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In the current version the export format does not contain an XML replacement of wiki markup (see Wikipedia DTD for an older proposal, or Wiki Markup Language). You only get the wikitext as you get when editing the article. (After export you can use alternative parsers to convert wikitext to other format)
The wikipedia.org servers need to do quite a bit of work to convert the wikicode into HTML. That's time consuming both for you and for the wikipedia.org servers, so simply spidering all pages is not the way to go. To access any article in XML, one at a time, access Special:Export/Title of the article. Read more about this at Special:Export.
It can open almost any file format. It can export to Mediawiki: File menu > export > save as type > MediaWiki. It will save the file as a .txt file which can be opened with any text editor. Copy the wiki code from the text file. You can save any web page as an HTML file, and then open it in LibreOffice Writer. Edit as needed.
A screencast that walks through how to upload files to Wikimedia Commons and add them to Wikipedia articles. If you want to give a link to the file description page in an article, use an extra colon at the front, e.g., "[[:File:pagename". If you type "[[Media:pagename]]", a download link to the media file is created.
A link to e.g. the train article in Wikipedia is given in the HTML-code as /wiki/Train. ... See also XML export. See also. Wikipedia:Database download;
Use Miro Video Converter on either Windows, Mac OSX or Linux; Use Firefogg plugin for Mozilla Firefox; Use Handbrake on Linux (Ubuntu) to convert; Use Online converter on toollabs to convert and upload; Upload to Commons Choose a license, such as CC-BY-SA-3.0; Embed it in a Wikipedia article Example code: [[File:Filename.webm|thumb|320px ...
the main objective of VideoWiki to bring up the multimedia (i.e. video) component to the existing articles. Most of people interested in watching videos would prefer to watch short videos compared to the lengthy ones. a practical constraint is that media coverage of many topics is very poor, compared to the spectrum of articles on English ...
All modern browsers will play video (Theora and WebM) and audio (Vorbis and MP3) files from Wikipedia, no modifications needed. On older iOS, iPadOS, and macOS devices, software decoding will be used. This might be a bit slow compared to what you are used to on such devices. Internet Explorer is NOT supported.