User:Teb728

Pages to which I have contributed usefully include:
 * Help desk
 * Media copyright questions
 * New contributors' help page/questions
 * Non-free_content_review
 * Albert Einstein
 * English language
 * History of the English language
 * The Mystery of Edwin Drood
 * Proto-Indo-European language
 * English verbs
 * Old English
 * Lee_Segel
 * Drood
 * Laryngeal theory
 * Proto-Germanic_language
 * Template:PIE

Notes to myself
X!'s Edit Counter for me,general

Single User Login info on all Wikimedia projects for me general

my sandbox, all my personal pages, editing help, WikiBlame

All my Wikimedia accounts (before unification):
 * w:User:teb728
 * wiktionary:User:teb728
 * wikisource:User:teb728
 * commons:User:teb728
 * wikibooks:User:teb728
 * meta:User:teb728

User:AndyZ/peerreviewer web-based version

Advanced details
Basically read the entire MediaWiki Handbook, which has four large sections: Also melt your brain on the Editor's index, which gives a pretty full description of what is possible on Wikipedia.
 * Help:Parserfunctions
 * Help:Magic words
 * Help:Template
 * Help:HTML in wikitext
 * Help:Category
 * for readers
 * for editors (this section tells the most about wikitext markup, naturally)
 * for moderators
 * for administrators

A solid introduction to Wikipedia editing could easily fill up a year of college-level work. And that would be a fun course to teach. But on Wikipedia, everything you see is built by and for people who self-educate. I suggest that you take some notes on a user sub-page with links to the manuals you are reading. Also see the Google custom template, which has a table of examples which link to a list of places I have found handy for answering questions that come up in the course of Wikipedia editing (I wrote the table of examples, so I put in the links I use routinely when looking up answers to questions on the Help desk). This info by Teratornis

Copyright renewal

Scratch
33.933°N, -118.331°W