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I think good indentation is very helpful. --~~~~ :Me too. --~~~~ ::I thought you didn't like indentation, Bob. --~~~~ :Me three! --~~~~ ::I thought you didn't like indentation either, Carlos. --~~~~ :::I thought that too, Alice. --~~~~ '''Good spelling and grammar are important on talk pages.'''
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closely related to the one already under discussion in a talk-page section, then it's usually best to create an entirely new section or subsection on the talk page for that purpose. You can find out how to do that by reading about "Headings and subheadings" on
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In the examples below, the user adding the final comment has typed the characters of the template, including its "braces", at the left margin, below the preceding comment, and just ahead of the text they entered for their own comment:
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I think good indentation is very helpful. --~~~~ :Me too. --~~~~ ::I thought you didn't like indentation, Bob. --~~~~ :::Well I sure don't. --~~~~ ::::I can take it or leave it. --~~~~ {{od|::::}}'''I like it, but not too much.'''
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I think good indentation is very helpful. --~~~~ :Me too. --~~~~ ::I thought you didn't like indentation, Bob. --~~~~ :::Well I sure don't. --~~~~ ::::I can take it or leave it. -—~~~~ {{od2}}'''I like it, but not too much.'''
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easier to read and understand. It might be helpful to think of discussions as reports with numbered/bulleted sections and subsections where material is not necessarily written in chronological order.
882:. Knowledge has never had a set of markup specifically designed for use in talk pages. Editors appropriated markup that was intended for other purposes for use in talk pages. There was a project,
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still closely related to the one already under discussion, you should add it at the very bottom of the section, below all the previous comments on the original topic, without indenting it at all:
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Sometimes, a long discussion can cause indentation to become too deep, which can make it difficult to read in narrower browser windows. When it does, you should consider
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characters at the very left margin, just before the text you add. In the following example, a single colon was typed just before the "Me too" text of the second comment:
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If you want to reply to a comment, but another editor has already done so, just position your own text beneath that other editor's reply, at the same indentation level:
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Note that there is no blank line between comments, and if you reply using multiple paragraphs, use the colons before the blank line between paragraphs (see
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I think good indentation is very helpful. --~~~~ :Me too. --~~~~ ::'''I thought you didn't like indentation, Bob.''' --~~~~ :Me three! --~~~~
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comment. In the following, Alice has done so, using two leading colon characters to indicate that she's responding to the reply made by Bob:
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Your reply to a particular comment should be indented beneath that comment. Indents are achieved by typing one or more leading colon
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It contains the advice or opinions of one or more
Knowledge contributors. This page is not an encyclopedia article, nor is it one of
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between talk pages and other pages, the techniques described in this page are likely to work poorly in other kinds of pages.
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exist for this purpose. You can use either one, and they can also be employed by their equivalent "shortcut" names of
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newcomers who don't know how to indent properly, but experienced users are expected to comply with it, to facilitate
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your next comment. When you do that, it's helpful to make clear what you're doing: The templates
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at the beginning of the next line indicates the definition of the term. But in talk pages
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I think good indentation is very helpful. --~~~~ :Me too. --~~~~ :'''Me three!''' --~~~~
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In these examples the boldface line is the most recently added comment.
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I think good indentation is very helpful. --~~~~ :'''Me too.''' --~~~~
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This essay only applies to talk pages. Because of differing
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347:I thought you didn't like indentation, Bob.
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989:Knowledge article elements help
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399:Markup
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891:lists
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664:Bob
604:od2
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970::
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