Help: Editing and Descent Into Pandemonium: Difference between pages

From DivNull RPG
(Difference between pages)
Jump to: navigation, search
imported>Wordman
No edit summary
 
No edit summary
 
Line 1: Line 1:
==General==
<div class="meta">
To edit a [[MediaWiki]] page, click on the "'''Edit this page'''" (or just "'''edit'''") link at one of its edges. This will bring you to the '''edit page''': a page with a text box containing the ''[[wikitext]]'': the editable source code from which the server produces the webpage. Depending on the preferences that have been set, a version of the edit page called '''preview page''' appears: in this case the rendered page is also shown; if not you get it by pressing "Show preview", see below. .
The idea of the [https://seanmccoy.substack.com/p/dungeon23 #dungeon32] "contest" was to build a megadungeon by creating a brief outline of one room, each day, for the year of 2023, in a [https://www.jetpens.com/Hobonichi-Techo-Weeks-Planners/ct/4080 particular kind of notebook]. This is the result of mine, with an introduction written after it was all done.</div>


The edit link of a page showing an old version leads to an edit page with the old wikitext. This allows [[Help:Reverting a page to an earlier version|restoring the old version]]. However, the edit link of a [[diff]] page gives the current wikitext, even if the diff page shows an old version below the table of differences.
== Introduction ==


After adding to or changing the wikitext it is useful to press "Show preview", which produces the corresponding webpage in your browser but does not make it publicly available yet (not until you press "Save"). Errors in formatting, links, tables, etc., are often much easier to discover from the rendered page than from the raw wikitext.  
This presentation of what turned into ''Descent Into Pandemonium'' explains, up front in this introduction, some things that became only clear as the design went on. This makes the megadungeon a bit easier to understand, particularly the glossary. For the most part, however, the sections after the introduction remain mostly as they were originally written, so you can sort of see the evolution of the idea. There are a couple of places where an idea from later in the process necessitated changing a prior location slightly, but this was avoided most of the time.


'''If you are not satisfied you can make more changes and preview the page as many times as necessary. Then write a short [[Help:Edit summary|edit summary]] in the small text field below the edit-box and when finished press "Save". Depending on your system, pressing the "Enter" key while the edit box is not active (i.e., there is no typing cursor in it) may have the same effect as pressing "Save".'''
=== Premise ===


You may find it more convenient to copy and paste the text first into your favorite [[en:text editor|text editor]], edit and spell check it there, and then paste it back into your [[en:web browser|web browser]] to preview. This way, you can also keep a local backup copy of the pages you have edited. It also allows you to make changes offline, but before you submit your changes, ''please make sure nobody else has edited the page'' since you saved your local copy (by checking the [[Help:page history|page history]]), otherwise you may accidently revert someone else's edits. If someone ''has'' edited it since you copied the page, you'll have to merge their edits into your new version (you can find their specific edits by using the "[[Help:diff|diff]]" feature of the page history). These issues are handled automatically by the MediaWiki software if you edit the page in your web browser.
The #dungeon23 pitch suggested making the dungeon have a level a month, but this one is done a level a week. The rough plan was a decent ever downwards, with order giving way to chaos the deeper you go. By the time you get to the bottom, you're accessing planes of chaos.


For a redirect page the preview and the rendered page may show the contents differently: the latter shows the canonical form of the target, while the preview renders the link in the usual way, compare [http://meta.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?title=Babel&redirect=no] with the preview of [http://meta.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?title=Babel&action=edit].
Given that, it seemed right to start with a temple devoted to order at the top, abandoned for two millennia. As it turns out, this time frame obliterates a lot of what you might normally see in a dungeon. Some research discovered that, over 2000 years in an underground, slightly damp environment with breathable air…


See also [[MediaWiki architecture]].
* …stalactites average about 20cm of growth.
* …all wood, cloth, leather, and organic materials decompose to dust and dirt
* …bones will have decomposed to dust
* …teeth will have fully or mostly decomposed; a few might remain intact
* …most metals (e.g. copper, iron, silver) corrode to dust
* …brass and some other metals may or may not have survived, based on their immediate environment
* …glass, stone, gold, platinum, and bronze remain mostly to fully unchanged
* …some crystals (e.g. quartz) remain intact and some (e.g. salt) do not, depending on their chemical makeup


