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How to Edit Halachipedia: Difference between revisions

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Halachipedia adopts the "Title case" for its style of capitalizing page and section titles. The rules of "Title case" are as follows:
Halachipedia adopts the "Title case" for its style of capitalizing page and section titles. The rules of "Title case" are as follows:
* Capitalize the first and last word in a title, regardless of part of speech
* Capitalize the first and last word in a title, regardless of part of speech
* Capitalize all nouns (baby, country, picture), pronouns (you, she, it), verbs (walk, think, dream), adjectives (sweet, large, perfect), adverbs (immediately, quietly), and subordinating conjunctions (as, because, although)
* Capitalize all nouns (baby, country, picture), pronouns (you, she, it, which), verbs (walk, think, dream), adjectives (sweet, large, perfect), adverbs (immediately, quietly), and subordinating conjunctions (as, because, although)
* Lowercase all articles (a, the), prepositions (to, at, in, with, on, during), and coordinating conjunctions (for, and, nor, but, or, yet, and so)
* Lowercase all articles (a, the), prepositions (to, at, in, with, on, during, into), and coordinating conjunctions (for, and, nor, but, or, yet, and so)
* Lowercase “to” as part of an infinitive.
* Lowercase “to” as part of an infinitive.
* "That" should be capitalized whether it is used as a pronoun (referring to a person, place, or thing, such as "''that'' is the halacha"), relative pronoun (beginning a subordinate clause that shares an argument with the main clause, such as "[[Melacha That Begins Before Shabbat]]"), or a subordinating conjunction (introducing clause about the subject, such as "the halacha is ''that'' it is permitted").
* "That" should be capitalized whether it is used as a pronoun (referring to a person, place, or thing, such as "''that'' is the halacha"), relative pronoun (beginning a subordinate clause that shares an argument with the main clause, such as "[[Melacha That Begins Before Shabbat]]"), or a subordinating conjunction (introducing clause about the subject, such as "the halacha is ''that'' it is permitted").