Usuario:Gcsantiago

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Revisión a fecha de 15:27 1 sep 2015; Gcsantiago (Discusión | contribuciones)

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Hola ! Mi Curriculum vitae

"User:Username/skinname.css"


http://www.mediawiki.org/wiki/Extension:Popups instalada pero no me funciona

The popups show an image (if one is available), a small text excerpt and the timestamp of the last edit.

Image The image comes from the Extension:PageImages which returns the single most appropriate thumbnail associated with an article. It ignores maintenance templates, stubs, flag icons etc.

Text The text comes from the Extension:TextExtracts from which a plain-text extract is requested (see that extension for exclusions). Even though two sentences are requested a limit is put through CSS that makes sure that text doesn't overflow from the card. This is done by applying a max-height on that element. This approach would provide the same visual solution regardless of the language's script. A major con is that the text stops abruptly and ellipses can't be added.


http://localhost/w/index.php?tour=mytour

The following tours are currently packaged with the extension, and are thus available on any wiki where GuidedTour is installed.

Test - Simple tour to show what tours can do

First edit - A tour showing you how to make your first edit using the wikitext


Designing a tour

If you want to make your own guided your, here are some maxims to consider.

Choose a primary goal for the tour. What do you want users to learn by the end? Know who your audience is before you start, and what their goals and experiences are. What knowledge about a process do they have before starting your tour?

Plot the necessary steps, focusing on the one action or key takeaway for each step. Less is more. The more steps in your tour, the more likely a user is to abandon your tour in the middle.

Tours can be started via a link or button within a page, or automatically via a cookie. How you start a tour has a big impact on the potential for delivering tours that interrupt or annoy users, so choose carefully.

Let the steps and their associated actions guide the design of the tour. For example, if you want users to edit as one step, pointing directly to the edit button is the obvious and efficient thing to do. A poor alternative would be to have a center-aligned window with an image and description of the edit tab. The strength of tooltip-based tours is that you can show users what to do, instead of simply describing it.

Choose titles, body text, and images only after you have plotted all steps in your tour.