User talk:VijitJain

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Welcome![edit]

Hello VijitJain, and welcome to Wikipedia! Thank you for your contributions. I hope you like the place and decide to stay. Here are a few good links for newcomers:

The five pillars of Wikipedia

How to edit a page

Help pages

Tutorial

How to write a great article

Manual of Style

I hope you enjoy editing here and being a Wikipedian! Please sign your name on talk pages using four tildes (~~~~); this will automatically produce your name and the date. If you have any questions, check out Wikipedia:Where to ask a question or ask me on my talk page. Again, welcome!  Solar

Hi Vijit, please see my comments on the talk page of Giridih. I am looking forward to more edits from you. Have a nice time. --Bhadani 17:18, 21 March 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Copied from the user page of SlimVirgin without her permission! I had always endevoured to follow the standard set by her. My overdue thanks to her!!! However, I may add that it is easy to preach, and difficult to practice.

  1. Be nice. Praise people when you see things being done well. Write personal notes to people on their talk pages saying what a good edit such-and-such was. You can make someone's day with some positive feedback.
  2. Don't engage in unnecessary personal criticism or personal attacks. At the same time, let people know that you're able and willing to stand up for yourself and your edits, but not to the point of being obnoxious.
  3. Try to be reasonable. If you establish a reputation as a reasonable editor, people will forgive you almost any other quirk. Try not to get on your high horse over an issue. Don't become a single-issue editor. And when you see that an argument has gone decisively against you, walk away no matter how annoyed you are. Never disrupt Wikipedia to make a point.
  4. Read Wikipedia:No original research, Wikipedia:Neutral point of view, Wikipedia:Verifiability (policies), Wikipedia:Reliable sources (guideline), and Wikipedia:Cite sources (style guide), and stick to them even when it's killing you.
  5. Vote for responsible people to become administrators, even if you disagree with them politically.
  6. Vote for articles that are going through the featured-article process. Read them carefully, make constructive suggestions, and give praise where it's due, because it really is harder than it looks to get an article through that peer review.
  7. Try to steer an article that you've written to featured-article status. It's hard work, but it will establish you as a serious editor.
  8. Don't criticize admins unduly and don't jump on admin-attack bandwagons. It's easy to make mistakes as an admin, so be generous in your dealings with them. You'll usually find that they, in turn, will be generous in their dealings with you.
  9. Try to avoid revert wars. Never violate 3RR. Be self-limiting in how many times you revert a page in a day. Try to get consensus on talk before reverting. If you do revert without prior discussion, explain why on talk.
  10. Contribute well-researched, well-referenced content, no matter how humble, to the encyclopedia, and discuss your edits on talk pages. Don't spend all your time on talk, but don't closet yourself away in the encyclopedia either. This is a community. Be part of it.

I wish you all the best at wikipedia. Please remember, editing wikipedia is a privilege and not a right. Please see the fate of User talk:Manzzzzzzzzzzzzzz. I would love to see you doing very active edits, and I am sure that you shall become one of the best wikipedians. All the best! --Bhadani 17:01, 28 March 2006 (UTC)[reply]