==Composition of the edit page==
This last fact led to the early idea that this temple to order was specifically attracted to crystals as expressions of order spontaneously created in nature, making crystals a theme through much of the megadungeon.
*[[help:edit toolbar|edit toolbar]] (optional)
*edit box
*[[help:edit summary|edit summary]] box
*save/preview/cancel links
*list of templates used
*preview (optionally either on every edit page or just after pressing "Show preview"; optionally the first item)


== Dummy edit and null edit==
=== Sources ===


If the wikitext is not changed no edit will be recorded and the edit summary is discarded.
=== Rough History ===


A '''dummy edit''' is a change in wikitext that has no effect on the rendered page, such as changing the number of [[w:newline|newline]]s at some position from 0 to 1 or from 2 to 3 or conversely (changing from 1 to 2 makes a difference, see below). This allows an edit summary, and is useful for correcting a previous edit summary, or an accidental marking of a previous edit as "minor" (see below).
* The “Kiooliciti” (kiːuˈlɪsɪtiː) refers to a religious movement/culture centered around worship of order and law, particularly in how it manifested in crystals. Though advanced, the Kiooliciti have been forgotten, the Kioolicit language extinct.
* Two thousand years ago, a Kioolicit temple flourished here, on the slope of a temperate mountain forest, part of a magically advanced, but now extinct, civilization.
* Though some activity took place above ground, the bulk of the temple descends, in levels, into the rock.
* Geomantic forces concentrated a potent source of order into a huge geode deep in the rock, with the temple built here to protect and access.
* The Kiooliciti forged a powerful artifact, The Axiom, to harness and use this source of order, ultimately constructing most of their society around it.
* While the priests spread Kioolicit teaching and culture to extend their influence, the culture’s mages became obsessed with using portals to capitalize on that influence, and built a tesseract connecting their labs across the globe.
* Three chaotic gods bristled at the existence of The Axiom, and became briefly obsessed with the idea of corrupting its power to stabilize a permanent path between the plane of Pandemonium and the center of Kioolicit society.
* The machinations of these gods arranged an unlikely alliance of extraplanar chaotic forces, which breached the temple’s tesseract and moved up to attack the temple.
* Kioolicit defenders managed to stall the invaders before they reached the surface.
* The short stalemate was broken by necromantic plague, turning many of the temple defenders into an undead horde.
* Remaining defenders managed to confine the horde to the lower levels of the temple, then gathered what they could and abandoned the temple entirely, burying the surface entrances, and severing portal connections.
* In time, the invaders shattered The Axiom and absconded with its heart.
* The invaders, having accomplished their actual goal, never breached through to the surface as the Kiooliciti feared and, over two centuries, the garrison guarding the surface faded to nothing, along with what was left of the Kioolicit culture.
* Within the temple’s somewhat humid conditions, two millennia have taken their toll on what was left behind.
* Over that time, most of the potent wards and spells used to seal the temple have also faded.  


To refresh the cache of some item in the database a lesser kind of dummy edit, called a '''null edit''', may be sufficient: one that does not cause any change in the wikitext, and no entry in the history, in Recent Changes, etc.: this can be done by opening the edit window and saving; a section edit is sufficient. See also  [[Help:Category#A_category_tag_in_a_template.3B_caching_problem|A category tag in a template; caching problem]].
=== Glossary ===


== Minor edits ==
When editing a page, a [[MediaWiki User's Guide: Logging-in|logged-in]] user has the option of flagging the edit as a "minor edit". This feature is important, because users can choose to ''hide'' minor edits in their view of the [[MediaWiki User's Guide: The Recent Changes page | Recent Changes page]], to keep the volume of edits down to a manageable level.


When to use this is somewhat a matter of personal preference. The rule of thumb is that an edit of a page that consists of spelling corrections, formatting, and minor rearranging of text should be flagged as a "minor edit".  A major edit is basically something that makes the entry worth revisiting for somebody who wants to watch the article rather closely. So any "real" change, even if it is a single word, should be flagged as a "major edit".
== The Temple Beneath ==


The reason for not allowing a user who is not logged in to mark an edit as minor is that vandalism could then be marked as a minor edit, in which case it would stay unnoticed longer. This limitation is another reason to log in.
=== A. The Surface ===


== The wiki markup ==
Half-way up a forested mountain, an ancient trail leads to ruins.
In the left column of the table below, you can see what effects are possible. In the right column, you can see how those effects were achieved. In other
words, to make text look like it looks in the left column, type it in the format you see in the right column.


