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: ''Împrumutată de la http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Wikiquette ''
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: ''Împrumutată şi adaptată de la http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Wikiquette ''
  
 
This page offers some principles of '''etiquette''' or "'''Wikiquette'''" —ie. guidelines on how to work with others on the wiki.  
 
This page offers some principles of '''etiquette''' or "'''Wikiquette'''" —ie. guidelines on how to work with others on the wiki.  

Versiunea de la data 3 decembrie 2005 05:38

Împrumutată şi adaptată de la http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Wikiquette

This page offers some principles of etiquette or "Wikiquette" —ie. guidelines on how to work with others on the wiki.

Principles of Wikiquette

  • Assume good faith
  • Treat others as you would have them treat you.
  • Be polite, please!
    • People can't see you or know for sure your mood. Irony isn't always obvious, and blunt, raw text can easily appear rude. Be careful of the words you choose — what you intended might not be what others think.
  • Sign and date your posts to talk pages (not articles!).
  • Work toward agreement.
  • Argue facts, not personalities.
  • Don't ignore questions.
    • If another disagrees with your edit, provide good reasons why you think it's appropriate.
  • Concede a point, when you have no response to it; or admit when you disagree based on intuition or taste.
    • Don't make people debate positions you don't really hold.
  • Be civil.
  • Although it's understandably difficult in a heated argument, if the other party is not as civil as you'd like them to be, make sure to be more civil than him or her, not less.
    • That way at least you're not spiralling down to open conflict and name-calling by your own accord, you're actively doing something about it: taking a hit and refraining from hitting back -- everybody appreciates that (or at least they should).
    • However, don't hesitate to let the other party know that you're not comfortable with their tone in a neutral way -- otherwise they might think you're too dense to understand their "subtlety", and you'll involuntarily encourage them (e.g. "I know you've been sarcastic above, but I don't think that's helping us resolve the issue. However, I don't think your argument stands because...").
  • Be prepared to apologize.
    • In animated discussions, we often say things we later wish we hadn't. Say so.
  • Forgive and forget.
  • Recognize your own biases and keep them in check.
  • Give praise when due. Everybody likes to feel appreciated, especially in an environment that often requires compromise. Drop a friendly note on users' talk pages.
  • Remove or summarize resolved disputes that you initiated.
  • Help mediate disagreements between others.
  • Avoid reverts and deletions whenever possible. Explain reversions in the edit summary box.
    • Amend, edit, discuss.