A WikiWord consists of two or more words with initial capitals, run together.
When you type a WikiWord, you establish a hyperlink. It's as easy as that.
WikiWords are styled like this because:
It makes Wiki hyperlinks instantly recognizable
It leads to interesting Wiki topics
It avoids the need to fiddle with HTML tags
It avoids over-general topics because at least two words are required
Syntax of a WikiWord
Uppercase letter(s)
Lowercase letter(s)
Uppercase letter(s)
Optional lowercase or uppercase letter(s) or number(s)
Web: Name without the uppercase letter(s), lowercase letter(s), uppercase letter(s) sequence
T5Wiki: Name with number before the uppercase, lowercase, uppercase sequence
Md5sumsAfterBurning: Name with number before the uppercase, lowercase, uppercase sequence
Know-How: Name with dashes in between
Hints
Insert WikiWords wherever you can. Rich linking helps to make a Wiki successful.
Be specific. All topics in a web share one name space. For example, instead of FunctionalSpec write BreadSlicerFunctionalSpec because other projects might also have a functional spec topic.
To stop a WikiWord from being turned into a hyperlink, insert the text <nop> immediately before the WikiWord.
It is recommended to create topics with singular names. Plural WikiWords are automatically linked to the singular topic, i.e. the link WikiWords links to the topic WikiWord.
Sometimes you have to be creative to find a good WikiName. Examples:
To create a topic about the the Bread Slicer 1.2 product, use BreadSlicer1dot2 or BreadSlicer1pt2, but not BreadSlicer1.2.
To create a topic about year 2000, you could go for YearTwoK or YearTwoThousand, but not Year2K or Y2K or Y2000.
Turn acronyms into WikiWords, i.e. take FaqIndex for a "FAQ index" topic.
You can specify any link label by using double square brackets, e.g. write [[TWikiAccessControl][access control]] to get a link to TWikiAccessControl that looks like access control.
The topic is assumed to be in the current TWiki web. Prepending the name of a TWiki web and a period links to a topic in another web.