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If you want to reply to the message with 2 colons and someone already is using 3 colons, use 3 colons to reply to the message. --Example1 22:09, 30 June 2020 (UTC) Four colons, and so on. --â Example2 10:40, 26 June 2019 (UTC) @Example2: this is an example of using Template:reply to ping a user.
The talk page associated with a page in another namespace is named by adding "talk" after the namespace label; for example, the talk page for Wikipedia:About is called Wikipedia talk:About. When viewing an article (or any other non-talk page) on the Wikipedia, a link to the corresponding talk page appears on the "Talk" tab at the top of the page.
When talk pages in other namespaces (including userspace) are used for discussion and communication between users, discussion should be directed solely toward the improvement of the encyclopedia. The names of talk pages associated with articles begin with Talk:. For example, the talk page for the article Australia is named Talk:Australia.
Most pages on Wikipedia have a Talk page behind it: articles, user pages, even sandbox pages. Click on the "Talk" or "Discussion" tab in the upper left corner of any page to access its talk page. Wikipedians assume you'll be reading messages left in user and article Talk pages, and you can use them to leave messages for others.
A list of such templates can be found at Wikipedia:Template messages/Talk namespace and Category:Talk header templates. Talk page templates contain information intended for editors, not readers. Which templates on Wikipedia are actually Talk page templates is a matter for some debate. For example, the cleanup template was originally created to ...
I'm doing a chart for NVQ of stages of development (age groups 0-3, 4-7, 8-12, 13-16) in different areas (physical, emotional, cognitive, communication, social) I found this page very useful for the first two age groups - thanks to everyone who contributed. Just wondering why it stops at age six when children continue developing?
BTW, if you're particularly interested in this subject, you might be interested in the discussions at Wikipedia talk:Talk page guidelines/Archive 2#Flat versus threaded, [mis]use of indents (two boxed examples, and editors struggled a bit to decide which one was the True™ version of threading) and Wikipedia talk:Talk page guidelines/Archive 8 ...
For example, on the page for Where the Wild Things Are, the first sentence in the lead is Where the Wild Things Are is a 1963 children's picture book by American writer and illustrator Maurice Sendak , originally published by Harper & Row .