User:TimBorgNetzWerk/sandbox

Work in Progress:


 * Thesis Writing Guide
 * See Reading room/General
 * See also further down below in this sandbox.

This page here (User:TimBorgNetzWerk/sandbox) is an intermediate landing place for any information related to a BorgNetzWerk wikibook project.

Keywords

 * Caption above tables and below graphics
 * Caption above tables, code and ... | Caption below graphics
 * How do you cite edited and reconstructed graphics?
 * Use PDFs over images wherever possible: Zoomable, searchable text, ...

In which style should the book be writen?

Narrated by an unnamed author, and adressing the author.

Allow for guest editors to say "I made a mistake here that I ..."

Links
Try to use the short-links: Precision_and_recall = https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Precision_and_recall

Note, apparently, the visual editor does some of this automatically already. Particularly around links, this is sometimes weird: - https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Precision_and_recall

https://de.wikibooks.org/wiki/Hilfe:Links/_Interwiki-Links

Citations:

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Help:Footnotes#WP:NAMEDREFS

Use  to reuse the same reference.

Wiki-Structure
We need


 * 1) a landing page where new people can arrive and note their interest. This should also allow them to drop their bits of knowledge, inputs, interests, ... - in whatever way, unstructured as it may be
 * 2) Especially for reference material, interesting links like https://academia.stackexchange.com/ etc.
 * 3) A tool section / landing page, where you get send to if you click on any tool inside the book - like a glossary.
 * 4) Therin explain Tools like https://overleaf.com/, https://zotero.org/,  https://orkg.org/, https://code.visualstudio.com/ - but just in terms of "how do i get the most out of them for my thesis" ...
 * 5) A foundational section Methods and Measurements, e.g. what to do when you prepare / evaluate a survey, or validation in general. Keeping this really short, just to draw attention to what should be done. Extensive work can be linked to or created in addition.

Write the Wikibook itself in thesis style
We could write the whole book like a thesis:


 * 1) Introduction
 * 2) Motivation
 * 3) Goal
 * 4) Research Goals/Questions
 * 5) Structure
 * 6) Background
 * 7) Requirements
 * 8) Scientifc Method
 * 9) Tools
 * 10) Writing styles
 * 11) Citation
 * 12) Structuring the thesis
 * 13) Chapters
 * 14) Related Work
 * 15) References, other guides
 * 16) Approach Soft style break here. Technically, everyone should be satisfied with Background and Related work. The rest is for people interested in the project.
 * 17) Validation  How can we make sure this Book is high quality?
 * 18) Link to potential for feedback, addition, collaboration -
 * 19) request scientific evaluation,
 * 20) spread, ...
 * 21) Results
 * 22) Actual feedback, findings, reviews
 * 23) Potential for personal additions
 * 24) Discussion
 * 25) Reviewing the project and results
 * 26) Document internal discussions on a meta-layer
 * 27) Conclusion
 * 28) Future Work
 * 1) Future Work

This idea might be benefitial, but potentially, it could also break what the book is ment to be. In the end, most of why people will come here will be a sub-sub-chapter, and the layouting will be hurt because of it. Having those two things separate might - after all - be the better call.