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Meta:Fact

What’s a fact?

A fact in Amapedia is a piece of information about the subject of an article. Every article can have many facts; each fact consists of a name and optionally a list of values.

What do they look like?

For example, a "singleton fact" (name-only) such as Side Quests on a computer game would indicate, presumably, that it featured side quests; "multi-part facts" (facts with a name and a list of values) such as Publisher: Atari or Designer: Sid Meyer, Brian Reynolds can convey specific information about different aspects of a product.

Why use facts?

Navigating 
From any fact name or value page, you can quickly jump to any article that refers to it in a fact.
Comparing 
In comparison tables, fact names become rows or columns, and fact values appear in the cells.
Searching 
Facts are searchable. For example, search for "Atari" to get all articles in Amapedia with a fact like Publisher: Atari.

How do I give facts to an article?

Add each fact on its own line in the Facts box on the article’s edit page. For a singleton fact, just type the name. For a multi-part fact, type the name, a colon (:), and each value. Separate multiple values with commas (,). If the value itself contains a comma, precede that comma with a backslash (\). Some examples:

Platform: XBox, Nintendo GameCube
Release Date: June 30\, 2005
Multiplayer

As you type, amapedia will suggest names and values users typically enter for other like products.

Can facts be subjective or imprecise?

Yes, despite the name. Should a fact you list become controversial or lead to a revert war, it probably belongs in the Description section as a "controversial issue".

The thing is, there can only be one current set of facts for an article. It is up to the community to decide if something belongs there or not, whether it should be a singleton or multi-part fact (or even a "This Is A" tag), what the fact’s name should be, and what standard format (if any) the values should take.

 

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Interesting Askville Questions:
2 volume set written around the 1930`s/40`s?Author,Meta Given
I have the answer... You just guess! Fact or Nutty Crap?
I ripped many CDs into wav format via itunes with the goal of creating a ?future proof? library (my goals are (i) reading music through either itunes or windows media player (or whatever) in the future, (ii) and benefitting from the meta data (artist, album, song, type, etc.) on a long term regardless the system I use to play my music). Yesterday I started to import music to said library through windows media player, also in the wav format. When trying to listen to the whole library (containing itunes and windows media player ripped files) with windows media player, I noticed that all itunes ripped wav files ended up in a sinlge ?other? file, destroying the classification of my library. How can windows media player read the meta data of the itunes ripped wav files? What would be the best ?future proof? lossless format allowing me to achieve above goals? Thank you PS: I tried suggestions posted earlier with no success
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This article was last modified Jun 01, 2009 16:59 GMT.

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