You may want to keep this page open in a separate browser window for reference. If you want to try out things without danger of doing any harm, you can do so in the [[Sandbox]].
<div class="container-fluid">
<div class="row">
<div class="col-md-8">
==== 1.1 Stone-Capped Well ====


=== Sections, paragraphs, lists and lines ===
* Rune-covered
<table border="1" cellpadding="2" cellspacing="0">
* Repellent
<tr>
<th>What it looks like</th>
<th>What you type</th>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>
Start your sections with header lines:


Note: Single equal signs work for formatting headings, however as a convention for this wiki, do not use them.
==== 1.2 Feet of the Colossus ====


<!-- This is the original
* All that remains of a massive granite statue, created by magic.
= DO NOT USE THIS =
* Overgrown, no paths remaining.
== New section ==
* Scattered haphazardly on all sides of the left foot are balls of hair and bones (like owl pellets), about volleyball size, as well as larger solitary bones, skulls, and antlers.
=== Subsection ===
* Ancient and weathered
==== Sub-subsection ====
</div>
-->
<div class="col-md-4">
Map
</div>
</div>
</div>


<!-- next set
=== Week title ===
<h1> DO NOT USE THIS </h1>
<h2> New section </h2>
<h3> Subsection </h3>
<h4> Sub-subsection </h4>
-->


<!-- This code prevents confusion in the section editing feature-->
Week description
<b><font style="font-size:120%"> New section </font></b>


<b><font style="font-size:110%"> Subsection</font></b>
<div class="container-fluid">
<div class="row">
<div class="col-md-8">
rooms
</div>
<div class="col-md-4">
Map
</div>
</div>
</div>


<b><font style="font-size:100%"> Sub-subsection</font></b>
=== Week title ===


</td>
Week description
<td><pre><nowiki>


== New section ==
<div class="container-fluid">
<div class="row">
<div class="col-md-8">
rooms
</div>
<div class="col-md-4">
Map
</div>
</div>
</div>


=== Subsection ===
=== Week title ===


==== Sub-subsection ====
Week description
</nowiki></pre>
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>
[[en:newline|Newline]]:


A single
<div class="container-fluid">
newline
<div class="row">
has no
<div class="col-md-8">
effect on the
rooms
layout.
</div>
<div class="col-md-4">
Map
</div>
</div>
</div>


But an empty line
== Appendices ==
starts a new paragraph.


(<nowiki><p></nowiki> disables this paragraphing until <nowiki></p></nowiki> or the end  of the section)
=== Appendix A: The Arch Keys ===


(in Cologne Blue two newlines and a div tag give just one newline; in the order newline, div tag, newline, the result is two newlines)
The early Kiooliciti experiments with portals led to the five "polyhedral" portals. The location of these are summarized here, in addition to the location of the keys that allow their use:


</td>
* Tetrahedral (yellow): 3.26, tesseract entrance. Keys: 2.2, 4.7, 4.8
<td>
* Cubic (orange): 1.28, smashed. Keys (shattered): 2.14, 4.26
<pre><nowiki>
* Octahedral (purple): 3.11, near geode. Keys: 1.13, 2.14, 4.7
* Dodecahedral (green): 4.16. Keys: 2.11, 4.4, 4.14
* Icosahedral (blue): 5.17. Keys: 5.3, 5.10, 5.27


A single
=== Appendix B: Shards of the Axiom ===
newline
has no
effect on the
layout.


But an empty line
Since reassembling the Axiom forms an overriding goal of this megadungeon, here is a list all the locations that mention containing shards of the shattered artifact:
starts a new paragraph.</nowiki></pre>
</td>
</tr>
<tr valign="top"><td>You can break lines<br>
without starting a new paragraph.<p>
Sufficient as wikitext code is <nowiki><br></nowiki>, the XHTML code <nowiki><br /></nowiki> is not needed, the system produces this code.</p></td>
<td><pre><nowiki>You can break lines<br>
without starting a new paragraph.</nowiki></pre>
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>
* [[Help:List|Lists]] are easy to do:
** start every line with a star
*** more stars means deeper levels
*A newline
*in a list
marks the end of the list.
*Of course
*you can
*start again.


