MEpedia:Manual of style

The following offers some style guidance for writing articles on MEpedia. Some of this requires familiarizing yourself with some of the basic formatting code used by MediaWiki, the software that powers both Wikipedia and MEpedia.

Key conventions

 * Page titles and section headings: Always capitalise the first letter of page titles and links, subsequent words must start with a lower case letter (eg "Post-exertional malaise", "Muscle fatigability") unless they are proper names (eg "Royal Free Hospital", "Nancy Klimas", "United States") or acronyms (eg "HHV-6", "IL-7").


 * Use of plurals in titles: Normal page articles should normally use the singular while category page articles should use the plural form.


 * Chronological order: put oldest first, e.g., for Notable studies 2010 would go before 2018.

This is red. This is blue. This is (light) gray. This is dark gray.
 * #MEAction colors: style-guide-colors.jpg red #E7453A, blue #0BA7CD , light gray a solid equivalent to #3B3E3F 50% fill - use rgba(59,62,63,0.5) for transparency or , dark gray #3B3E3F , white #FFFFF, use templates for colors, e.g.:

Dates and numbers
Dates should be in a consistent form and in US format: Jun 26, 2018; Jun 2018; or when the month is unknown, 2018. When manually inputting citations, use Jun 26, 2018; Jun 2018; or when the month is unknown, 2018.

Names and titles
The first time a person is mentioned in an article, their full name, title and relevant highest degree(s) should be described in detail to provide context for the reader (e.g. Dr. Jane Doe, PhD, a professor of Immunology at the University of Y). From then on, they should be referred to only by last name, e.g. Doe (unless you need to add their first name, Jane Doe, to distinguish from a mention of John Doe.)

Punctuation and footnotes
Punctuation should appear before (rather than after) footnotes where possible.

Lead paragraph
Each entry should begin with a paragraph providing a summary of the whole. If the entry is very long, two or three paragraphs may be warranted.

Notable studies
The “Notable studies” section should list studies in chronological order and cite studies with a footnote, rather than an external link. However, following the footnote, you may optionally wish to add a parenthetical with external links to the paper's abstract or full text for reader convenience:
 * 1993, How reliable is peer review of scientific abstracts? Looking back at the 1991 Annual Meeting of the Society of General Internal Medicine (Abstract)

Learn more

 * #MEAction branding
 * MediaWiki’s formatting help (e.g, bold, italics, bullets)
 * MediaWiki: Creating internal, external and transwiki links
 * Wikipedia Manual of Style
 * Wikipedia: Chronological Order