Template:Metadata: Difference between revisions
imported>Chris Day No edit summary |
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'''General article properties''' | '''General article properties''' | ||
:pagename = {{:{{BASEPAGENAME}}| | :pagename = {{:{{BASEPAGENAME}}|Metadata=pagename}} | ||
:dialect = {{:{{BASEPAGENAME}}| | :dialect = {{:{{BASEPAGENAME}}|Metadata=dialect}} | ||
'''Required for checklist''' | '''Required for checklist''' | ||
:abc = {{:{{BASEPAGENAME}}| | :abc = {{:{{BASEPAGENAME}}|Metadata=abc}} | ||
:cat1 = {{:{{BASEPAGENAME}}| | :cat1 = {{:{{BASEPAGENAME}}|Metadata=cat1}} | ||
:cat2 = {{:{{BASEPAGENAME}}| | :cat2 = {{:{{BASEPAGENAME}}|Metadata=cat2}} | ||
:cat3 = {{:{{BASEPAGENAME}}| | :cat3 = {{:{{BASEPAGENAME}}|Metadata=cat3}} | ||
:cat_check = {{:{{BASEPAGENAME}}| | :cat_check = {{:{{BASEPAGENAME}}|Metadata=cat_check}} | ||
:status = {{:{{BASEPAGENAME}}| | :status = {{:{{BASEPAGENAME}}|Metadata=status}} | ||
:underlinked = {{:{{BASEPAGENAME}}| | :underlinked = {{:{{BASEPAGENAME}}|Metadata=underlinked}} | ||
:cleanup = {{:{{BASEPAGENAME}}| | :cleanup = {{:{{BASEPAGENAME}}|Metadata=cleanup}} | ||
:by = {{:{{BASEPAGENAME}}| | :by = {{:{{BASEPAGENAME}}|Metadata=by}} | ||
'''Required for the ''{{tl|Approved}}'' template''' | '''Required for the ''{{tl|Approved}}'' template''' | ||
:The status parameter in the checklist (see above) of approved versions must be set to 0 (zero). | :The status parameter in the checklist (see above) of approved versions must be set to 0 (zero). | ||
::A editor = {{:{{BASEPAGENAME}}| | ::A editor = {{:{{BASEPAGENAME}}|Metadata=A editor}} | ||
::A editor2 = {{:{{BASEPAGENAME}}| | ::A editor2 = {{:{{BASEPAGENAME}}|Metadata=A editor2}} | ||
::A editor3 = {{:{{BASEPAGENAME}}| | ::A editor3 = {{:{{BASEPAGENAME}}|Metadata=A editor3}} | ||
'''Required for the ''{{tl|ToApprove}}'' template''' | '''Required for the ''{{tl|ToApprove}}'' template''' | ||
:article url = {{:{{BASEPAGENAME}}| | :article url = {{:{{BASEPAGENAME}}|Metadata=article url}} | ||
:subpage url = {{:{{BASEPAGENAME}}| | :subpage url = {{:{{BASEPAGENAME}}|Metadata=subpage url}} | ||
:cluster = {{:{{BASEPAGENAME}}| | :cluster = {{:{{BASEPAGENAME}}|Metadata=cluster}} | ||
:now = {{:{{BASEPAGENAME}}| | :now = {{:{{BASEPAGENAME}}|Metadata=now}} | ||
:ToA editor = {{:{{BASEPAGENAME}}| | :ToA editor = {{:{{BASEPAGENAME}}|Metadata=ToA editor}} | ||
:ToA editor2 = {{:{{BASEPAGENAME}}| | :ToA editor2 = {{:{{BASEPAGENAME}}|Metadata=ToA editor2}} | ||
:ToA editor3 = {{:{{BASEPAGENAME}}| | :ToA editor3 = {{:{{BASEPAGENAME}}|Metadata=ToA editor3}} | ||
:date = {{:{{BASEPAGENAME}}| | :date = {{:{{BASEPAGENAME}}|Metadata=date}} |
Revision as of 02:24, 16 August 2007
This is a central location for all information relating to the This is a central location for all information relating to the Template loop detected: Template:Metadata cluster. It is critical to keep this page updated since the {{subpages}} and related templates use this information for the placement of categories and header templates in the cluster.
General article properties
- pagename = The {{subpages}} template is designed to be used within article clusters and their related pages.
It will not function on Template pages.
Metadata means data about other data. Tt may include information about the acquisition or publication of the underlying data, or technical aspects like the format of the files, the amount of storage they require,
or of other properties of the data, and whether they are released under a license that permits reuse or not.
A typical example would be bibliographic metadata, in which key properties of formally published materials are collected — author, title, journal, issue, DOI, PubMed ID, PubMed Central ID or a summary of the content of the published item:
- Patil C, Siegel V (2009). "This revolution will be digitized: online tools for radical collaboration". Dis Model Mech 2 (5-6): 201-5. DOI:10.1242/dmm.003285. PMID 19407323. PMC PMC2675795. Research Blogging. [e]
- An overview of science 2.0 from the perspective of the scientists and tools involved. Abstract:
What if everyone in the world were in your lab – a 'hive mind' of sorts, but composed of countless creative intellects rather than mindless worker ants, and one in which resources, reagents and effort could be shared, along with ideas, in a manner not dictated by institutional and geographical constraints?
Other common types of metadata include access codes to database entries, e.g. the access number for a gene listed in Gene Bank.
Citizendium article metadata
Citizendium itself keeps metadata about each article in a special text file that can be parsed. The article metadata is used to display an article's subpages as gray tabs across the top of each article, and to classify the articles into Workgroups (topic "categories") to help with managing them.
- dialect = The {{subpages}} template is designed to be used within article clusters and their related pages.
It will not function on Template pages.
Metadata means data about other data. Tt may include information about the acquisition or publication of the underlying data, or technical aspects like the format of the files, the amount of storage they require,
or of other properties of the data, and whether they are released under a license that permits reuse or not.
A typical example would be bibliographic metadata, in which key properties of formally published materials are collected — author, title, journal, issue, DOI, PubMed ID, PubMed Central ID or a summary of the content of the published item:
- Patil C, Siegel V (2009). "This revolution will be digitized: online tools for radical collaboration". Dis Model Mech 2 (5-6): 201-5. DOI:10.1242/dmm.003285. PMID 19407323. PMC PMC2675795. Research Blogging. [e]
- An overview of science 2.0 from the perspective of the scientists and tools involved. Abstract:
What if everyone in the world were in your lab – a 'hive mind' of sorts, but composed of countless creative intellects rather than mindless worker ants, and one in which resources, reagents and effort could be shared, along with ideas, in a manner not dictated by institutional and geographical constraints?
Other common types of metadata include access codes to database entries, e.g. the access number for a gene listed in Gene Bank.
Citizendium article metadata
Citizendium itself keeps metadata about each article in a special text file that can be parsed. The article metadata is used to display an article's subpages as gray tabs across the top of each article, and to classify the articles into Workgroups (topic "categories") to help with managing them.
Required for checklist
- abc = The {{subpages}} template is designed to be used within article clusters and their related pages.
It will not function on Template pages.
Metadata means data about other data. Tt may include information about the acquisition or publication of the underlying data, or technical aspects like the format of the files, the amount of storage they require,
or of other properties of the data, and whether they are released under a license that permits reuse or not.
A typical example would be bibliographic metadata, in which key properties of formally published materials are collected — author, title, journal, issue, DOI, PubMed ID, PubMed Central ID or a summary of the content of the published item:
- Patil C, Siegel V (2009). "This revolution will be digitized: online tools for radical collaboration". Dis Model Mech 2 (5-6): 201-5. DOI:10.1242/dmm.003285. PMID 19407323. PMC PMC2675795. Research Blogging. [e]
- An overview of science 2.0 from the perspective of the scientists and tools involved. Abstract:
What if everyone in the world were in your lab – a 'hive mind' of sorts, but composed of countless creative intellects rather than mindless worker ants, and one in which resources, reagents and effort could be shared, along with ideas, in a manner not dictated by institutional and geographical constraints?
Other common types of metadata include access codes to database entries, e.g. the access number for a gene listed in Gene Bank.
Citizendium article metadata
Citizendium itself keeps metadata about each article in a special text file that can be parsed. The article metadata is used to display an article's subpages as gray tabs across the top of each article, and to classify the articles into Workgroups (topic "categories") to help with managing them.
