User:Karsten Theis/Sandbox 2

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==<i class="fas fa-chalkboard-teacher"></i> For teachers==
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==<div class="bg-yellow"><i class="fas fa-chalkboard-teacher"></i> For teachers</div>==
*[[Proteopedia:Practical Guide to Advanced Proteopedia Authoring and Its Use in Teaching]]
*[[Proteopedia:Practical Guide to Advanced Proteopedia Authoring and Its Use in Teaching]]
* [[Proteopedia:Primer]]
* [[Proteopedia:Primer]]
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===Software for use with Proteopedia===
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===<div class="bg-yellow">Software for use with Proteopedia</div>===
*[[Java]] can be used to improve performance of molecular scenes in Proteopedia. Please see [[Installing and enabling Java]].
*[[Java]] can be used to improve performance of molecular scenes in Proteopedia. Please see [[Installing and enabling Java]].
*Java may be a security risk. Please see [[Java#How_to_be_as_safe_as_possible_with_Java|How to be as safe as possible with Java]].
*Java may be a security risk. Please see [[Java#How_to_be_as_safe_as_possible_with_Java|How to be as safe as possible with Java]].
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*You can make presentation-ready animations that can be dropped into Powerpoint slides from any scene in Proteopedia or FirstGlance. See [[Help:Making animations for Powerpoint]]. (At right: [[1ijw]])
*You can make presentation-ready animations that can be dropped into Powerpoint slides from any scene in Proteopedia or FirstGlance. See [[Help:Making animations for Powerpoint]]. (At right: [[1ijw]])
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===Interactive 3D "Supplementary Materials" for Journal Publications===
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===<div class="bg-yellow">Interactive 3D "Supplementary Materials" for Journal Publications</div>===
*For preparing interactive 3D complements to journal publications (similar to supplementary materials), please see [[Interactive 3D Complements in Proteopedia]].
*For preparing interactive 3D complements to journal publications (similar to supplementary materials), please see [[Interactive 3D Complements in Proteopedia]].
*For hiding these until the date of publication, please see [[Proteopedia:Workbench]].
*For hiding these until the date of publication, please see [[Proteopedia:Workbench]].
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===Protecting Pages===
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===<div class="bg-yellow">Protecting Pages</div>===
*If you would like to protect a personal page from editing by others, please see [[Proteopedia:Policy]] and [[Help:Protected_Pages]].
*If you would like to protect a personal page from editing by others, please see [[Proteopedia:Policy]] and [[Help:Protected_Pages]].
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===Languages===
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===<div class="bg-yellow">Languages</div>===
* For examples of Proteopedia articles in non-English languages, and for the rules and policies for such articles, please see [[Proteopedia:Languages]]. *For instructions for translating articles to other languages, see [[Help:Language Translation]].
* For examples of Proteopedia articles in non-English languages, and for the rules and policies for such articles, please see [[Proteopedia:Languages]]. *For instructions for translating articles to other languages, see [[Help:Language Translation]].
* See also [[Help:Text Directionality|Text Directionality]] regarding right-to-left languages such as Arabic or Hebrew.
* See also [[Help:Text Directionality|Text Directionality]] regarding right-to-left languages such as Arabic or Hebrew.

Revision as of 16:07, 14 February 2021

Proteopedia is the 3D encyclopedia of proteins and other biological molecules.

Navigating Proteopedia

Proteopedia is organized like an encyclopedia, with entries (also called pages or articles) on different topics. If you already know the topic you are interested in, you can search for relevant entries using the search box on the left side of the page. For help, go to Help:Searching. You can also browse the entries, starting with the suggestions on the Main Page or the table of contents or the structure index available in the navigation box on the left. Entries have links to other entries (if you right-click them, the current entry will stay available and the linked entry will open in a new tab). This is a way to browse entries on related topics.

