Navigation:
UCSB Seal

Paul J. Atzberger

  • Department
    • Applied Mathematics
    • Employment/Positions
    • Event Calendar
    • People
      • Staff
      • Faculty
      • Visitors
    • Directions
    • UCSB Map
  • Research
    • Course Notes and Resources
    • Math Research Groups
      • Applied Math
      • Analysis
      • Partial Differential Equations
      • Geometry
      • Algebra
      • Topology
      • Number Theory
    • UCSB Research Groups
      • Kavli Institute (KITP Physics)
      • Materials Research (MRL)
      • California Nanosystems Institute (CNSI)
      • Computer Science and Engineering (CSE)
      • Center for Financial Mathematics and Statistics (CRFMS)
    • UCSB Math Preprint Server
    • Science Direct
    • Math Sci Net
    • LALN arXiv
    • CiteSeer IST
    • ISI Web of Knowledge
  • Graduate
    • Prospective Students
  • Undergraduate
    • Prospective Students

WikiWikiWeb is an "open-editing" system where the emphasis is on the authoring and collaboration of documents rather than the simple browsing or viewing of them. The name "wiki" is based on the Hawaiian term "wiki wiki", meaning "quick" or "super-fast".

The basic concept of a WikiWikiWeb (or "wiki") is that (almost) anyone can edit any page. While at first this sounds like a recipe for complete anarchy, the truth is that sites using this system have developed surprisingly complex and rich communities for online collaboration and communication. Yes, it's possible for someone to go and destroy everything on a page, but it doesn't seem to happen often. And, many systems (including this one) have built-in mechanisms to restore content that has been defaced or destroyed.

The point of the system is to simply make it as quick, easy and rewarding as possible to create or edit online content.

Using any standard Web browser, a person can edit (almost) any page on the system using relatively simple text formatting rules. Creating a link to a new or existing page simply involves putting the word or phrase that will be your link text inside [[double square brackets]] to reference and serve as a title for the target page. In the process of creating the link you're creating the new page, if it doesn't already exist. On some sites (depending on the configuration of PmWiki), a link can also be created by entering a WikiWord -- a word consisting of two or more capitalized words joined together.

It's not necessary to learn all of the formatting rules; others will often come in and reformat things for you. After all, anyone can edit! You can see some of the recent changes that others have posted to this site.

To learn more about adding pages to this Wiki site, see basic editing, then try editing pages in the WikiSandbox.

If you want to learn more about the WikiWikiWeb concept, try some of these Web sites:

  • Wiki:WikiWikiWeb -- The original WikiWikiWeb
  • Meatball:WhyWikiWorks -- how and why Wiki works
  • Meatball:SoftSecurity -- how open editing can result in good Web sites
  • Wiki on CommunityWiki
  • WikiFeatures -- for info on features in wikis and how to use them
  • Wikipedia:Wikipedia:Why_Wikipedia_is_so_great -- how and why the biggest wiki in the world made a comprehensive free-content encyclopedia
  • Wikivoyage:Wiki -- another introduction to wikis, on another exemplary site

If you want to learn more about PmWiki see:

  • Audiences   Patrick Michaud's comments regarding the "audiences" for which PmWiki was designed
  • DesignNotes   Some of the features and notes about PmWiki's design decisions
  • Documentation Index   PmWiki documentation index
  • PmWikiPhilosophy   This page describes some of the ideas that guide the design and implementation of PmWiki
  • Security   Resources for securing your PmWiki installation

Or, send email to Patrick Michaud at pmichaud@pobox.com.

This page may have a more recent version on pmwiki.org: PmWiki:WikiWikiWeb, and a talk page: PmWiki:WikiWikiWeb-Talk.

Edit | History | Print | Recent Changes | Edit Sidebar

Page last modified on June 19, 2017, at 09:04 pm


Contact Us