- cat1 = The {{subpages}} template is designed to be used within article clusters and their related pages.
It will not function on Template pages.
Metadata means data about other data. Tt may include information about the acquisition or publication of the underlying data, or technical aspects like the format of the files, the amount of storage they require,
or of other properties of the data, and whether they are released under a license that permits reuse or not.
A typical example would be bibliographic metadata, in which key properties of formally published materials are collected — author, title, journal, issue, DOI, PubMed ID, PubMed Central ID or a summary of the content of the published item:
- Patil C, Siegel V (2009). "This revolution will be digitized: online tools for radical collaboration". Dis Model Mech 2 (5-6): 201-5. DOI:10.1242/dmm.003285. PMID 19407323. PMC PMC2675795. Research Blogging. [e]
- An overview of science 2.0 from the perspective of the scientists and tools involved. Abstract:
What if everyone in the world were in your lab – a 'hive mind' of sorts, but composed of countless creative intellects rather than mindless worker ants, and one in which resources, reagents and effort could be shared, along with ideas, in a manner not dictated by institutional and geographical constraints?
Other common types of metadata include access codes to database entries, e.g. the access number for a gene listed in Gene Bank.
Citizendium article metadata
Citizendium itself keeps metadata about each article in a special text file that can be parsed. The article metadata is used to display an article's subpages as gray tabs across the top of each article, and to classify the articles into Workgroups (topic "categories") to help with managing them.
- cat2 = The {{subpages}} template is designed to be used within article clusters and their related pages.
It will not function on Template pages.
Metadata means data about other data. Tt may include information about the acquisition or publication of the underlying data, or technical aspects like the format of the files, the amount of storage they require,
or of other properties of the data, and whether they are released under a license that permits reuse or not.
A typical example would be bibliographic metadata, in which key properties of formally published materials are collected — author, title, journal, issue, DOI, PubMed ID, PubMed Central ID or a summary of the content of the published item:
- Patil C, Siegel V (2009). "This revolution will be digitized: online tools for radical collaboration". Dis Model Mech 2 (5-6): 201-5. DOI:10.1242/dmm.003285. PMID 19407323. PMC PMC2675795. Research Blogging. [e]
- An overview of science 2.0 from the perspective of the scientists and tools involved. Abstract:
What if everyone in the world were in your lab – a 'hive mind' of sorts, but composed of countless creative intellects rather than mindless worker ants, and one in which resources, reagents and effort could be shared, along with ideas, in a manner not dictated by institutional and geographical constraints?
Other common types of metadata include access codes to database entries, e.g. the access number for a gene listed in Gene Bank.
Citizendium article metadata
Citizendium itself keeps metadata about each article in a special text file that can be parsed. The article metadata is used to display an article's subpages as gray tabs across the top of each article, and to classify the articles into Workgroups (topic "categories") to help with managing them.
- cat3 = The {{subpages}} template is designed to be used within article clusters and their related pages.
It will not function on Template pages.
Metadata means data about other data. Tt may include information about the acquisition or publication of the underlying data, or technical aspects like the format of the files, the amount of storage they require,
or of other properties of the data, and whether they are released under a license that permits reuse or not.
A typical example would be bibliographic metadata, in which key properties of formally published materials are collected — author, title, journal, issue, DOI, PubMed ID, PubMed Central ID or a summary of the content of the published item:
- Patil C, Siegel V (2009). "This revolution will be digitized: online tools for radical collaboration". Dis Model Mech 2 (5-6): 201-5. DOI:10.1242/dmm.003285. PMID 19407323. PMC PMC2675795. Research Blogging. [e]
- An overview of science 2.0 from the perspective of the scientists and tools involved. Abstract:
What if everyone in the world were in your lab – a 'hive mind' of sorts, but composed of countless creative intellects rather than mindless worker ants, and one in which resources, reagents and effort could be shared, along with ideas, in a manner not dictated by institutional and geographical constraints?
Other common types of metadata include access codes to database entries, e.g. the access number for a gene listed in Gene Bank.
Citizendium article metadata
Citizendium itself keeps metadata about each article in a special text file that can be parsed. The article metadata is used to display an article's subpages as gray tabs across the top of each article, and to classify the articles into Workgroups (topic "categories") to help with managing them.
- cat_check = The {{subpages}} template is designed to be used within article clusters and their related pages.
It will not function on Template pages.
Metadata means data about other data. Tt may include information about the acquisition or publication of the underlying data, or technical aspects like the format of the files, the amount of storage they require,
or of other properties of the data, and whether they are released under a license that permits reuse or not.
A typical example would be bibliographic metadata, in which key properties of formally published materials are collected — author, title, journal, issue, DOI, PubMed ID, PubMed Central ID or a summary of the content of the published item:
- Patil C, Siegel V (2009). "This revolution will be digitized: online tools for radical collaboration". Dis Model Mech 2 (5-6): 201-5. DOI:10.1242/dmm.003285. PMID 19407323. PMC PMC2675795. Research Blogging. [e]
- An overview of science 2.0 from the perspective of the scientists and tools involved. Abstract:
What if everyone in the world were in your lab – a 'hive mind' of sorts, but composed of countless creative intellects rather than mindless worker ants, and one in which resources, reagents and effort could be shared, along with ideas, in a manner not dictated by institutional and geographical constraints?
Other common types of metadata include access codes to database entries, e.g. the access number for a gene listed in Gene Bank.
Citizendium article metadata
Citizendium itself keeps metadata about each article in a special text file that can be parsed. The article metadata is used to display an article's subpages as gray tabs across the top of each article, and to classify the articles into Workgroups (topic "categories") to help with managing them.
- status = The {{subpages}} template is designed to be used within article clusters and their related pages.
It will not function on Template pages.
Metadata means data about other data. Tt may include information about the acquisition or publication of the underlying data, or technical aspects like the format of the files, the amount of storage they require,
or of other properties of the data, and whether they are released under a license that permits reuse or not.
A typical example would be bibliographic metadata, in which key properties of formally published materials are collected — author, title, journal, issue, DOI, PubMed ID, PubMed Central ID or a summary of the content of the published item:
- Patil C, Siegel V (2009). "This revolution will be digitized: online tools for radical collaboration". Dis Model Mech 2 (5-6): 201-5. DOI:10.1242/dmm.003285. PMID 19407323. PMC PMC2675795. Research Blogging. [e]
- An overview of science 2.0 from the perspective of the scientists and tools involved. Abstract:
What if everyone in the world were in your lab – a 'hive mind' of sorts, but composed of countless creative intellects rather than mindless worker ants, and one in which resources, reagents and effort could be shared, along with ideas, in a manner not dictated by institutional and geographical constraints?
Other common types of metadata include access codes to database entries, e.g. the access number for a gene listed in Gene Bank.
Citizendium article metadata
Citizendium itself keeps metadata about each article in a special text file that can be parsed. The article metadata is used to display an article's subpages as gray tabs across the top of each article, and to classify the articles into Workgroups (topic "categories") to help with managing them.
- underlinked = The {{subpages}} template is designed to be used within article clusters and their related pages.
It will not function on Template pages.
Metadata means data about other data. Tt may include information about the acquisition or publication of the underlying data, or technical aspects like the format of the files, the amount of storage they require,
or of other properties of the data, and whether they are released under a license that permits reuse or not.
A typical example would be bibliographic metadata, in which key properties of formally published materials are collected — author, title, journal, issue, DOI, PubMed ID, PubMed Central ID or a summary of the content of the published item:
- Patil C, Siegel V (2009). "This revolution will be digitized: online tools for radical collaboration". Dis Model Mech 2 (5-6): 201-5. DOI:10.1242/dmm.003285. PMID 19407323. PMC PMC2675795. Research Blogging. [e]
- An overview of science 2.0 from the perspective of the scientists and tools involved. Abstract:
What if everyone in the world were in your lab – a 'hive mind' of sorts, but composed of countless creative intellects rather than mindless worker ants, and one in which resources, reagents and effort could be shared, along with ideas, in a manner not dictated by institutional and geographical constraints?
Other common types of metadata include access codes to database entries, e.g. the access number for a gene listed in Gene Bank.
