Thread:Merrimack/@comment-27127038-20160403225114/@comment-32738051-20160403232918

Glad you enjoyed the ice cream. 😋

And OMG am I ever so glad April 2016 was a joke. I kind of went through an April Fool's joke at work on 3/31 and 4/1...don't ask. Just suffice it to say that because I had already gone through April Fool's, I wasn't expecting another one and certainly not from Foss! She got me good. And I suppose one reason I took it at face value was I really have been expecting G5 and MyTona to do something like add additional night modes for quite some time. I just hope Foss takes the page down before someone at G5 or MyTona sees it and gets any bright ideas. 🙏 😲 😝

I'm not sure there is downloadable guide per se and I haven't really found a good starter page for building Wiki content. What I always do, when I want to know how to do something specific with a page or content on a page on this Wiki, is I go the Wiki Help Contents page. You can click the link to access or scroll over your profile icon towards the top right (to the right of the SSHM Wiki search field) so you access the drop down menu and Help is the third link. I usually right click it to open it as a new tab so you can switch back and forth between the current page and the help pages. On the Help page, I usually search for a particular keyword, like if I want to find out how to create a table, I might use the word table to find help content. But on that same Help main page are major content buttons and below that FAQ links that you may find helpful. There are additional links below that as well with more help content. It's important to remember that there are really 3 different Wiki editors (or I should probably say edit modes): Visual Editor, Classic Editor and Source Mode (aka Wikitext). You should figure out which one(s) you have access to and, if more than 1, which one you prefer and how to access that edit mode. I only work in source mode myself. If you use the visual editor, my understanding is you know as you create content what it will look like when published. With source mode, you can preview in both mobile and desktop formats before you publish. The other big tip I would give is there are limits to what you can do and additional limitations depending on the type content page you're working with. For example, blog pages don't allow users to edit content, only authors and Wiki administrators. This is why on my blogs, everyone has to tell me when they want to be listed in a table I created on the blog. But an article page does allow other users to edit. This is why users are able to add their info to the list of community players table on that page that Foss has provided.

As for which is better for creating pages, Kindle or PC, I would think the PC would be easier and that is what I use. I have Windows 8.1, which is a combo of both PC and app functionality and I edit pages using the PC version of Internet Explorer, as opposed to the app version of IE. But I don't think all 3 edit modes are available across all devices so your decision may depend on which edit mode you prefer.

Hope this helps.