Difference between revisions of "The Dreadnought Project:Editing Guide"

From The Dreadnought Project
Jump to: navigation, search
(Ship Names)
(Ship Class Articles)
Line 13: Line 13:
 
====Ship Class Articles====
 
====Ship Class Articles====
  
Ship class pages are created by ignoring the prefix (classes are not referred to as the ''USS Nevada Class''), using the name of the lead ship of the class, followed by the word class, and then the year of launch for the earliest vessel to be launched in brackets.
+
Ship class pages are created by ignoring the prefix (classes are not referred to as the "U.S.S. ''Nevada'' Class"), using the name of the lead ship of the class, followed by the word "Class", and then the year of launch for the earliest vessel of the class to be launched in brackets.
  
 
'''Example''': [[Danton Class (1909)]]
 
'''Example''': [[Danton Class (1909)]]

Revision as of 18:10, 1 August 2009

Welcome to the Editing Guide for Tone's Fighting Ships.

Conventions

Article Names

Ship Articles

Individual ships are to be named where appropriate with the prefix first (e.g. H.M.S.), then the ship name, and then the year of launch in brackets.

Example: H.M.S. Dreadnought (1906)

Ship Class Articles

Ship class pages are created by ignoring the prefix (classes are not referred to as the "U.S.S. Nevada Class"), using the name of the lead ship of the class, followed by the word "Class", and then the year of launch for the earliest vessel of the class to be launched in brackets.

Example: Danton Class (1909)

Ship Names

Convention has it that ship names need to be highlighted in some way, and at Tone's Fighting Ships they are to be italicised. This applies to every ship name in every article. It does not however, apply to article titles.

Article Leaders

At the start of every article, the first mention of the subject of the article should be entered in bold; for example at the top of this page Editing Guide has been so highlighted.

Ship Names

Ship names should be in bold - as well as in italics. The prefix will also be in bold.

Example: SMS Bayern

Personalities

With persons who are the subject of an article (for the most part naval men), their rank and title should not be highlighted. If they are a member of the nobility (Earl, Marchesa, Graf) and it is part of their name, then it should be entered in bold along with the full name of the subject.

Example: Admiral of the Fleet John Rushworth Jellicoe, 1st Earl Jellicoe