Citizendium article metadata
Citizendium itself keeps metadata about each article in a special text file that can be parsed. The article metadata is used to display an article's subpages as gray tabs across the top of each article, and to classify the articles into Workgroups (topic "categories") to help with managing them.
- cleanup = The {{subpages}} template is designed to be used within article clusters and their related pages.
It will not function on Template pages.
Metadata means data about other data. Tt may include information about the acquisition or publication of the underlying data, or technical aspects like the format of the files, the amount of storage they require,
or of other properties of the data, and whether they are released under a license that permits reuse or not.
A typical example would be bibliographic metadata, in which key properties of formally published materials are collected — author, title, journal, issue, DOI, PubMed ID, PubMed Central ID or a summary of the content of the published item:
- Patil C, Siegel V (2009). "This revolution will be digitized: online tools for radical collaboration". Dis Model Mech 2 (5-6): 201-5. DOI:10.1242/dmm.003285. PMID 19407323. PMC PMC2675795. Research Blogging. [e]
- An overview of science 2.0 from the perspective of the scientists and tools involved. Abstract:
What if everyone in the world were in your lab – a 'hive mind' of sorts, but composed of countless creative intellects rather than mindless worker ants, and one in which resources, reagents and effort could be shared, along with ideas, in a manner not dictated by institutional and geographical constraints?
Other common types of metadata include access codes to database entries, e.g. the access number for a gene listed in Gene Bank.
Citizendium article metadata
Citizendium itself keeps metadata about each article in a special text file that can be parsed. The article metadata is used to display an article's subpages as gray tabs across the top of each article, and to classify the articles into Workgroups (topic "categories") to help with managing them.
- by = The {{subpages}} template is designed to be used within article clusters and their related pages.
It will not function on Template pages.
Metadata means data about other data. Tt may include information about the acquisition or publication of the underlying data, or technical aspects like the format of the files, the amount of storage they require,
or of other properties of the data, and whether they are released under a license that permits reuse or not.
A typical example would be bibliographic metadata, in which key properties of formally published materials are collected — author, title, journal, issue, DOI, PubMed ID, PubMed Central ID or a summary of the content of the published item:
- Patil C, Siegel V (2009). "This revolution will be digitized: online tools for radical collaboration". Dis Model Mech 2 (5-6): 201-5. DOI:10.1242/dmm.003285. PMID 19407323. PMC PMC2675795. Research Blogging. [e]
- An overview of science 2.0 from the perspective of the scientists and tools involved. Abstract:
What if everyone in the world were in your lab – a 'hive mind' of sorts, but composed of countless creative intellects rather than mindless worker ants, and one in which resources, reagents and effort could be shared, along with ideas, in a manner not dictated by institutional and geographical constraints?
Other common types of metadata include access codes to database entries, e.g. the access number for a gene listed in Gene Bank.
Citizendium article metadata
Citizendium itself keeps metadata about each article in a special text file that can be parsed. The article metadata is used to display an article's subpages as gray tabs across the top of each article, and to classify the articles into Workgroups (topic "categories") to help with managing them.
Required for the {{Approved}} template
- The status parameter in the checklist (see above) of approved versions must be set to 0 (zero).
- A editor = The {{subpages}} template is designed to be used within article clusters and their related pages.
It will not function on Template pages.
- A editor = The {{subpages}} template is designed to be used within article clusters and their related pages.
Metadata means data about other data. Tt may include information about the acquisition or publication of the underlying data, or technical aspects like the format of the files, the amount of storage they require,
or of other properties of the data, and whether they are released under a license that permits reuse or not.
A typical example would be bibliographic metadata, in which key properties of formally published materials are collected — author, title, journal, issue, DOI, PubMed ID, PubMed Central ID or a summary of the content of the published item:
- Patil C, Siegel V (2009). "This revolution will be digitized: online tools for radical collaboration". Dis Model Mech 2 (5-6): 201-5. DOI:10.1242/dmm.003285. PMID 19407323. PMC PMC2675795. Research Blogging. [e]
- An overview of science 2.0 from the perspective of the scientists and tools involved. Abstract:
What if everyone in the world were in your lab – a 'hive mind' of sorts, but composed of countless creative intellects rather than mindless worker ants, and one in which resources, reagents and effort could be shared, along with ideas, in a manner not dictated by institutional and geographical constraints?
Other common types of metadata include access codes to database entries, e.g. the access number for a gene listed in Gene Bank.
Citizendium article metadata
Citizendium itself keeps metadata about each article in a special text file that can be parsed. The article metadata is used to display an article's subpages as gray tabs across the top of each article, and to classify the articles into Workgroups (topic "categories") to help with managing them.
- A editor2 = The {{subpages}} template is designed to be used within article clusters and their related pages.
It will not function on Template pages.
- A editor2 = The {{subpages}} template is designed to be used within article clusters and their related pages.
Metadata means data about other data. Tt may include information about the acquisition or publication of the underlying data, or technical aspects like the format of the files, the amount of storage they require,
or of other properties of the data, and whether they are released under a license that permits reuse or not.
A typical example would be bibliographic metadata, in which key properties of formally published materials are collected — author, title, journal, issue, DOI, PubMed ID, PubMed Central ID or a summary of the content of the published item:
- Patil C, Siegel V (2009). "This revolution will be digitized: online tools for radical collaboration". Dis Model Mech 2 (5-6): 201-5. DOI:10.1242/dmm.003285. PMID 19407323. PMC PMC2675795. Research Blogging. [e]
- An overview of science 2.0 from the perspective of the scientists and tools involved. Abstract:
What if everyone in the world were in your lab – a 'hive mind' of sorts, but composed of countless creative intellects rather than mindless worker ants, and one in which resources, reagents and effort could be shared, along with ideas, in a manner not dictated by institutional and geographical constraints?
Other common types of metadata include access codes to database entries, e.g. the access number for a gene listed in Gene Bank.
Citizendium article metadata
Citizendium itself keeps metadata about each article in a special text file that can be parsed. The article metadata is used to display an article's subpages as gray tabs across the top of each article, and to classify the articles into Workgroups (topic "categories") to help with managing them.
- A editor3 = The {{subpages}} template is designed to be used within article clusters and their related pages.
It will not function on Template pages.
- A editor3 = The {{subpages}} template is designed to be used within article clusters and their related pages.
Metadata means data about other data. Tt may include information about the acquisition or publication of the underlying data, or technical aspects like the format of the files, the amount of storage they require,
or of other properties of the data, and whether they are released under a license that permits reuse or not.
A typical example would be bibliographic metadata, in which key properties of formally published materials are collected — author, title, journal, issue, DOI, PubMed ID, PubMed Central ID or a summary of the content of the published item:
- Patil C, Siegel V (2009). "This revolution will be digitized: online tools for radical collaboration". Dis Model Mech 2 (5-6): 201-5. DOI:10.1242/dmm.003285. PMID 19407323. PMC PMC2675795. Research Blogging. [e]
- An overview of science 2.0 from the perspective of the scientists and tools involved. Abstract:
What if everyone in the world were in your lab – a 'hive mind' of sorts, but composed of countless creative intellects rather than mindless worker ants, and one in which resources, reagents and effort could be shared, along with ideas, in a manner not dictated by institutional and geographical constraints?
Other common types of metadata include access codes to database entries, e.g. the access number for a gene listed in Gene Bank.
Citizendium article metadata
Citizendium itself keeps metadata about each article in a special text file that can be parsed. The article metadata is used to display an article's subpages as gray tabs across the top of each article, and to classify the articles into Workgroups (topic "categories") to help with managing them.
Required for the {{ToApprove}} template
- article url = The {{subpages}} template is designed to be used within article clusters and their related pages.
It will not function on Template pages.
Metadata means data about other data. Tt may include information about the acquisition or publication of the underlying data, or technical aspects like the format of the files, the amount of storage they require,
or of other properties of the data, and whether they are released under a license that permits reuse or not.
A typical example would be bibliographic metadata, in which key properties of formally published materials are collected — author, title, journal, issue, DOI, PubMed ID, PubMed Central ID or a summary of the content of the published item:
- Patil C, Siegel V (2009). "This revolution will be digitized: online tools for radical collaboration". Dis Model Mech 2 (5-6): 201-5. DOI:10.1242/dmm.003285. PMID 19407323. PMC PMC2675795. Research Blogging. [e]
- An overview of science 2.0 from the perspective of the scientists and tools involved. Abstract:
What if everyone in the world were in your lab – a 'hive mind' of sorts, but composed of countless creative intellects rather than mindless worker ants, and one in which resources, reagents and effort could be shared, along with ideas, in a manner not dictated by institutional and geographical constraints?
