User:DBbar/sandbox


 * Disc Golf: The Book
 * My User Page
 * 1) first item
 * 2) draft 1 of DISC GOLF
 * 3) draft 1 of A ROUND OF DISC GOLF
 * 4) Using_Wikibooks

Group or Split
I'd love to get opinions on grouping vs splitting. Specifically, I want to dig into the Disc Golf wikibook, however I see two major "needs" for such a resource: (1) a picture-intensive walk-through of a players first round of the the sport providing the basics to get them on the course and having fun, and (2) a collection of topics with enough description so that (2a) a player can get a feel for what aspects of the sport exist and (2b) a player will have enough of a "big picture" understanding, and the terminology, to start asking good questions... from other players and from the web. A draft structure of a one book format is here: draft 1 of DISC GOLF. So, in general, how does one decide if grouping or splitting is most appropriate? Is that a negative to breaking off pieces of a larger book later? Any thoughts would be appreciated.

Playing around

 * Disc golf|Disc Golf: The Book

Grey Box Test
This is an indented sentence This is a second one. However this one is going to be long enough to wrap around and provide a test for what a wrapped sentence does in a grey box. This is not to say that it could do something else if the box color changes to something like orange, but that's a bridge we'll cross when we get there. Are these automatically put into a grey box?

Table of contents


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 * valign="top" width="33%"|
 * valign="top" width="33%"|

Introductory Material

 * /About/
 * /Introduction/

/Planning/

 * /Decision Making/
 * /Modeling/
 * /Data/
 * /Networks/
 * /Modes/
 * /Land Use Forecasting/
 * /Trip Generation/
 * /Destination Choice/
 * /Mode Choice/
 * /Route Choice/
 * /Evaluation/


 * valign="top" width="33%"|

/Transit/

 * /Transit Demand/
 * /Transit Operations and Capacity/
 * /Network Design and Frequency/
 * /Timetabling and Scheduling/

/Traffic/

 * /Queueing/
 * /Traffic Flow/
 * /Queueing and Traffic Flow/
 * /Shockwaves/
 * /Traffic Signals/
 * /Traffic Control Devices/
 * /Metering/
 * /Analogs/


 * valign="top" width="33%"|

Geometric Design

 * /Sight Distance/
 * /Grade/
 * /Earthwork/
 * /Horizontal Curves/
 * /Vertical Curves/

Conclusions

 * /Conclusions/
 * }

Related Wikibooks

 * Transportation Economics
 * Introduction
 * Pricing
 * Transportation Geography and Network Science

Useful Off-site Resources

 * NSF STREET: Simulating Transportation for Realistic Engineering Education and Training
 * Transportation Engineering Lab Manual
 * Pavement Interactive