TIC:Training
A Friendly Wiki manual for TIC
Hello TIC!
This is a small manual with a few basic gestures that will help you to work on and enjoy your Wiki!
Find more complex/in-depth gestures and explanations here.
You can also use the "Edit source" interface to copy the code for the design elements you need in our own page.
A few usefull reminders:
- When Logging in and entering information in the search bar CAPITAL & small letters matter
- Have only one person editing at a time -> saving changes while someone else is editing them might make them loose all their efforts! ADVICE: write your texts in another document and copy paste them into the Wiki, this way you can be sure to not lose all your & your collegues efforts
- Don't use Wiki for confidential information, everything once saved can be traced back, until we find a moment to password protect a page everything will be searchable
- Add comments for edits so one can more easily navegate and find previous versions
How to:
Create an account
This needs to be done by somene with an ADMINISTRATOR account. Nani is a Beaurocrat so has no means of making an account.
Create a namespace
Create a page within a namespace
Index
Links in and out
Intorduce a text
Upload an image/file
Columns and other formatting
On "Edit source" insert this code
<div class=columns> before the beginning of the text you want to be seen as a column, at the end of the same text insert this code </div> .
Example:
Intersectional Justice Struggle
We connect economic, racial, social, migrant, feminist, LGBT and digital justice work, bridging over silos in social justice organising. We focus on the need to address intersectional oppressions and create unity between our communities for a stronger justice movement.
Coalition & solidarity organising
We build collective power through coalitions of marginalised communities. Our model addresses the gap between grassroots activism and impactful political advocacy led by affected communities. Structural change & redistribution
Structural change & redistribution
We develop critical analysis and solutions to address the root causes of structural oppressions, rather than the interpersonal symptoms. We look to operationalise long-term visions for structural change rooted in decriminalisation, de-militarisation and redistribution.