Other common types of metadata include access codes to database entries, e.g. the access number for a gene listed in Gene Bank.
Citizendium article metadata
Citizendium itself keeps metadata about each article in a special text file that can be parsed. The article metadata is used to display an article's subpages as gray tabs across the top of each article, and to classify the articles into Workgroups (topic "categories") to help with managing them.
- subpage url = The {{subpages}} template is designed to be used within article clusters and their related pages.
It will not function on Template pages.
Metadata means data about other data. Tt may include information about the acquisition or publication of the underlying data, or technical aspects like the format of the files, the amount of storage they require,
or of other properties of the data, and whether they are released under a license that permits reuse or not.
A typical example would be bibliographic metadata, in which key properties of formally published materials are collected — author, title, journal, issue, DOI, PubMed ID, PubMed Central ID or a summary of the content of the published item:
- Patil C, Siegel V (2009). "This revolution will be digitized: online tools for radical collaboration". Dis Model Mech 2 (5-6): 201-5. DOI:10.1242/dmm.003285. PMID 19407323. PMC PMC2675795. Research Blogging. [e]
- An overview of science 2.0 from the perspective of the scientists and tools involved. Abstract:
What if everyone in the world were in your lab – a 'hive mind' of sorts, but composed of countless creative intellects rather than mindless worker ants, and one in which resources, reagents and effort could be shared, along with ideas, in a manner not dictated by institutional and geographical constraints?
Other common types of metadata include access codes to database entries, e.g. the access number for a gene listed in Gene Bank.
Citizendium article metadata
Citizendium itself keeps metadata about each article in a special text file that can be parsed. The article metadata is used to display an article's subpages as gray tabs across the top of each article, and to classify the articles into Workgroups (topic "categories") to help with managing them.
- cluster = The {{subpages}} template is designed to be used within article clusters and their related pages.
It will not function on Template pages.
Metadata means data about other data. Tt may include information about the acquisition or publication of the underlying data, or technical aspects like the format of the files, the amount of storage they require,
or of other properties of the data, and whether they are released under a license that permits reuse or not.
A typical example would be bibliographic metadata, in which key properties of formally published materials are collected — author, title, journal, issue, DOI, PubMed ID, PubMed Central ID or a summary of the content of the published item:
- Patil C, Siegel V (2009). "This revolution will be digitized: online tools for radical collaboration". Dis Model Mech 2 (5-6): 201-5. DOI:10.1242/dmm.003285. PMID 19407323. PMC PMC2675795. Research Blogging. [e]
- An overview of science 2.0 from the perspective of the scientists and tools involved. Abstract:
What if everyone in the world were in your lab – a 'hive mind' of sorts, but composed of countless creative intellects rather than mindless worker ants, and one in which resources, reagents and effort could be shared, along with ideas, in a manner not dictated by institutional and geographical constraints?
Other common types of metadata include access codes to database entries, e.g. the access number for a gene listed in Gene Bank.
Citizendium article metadata
Citizendium itself keeps metadata about each article in a special text file that can be parsed. The article metadata is used to display an article's subpages as gray tabs across the top of each article, and to classify the articles into Workgroups (topic "categories") to help with managing them.
- now = The {{subpages}} template is designed to be used within article clusters and their related pages.
It will not function on Template pages.
Metadata means data about other data. Tt may include information about the acquisition or publication of the underlying data, or technical aspects like the format of the files, the amount of storage they require,
or of other properties of the data, and whether they are released under a license that permits reuse or not.
A typical example would be bibliographic metadata, in which key properties of formally published materials are collected — author, title, journal, issue, DOI, PubMed ID, PubMed Central ID or a summary of the content of the published item:
- Patil C, Siegel V (2009). "This revolution will be digitized: online tools for radical collaboration". Dis Model Mech 2 (5-6): 201-5. DOI:10.1242/dmm.003285. PMID 19407323. PMC PMC2675795. Research Blogging. [e]
- An overview of science 2.0 from the perspective of the scientists and tools involved. Abstract:
What if everyone in the world were in your lab – a 'hive mind' of sorts, but composed of countless creative intellects rather than mindless worker ants, and one in which resources, reagents and effort could be shared, along with ideas, in a manner not dictated by institutional and geographical constraints?
Other common types of metadata include access codes to database entries, e.g. the access number for a gene listed in Gene Bank.
Citizendium article metadata
Citizendium itself keeps metadata about each article in a special text file that can be parsed. The article metadata is used to display an article's subpages as gray tabs across the top of each article, and to classify the articles into Workgroups (topic "categories") to help with managing them.
- ToA editor = The {{subpages}} template is designed to be used within article clusters and their related pages.
It will not function on Template pages.
Metadata means data about other data. Tt may include information about the acquisition or publication of the underlying data, or technical aspects like the format of the files, the amount of storage they require,
or of other properties of the data, and whether they are released under a license that permits reuse or not.
A typical example would be bibliographic metadata, in which key properties of formally published materials are collected — author, title, journal, issue, DOI, PubMed ID, PubMed Central ID or a summary of the content of the published item:
- Patil C, Siegel V (2009). "This revolution will be digitized: online tools for radical collaboration". Dis Model Mech 2 (5-6): 201-5. DOI:10.1242/dmm.003285. PMID 19407323. PMC PMC2675795. Research Blogging. [e]
- An overview of science 2.0 from the perspective of the scientists and tools involved. Abstract:
What if everyone in the world were in your lab – a 'hive mind' of sorts, but composed of countless creative intellects rather than mindless worker ants, and one in which resources, reagents and effort could be shared, along with ideas, in a manner not dictated by institutional and geographical constraints?
Other common types of metadata include access codes to database entries, e.g. the access number for a gene listed in Gene Bank.
Citizendium article metadata
Citizendium itself keeps metadata about each article in a special text file that can be parsed. The article metadata is used to display an article's subpages as gray tabs across the top of each article, and to classify the articles into Workgroups (topic "categories") to help with managing them.
- ToA editor2 = The {{subpages}} template is designed to be used within article clusters and their related pages.
It will not function on Template pages.
Metadata means data about other data. Tt may include information about the acquisition or publication of the underlying data, or technical aspects like the format of the files, the amount of storage they require,
or of other properties of the data, and whether they are released under a license that permits reuse or not.
A typical example would be bibliographic metadata, in which key properties of formally published materials are collected — author, title, journal, issue, DOI, PubMed ID, PubMed Central ID or a summary of the content of the published item:
- Patil C, Siegel V (2009). "This revolution will be digitized: online tools for radical collaboration". Dis Model Mech 2 (5-6): 201-5. DOI:10.1242/dmm.003285. PMID 19407323. PMC PMC2675795. Research Blogging. [e]
- An overview of science 2.0 from the perspective of the scientists and tools involved. Abstract:
What if everyone in the world were in your lab – a 'hive mind' of sorts, but composed of countless creative intellects rather than mindless worker ants, and one in which resources, reagents and effort could be shared, along with ideas, in a manner not dictated by institutional and geographical constraints?
Other common types of metadata include access codes to database entries, e.g. the access number for a gene listed in Gene Bank.
Citizendium article metadata
Citizendium itself keeps metadata about each article in a special text file that can be parsed. The article metadata is used to display an article's subpages as gray tabs across the top of each article, and to classify the articles into Workgroups (topic "categories") to help with managing them.
- ToA editor3 = The {{subpages}} template is designed to be used within article clusters and their related pages.
It will not function on Template pages.
Metadata means data about other data. Tt may include information about the acquisition or publication of the underlying data, or technical aspects like the format of the files, the amount of storage they require,
or of other properties of the data, and whether they are released under a license that permits reuse or not.
A typical example would be bibliographic metadata, in which key properties of formally published materials are collected — author, title, journal, issue, DOI, PubMed ID, PubMed Central ID or a summary of the content of the published item:
- Patil C, Siegel V (2009). "This revolution will be digitized: online tools for radical collaboration". Dis Model Mech 2 (5-6): 201-5. DOI:10.1242/dmm.003285. PMID 19407323. PMC PMC2675795. Research Blogging. [e]
- An overview of science 2.0 from the perspective of the scientists and tools involved. Abstract:
What if everyone in the world were in your lab – a 'hive mind' of sorts, but composed of countless creative intellects rather than mindless worker ants, and one in which resources, reagents and effort could be shared, along with ideas, in a manner not dictated by institutional and geographical constraints?
