Wiki System
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A Wiki System is a Collaboration Software System that is powered by a Wiki Software Engine to create, edit and run Wikis.
- Context:
- It can be a Software-based Computing System.
- It can incorporate a Text Wikification System.
- It can range from being a Traditional Wiki System to being a Semantic Wiki System.
- It can range from being a On-Premise Wiki to being a Cloud-based Wiki Service.
- It can range from being a Public Wiki System to being a Private Wiki System (such as Atlassian Confluence).
- It can range from being an Organizational Wiki System to being a Personal Wiki System.
- It can (typically) rely on a Web Server.
- It can (typically) rely on a DBMS.
- Example(s):
- a Traditional Wiki System, such as:
- a Semantic Wiki System, such as:
- …
- Counter-Example(s):
- See: Web Server Software Distribution, Server Software Program, Collaborative Software, Web Application, Web Content Management System.
References
2020a
- (Wikipedia, 2020) ⇒ https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wiki_software Retrieved:2020-1-26.
- Wiki software (also known as a wiki engine or wiki application) is collaborative software that runs a wiki, which allows users to create and collaboratively edit "pages" or entries via a web browser. A wiki system is usually a web application that runs on one or more web servers. The content, including previous revisions, is usually stored in either a file system or a database. Wikis are a type of web content management system, and the most commonly supported off-the-shelf software that web hosting facilities offer.
There are dozens of actively maintained wiki engines. They vary in the platforms they run on, the programming language they were developed in, whether they are open source or proprietary, their support for natural language characters and conventions, and their assumptions about technical versus social control of editing.
- Wiki software (also known as a wiki engine or wiki application) is collaborative software that runs a wiki, which allows users to create and collaboratively edit "pages" or entries via a web browser. A wiki system is usually a web application that runs on one or more web servers. The content, including previous revisions, is usually stored in either a file system or a database. Wikis are a type of web content management system, and the most commonly supported off-the-shelf software that web hosting facilities offer.
2020b
- (Melli et al., 2020) ⇒ Gabor Melli, Abdelrhman Eldallal, Bassim Lazem, and Olga Moreira. (2020). “GM-RKB WikiText Error Correction Task and Baselines.”. In: Proceedings of LREC 2020 (LREC-2020).
- QUOTE: Similar to the creation of websites in the early days of the Web; when websites content was crafted with HTML code by hand than transformed by a browser rendering engine into webpages, wikis content is created using WikiText (Dohrn & Riehle, 2011) written and edited predominantly by humans than parsed and rendered by a wiki engine (Dohrn & Riehle, 2011, Junghans et. al, 2008). WikiText is a simplified markup language that facilitates annotation of text documents. To create an internal link between annotated words (concept mentions) and a target wiki pages in Mediawiki markup, the editor simply needs to use double square brackets ("[[" and "]]"). For instance, A [[Character-Level Seq2Seq Training Algorithm|character-level seq2seq algorithm]] is a [[seq2seq algorithm]] that is a [[character-level NNet algorithm]]."
tells the wiki engine to create a wikilink between the concept mentions
character-level seq2seq algorithm
,seq2seq algorithm
, andcharacter-level NNet algorithm
to the corresponding wiki entries.
- QUOTE: Similar to the creation of websites in the early days of the Web; when websites content was crafted with HTML code by hand than transformed by a browser rendering engine into webpages, wikis content is created using WikiText (Dohrn & Riehle, 2011) written and edited predominantly by humans than parsed and rendered by a wiki engine (Dohrn & Riehle, 2011, Junghans et. al, 2008). WikiText is a simplified markup language that facilitates annotation of text documents. To create an internal link between annotated words (concept mentions) and a target wiki pages in Mediawiki markup, the editor simply needs to use double square brackets ("[[" and "]]"). For instance,