Reading and viewing entries

The special feature of Proteopedia entries are the interactive 3D representations of molecules viewable on most pages. They appear in a window integrated into the page (often called "Jmol window"). As you read through the text of an entry, you will find "green links". When you click on them, you stay on the same page but the interactive 3D scene. To learn how to get the most out of the interactive 3D scenes, reference the Viewing guide and the cheat sheet that comes with it. If you encounter technical terms you are unfamiliar with, try searching for them to learn more about them (the About Macromolecular Structure entry is a good start.

Who wrote the entry when?

The section headed "Proteopedia Page Contributors and Editors" (on the bottom of the entry) lists all authors of the entry. If you are interested to learn who wrote what and when the entry was last updated, go to the history tab. Occasionally, the discussion tab contains information about how the entry was created or suggestions for improvement.


Becoming a registered user on Proteopedia

To edit pages or create new ones, you need an account. At the top right of each page, there is a link to login in or request an account. With an account, you can edit pages and create new ones. You will also have a user page to introduce yourself, and access to sandboxes where you can try out creating content.

For authors: contributing content

Proteopedia entries contain text and 3D scenes (interactive images). Help for editing text is in this section, and help for creating 3D scenes is in the section on the right. To get started, read Help:Getting Started in Proteopedia, or watch the videos linked there. You can start editing in a sandbox (see Help:Sandboxes). If you are copying or paraphrasing content from other authors, consult Proteopedia:Guidelines for Ethical Writing for ethical aspects, and Help:Editing#Citing_Literature_References for formatting references. The text on Proteopedia has an open license that encourages remixing with attribution, see Remixing. For some suggestions how to improve the quality of a page, see Proteopedia:How to Make a Page.

For authors: creating 3D scenes

Proteopedia entries contain text and 3D scenes (interactive images). Help for creating 3D scenes is in this section, and help for editing text is in the section on the left.To show a 3D scene, you need structural data (typically from the protein database PDB) and need to decide how to show it. This is described in Proteopedia:DIY:Scenes. The 3D scenes are created and previewed using the Scene authoring tools. If you want to show a structure not in the PDB, you have to upload the structure first (Help:Uploading molecules). Tips how to make 3D scenes that have a lot of information yet are easy to understand is available at Proteopedia:How to Make a Scene/

For authors: multimedia

You can insert static images (and other media) and embed videos. Proteopedia hosts image as long as they come with the appropriate licence (see Proteopedia:Terms of Service). For uploadin images, see Video Guide 5. For help on formatting the image within the page, see Wiki markup: Images or for even more detail, Wikipedia:Extended image syntax.

For authors: advanced topics

Some advanced topics are discussed in Proteopedia:Cookbook.


For teachers


Software for use with Proteopedia

Interactive 3D "Supplementary Materials" for Journal Publications

Protecting Pages

Languages

  • For examples of Proteopedia articles in non-English languages, and for the rules and policies for such articles, please see Proteopedia:Languages. *For instructions for translating articles to other languages, see Help:Language Translation.
  • See also Text Directionality regarding right-to-left languages such as Arabic or Hebrew.

Proteopedia Speed

  • Proteopedia will render faster in your computer if you enable the use of Java (see above).
  • Create fast pages: Following these simple tips your Proteopedia pages might load and render faster.


Comments

Users of Proteopedia are invited to comment on published structures. Comments can raise questions about the interpretation, validity or quality of the model, cite other pertinent resources, congratulate the authors on a job well done, discuss implications of the model, etc.

How to comment on articles or published structures: Log in to Proteopedia and add your comment by editing the discussion tab associated with each page. You can comment on any page in Proteopedia.

Errors

See Help:Errors for guidelines on how to proceed when your page seems gone forever.

Contact

Feel free to contact us with any questions or suggestions.


Proteopedia Speed

  • Render faster: If you have Java available on your computer, molecular models in Proteopedia pages will be rendered faster:

Your Heading Here (maybe something like 'Structure')

Caption for this structure

Drag the structure with the mouse to rotate

Proteopedia Page Contributors and Editors (what is this?)

Karsten Theis, Jaime Prilusky

Personal tools