This is a Guide to the Traversal of This Site
Aspects:
Tags:
Tags are most of the structure that this site has. At the top of each page will be a list of tags which either refer to the type of page(see later down) or the topic. They are all clickable and bring you to pages which hold everything in that tag!
Glossary:
Every page and tag on the site is automatically added to the
glossary . If you want to check for new pages or find orphan* pages this is where to go!.
*pages which are not linked to and do not link to
NavBar:
In:
The in links are the star of the show in this website and the main reason I wrote
jorg . By having in links it is possible to navigate not just to things which reference a page but pages which reference the one you are on! They are my favorite way to browse a site if they are available.
Out:
This is a list of all the pages that are linked to by this page. If you read them it can often give a hint as to what the page is all bout.
Tags:
List of tags that this page has.
Legend:
Just a quick reference to what the different styles of text on a page mean.
Helpful:
A link to the
glossary and to this
page!
Page Types:
Journal:
Journal pages are pages which are designed to be frequently updated with timestamped entries for the logging of something's progress.
Research:
Research pages are pages which are updated frequently with notes (often unorganized) for use on projects which are in progress. They also often have something at the top of the page which shows when they were last updated if they are formatted well enough to be read by other people.
Info:
Info pages are pages which were crafted with more care than other pages and have the duty of being as reliable as I can manage resources for some piece of information. They are by far the most polished pages.
Elements:
Links:
As can be seen in the legend, there are two types of links:
Local links lead to other pages
It is
highly encouraged that you click local links, That's how you get around the site!
External links go somewhere else
Either to a helpful resource or something I just think is neat, these are a lot more situational.
Comments:
Comments, which appear in a are small, spur of the moment thoughts which don't entirely fit in their places. They are also perfectly fine to ignore and don't really matter to anyone but me.
Footnotes:
These are like comments, but they add context to a piece of information as opposed to comments not necessarily fitting into the context. Feel free to read them, but they are not essential.