</td>
<td><pre><nowiki>* Lists are easy to do:
** start every line with a star
*** more stars means deeper levels
*A newline
*in a list 
marks the end of the list.
*Of course
*you can
*start again.


</nowiki></pre>
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>
# Numbered lists are also good
## very organized
## easy to follow
#A newline
#in a list 
marks the end of the list.
#New numbering starts
#with 1.


</td>
=== Appendix C: Tesseract Connections ===
<td><pre><nowiki># Numbered lists are also good
## very organized
## easy to follow
#A newline
#in a list 
marks the end of the list.
#New numbering starts
#with 1.
</nowiki></pre>
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>
* You can even do mixed lists
*# and nest them
*#* like this<br>or have newlines<br>inside lists
</td>
<td><pre><nowiki>* You can even do mixed lists
*# and nest them
*#* like this<br>or have newlines<br>inside lists</nowiki></pre>
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>
* You can also
**break lines<br>inside lists<br>like this
</td>
<td><pre><nowiki>* You can also
**break lines<br>inside lists<br>like this</nowiki></pre>
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>
; Definition list : list of definitions
; item : the item's definition
</td>
<td><pre><nowiki>; Definition list : list of definitions
; item : the item's definition</nowiki></pre>
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>
:A colon indents a line or paragraph.
A manual newline starts a new paragraph.
* This is primarily for displayed material, but is also used for discussion on [[Help:Talk page|Talk page]]s.
</td>
<td><pre><nowiki>: A colon indents a line or paragraph.
A manual newline starts a new paragraph.
</nowiki></pre>
</td>
</tr>
<tr valign=top>
<td>
<pre><nowiki>IF a line of plain text starts with a space THEN
  it will be formatted exactly
    as typed;
  in a fixed-width font;
  lines won't wrap;
ENDIF
this is useful for:
  * pasting preformatted text;
  * algorithm descriptions;
  * program source code
  * ASCII art;
  * chemical structures;</nowiki></pre>


WARNING If you make it wide,
When the Kiooliciti built their tesseract, they labelled the ''edges'' of its graph not the ''nodes''. (After all, it is the edges that are the hard things to create and monitor.) Each edge (a connection between rooms of the tesseract) has been given an alchemical symbol. Most are two way (↔), some are one way (→), and some are broken (—). The edges are:
you [[en:page widening|force the whole page to be wide]] and
hence less readable. Never start ordinary lines with spaces.<br>
<center>(see also below)</center>
</td>
<td><pre><nowiki> IF a line of plain text starts with a space THEN
  it will be formatted exactly
    as typed;
  in a fixed-width font;
  lines won't wrap;
ENDIF
this is useful for:
  * pasting preformatted text;
  * algorithm descriptions;
  * program source code
  * ASCII art;
  * chemical structures;</nowiki></pre></td>
</tr>
<tr valign="top"><td><center>Centered text.</center>
</td>
<td><pre><nowiki><center>Centered text.</center></nowiki></pre>
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>A [[en:horizontal dividing line|horizontal dividing line]]: above
----
and below.


(However, in most cases a section header is more useful. The horizontal dividing line should only be used if what follows is logically part of the same section; otherwise that part would be hidden in the TOC.)</td>
<div class="container-fluid">
<td><pre><nowiki>A horizontal dividing line: above
<div class="row">
----
<div class="col-md-6 col-lg-4">
and below. </nowiki></pre>
* 🜁 air 3.26 → random destination.
</td>
* 🜂 fire 1.21 — 3.26
</tr>
* 🜃 earth 3.26 ↔ 4.15
</table>
* 🜄 water 3.26 ↔ 5.1
 
* 🜉 aqua vitæ 4.15 ↔ 6.2
Summarizing the effect of a single newline: no effect in general, but it ends a list item or indented part; thus changing some text into a list item, or indenting it, is more cumbersome if it contains newlines, they have to be removed; see also [[w:Wikipedia:Don't use line breaks]].
* 🜌 vinegar 4.15 ↔ 5.1
 