Other common types of metadata include access codes to database entries, e.g. the access number for a gene listed in Gene Bank.
Citizendium article metadata
Citizendium itself keeps metadata about each article in a special text file that can be parsed. The article metadata is used to display an article's subpages as gray tabs across the top of each article, and to classify the articles into Workgroups (topic "categories") to help with managing them.
- date = The {{subpages}} template is designed to be used within article clusters and their related pages.
It will not function on Template pages.
Metadata means data about other data. Tt may include information about the acquisition or publication of the underlying data, or technical aspects like the format of the files, the amount of storage they require,
or of other properties of the data, and whether they are released under a license that permits reuse or not.
A typical example would be bibliographic metadata, in which key properties of formally published materials are collected — author, title, journal, issue, DOI, PubMed ID, PubMed Central ID or a summary of the content of the published item:
- Patil C, Siegel V (2009). "This revolution will be digitized: online tools for radical collaboration". Dis Model Mech 2 (5-6): 201-5. DOI:10.1242/dmm.003285. PMID 19407323. PMC PMC2675795. Research Blogging. [e]
- An overview of science 2.0 from the perspective of the scientists and tools involved. Abstract:
What if everyone in the world were in your lab – a 'hive mind' of sorts, but composed of countless creative intellects rather than mindless worker ants, and one in which resources, reagents and effort could be shared, along with ideas, in a manner not dictated by institutional and geographical constraints?
Other common types of metadata include access codes to database entries, e.g. the access number for a gene listed in Gene Bank.
Citizendium article metadata
Citizendium itself keeps metadata about each article in a special text file that can be parsed. The article metadata is used to display an article's subpages as gray tabs across the top of each article, and to classify the articles into Workgroups (topic "categories") to help with managing them. cluster. It is critical to keep this page updated since the {{subpages}} and related templates use this information for the placement of categories and header templates in the cluster.
General article properties
- pagename = The {{subpages}} template is designed to be used within article clusters and their related pages.
It will not function on Template pages.
Metadata means data about other data. Tt may include information about the acquisition or publication of the underlying data, or technical aspects like the format of the files, the amount of storage they require,
or of other properties of the data, and whether they are released under a license that permits reuse or not.
A typical example would be bibliographic metadata, in which key properties of formally published materials are collected — author, title, journal, issue, DOI, PubMed ID, PubMed Central ID or a summary of the content of the published item:
- Patil C, Siegel V (2009). "This revolution will be digitized: online tools for radical collaboration". Dis Model Mech 2 (5-6): 201-5. DOI:10.1242/dmm.003285. PMID 19407323. PMC PMC2675795. Research Blogging. [e]
- An overview of science 2.0 from the perspective of the scientists and tools involved. Abstract:
What if everyone in the world were in your lab – a 'hive mind' of sorts, but composed of countless creative intellects rather than mindless worker ants, and one in which resources, reagents and effort could be shared, along with ideas, in a manner not dictated by institutional and geographical constraints?
Other common types of metadata include access codes to database entries, e.g. the access number for a gene listed in Gene Bank.
Citizendium article metadata
Citizendium itself keeps metadata about each article in a special text file that can be parsed. The article metadata is used to display an article's subpages as gray tabs across the top of each article, and to classify the articles into Workgroups (topic "categories") to help with managing them.
- dialect = The {{subpages}} template is designed to be used within article clusters and their related pages.
It will not function on Template pages.
Metadata means data about other data. Tt may include information about the acquisition or publication of the underlying data, or technical aspects like the format of the files, the amount of storage they require,
or of other properties of the data, and whether they are released under a license that permits reuse or not.
A typical example would be bibliographic metadata, in which key properties of formally published materials are collected — author, title, journal, issue, DOI, PubMed ID, PubMed Central ID or a summary of the content of the published item:
- Patil C, Siegel V (2009). "This revolution will be digitized: online tools for radical collaboration". Dis Model Mech 2 (5-6): 201-5. DOI:10.1242/dmm.003285. PMID 19407323. PMC PMC2675795. Research Blogging. [e]
- An overview of science 2.0 from the perspective of the scientists and tools involved. Abstract:
What if everyone in the world were in your lab – a 'hive mind' of sorts, but composed of countless creative intellects rather than mindless worker ants, and one in which resources, reagents and effort could be shared, along with ideas, in a manner not dictated by institutional and geographical constraints?
Other common types of metadata include access codes to database entries, e.g. the access number for a gene listed in Gene Bank.
Citizendium article metadata
Citizendium itself keeps metadata about each article in a special text file that can be parsed. The article metadata is used to display an article's subpages as gray tabs across the top of each article, and to classify the articles into Workgroups (topic "categories") to help with managing them.
Required for checklist
- abc = The {{subpages}} template is designed to be used within article clusters and their related pages.
It will not function on Template pages.
Metadata means data about other data. Tt may include information about the acquisition or publication of the underlying data, or technical aspects like the format of the files, the amount of storage they require,
or of other properties of the data, and whether they are released under a license that permits reuse or not.
A typical example would be bibliographic metadata, in which key properties of formally published materials are collected — author, title, journal, issue, DOI, PubMed ID, PubMed Central ID or a summary of the content of the published item:
- Patil C, Siegel V (2009). "This revolution will be digitized: online tools for radical collaboration". Dis Model Mech 2 (5-6): 201-5. DOI:10.1242/dmm.003285. PMID 19407323. PMC PMC2675795. Research Blogging. [e]
- An overview of science 2.0 from the perspective of the scientists and tools involved. Abstract:
What if everyone in the world were in your lab – a 'hive mind' of sorts, but composed of countless creative intellects rather than mindless worker ants, and one in which resources, reagents and effort could be shared, along with ideas, in a manner not dictated by institutional and geographical constraints?
Other common types of metadata include access codes to database entries, e.g. the access number for a gene listed in Gene Bank.
Citizendium article metadata
Citizendium itself keeps metadata about each article in a special text file that can be parsed. The article metadata is used to display an article's subpages as gray tabs across the top of each article, and to classify the articles into Workgroups (topic "categories") to help with managing them.
- cat1 = The {{subpages}} template is designed to be used within article clusters and their related pages.
It will not function on Template pages.
Metadata means data about other data. Tt may include information about the acquisition or publication of the underlying data, or technical aspects like the format of the files, the amount of storage they require,
or of other properties of the data, and whether they are released under a license that permits reuse or not.
A typical example would be bibliographic metadata, in which key properties of formally published materials are collected — author, title, journal, issue, DOI, PubMed ID, PubMed Central ID or a summary of the content of the published item:
- Patil C, Siegel V (2009). "This revolution will be digitized: online tools for radical collaboration". Dis Model Mech 2 (5-6): 201-5. DOI:10.1242/dmm.003285. PMID 19407323. PMC PMC2675795. Research Blogging. [e]
- An overview of science 2.0 from the perspective of the scientists and tools involved. Abstract:
What if everyone in the world were in your lab – a 'hive mind' of sorts, but composed of countless creative intellects rather than mindless worker ants, and one in which resources, reagents and effort could be shared, along with ideas, in a manner not dictated by institutional and geographical constraints?
Other common types of metadata include access codes to database entries, e.g. the access number for a gene listed in Gene Bank.
Citizendium article metadata
Citizendium itself keeps metadata about each article in a special text file that can be parsed. The article metadata is used to display an article's subpages as gray tabs across the top of each article, and to classify the articles into Workgroups (topic "categories") to help with managing them.
- cat2 = The {{subpages}} template is designed to be used within article clusters and their related pages.
It will not function on Template pages.
Metadata means data about other data. Tt may include information about the acquisition or publication of the underlying data, or technical aspects like the format of the files, the amount of storage they require,
or of other properties of the data, and whether they are released under a license that permits reuse or not.
