User talk:TronNDoE

Hi TronNDoE. I wanted to give you some instructions on how to do reverts and search page histories, because you made a very good attempt at an edit to Billiards but without this knowledge, your edit actually helped to hide the removal of a vast amount of material by another editor. If you go the history tab at the top of an article, you'll see that each edit is listed with a date, the user and sometimes an edit summary. You can compare two versions of the article by checking the date before an edit and a date after. When you removed the nonsense from the article, you didn't notice that that editor had also removed 15 paragraphs of material and replaced it with the nonsense you removed. See [this edit comparison] from the articles history (often called a "diff" here).

In order to revert this easily, you don't need to manually undo what was done. What you do is click on the date in the history page before the edit occurred, which takes you to that prior version of the article. Then you click edit this page, and then save back to that prior version. This is typically called a revert and exactly undoes the damage. Here, your edit appeared to have fixed nonsense, but made it less easy to find that the editor had also removed the material. Oh, and Welcome to Wikipedia!