Help:Wikipedia: The Missing Manual/Appendixes/Learning more

No book, not even the one you're holding, can tell you everything you'll ever need to know about Wikipedia, especially since Wikipedia is a work in progress, always changing and growing in the hands of a changing and growing community of editors. Being a Wikipedia editor is like being an eternal student, acquiring as well as transmitting new knowledge all the time.

Think of this appendix as a campus map. It shows you the myriad places you can go, both inside and outside Wikipedia, to learn what you need to know when you're ready. It focuses on three main areas of learning:


 * Finding exactly the right information. Wikipedia has many hundreds of pages of detailed policies, guidelines, technical advice, and essays, not to mention specialized pages that simply list other pages. You're more likely to find what you're looking for, among all these instructional pages, if you choose one of several good starting points.
 * Getting personalized help. An unspoken assumption about editing in Wikipedia, as you may have noticed, is that you're supposed to figure out things mostly by yourself. Still, you can get personal help, if you know where and how to ask.
 * Understanding Wikipedia as a community. You may be curious about what's going on in the Wikipedia community. This appendix shows you how to get the news (and the gossip) about Wikipedia, and even how to meet other Wikipedians face-to-face if you so desire.

Information pages
Wikipedia has help pages, FAQs, and other kinds of pages offering information about editing and using Wikipedia. If you had to choose one place to go to first in your quest to find specifics about editing Wikipedia, a good candidate would be Help:Menu (shortcut: H:MENU). The Help:Menu page does a nice job of organizing information you might need into a dozen subtopics (most are shown in Figure C-1). For a comprehensive descriptive list-style of help pages, see the Help directory



The FAQ/Index page contains a list of frequently asked questions about using and contributing. (Figure C-2)



Directories and indexes
The Help:Menu page and its FAQ brethren provide fairly tightly organized information. By contrast, three directories offer a jumping-off point for a much larger number of instructional pages. The Help:Contents/Directory and Department directory (shortcut: WP:DIR) (Figure C-3), lists hundreds of links to specific pages, organized by categories of general Wikipedia functions.



Figure C-3 also has a top bar, similar to the one in Figure C-2. One of the links listed there is to Quick directory (shortcut: WP:QUICK). Figure C-4 shows the Quick Directory.



The newest addition tool within Wikipedia for finding information is the Editor's index to Wikipedia (shortcut: WP:EIW). Figure C-5 is a snapshot of part of this index, which has over 2,000 entries.



Places to ask questions
Despite the many thousands of instructional pages with information for editors (some would say because of the thousands of pages), you may want to ask other editors how to do something, or why something is the way it is. Before listing the places where you can ask questions, here are two caveats:


 * If you have a question about a specific article, it's best to start by asking at the article's talk/discussion page (see Help:Wikipedia: The Missing Manual/Collaborating with other editors/Communicating with your fellow editors). If you don't get any response within a day or two, then ask at one of the pages listed below.
 * If you have a question about a specific policy or guideline, ask at the talk page for that policy or guideline. For example, if you have a question about articles that are lists, and the relevant guideline is Lists, then ask on the page Wikipedia talk:Lists.

Here are three places for editors to ask (more or less) general questions:


 * The Teahouse (shortcut: WP:TH)
 * Help desk (shortcut: WP:HD)
 * Village pump (technical) (shortcut: WP:VPT)

In addition, for specialized questions about images and other uploaded media that Wikipedia can use:


 * Media copyright questions (shortcut: WP:MCQ)

Using your own talk page
You can also post your question on your own user talk page (the section about user talk pages). When you do, add the following template to the section of the page where the question is: helpme. That template adds the category Wikipedians looking for help to your user talk page, and then one or more editors who monitor that category will show up to answer your question.

Using Wikipedia IRC channels
Finally, if you are an IRC user, you can connect at WP:IRCHELP, one of the help channels for Wikipedians.

Shortcut WP:CHAT has the more complete list of English Wikipedia IRC channels.

For a complete list of Interwiki channels go to: IRC/Channels.

Coaching and classes
If you learn better in a one-on-one situation, you're not alone. Wikipedia has three pages where an editor can go for personalized advising. Consider one of these services if you're serious about honing your skills:


 * Adopt-a-User (shortcut: WP:ADOPT). A program where experienced editors pair up with and help new, inexperienced editors.

In addition, IRC channels (shortcut: WP:IRC) has information about the freenode network's dedicated chat rooms. These are online meeting places, open 24 hours a day, in which Wikipedians can engage in real-time discussions with each other.

Wikipedia news and gossip
Like any place with lots of action (Hollywood and Washington, D.C. come to mind), Wikipedia generates a body of news and gossip. When people are interested in something, they crave reading and talking about it. If you've been bitten by the Wikipedia bug, you'll be glad to know there's plenty of official news and unofficial gossip to satisfy your craving to know more.

News
If you expect to continue editing at Wikipedia for any length of time, by all means subscribe to the monthly internal newsletter, the Wikipedia Signpost. New issues will automatically appear at the top of your watchlist report. The page Wikipedia Signpost/Subscribe provides numerous alternative methods of signing up, if you are interested.

Another way to keep up with what's happening with Wikipedia is to read the page within Wikipedia that tracks news stories, Press coverage.

Gossip
You can also get information about Wikipedia-related goings-on from the following sources (which Wikipedia's guidelines define as not reliable sources).


 * Planet Wikimedia (http://en.planet.wikimedia.org) is a Web log (blog) aggregator operated by the Wikimedia Foundation. Some of the posts are about wikis in general, and some are on topics peripheral to Wikipedia, but the quality is quite high, and interesting things are likely to show up here at least as quickly as anywhere else.
 * Mailing lists (shortcut: WP:ML) provides links to subscribe to any one of a number of mailing lists.

If you want to talk about Wikipedia face to face, your best opportunities are regional meet-ups. Future (planned) events are listed on the Meetup page (shortcut: WP:MEET). Wikipedians have roughly five to ten meet-ups per month, which may sound like a lot, but that figure is for all meet-ups across the entire world. Meet-ups that are not in North America, the UK, or Oceania are likely to focus on a non-English language edition of Wikipedia.