Help:Watchlist/he

From Linux Web Expert

File:PD-icon.svg Note: When you edit this page, you agree to release your contribution under the CC0. See Public Domain Help Pages for more info. File:PD-icon.svg

Your watchlist is a display for tracking changes, similar to the Recent changes display, but limited to showing changes only across your set of "watched" pages. You can see your watchlist by following the "Watchlist" link in your account menu (on the top right). This feature is only available to users who have registered and logged in.

Before you see anything interesting here, you have to actually add some pages to your watchlist. Do so by navigating to a page that interests you, and click the star icon Add this page to your watchlist (or "Watch" tab).

A page already in your watchlist will be marked with a blue star (Remove this page from your watchlist or "Unwatch" tab).

If you want to remove pages from your watchlist, click on the blue star icon Remove this page from your watchlist (or "Unwatch" tab).

Watchlist Expiry

A new watchlist feature is included in MediaWiki 1.35 : Watchlist Expiry. With this feature, you can optionally select to watch a page for a temporary period of time. Once the watch period has expired, the page will be automatically removed from your watchlist. You can update the watch period at any time, including switching from temporary to permanent status. Temporarily watched pages are usually represented by a half star (as opposed to a full star, which represents permanently watched pages). To find out when Watchlist Expiry will be enabled on your wiki, you can check out the release schedule on Meta-wiki. For documentation on how to use the feature, please visit Help:Watchlist expiry .

Why a watchlist

The watchlist feature is mainly useful on a very busy wiki where the "Recent changes" display becomes too overwhelming with many changes you don't want to follow. On a typical low traffic wiki, you can normally see all of the editing activity across the whole wiki without feeling overwhelmed. On a more busy wiki you will find that many edits are taking place on pages which you personally find less interesting. To help track changes which are more interesting, start watching pages!

Typically you would watch pages related to your interest areas, and also pages where you care most about the content. If you make a significant edit to a page, you might want to watch the page (so you know when there are any follow-up edits). Note that there is a also a checkbox on the edit screen ("Watch this page") for this purpose.

Your watchlist is personal. You can watch any page you want. That choice will remain private.

Use your watchlist

On the watchlist display, some page names appear in bold. This indicates whether or not you have visited the page to see the change. It's a bit like read/unread emails in an email inbox. The "Recent changes" display will also have some new bold highlighting, but for a different reason. Here bold is just indicating edits to pages on your watchlist.

You can combine different kinds of filters to display the results you want.

Email notifications

According to the relevant preferences, changes to pages you watch may also be notified to you by email. The main preference for this is "Email me when a page or a file on my watchlist is changed".

After receiving an email notification for a page, you have to visit the page while logged in if you want to be notified of further changes to the same page.

Watchlist feed with token

You can set up an RSS or Atom feed of your watchlist that is accessible even when logged out:

  • If you would prefer an Atom feed rather than an RSS one, add "&feedformat=atom" to the Link of your feed.
  • To further customise your watchlist feed add different parameters to the link, see API:Watchlist feed .

ר' גם