* 🜍 sulphur 4.29 ↔ 5.11
=== Links, URLs ===
* 🜎 philosophers sulfur
 
* 🜏 black sulfur 5.7 ↔ 5.17
<table border="1" cellpadding="2" cellspacing="0">
* 🜑 mercury sublimate 5.10 5.17
<tr>
* 🜔 salt 5.6 ↔ 5.7
<th>What it looks like</th>
* 🜕 nitre 5.11 ↔ 5.21
<th>What you type</th>
* 🜖 vitriol 5.3 ↔ 5.7
</tr>
* 🜨 verdigris 5.21 ↔ 5.30
<tr valign="top"><td>Sue is reading the [[video policy]].
* 🜶 alkali 5.17 ↔ 5.31
*First letter of target is automatically capitalized.
* 🜳 regulus 5.4 ↔ 5.5
*Internally spaces are automatically represented as underscores (typing an underscore has the same effect as typing a space, but is not recommended).
* 🜬 sublimate of antimony 5.4 ↔ 5.8
Thus the [[link]] above is to <nowiki>http://meta.wikipedia.org/wiki/Video_policy</nowiki>, which is the page with the name "Video policy".
* 🜢 sublimate of copper 5.5 ↔ 5.8
</td>
</div>
<td><pre><nowiki>Sue is reading the [[video policy]].</nowiki></pre>
<div class="col-md-6 col-lg-4">
</td>
* 🝁 quicklime 5.15 ↔ 6.3
</tr>
* 🝅 alum 5.15 ↔ 6.3
<tr><td>
* 🜩 tin 5.2 ↔ 5.8
Link to a section on a page, e.g.
* 🜚 gold 5.16 ↔ 5.19
[[List_of_cities_by_country#Morocco]]; when section linking does not work the link is treated as link to the page, i.e. to the top; this applies for:
* 🜛 silver 5.20 ↔ 6.1
*links to non-existent sections
* 🜠 copper 5.29 ↔ 6.2
*links in redirects
* 🜪 lead 5.2 ↔ 5.14
</td><td>
* 🜜 iron 5.8 ↔ 5.31
<pre><nowiki>[[List_of_cities_by_country#Morocco]].</nowiki></pre></td>
* 🜫 antimony 5.20 ↔ 6.1
</tr>
* 🜾 bismuth 5.16 ↔ 6.4
<tr valign="top"><td>Link target and link label are different: [[User:Larry Sanger|answers]].
* 🜺 arsenic 5.8 ↔ 5.13
 