A typical example would be bibliographic metadata, in which key properties of formally published materials are collected — author, title, journal, issue, DOI, PubMed ID, PubMed Central ID or a summary of the content of the published item:
- Patil C, Siegel V (2009). "This revolution will be digitized: online tools for radical collaboration". Dis Model Mech 2 (5-6): 201-5. DOI:10.1242/dmm.003285. PMID 19407323. PMC PMC2675795. Research Blogging. [e]
- An overview of science 2.0 from the perspective of the scientists and tools involved. Abstract:
What if everyone in the world were in your lab – a 'hive mind' of sorts, but composed of countless creative intellects rather than mindless worker ants, and one in which resources, reagents and effort could be shared, along with ideas, in a manner not dictated by institutional and geographical constraints?
Other common types of metadata include access codes to database entries, e.g. the access number for a gene listed in Gene Bank.
Citizendium article metadata
Citizendium itself keeps metadata about each article in a special text file that can be parsed. The article metadata is used to display an article's subpages as gray tabs across the top of each article, and to classify the articles into Workgroups (topic "categories") to help with managing them.
- cat3 = The {{subpages}} template is designed to be used within article clusters and their related pages.
It will not function on Template pages.
Metadata means data about other data. Tt may include information about the acquisition or publication of the underlying data, or technical aspects like the format of the files, the amount of storage they require,
or of other properties of the data, and whether they are released under a license that permits reuse or not.
A typical example would be bibliographic metadata, in which key properties of formally published materials are collected — author, title, journal, issue, DOI, PubMed ID, PubMed Central ID or a summary of the content of the published item:
- Patil C, Siegel V (2009). "This revolution will be digitized: online tools for radical collaboration". Dis Model Mech 2 (5-6): 201-5. DOI:10.1242/dmm.003285. PMID 19407323. PMC PMC2675795. Research Blogging. [e]
- An overview of science 2.0 from the perspective of the scientists and tools involved. Abstract:
What if everyone in the world were in your lab – a 'hive mind' of sorts, but composed of countless creative intellects rather than mindless worker ants, and one in which resources, reagents and effort could be shared, along with ideas, in a manner not dictated by institutional and geographical constraints?
Other common types of metadata include access codes to database entries, e.g. the access number for a gene listed in Gene Bank.
Citizendium article metadata
Citizendium itself keeps metadata about each article in a special text file that can be parsed. The article metadata is used to display an article's subpages as gray tabs across the top of each article, and to classify the articles into Workgroups (topic "categories") to help with managing them.
- cat_check = The {{subpages}} template is designed to be used within article clusters and their related pages.
It will not function on Template pages.
Metadata means data about other data. Tt may include information about the acquisition or publication of the underlying data, or technical aspects like the format of the files, the amount of storage they require,
or of other properties of the data, and whether they are released under a license that permits reuse or not.
A typical example would be bibliographic metadata, in which key properties of formally published materials are collected — author, title, journal, issue, DOI, PubMed ID, PubMed Central ID or a summary of the content of the published item:
- Patil C, Siegel V (2009). "This revolution will be digitized: online tools for radical collaboration". Dis Model Mech 2 (5-6): 201-5. DOI:10.1242/dmm.003285. PMID 19407323. PMC PMC2675795. Research Blogging. [e]
- An overview of science 2.0 from the perspective of the scientists and tools involved. Abstract:
What if everyone in the world were in your lab – a 'hive mind' of sorts, but composed of countless creative intellects rather than mindless worker ants, and one in which resources, reagents and effort could be shared, along with ideas, in a manner not dictated by institutional and geographical constraints?
Other common types of metadata include access codes to database entries, e.g. the access number for a gene listed in Gene Bank.
Citizendium article metadata
Citizendium itself keeps metadata about each article in a special text file that can be parsed. The article metadata is used to display an article's subpages as gray tabs across the top of each article, and to classify the articles into Workgroups (topic "categories") to help with managing them.
- status = The {{subpages}} template is designed to be used within article clusters and their related pages.
It will not function on Template pages.
Metadata means data about other data. Tt may include information about the acquisition or publication of the underlying data, or technical aspects like the format of the files, the amount of storage they require,
or of other properties of the data, and whether they are released under a license that permits reuse or not.
A typical example would be bibliographic metadata, in which key properties of formally published materials are collected — author, title, journal, issue, DOI, PubMed ID, PubMed Central ID or a summary of the content of the published item:
- Patil C, Siegel V (2009). "This revolution will be digitized: online tools for radical collaboration". Dis Model Mech 2 (5-6): 201-5. DOI:10.1242/dmm.003285. PMID 19407323. PMC PMC2675795. Research Blogging. [e]
- An overview of science 2.0 from the perspective of the scientists and tools involved. Abstract:
What if everyone in the world were in your lab – a 'hive mind' of sorts, but composed of countless creative intellects rather than mindless worker ants, and one in which resources, reagents and effort could be shared, along with ideas, in a manner not dictated by institutional and geographical constraints?
Other common types of metadata include access codes to database entries, e.g. the access number for a gene listed in Gene Bank.
Citizendium article metadata
Citizendium itself keeps metadata about each article in a special text file that can be parsed. The article metadata is used to display an article's subpages as gray tabs across the top of each article, and to classify the articles into Workgroups (topic "categories") to help with managing them.
- underlinked = The {{subpages}} template is designed to be used within article clusters and their related pages.
It will not function on Template pages.
Metadata means data about other data. Tt may include information about the acquisition or publication of the underlying data, or technical aspects like the format of the files, the amount of storage they require,
or of other properties of the data, and whether they are released under a license that permits reuse or not.
A typical example would be bibliographic metadata, in which key properties of formally published materials are collected — author, title, journal, issue, DOI, PubMed ID, PubMed Central ID or a summary of the content of the published item:
- Patil C, Siegel V (2009). "This revolution will be digitized: online tools for radical collaboration". Dis Model Mech 2 (5-6): 201-5. DOI:10.1242/dmm.003285. PMID 19407323. PMC PMC2675795. Research Blogging. [e]
- An overview of science 2.0 from the perspective of the scientists and tools involved. Abstract:
What if everyone in the world were in your lab – a 'hive mind' of sorts, but composed of countless creative intellects rather than mindless worker ants, and one in which resources, reagents and effort could be shared, along with ideas, in a manner not dictated by institutional and geographical constraints?
Other common types of metadata include access codes to database entries, e.g. the access number for a gene listed in Gene Bank.
Citizendium article metadata
Citizendium itself keeps metadata about each article in a special text file that can be parsed. The article metadata is used to display an article's subpages as gray tabs across the top of each article, and to classify the articles into Workgroups (topic "categories") to help with managing them.
- cleanup = The {{subpages}} template is designed to be used within article clusters and their related pages.
It will not function on Template pages.
Metadata means data about other data. Tt may include information about the acquisition or publication of the underlying data, or technical aspects like the format of the files, the amount of storage they require,
or of other properties of the data, and whether they are released under a license that permits reuse or not.
A typical example would be bibliographic metadata, in which key properties of formally published materials are collected — author, title, journal, issue, DOI, PubMed ID, PubMed Central ID or a summary of the content of the published item:
- Patil C, Siegel V (2009). "This revolution will be digitized: online tools for radical collaboration". Dis Model Mech 2 (5-6): 201-5. DOI:10.1242/dmm.003285. PMID 19407323. PMC PMC2675795. Research Blogging. [e]
- An overview of science 2.0 from the perspective of the scientists and tools involved. Abstract:
What if everyone in the world were in your lab – a 'hive mind' of sorts, but composed of countless creative intellects rather than mindless worker ants, and one in which resources, reagents and effort could be shared, along with ideas, in a manner not dictated by institutional and geographical constraints?
Other common types of metadata include access codes to database entries, e.g. the access number for a gene listed in Gene Bank.
Citizendium article metadata
Citizendium itself keeps metadata about each article in a special text file that can be parsed. The article metadata is used to display an article's subpages as gray tabs across the top of each article, and to classify the articles into Workgroups (topic "categories") to help with managing them.
- by = The {{subpages}} template is designed to be used within article clusters and their related pages.
It will not function on Template pages.
Metadata means data about other data. Tt may include information about the acquisition or publication of the underlying data, or technical aspects like the format of the files, the amount of storage they require,
or of other properties of the data, and whether they are released under a license that permits reuse or not.
