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Geoscience Reporting Guidelines—for geoscience reports in industry, academia and other disciplines. [30] Handbook of Technical Writing, by Gerald J. Alred, Charles T. Brusaw, and Walter E. Oliu.—for general technical writing. IEEE style—used in many technical research papers, especially those relating to computer science.
Portal guidelines General guidelines and best practices for portals. Spam Spam is the inappropriate addition of links or information to Wikipedia, with the purpose of promoting an outside organization, individual or idea. Miscellaneous content guidelines Record charts. WikiProject Days of the year articles. Video games articles.
A guideline is a statement by which to determine a course of action. It aims to streamline particular processes according to a set routine or sound practice. [1] They may be issued by and used by any organization (governmental or private) to make the actions of its employees or divisions more predictable, and presumably of higher quality.
List of policies and guidelines — a list of principle policies and guidelines. List of policies — a comprehensive descriptive directory of policies. List of guidelines — a comprehensive descriptive directory of guidelines. Manual of Style contents — a comprehensive descriptive directory of the pages which make up the Manual of Style.
The general advice at WP:Stand-alone lists#Naming conventions (e.g. handling of nationalities, fictional subjects, etc.) includes glossaries as well, to the extent applicable. The sub-articles of multi-page split glossaries should follow the guidelines at WP:Naming conventions (long lists) to the extent applicable.
Pages for logged out editors learn more. Contributions; Talk; Wikipedia: General notability guideline
A number of proposed or inactive language-specific guidelines exist, but they are not listed here; there are language-specific guidelines for several languages including Korean, Chinese and Hebrew; most issues are instead covered by naming conventions. Wikipedia:Manual of Style/Canada-related articles (MOS:CA)
Style guides may be categorized into three types: comprehensive style for general use; discipline style for specialized use, which is often specific to academic disciplines, medicine, journalism, law, government, business, and other industries; and house or corporate style, created and used by a particular publisher or organization.