User talk:Andars97

Your experience with Wikipedia so far
Welcome to Wikipedia! I am conducting a quick survey about newcomer support and I would like to hear about your experience so far. Your response will go a long way to help us build a better experience for newcomers like yourself. The survey will take you around 10 minutes to complete.

To learn more about the study, visit this link: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Co-op

To take the survey, visit this link: https://syracuseuniversity.qualtrics.com/SE/?SID=SV_2bnPZz0HelBaY85

Thanks!

Gabrielm199 (talk) 18:51, 17 December 2014 (UTC)

Copy-editing
Hello.

Please look at this edit. Note that:
 * In Wikipedia articles, one does not capitalize an initial letter merely because it is in a section heading. The first letter of the heading is capital except when there is a special reason to use lower case, and the later initial letters are in lower case except when they are proper names or there is some other special reason to use a capital.
 * In non-TeX mathematical notation one italicizes variables but not punctuation and not digits.
 * right: [a,b] or [a, b]
 * wrong: [a,b]
 * right: x2 + 5
 * wrong: x2 + 5
 * The point of this is to be consistent with the way TeX does it.


 * Ranges of pages or years or other numbers use an en-dash, not a hyphen.
 * right: pp. 509–513
 * wrong: pp. 509-513
 * right: John Smith (January 1, 1990 – December 25, 2087) was a theologian and blacksmith.
 * wrong: John Smith (January 1, 1990 - December 25, 2087) was a theologian and blacksmith.


 * Things like Borsuk–Ulam theorem use an en-dash, not a hyphen.
 * right: Borsuk–Ulam theorem
 * wrong: Borsuk-Ulam theorem
 * (On the other hand hyphenated names like Levi-Civita use a hyphen.)


 * In Wikipedia the house style is that in things like "Borsuk–Ulam theorem" and "Rolle's theorem" the word "theorem" begins with a lower-case initial letter.

These things are codified in WP:MOS and in WP:MOSMATH. Michael Hardy (talk) 18:14, 18 November 2016 (UTC)