* 🜼 realgar 5.30 ↔ 6.4
(This is called a [[piped link]]).
* 🜸 marcasite 5.20 ↔ 6.4
</td>
* 🜿 tartar 5.10 ↔ 5.16
<td><pre><nowiki>Same target, different name:
* 🝃 borax 5.31 ↔ 6.1
[[User:Larry Sanger|answers]]</nowiki></pre>
* 🜘 rock salt 5.2 ↔ 5.11
</td>
* 🝉 gum 5.9 ↔ 5.13
</tr>
* 🝊 wax 5.2 ↔ 5.20
<tr valign="top">
</div>
<td>Endings are blended into the link: [[official position]]s, [[gene]]s</td>
<div class="col-md-6 col-lg-4">
<td>
* 🝕 urine 5.2 ↔ 5.29
<pre><nowiki>Endings are blended
* 🝖 horse dung
into the link: [[official position]]s, [[gene]]s</nowiki></pre>
* 🝞 sublimation 5.2 ↔ 5.22
</td>
* 🝟 precipitate 5.10 ↔ 5.24
</tr>
* 🝠 distill 5.15 ↔ 5.23
<tr valign="top">
* 🝢 dissolve 5.8 ↔ 5.25
<td>
* 🝣 purify 5.2 ↔ 5.27
Automatically hide stuff in parentheses: [[kingdom (biology)|kingdom]].
* 🝤 putrefaction 5.17 ↔ 5.26
<p>Automatically hide namespace: [[Wikipedia:Village pump|Village pump]].</p>
* 🝩 crucible 5.9 ↔ 5.28
<p>The server fills in the part after the | when you save the page. Next time you open the edit box you will see the expanded piped link. A preview interprets the abbreviated form correctly, but does not expand it yet in the edit box. Press Save and again Edit, and you will see the expanded version. The same applies for the following feature.</p>
* 🝪 alembic 5.25 ↔ 7.3
</td>
* 🝭 retort 5.23 ↔ 7.31
<td>
* 🝑 trident 5.24 ↔ 6.5
<pre><nowiki>Automatically hide stuff in parentheses:
* 🝎 caput mortuum 5.20 ↔ 5.27
[[kingdom (biology)|]]. </nowiki></pre>
* ⍚ “evaporate” 5.26 ↔ 6.1
<pre><nowiki>Automatically hide namespace:
* ⍝ “encase” 5.27 ↔ 5.31
[[Wikipedia:Village pump|]].</nowiki></pre>
* ⍢ “grind” 5.27 ↔ 6.2
</td></tr>
* ⌱ “extract” 5.28 ↔ 6.3
<tr>
</div>
<td>When adding a comment to a Talk page,
</div>
you should sign it. You can do this by
</div>
adding three tildes for your user name:
: [[User:Karl Wick|Karl Wick]]
or four for user name plus date/time:
: [[User:Karl Wick|Karl Wick]] 08:10 Oct 5, 2002 (UTC)
</td>
<td><pre><nowiki>When adding a comment to a Talk page,
you should sign it. You can do this by
adding three tildes for your user name:
: ~~~
or four for user name plus date/time:
: ~~~~</nowiki></pre>
</td>
</tr>
<tr valign="top"><td>[[The weather in London]] is a page that doesn't exist yet.
*You can create it by clicking on the link.
*To create a new page:
*#Create a link to it on some other page.
*#Save that page.
*#Click on the link you just made. The new page will open for editing.
*Have a look at [[MediaWiki User's Guide: Starting a new page|how to start a page]] guide and the naming conventions page for your project.
</td>
<td><pre><nowiki>[[The weather in London]] is a page
that doesn't exist yet.</nowiki></pre>
</td>
</tr>
<tr valign="top"><td>
[[MediaWiki User's Guide: Using redirects|Redirect]] one article title to another by putting text like this in its first line.
</td>
<td><pre><nowiki>#REDIRECT [[United States]]</nowiki></pre>
</td>
</tr>
<tr valign="top"><td>
A link to the page on the same subject in another language or, more generally, to a page on another wiki:
[[:fr:Wikip�dia:Aide]].  
For more info see [[m:Help:Interwiki linking]].
</td>
<td><pre><nowiki>[[fr:Wikip�dia:Aide]], [[:fr:Wikip�dia:Aide]]</nowiki></pre></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>"What links here" and "Related changes" can be linked as:<br/>
[[Special:Whatlinkshere/Wikipedia:How to edit a page]] and
[[Special:Recentchangeslinked/Wikipedia:How to edit a page]]
</td>
<td><pre><nowiki>
[[Special:Whatlinkshere/
Wikipedia:How to edit a page]] and
[[Special:Recentchangeslinked/
Wikipedia:How to edit a page]]</nowiki></pre>
</td>
</tr>
<tr valign="top"><td>External links: [http://www.nupedia.com Nupedia], [http://www.nupedia.com]
</td>
<td><pre><nowiki>External links:
[http://www.nupedia.com Nupedia],
[http://www.nupedia.com]</nowiki></pre>
</td>
</tr>
<tr valign="top"><td>Or just give the URL: http://www.nupedia.com.
*In the [[en:URL|URL]] all symbols must be among: A-Z a-z 0-9 ._\/~%-+&amp;#?!=()@ \x80-\xFF. If a URL contains a different character it should be converted; for example, ^ has to be written %5E (to be looked up in [[en:ASCII|ASCII]]). A blank space can also be converted into an underscore.
</td>
<td><pre><nowiki>Or just give the URL:
http://www.nupedia.com.</nowiki></pre>
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>
To link to books, you can use [[en:ISBN|ISBN]] links.
ISBN 0123456789X See [[Help:ISBN links]]
</td>
<td>
<pre><nowiki>ISBN 0123456789X</nowiki></pre>
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>
Link to [[w:Request for Comments|Request for Comments]]: RFC 123 (URL specified in [[mediawiki:Rfcurl]])
</td>
<td>
<pre><nowiki>RFC 123</nowiki></pre>
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>
To include links to non-image uploads such as sounds, use a "media" link.
<br/>[[media:Sg_mrob.ogg|Sound]]
</td>
<td>
<pre>
<nowiki>
[[media:Sg_mrob.ogg|Sound]]
</nowiki></pre>
</td>
</tr>
<tr valign=top>
<td>Use links for dates, so everyone can set their own display order. Use [[Special:Preferences]] to change your own date display setting.
</td>
<td><pre><nowiki>[[July 20]], [[1969]] , [[20 July]] [[1969]]
and [[1969]]-[[07-20]]
</nowiki></pre>will all appear as [[20 July]] [[1969]] if you set your date display preference to 1 January 2001.
</td>
</tr>
</table>
 
