Additional writing habits have formed beyond those mentioned in GoodStyle. Here are some more suggestions, some of which are subsequently debated. # At the top, establish a context: Tell the reader what the page is about. # Tell important information first, go into details later. Think of the wiki page as newspaper article. Readers are impatient: they start at the top and read down. If they care enough about the page to edit it, they scroll to the bottom (because the EditText button is there). # Link to other relevant wiki pages wherever possible. Links increase the value of the WikiWikiWeb. # Use categories for automatic indexing. See WikiCategories. # Unless you prefer anonymity, sign and date your comment. -- LarsAronsson (18 May 2001) # Readers love enumerated lists, (of 5 entries +/-2 i.e. 3-7 entries). These probably deserve to be considered, pondered, cherished and grokked for a while before eventual inclusion in GoodStyle. On the other hand ... * See also PleasePleaseDontCategorizeEveryPageOnWiki * Anonymity and non-dated comments are preferred if we want to "Edit pages to emphasize the flow of ideas, not the chronology of contribution." Besides anonymity, not signing invites refactoring. * Some readers don't love enumerated lists. Remember: use of a numbered list implies that either there is a chronological ordering, or you will refer back to it at some point in the following text. Otherwise, a bulleted list works just as well.