Manifold Atlas:Instructions for writing

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* For articles in the [[:Category:Manifolds|Manifolds]] chapter please review the [[Manifold Atlas:Structure of a Manifolds page|suggested structure]].
* For articles in the [[:Category:Manifolds|Manifolds]] chapter please review the [[Manifold Atlas:Structure of a Manifolds page|suggested structure]].
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== The evolution of a page ==
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* It will typically take many edits for a page to reach [[Manifold Atlas:Editorial Policy#Editorial criteria|maturity]].
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* New and young pages bear the [[Template:Stub|Stub]] template indicating that they are under development.
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* After a page reaches maturity, the editorial board will organise for it to be [[Manifold Atlas:Editorial Process|refereed]].
== Hyperlinks ==
== Hyperlinks ==

Revision as of 15:28, 24 September 2009

This page describes the scientific writing style of the Manifold Atlas.

Contents

1 Scientific style

  • The Manifold Atlas aims to be an reliable scientific reference for researchers and students of manifolds.
  • Please write rigorously and clearly for a topologically literate audience:
    • i.e. assume that your reader has taken relevant introductory graduate level courses for the area you are covering.
  • Please give proofs or references to peer-reviewed journals for all non-elementary statements.
  • As far as possible define the terms and concepts you use:
    • a quick way to achieve this is to hyperlink to Wikipedia or another web resource if the term is adequately defined.

2 The evolution of a page

  • It will typically take many edits for a page to reach maturity.
  • New and young pages bear the Stub template indicating that they are under development.
  • After a page reaches maturity, the editorial board will organise for it to be refereed.

3 Hyperlinks

  • A well-written article will find a good balance between the following extremes:
    • too few hyperlinks and your document is somewhat of a dead-end,
    • too many hyperlinks make texts hard to read and can distract the reader.
  • Here are some guides for hyperlinking:
    • you can use hyperlinks to both defined and emphasis key concepts,
    • you only need to link a give page once per page or section, unless emphasis is sought,
    • broken hyperlinks, appearing in red, can be useful: they indicate pages you think should exist but don't right now.
    • for ease of writing on your first draft, simply write your hyperlink as intended link: later on you, or other users, can fill in the links to make them active.

3.1 Wikipedia

  • Wikipedia:Wikipedia already contains a great wealth of mathematical articles and there is not point in duplicating this content.
  • Atlas articles will differ from Wikipedia articles in that they assume a higher level of mathematical background and will typically discuss manifolds in greater depth and with greater precesion than Wikipedia.
  • A good heuristic for linking to Wikipedia is the following:
    • use Wikipedia links to define terms and concepts but,
    • do not use Wikipedia as a reference: refer to peer-reviewed mathematical literature.
  • We hope that there will be a positive synergy between Wikipedia and the Atlas:
    • Atlas authors may wish to improve to and to Wikipedia articles to define the terms they use,
    • hopefully in time, Wikipedia can link and refer to articles in the Atlas.
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