=== Images ===
 
<table border="1" cellpadding="2" cellspacing="0">
<tr>
<th>What it looks like</th>
<th>What you type</th>
</tr>
<tr valign="top"><td>A picture: [[Image:Wiki.png|Wikipedia - The Free Encyclopedia]]
* For many projects, only images that have been uploaded to the same project or [[commons:|the Commons]] can be used. To upload images, use the [[Special:Upload|upload page]]. You can find the uploaded image on the [[Special:Imagelist|image list]]
</td>
<td><pre><nowiki>
A picture: [[Image:Wiki.png]]</nowiki></pre>
or, with alternative text (''strongly'' encouraged) <!-- actually required in HTML4 -->
<pre><nowiki>[[Image:Wiki.png|Wikipedia
- The Free Encyclopedia]] </nowiki>
</pre>
[[en:Web browser|Web browser]]s render alternative text when not displaying an image -- for example, when the image isn't loaded, or in a text-only browser, or when spoken aloud. See [[en:Wikipedia:Alternative text for images|Alternative text for images]] for help on choosing alternative text.  See [[en:Wikipedia:Extended_image_syntax|Extended image syntax]] for more options.
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>
Clicking on an uploaded image displays a description page, which you can also link directly to: [[:Image:Wiki.png]]
</td>
<td><pre><nowiki>
[[:Image:Wiki.png]]
</nowiki></pre>
</td>
</tr>
 
<tr>
<td>
To include links to images shown as links instead of drawn on the page, use a "media" link.
<br/>[[media:Tornado.jpg|Image of a Tornado]]
</td>
<td>
<pre>
<nowiki>
[[media:Tornado.jpg|Image of a Tornado]]
</nowiki></pre>
</td>
</tr>
 
</table>
 
=== Character formatting ===
 
<table border="1" cellpadding="2" cellspacing="0">
<tr>
<th>What it looks like</th>
<th>What you type</th>
</tr>
<tr valign="top"><td>
''Emphasize'', '''strongly''', '''''very strongly'''''.
*These are double and triple apostrophes, not double quotes.
</td>
<td>
<pre><nowiki>''Emphasize'', '''strongly''',
'''''very strongly'''''.</nowiki></pre>
</td>
</tr>
<tr valign="top"><td>
You can also write <i>italic</i> and <b>bold</b>
if the desired effect is a specific font style
rather than emphasis, as in mathematical formulas:
:<b>F</b> = <i>m</i><b>a</b>
*However, the difference between these two methods is not very important for graphical browsers, and many people choose to ignore it.
</td>
<td>
<pre><nowiki>You can also write <i>italic</i>
and <b>bold</b> if the desired effect is a
specific font style rather than emphasis, as
in mathematical formulas:
:<b>F</b> = <i>m</i><b>a</b></nowiki></pre><!-- that's not a mathematical formula, though -- sure it is, just because it's being applied to physics doesn't make it stop being mathematics -->
</td>
</tr>
<tr valign=top>
<td>A typewriter font for <tt>technical terms</tt>.
</td>
<td><pre><nowiki>A typewriter font for
<tt>technical terms</tt>.</nowiki></pre>
</td><!-- tt is really 'teletype', not 'technical term' -->
</tr>
<tr valign=top>
<td>You can use <small>small text</small> for captions.
</td>
<td><pre><nowiki>You can use <small>small text</small>
for captions.</nowiki></pre>
</td>
</tr>
<tr valign="top"><td>You can <strike>strike out deleted material</strike>
and <u>underline new material</u>.
</td>
<td><pre><nowiki>You can <strike>strike out deleted material</strike>
and <u>underline new material</u>.</nowiki></pre>
</td>
</tr>
<tr valign="top">
<td>
'''Umlauts and accents:''' (See [[MediaWiki User's Guide: Creating special characters]])<br/>
� � � � � �<br/>
<br/>
&Agrave; &Aacute; &Acirc; &Atilde; &Auml; &Aring; <br/>
&AElig; &Ccedil; &Egrave; &Eacute; &Ecirc; &Euml; <br/>
&Igrave; &Iacute;
&Icirc; &Iuml; &Ntilde; &Ograve; <br/>
&Oacute; &Ocirc; &Otilde;
&Ouml; &Oslash; &Ugrave; <br/>
&Uacute; &Ucirc; &Uuml; &szlig;
&agrave; &aacute; <br/>
&acirc; &atilde; &auml; &aring; &aelig;
&ccedil; <br/>
&egrave; &eacute; &ecirc; &euml; &igrave; &iacute;<br/>
&icirc; &iuml; &ntilde; &ograve; &oacute; &ocirc; <br/>
&oelig; &otilde;
&ouml; &oslash; &ugrave; &uacute; <br/>
&ucirc; &uuml; &yuml;
</td>
<td><pre><nowiki>
 