A typical example would be bibliographic metadata, in which key properties of formally published materials are collected — author, title, journal, issue, DOI, PubMed ID, PubMed Central ID or a summary of the content of the published item:
- Patil C, Siegel V (2009). "This revolution will be digitized: online tools for radical collaboration". Dis Model Mech 2 (5-6): 201-5. DOI:10.1242/dmm.003285. PMID 19407323. PMC PMC2675795. Research Blogging. [e]
- An overview of science 2.0 from the perspective of the scientists and tools involved. Abstract:
What if everyone in the world were in your lab – a 'hive mind' of sorts, but composed of countless creative intellects rather than mindless worker ants, and one in which resources, reagents and effort could be shared, along with ideas, in a manner not dictated by institutional and geographical constraints?
Other common types of metadata include access codes to database entries, e.g. the access number for a gene listed in Gene Bank.
Citizendium article metadata
Citizendium itself keeps metadata about each article in a special text file that can be parsed. The article metadata is used to display an article's subpages as gray tabs across the top of each article, and to classify the articles into Workgroups (topic "categories") to help with managing them.
Required for the {{Approved}} template
- The status parameter in the checklist (see above) of approved versions must be set to 0 (zero).
- A editor = The {{subpages}} template is designed to be used within article clusters and their related pages.
It will not function on Template pages.
- A editor = The {{subpages}} template is designed to be used within article clusters and their related pages.
Metadata means data about other data. Tt may include information about the acquisition or publication of the underlying data, or technical aspects like the format of the files, the amount of storage they require,
or of other properties of the data, and whether they are released under a license that permits reuse or not.
A typical example would be bibliographic metadata, in which key properties of formally published materials are collected — author, title, journal, issue, DOI, PubMed ID, PubMed Central ID or a summary of the content of the published item:
- Patil C, Siegel V (2009). "This revolution will be digitized: online tools for radical collaboration". Dis Model Mech 2 (5-6): 201-5. DOI:10.1242/dmm.003285. PMID 19407323. PMC PMC2675795. Research Blogging. [e]
- An overview of science 2.0 from the perspective of the scientists and tools involved. Abstract:
What if everyone in the world were in your lab – a 'hive mind' of sorts, but composed of countless creative intellects rather than mindless worker ants, and one in which resources, reagents and effort could be shared, along with ideas, in a manner not dictated by institutional and geographical constraints?
Other common types of metadata include access codes to database entries, e.g. the access number for a gene listed in Gene Bank.
Citizendium article metadata
Citizendium itself keeps metadata about each article in a special text file that can be parsed. The article metadata is used to display an article's subpages as gray tabs across the top of each article, and to classify the articles into Workgroups (topic "categories") to help with managing them.
- A editor2 = The {{subpages}} template is designed to be used within article clusters and their related pages.
It will not function on Template pages.
- A editor2 = The {{subpages}} template is designed to be used within article clusters and their related pages.
Metadata means data about other data. Tt may include information about the acquisition or publication of the underlying data, or technical aspects like the format of the files, the amount of storage they require,
or of other properties of the data, and whether they are released under a license that permits reuse or not.
A typical example would be bibliographic metadata, in which key properties of formally published materials are collected — author, title, journal, issue, DOI, PubMed ID, PubMed Central ID or a summary of the content of the published item:
- Patil C, Siegel V (2009). "This revolution will be digitized: online tools for radical collaboration". Dis Model Mech 2 (5-6): 201-5. DOI:10.1242/dmm.003285. PMID 19407323. PMC PMC2675795. Research Blogging. [e]
- An overview of science 2.0 from the perspective of the scientists and tools involved. Abstract:
What if everyone in the world were in your lab – a 'hive mind' of sorts, but composed of countless creative intellects rather than mindless worker ants, and one in which resources, reagents and effort could be shared, along with ideas, in a manner not dictated by institutional and geographical constraints?
Other common types of metadata include access codes to database entries, e.g. the access number for a gene listed in Gene Bank.
Citizendium article metadata
Citizendium itself keeps metadata about each article in a special text file that can be parsed. The article metadata is used to display an article's subpages as gray tabs across the top of each article, and to classify the articles into Workgroups (topic "categories") to help with managing them.
- A editor3 = The {{subpages}} template is designed to be used within article clusters and their related pages.
It will not function on Template pages.
- A editor3 = The {{subpages}} template is designed to be used within article clusters and their related pages.
Metadata means data about other data. Tt may include information about the acquisition or publication of the underlying data, or technical aspects like the format of the files, the amount of storage they require,
or of other properties of the data, and whether they are released under a license that permits reuse or not.
A typical example would be bibliographic metadata, in which key properties of formally published materials are collected — author, title, journal, issue, DOI, PubMed ID, PubMed Central ID or a summary of the content of the published item:
- Patil C, Siegel V (2009). "This revolution will be digitized: online tools for radical collaboration". Dis Model Mech 2 (5-6): 201-5. DOI:10.1242/dmm.003285. PMID 19407323. PMC PMC2675795. Research Blogging. [e]
- An overview of science 2.0 from the perspective of the scientists and tools involved. Abstract:
What if everyone in the world were in your lab – a 'hive mind' of sorts, but composed of countless creative intellects rather than mindless worker ants, and one in which resources, reagents and effort could be shared, along with ideas, in a manner not dictated by institutional and geographical constraints?
Other common types of metadata include access codes to database entries, e.g. the access number for a gene listed in Gene Bank.
Citizendium article metadata
Citizendium itself keeps metadata about each article in a special text file that can be parsed. The article metadata is used to display an article's subpages as gray tabs across the top of each article, and to classify the articles into Workgroups (topic "categories") to help with managing them.
Required for the {{ToApprove}} template
- article url = The {{subpages}} template is designed to be used within article clusters and their related pages.
It will not function on Template pages.
Metadata means data about other data. Tt may include information about the acquisition or publication of the underlying data, or technical aspects like the format of the files, the amount of storage they require,
or of other properties of the data, and whether they are released under a license that permits reuse or not.
A typical example would be bibliographic metadata, in which key properties of formally published materials are collected — author, title, journal, issue, DOI, PubMed ID, PubMed Central ID or a summary of the content of the published item:
- Patil C, Siegel V (2009). "This revolution will be digitized: online tools for radical collaboration". Dis Model Mech 2 (5-6): 201-5. DOI:10.1242/dmm.003285. PMID 19407323. PMC PMC2675795. Research Blogging. [e]
- An overview of science 2.0 from the perspective of the scientists and tools involved. Abstract:
What if everyone in the world were in your lab – a 'hive mind' of sorts, but composed of countless creative intellects rather than mindless worker ants, and one in which resources, reagents and effort could be shared, along with ideas, in a manner not dictated by institutional and geographical constraints?
Other common types of metadata include access codes to database entries, e.g. the access number for a gene listed in Gene Bank.
Citizendium article metadata
Citizendium itself keeps metadata about each article in a special text file that can be parsed. The article metadata is used to display an article's subpages as gray tabs across the top of each article, and to classify the articles into Workgroups (topic "categories") to help with managing them.
- subpage url = The {{subpages}} template is designed to be used within article clusters and their related pages.
It will not function on Template pages.
Metadata means data about other data. Tt may include information about the acquisition or publication of the underlying data, or technical aspects like the format of the files, the amount of storage they require,
or of other properties of the data, and whether they are released under a license that permits reuse or not.
A typical example would be bibliographic metadata, in which key properties of formally published materials are collected — author, title, journal, issue, DOI, PubMed ID, PubMed Central ID or a summary of the content of the published item:
- Patil C, Siegel V (2009). "This revolution will be digitized: online tools for radical collaboration". Dis Model Mech 2 (5-6): 201-5. DOI:10.1242/dmm.003285. PMID 19407323. PMC PMC2675795. Research Blogging. [e]
- An overview of science 2.0 from the perspective of the scientists and tools involved. Abstract:
What if everyone in the world were in your lab – a 'hive mind' of sorts, but composed of countless creative intellects rather than mindless worker ants, and one in which resources, reagents and effort could be shared, along with ideas, in a manner not dictated by institutional and geographical constraints?
Other common types of metadata include access codes to database entries, e.g. the access number for a gene listed in Gene Bank.
Citizendium article metadata
Citizendium itself keeps metadata about each article in a special text file that can be parsed. The article metadata is used to display an article's subpages as gray tabs across the top of each article, and to classify the articles into Workgroups (topic "categories") to help with managing them.
- cluster = The {{subpages}} template is designed to be used within article clusters and their related pages.
