Wikipedia News Desk - Page 35
Community Programs That Support Diverse New Wikipedia Editors
Community programs are helping women, Indigenous peoples, and non-Western editors contribute to Wikipedia, fixing systemic bias and expanding knowledge beyond traditional sources.
Parsoid and Wikitext: How Wikipedia Renders Pages Reliably
Parsoid converts Wikipedia's messy Wikitext into clean, reliable HTML, enabling consistent page rendering across devices. It powers the visual editor, handles thousands of formatting rules, and ensures accuracy for over 500 million daily visitors.
Wikipedia Across 300+ Languages: The Global Encyclopedia Project
Wikipedia exists in over 300 languages, each built independently by local volunteers. It’s not a translation project-it’s a global network of knowledge rooted in culture, language, and community.
How to Reference Sources in Non-Latin Scripts on Wikipedia
Learn how to properly cite sources in non-Latin scripts like Chinese, Arabic, and Russian on Wikipedia. Follow best practices for transliteration, translation, and verification to make your edits accurate and globally inclusive.
How to Cite Books on Wikipedia Correctly: Editions, Page Numbers, and Verifiability
Learn how to properly cite books on Wikipedia with correct editions, page numbers, and reliable sources to ensure your edits are accepted and maintain the site's credibility.
Is Wikipedia Reliable? What Academic Studies Really Show
Academic studies show Wikipedia is often as accurate as traditional encyclopedias. Learn how it works, why it's trusted by researchers, and how to use it properly without citing it in papers.
How Wikipedia Covers Disasters: From First Edits to Post-Event Analysis
Wikipedia's disaster coverage turns real-time chaos into verified, lasting records. From the first edit to long-term analysis, volunteers ensure accuracy, transparency, and accessibility when it matters most.
Wikipedia Article Quality Classes Explained for Editors
Learn how Wikipedia's article quality classes work, from Stub to Featured Article, and how editors can improve content step by step with reliable sources and clear structure.
MediaWiki Software: The Foundation of Wikipedia Explained
MediaWiki is the open-source software that powers Wikipedia, handling millions of edits daily through robust collaboration tools, bot automation, and version control. Learn how it works and why it's still the best platform for large-scale wikis.
Bridging Academic and Wikipedia Communities Through Fellowships
Wikipedia fellowships are connecting academics with public knowledge by training scholars to edit and improve articles. These programs are changing who writes on Wikipedia and what knowledge gets shared globally.
How Wikipedia Handles Pseudoscience vs. Mainstream Science
Wikipedia doesn't declare what's true-it reports what reliable sources say. Learn how it distinguishes mainstream science from pseudoscience using citations, consensus, and proportional representation.
Mass Deletions and G13 Expired Drafts on Wikipedia: Cleanup Tips
Learn how to prevent your Wikipedia drafts from being deleted under G13 policy. Simple steps to save, revive, and submit your work before it disappears forever.