20-Minute WikiHealthCare Tutorial
This step-by-step, hands-on tutorial gets you up to speed with all the WikiHealthCare basics, in
mere minutes...
1. Get set...
Open two browser windows, so that you can follow these steps in one window, while trying things out in the other.
2. Take a quick tour...
The WikiHealthCare site is divided into webs; each one usually represents one area of collaboration (e.g., Home, Quality Improvement). You can navigate the webs from the left menu bar.
- Each web has hyperlinked topics, displayed as pages in your browser.
- The home page in each web is the Home topic.
- To browse a web, just click on any highlighted link. These links are called WikiWords and comprise two or more words with initial capitals, run together.
- Follow the WikiWord link and learn what it is.
- You can search each web. Enter a search string in the Home topic or the WebSearch topic accessible from the
Search link on each topic. The search looks for an exact match; optionally, you can also use RegularExpressions.
3. Register...
To edit topics, you need to
register on WikiHealthCare.
- Go to the TWikiRegistration page to create your account. Fill in a couple of lines and you're set!
4. Check out users, groups.
- Go to the TWikiUsers topic in the Users web; it has a list of all users of WikiHealthCare. Your WikiName will be in this list after you register.
5. Test the page controls...
At the top of the white section on each page, you will find a number of different icons.
-
Edit - add to or edit the topic (discussed later)
-
Attach - attach files to a topic (discussed later)
-
Printable - goes to a stripped down version of the page, good for printing
-
History - topics are under revision control - History shows you the complete change history of the topic, for example, who changed what and when
-
Discussion - discuss a topic (behind the scenes) without editing the page
-
Notify - have an e-mail sent to you each time the topic is modified by a user.
6. Change a page, and create a new one...
Go to the
Sandbox. This is the sandbox web, where you can make changes and try it all out at will.
- Click the
Edit link. You are now in edit mode and you can see the source of the page. (Go to a different topic like TWikiGuestSandbox? if you see a "Topic is being edited by an other user" warning.)
- Look at the text in edit mode and compare it with the rendered page (move back and forth in your browser.)
- Notice how WikiWords are linked automatically; there is no link if you look at the text in edit mode.
- Now, create a new topic - your own test page:
- In edit mode, enter a new text with a WikiWord, for example:
This is TWikiGuestSandbox topic.
- Preview and save the topic. The name appears, highlighted, with a linked question mark at the end. This means that the topic doesn't exist yet.
- Click on the question mark. Now you're in edit mode of the new topic.
- Type some text, basically, like you write an e-mail.
- A signature with your name is already entered by default. NOTE: The
Users. in front of your name means that you have a link from the current web to your personal topic located in the Users web.
- Preview and save the topic...
- Learn about text formatting. You can enter text in TWikiShorthand, a very simple markup language. Follow the TWikiShorthand link to see how, then:
- Go back to your sandbox topic end edit it.
- Enter some text in TWikiShorthand: bold text, italic text, bold italic text, a bullet list, tables, paragraphs, etc. Hint: If you need help, click on the TextFormattingRules link located below the text box in edit mode.
- Preview and save the topic.
7. Use your browser to upload files as page attachments...
You can attach
any type of file to a topic - documents, images, programs, whatever - where they can be opened, viewed, or downloaded.
- Attaching files is just like including a file with an e-mail.
- Go back to your sandbox topic and click on the
[Attach] link at the top.
- Click
[Browse] to find a file on your PC that you'd like to attach; enter an optional comment; leave everything else unchecked.
- Click
[Upload file], then scroll to the end of the page to see the new attachment listing.
- Do this again - this time, upload a GIF, JPG or PNG image file.
- Check the
[Link:] box to Create a link to the attached file at the end of the topic. The image will show up at the bottom of the topic.
- To move the image, edit the topic and place the last line (containing
%ATTACHURL%) anywhere on the page.
- If you have a GIF, JPG or PNG image of yourself, your cat, your sprawling family estate...why not upload it now to personalize your account page TWikiGuest?
8. Get e-mail alerts whenever pages are changed...
WebNotify is a subscription service that automatically notifies you by e-mail when topics change in a WikiHealthCare web. This is a convenience service - for many people, checking e-mail is easier than checking the Web.
- If you're using the site to collaborate on a project, it's important to know when anyone on your team posts an update. If you're following a specific discussion, it's convenient to know when there's new input.
- Alerts are e-mailed as links to individual topics that've been changed in a set period: each day, every hour, whatever is configured for your system.
- It's strongly recommended that you try out the service by subscribing to each web that's relevant to you. You can subscribe and unsubscribe instantly, on a per topic basis by clicking on the
icon.
That's it! You're now equipped with all the WikiHealthCare essentials. You are ready to roll.
NOTE: When first using WikiHealthCare, it will probably seem strange to be able to change other people's postings - we're used to
separating individual messages, with e-mail, message boards, non-Wiki collaboration platforms.
Don't worry about it. You can't accidentally delete important stuff - you can always check previous versions, and copy-and-paste from them if you want to undo any changes. After a short while, wiki-style free-form communication becomes second-nature. You'll expect it everywhere!
Related Topics: UserDocumentationCategory