HymnWiki:Editing Conventions
From HymnWiki
Most of these editing conventions are not absolute; which ones are indicated under Absolute. Please follow them unless you have a good reason not to do so.
Absolute
Acceptable Content:
Copyrights:
- See the copyright page.
Uploads:
- See the upload information page
Disclaimers
- See the Disclaimers.
Sheet Music
- When you add sheet music to an article, submit the article to search engines - like Google and Yahoo: Add a site to Google; Add a site to Yahoo.
- Also, once you have sheet music, for an article, feel free to make similar articles in the Choral Public Domain Library, linking to HymnWiki's articles; feel free to use links for sheet music uploaded to HymnWiki there if there is an article on HymnWiki linking to those files.
- If you have sheet music on a HymnWiki article, feel free to link to it from Wikipedia.
Hymnists
- Poets, composers, adapters, arrangers, and such (of all songs, hymns, etc.) go under the category Hymnists.
- Writers of song lyrics go under both Poets and Hymnists.
- Writers of song tunes go under both Composers and Hymnists.
- In hymnist articles, make sure to list both poetic works and musical compositions, as well as arrangements and adaptations.
Compilations
- For the article name of a compilation, put the full name of the hymnal, followed by a comma, followed by the year (if known).
- If the hymnal has a common name, plus the name of the publisher in parentheses in the article name, after the year.
Misc.
- List the poetic meter for hymns (note if they differ from tune to tune, as the lyrics are sometimes repeated, depending on the tune); meters should be listed in the categories for the hymn.
- List tune names if known, and what other songs they are used with (perhaps even in their own article).
- Avoid obscurity when referring to authors of works (i.e. 'composer'/'poet'/'arranger'/'adapter' instead of 'writer'/'author'; however, 'hymnists' is the preferred category for all of these - the articles about the hymnists themselves should say precisely what they are)