It will not function on Template pages.
Metadata means data about other data. Tt may include information about the acquisition or publication of the underlying data, or technical aspects like the format of the files, the amount of storage they require,
or of other properties of the data, and whether they are released under a license that permits reuse or not.
A typical example would be bibliographic metadata, in which key properties of formally published materials are collected — author, title, journal, issue, DOI, PubMed ID, PubMed Central ID or a summary of the content of the published item:
- Patil C, Siegel V (2009). "This revolution will be digitized: online tools for radical collaboration". Dis Model Mech 2 (5-6): 201-5. DOI:10.1242/dmm.003285. PMID 19407323. PMC PMC2675795. Research Blogging. [e]
- An overview of science 2.0 from the perspective of the scientists and tools involved. Abstract:
What if everyone in the world were in your lab – a 'hive mind' of sorts, but composed of countless creative intellects rather than mindless worker ants, and one in which resources, reagents and effort could be shared, along with ideas, in a manner not dictated by institutional and geographical constraints?
Other common types of metadata include access codes to database entries, e.g. the access number for a gene listed in Gene Bank.
Citizendium article metadata
Citizendium itself keeps metadata about each article in a special text file that can be parsed. The article metadata is used to display an article's subpages as gray tabs across the top of each article, and to classify the articles into Workgroups (topic "categories") to help with managing them.
- now = The {{subpages}} template is designed to be used within article clusters and their related pages.
It will not function on Template pages.
Metadata means data about other data. Tt may include information about the acquisition or publication of the underlying data, or technical aspects like the format of the files, the amount of storage they require,
or of other properties of the data, and whether they are released under a license that permits reuse or not.
A typical example would be bibliographic metadata, in which key properties of formally published materials are collected — author, title, journal, issue, DOI, PubMed ID, PubMed Central ID or a summary of the content of the published item:
- Patil C, Siegel V (2009). "This revolution will be digitized: online tools for radical collaboration". Dis Model Mech 2 (5-6): 201-5. DOI:10.1242/dmm.003285. PMID 19407323. PMC PMC2675795. Research Blogging. [e]
- An overview of science 2.0 from the perspective of the scientists and tools involved. Abstract:
What if everyone in the world were in your lab – a 'hive mind' of sorts, but composed of countless creative intellects rather than mindless worker ants, and one in which resources, reagents and effort could be shared, along with ideas, in a manner not dictated by institutional and geographical constraints?
Other common types of metadata include access codes to database entries, e.g. the access number for a gene listed in Gene Bank.
Citizendium article metadata
Citizendium itself keeps metadata about each article in a special text file that can be parsed. The article metadata is used to display an article's subpages as gray tabs across the top of each article, and to classify the articles into Workgroups (topic "categories") to help with managing them.
- ToA editor = The {{subpages}} template is designed to be used within article clusters and their related pages.
It will not function on Template pages.
Metadata means data about other data. Tt may include information about the acquisition or publication of the underlying data, or technical aspects like the format of the files, the amount of storage they require,
or of other properties of the data, and whether they are released under a license that permits reuse or not.
A typical example would be bibliographic metadata, in which key properties of formally published materials are collected — author, title, journal, issue, DOI, PubMed ID, PubMed Central ID or a summary of the content of the published item:
- Patil C, Siegel V (2009). "This revolution will be digitized: online tools for radical collaboration". Dis Model Mech 2 (5-6): 201-5. DOI:10.1242/dmm.003285. PMID 19407323. PMC PMC2675795. Research Blogging. [e]
- An overview of science 2.0 from the perspective of the scientists and tools involved. Abstract:
What if everyone in the world were in your lab – a 'hive mind' of sorts, but composed of countless creative intellects rather than mindless worker ants, and one in which resources, reagents and effort could be shared, along with ideas, in a manner not dictated by institutional and geographical constraints?
Other common types of metadata include access codes to database entries, e.g. the access number for a gene listed in Gene Bank.
Citizendium article metadata
Citizendium itself keeps metadata about each article in a special text file that can be parsed. The article metadata is used to display an article's subpages as gray tabs across the top of each article, and to classify the articles into Workgroups (topic "categories") to help with managing them.
- ToA editor2 = The {{subpages}} template is designed to be used within article clusters and their related pages.
It will not function on Template pages.
Metadata means data about other data. Tt may include information about the acquisition or publication of the underlying data, or technical aspects like the format of the files, the amount of storage they require,
or of other properties of the data, and whether they are released under a license that permits reuse or not.
A typical example would be bibliographic metadata, in which key properties of formally published materials are collected — author, title, journal, issue, DOI, PubMed ID, PubMed Central ID or a summary of the content of the published item:
- Patil C, Siegel V (2009). "This revolution will be digitized: online tools for radical collaboration". Dis Model Mech 2 (5-6): 201-5. DOI:10.1242/dmm.003285. PMID 19407323. PMC PMC2675795. Research Blogging. [e]
- An overview of science 2.0 from the perspective of the scientists and tools involved. Abstract:
What if everyone in the world were in your lab – a 'hive mind' of sorts, but composed of countless creative intellects rather than mindless worker ants, and one in which resources, reagents and effort could be shared, along with ideas, in a manner not dictated by institutional and geographical constraints?
Other common types of metadata include access codes to database entries, e.g. the access number for a gene listed in Gene Bank.
Citizendium article metadata
Citizendium itself keeps metadata about each article in a special text file that can be parsed. The article metadata is used to display an article's subpages as gray tabs across the top of each article, and to classify the articles into Workgroups (topic "categories") to help with managing them.
- ToA editor3 = The {{subpages}} template is designed to be used within article clusters and their related pages.
It will not function on Template pages.
Metadata means data about other data. Tt may include information about the acquisition or publication of the underlying data, or technical aspects like the format of the files, the amount of storage they require,
or of other properties of the data, and whether they are released under a license that permits reuse or not.
A typical example would be bibliographic metadata, in which key properties of formally published materials are collected — author, title, journal, issue, DOI, PubMed ID, PubMed Central ID or a summary of the content of the published item:
- Patil C, Siegel V (2009). "This revolution will be digitized: online tools for radical collaboration". Dis Model Mech 2 (5-6): 201-5. DOI:10.1242/dmm.003285. PMID 19407323. PMC PMC2675795. Research Blogging. [e]
- An overview of science 2.0 from the perspective of the scientists and tools involved. Abstract:
What if everyone in the world were in your lab – a 'hive mind' of sorts, but composed of countless creative intellects rather than mindless worker ants, and one in which resources, reagents and effort could be shared, along with ideas, in a manner not dictated by institutional and geographical constraints?
Other common types of metadata include access codes to database entries, e.g. the access number for a gene listed in Gene Bank.
Citizendium article metadata
Citizendium itself keeps metadata about each article in a special text file that can be parsed. The article metadata is used to display an article's subpages as gray tabs across the top of each article, and to classify the articles into Workgroups (topic "categories") to help with managing them.
- date = The {{subpages}} template is designed to be used within article clusters and their related pages.
It will not function on Template pages.
Metadata means data about other data. Tt may include information about the acquisition or publication of the underlying data, or technical aspects like the format of the files, the amount of storage they require,
or of other properties of the data, and whether they are released under a license that permits reuse or not.
A typical example would be bibliographic metadata, in which key properties of formally published materials are collected — author, title, journal, issue, DOI, PubMed ID, PubMed Central ID or a summary of the content of the published item:
- Patil C, Siegel V (2009). "This revolution will be digitized: online tools for radical collaboration". Dis Model Mech 2 (5-6): 201-5. DOI:10.1242/dmm.003285. PMID 19407323. PMC PMC2675795. Research Blogging. [e]
- An overview of science 2.0 from the perspective of the scientists and tools involved. Abstract:
What if everyone in the world were in your lab – a 'hive mind' of sorts, but composed of countless creative intellects rather than mindless worker ants, and one in which resources, reagents and effort could be shared, along with ideas, in a manner not dictated by institutional and geographical constraints?
Other common types of metadata include access codes to database entries, e.g. the access number for a gene listed in Gene Bank.
Citizendium article metadata
Citizendium itself keeps metadata about each article in a special text file that can be parsed. The article metadata is used to display an article's subpages as gray tabs across the top of each article, and to classify the articles into Workgroups (topic "categories") to help with managing them.