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Larry_Sanger (talk)
Pronunciation per Ward
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The term '''<nowiki>WikiWiki</nowiki>''' ("wiki wiki" means "quick" in the [[Hawaiian language]]) can be used to identify either a type of [[hypertext]] document or the software used to write it. Often called "wiki" for short, the collaborative software application enables web documents to be authored collectively using a simple [[markup]] scheme and without the content being reviewed prior to its acceptance. The resulting collaborative hypertext document, also called either "wiki" or "[[WikiWikiWeb]]," is typically produced by a community of users. Many wikis are immediately identifiable by their use of [[CamelCase]], produced by capitalizing words in a phrase and removing the spaces between them; this turns the phrase into an automatic link.
The term '''<nowiki>WikiWiki</nowiki>''' ("wiki wiki" means "quick" in the [[Hawaiian language]]; pronounced "wickee wickee") can be used to identify either a type of [[hypertext]] document or the software used to write it. Often called "wiki" for short, the collaborative software application enables web documents to be authored collectively using a simple [[markup]] scheme and without the content being reviewed prior to its acceptance. The resulting collaborative hypertext document, also called either "wiki" or "[[WikiWikiWeb]]," is typically produced by a community of users. Many wikis are immediately identifiable by their use of [[CamelCase]], produced by capitalizing words in a phrase and removing the spaces between them; this turns the phrase into an automatic link.





Revision as of 22:37, 20 December 2001

The term WikiWiki ("wiki wiki" means "quick" in the Hawaiian language; pronounced "wickee wickee") can be used to identify either a type of hypertext document or the software used to write it. Often called "wiki" for short, the collaborative software application enables web documents to be authored collectively using a simple markup scheme and without the content being reviewed prior to its acceptance. The resulting collaborative hypertext document, also called either "wiki" or "WikiWikiWeb," is typically produced by a community of users. Many wikis are immediately identifiable by their use of CamelCase, produced by capitalizing words in a phrase and removing the spaces between them; this turns the phrase into an automatic link.


It is a mark of wiki culture that no two wiki clones are alike. It is often debatable whether a site is a wiki or not, and few people expend much effort trying to define or preserve the difference.


The original WikiWikiWeb was established by Ward Cunningham, who invented and named the Wiki concept, and produced the first implementation of a WikiWiki server. Some people maintain that only Ward's wiki should be called Wiki (upper case) or the WikiWikiWeb. For more history, please see history of wiki. Ward's Wiki remains one of the most popular Wiki sites:


http://www.c2.com/cgi/wiki?WelcomeVisitors


You can search the page titles of various wikis at once using MetaWiki.


The particular Wiki you are looking at is Wikipedia, an effort to write a complete encyclopedia from scratch, collaboratively.


See also: What is a wiki, History of wiki


MeatBall:WikiSyntax



/Talk