In Part 1 of the Guide, you learned about how to assess articles using the Wikiproject India talk page template and by filling in the two parameters - "class" and "importance". Part 2 of this Guide showed you how to add more functionality to the template while assessing an article. If this is incorporated, a single assessment becomes very useful for sorting and earmarking of articles by means of categories. Part 3 of the Guide, deals with the AutoWikiBrowser, a semi-automated Windows tool for technically adept editors.
(Note: Parts 1, 2 and 3 are older versions of the Guide, but are still valid for Tag & Assess 2021)
This part, Part 4 of the Guide, deals with Rater.js, a simple script-based tool which makes assessment easier for technically-challenged editors.
Assessment Bar (WikiProject India version) Release 1.
A javascript which adds an easy to use assessment bar at the bottom of articles pertaining to WikiProject India so we can assess them easily.
Note: After saving, you have to bypass your browser's cache to see the changes. Internet Explorer: hold down the Ctrl key and click the Refresh or Reload button. Firefox: hold down the Shift key while clicking Reload (or press Ctrl-Shift-R). Google Chrome and Safari users can just click the Reload button. For details and instructions about other browsers, see Wikipedia:Bypass your cache.
Once installed, the assessment bar appears at the bottom of pages of articles belonging to WikiProject India only. It does this by auto-detecting the talk page template. The bar has a number of small controls on it which display the present assessment & also allow you to change the assessment and save it. It is very easy to use, try it out yourself.
The left most controls after the words “Wikiproject India” are:
To the right of the Subprojects are six tick-boxes. They are:
The assessment will reflect their present state. Tick them if they apply to the article. Untick them if they no longer apply. Press "save" to finalise the assessment for the new values of the tick-boxes to be loaded.
Still dont understand how they apply exactly or how all this comes together? Please read the Assessment Guide Part I and Part II.
At the end & to the right at the bottom of the Assessment Bar are two blue links which act like buttons -
“Next article” fetches another unassessed article from WikiProject India for you to assess, should you chose to use this feature.
MOST IMPORTANT : The “Save” link - Your assessments/changes are shown to you but get saved ONLY when you press the save button. So don’t forget to use it.
Important Notice - Assessment Bar is a Beta release & requires you to field test it & give feedback to YuviPanda here: User_talk:YuviPanda/AssessmentBar
In Part 1 of the Guide, you learned about how to assess articles using the Wikiproject India talk page template and by filling in the two parameters - "class" and "importance". Part 2 of this Guide showed you how to add more functionality to the template while assessing an article. If this is incorporated, a single assessment becomes very useful for sorting and earmarking of articles by means of categories. Part 3 of the Guide, deals with the AutoWikiBrowser, a semi-automated Windows tool for technically adept editors.
(Note: Parts 1, 2 and 3 are older versions of the Guide, but are still valid for Tag & Assess 2021)
This part, Part 4 of the Guide, deals with Rater.js, a simple script-based tool which makes assessment easier for technically-challenged editors.
Assessment Bar (WikiProject India version) Release 1.
A javascript which adds an easy to use assessment bar at the bottom of articles pertaining to WikiProject India so we can assess them easily.
Note: After saving, you have to bypass your browser's cache to see the changes. Internet Explorer: hold down the Ctrl key and click the Refresh or Reload button. Firefox: hold down the Shift key while clicking Reload (or press Ctrl-Shift-R). Google Chrome and Safari users can just click the Reload button. For details and instructions about other browsers, see Wikipedia:Bypass your cache.
Once installed, the assessment bar appears at the bottom of pages of articles belonging to WikiProject India only. It does this by auto-detecting the talk page template. The bar has a number of small controls on it which display the present assessment & also allow you to change the assessment and save it. It is very easy to use, try it out yourself.
The left most controls after the words “Wikiproject India” are:
To the right of the Subprojects are six tick-boxes. They are:
The assessment will reflect their present state. Tick them if they apply to the article. Untick them if they no longer apply. Press "save" to finalise the assessment for the new values of the tick-boxes to be loaded.
Still dont understand how they apply exactly or how all this comes together? Please read the Assessment Guide Part I and Part II.
At the end & to the right at the bottom of the Assessment Bar are two blue links which act like buttons -
“Next article” fetches another unassessed article from WikiProject India for you to assess, should you chose to use this feature.
MOST IMPORTANT : The “Save” link - Your assessments/changes are shown to you but get saved ONLY when you press the save button. So don’t forget to use it.
Important Notice - Assessment Bar is a Beta release & requires you to field test it & give feedback to YuviPanda here: User_talk:YuviPanda/AssessmentBar