User talk:Neli Georgieva

Welcome!

Hello,, and welcome to Wikipedia! Thank you for your contributions. I hope you like the place and decide to stay. Here are some pages that you might find helpful: I hope you enjoy editing here and being a Wikipedian! Please sign your messages on discussion pages using four tildes ( ~ ); this will automatically insert your username and the date. If you need help, check out Questions, ask me on, or ask your question on this page and then place  before the question. Again, welcome!
 * The five pillars of Wikipedia
 * Tutorial
 * How to edit a page
 * How to write a great article
 * Manual of Style

Muscle and tools
Hi! Excellent addition to muscle! Though your content and references were great (great!) and the way you added your references was acceptable, particularly on a page where there are already embedded references as footnotes it is preferable to continue using embedded references. Here is my change, which only embedded the links you had already cited. Adding citations is pretty easy, particularly when you have access to the tools. Below are what I normally use:


 * Citation templates - the stuff in the squiggly brackets -, which generates a standard template irrespective of the order in the squiggles.
 * footnotes, which is what replaces the citation template with a superscript number - [1]; basically it's just a matter of putting it between tags, with some tricks for repeating links (the ref name = in the <>)
 * Google scholar autocitation, a google-style search engine and reference generator. Useful when the article doesn't have a pubmed number (old, social sciences or humanities) but the citation template isn't as neat and it does not fill in ISBN or pubmed numbers
 * ISBN searchable database, used in conjunction with Diberry to find, and generate citation templates
 * pubmed/isbn Diberry's template generator, incredibly useful, uses the [www.pubmed.org pubmed] number or isbn to automatically generate a citation template for you; the most useful if you have a pubemd or ISBN. Go to any pubmed page, search for PMID and the six or so digits following is the pubmed number.  Plug it into diberri and you've a fool-proof template.

It's a lot to digest, if you plan on adding more info to wikipedia I hope you find them useful. Please feel free to ask me any questions, and again, WELCOME!! WLU (talk) 23:27, 17 April 2008 (UTC)