� � � � � �
 
&amp;Agrave; &amp;Aacute; &amp;Acirc; &amp;Atilde; &amp;Auml; &amp;Aring;
&amp;AElig; &amp;Ccedil; &amp;Egrave; &amp;Eacute; &amp;Ecirc; &amp;Euml;
&amp;Igrave; &amp;Iacute; &amp;Icirc; &amp;Iuml; &amp;Ntilde; &amp;Ograve;
&amp;Oacute; &amp;Ocirc; &amp;Otilde; &amp;Ouml; &amp;Oslash; &amp;Ugrave;
&amp;Uacute; &amp;Ucirc; &amp;Uuml; &amp;szlig; &amp;agrave; &amp;aacute;
&amp;acirc; &amp;atilde; &amp;auml; &amp;aring; &amp;aelig; &amp;ccedil;
&amp;egrave; &amp;eacute; &amp;ecirc; &amp;euml; &amp;igrave; &amp;iacute;
&amp;icirc; &amp;iuml; &amp;ntilde; &amp;ograve; &amp;oacute; &amp;ocirc;
&amp;oelig; &amp;otilde; &amp;ouml; &amp;oslash; &amp;ugrave; &amp;uacute;
&amp;ucirc; &amp;uuml; &amp;yuml;</nowiki></pre></td>
</tr>
<tr valign=top>
<td>
'''Punctuation:'''<br/>
&iquest; &iexcl; &laquo; &raquo; &sect; &para;<br/>
&dagger; &Dagger; &bull; - &ndash; &mdash;
</td>
<td><pre><nowiki>
&amp;iquest; &amp;iexcl; &amp;laquo; &amp;raquo; &amp;sect; &amp;para;
&amp;dagger; &amp;Dagger; &amp;bull; - &amp;ndash; &amp;mdash;</nowiki></pre></td>
</tr>
<tr valign="top">
<td>
'''Commercial symbols:'''<br/>
&trade; &copy; &reg; &cent; &euro; &yen; <br/>
&pound; &curren;</td>
<td><pre><nowiki>
&amp;trade; &amp;copy; &amp;reg; &amp;cent; &amp;euro; &amp;yen;
&amp;pound; &amp;curren;
</nowiki></pre></td>
</tr>
<tr valign="top" id="subscript"><td>Subscript: x<sub>2</sub><br/>
Superscript: x<sup>2</sup> or x&sup2;
 
*The latter method of superscript can't be used in the most general context, but is preferred when possible (as with units of measurement) because most browsers have an easier time formatting lines with it.
&epsilon;<sub>0</sub> =
8.85 &times; 10<sup>&minus;12</sup>
C&sup2; / J m.
<br/>
<br/>
1 [[hectare]] = [[1 E4 m�]]
</td>
<td><pre><nowiki>Subscript: x<sub>2</sub>
Superscript: x<sup>2</sup> or x&amp;sup2;
 
or in projects with the templates sub and sup:
 
Subscript: x{{sub|2}}
Superscript: x{{sup|2}}
 
&amp;epsilon;<sub>0</sub> =
8.85 &amp;times; 10<sup>&amp;minus;12</sup>
C&amp;sup2; / J m.
 
1 [[hectare]] = [[1 E4 m�]]
</nowiki></pre></td>
</tr>
<tr valign="top"><td>'''Greek characters:''' <br/>
&alpha; &beta; &gamma; &delta; &epsilon; &zeta; <br/>
&eta; &theta; &iota; &kappa; &lambda; &mu; &nu; <br/>
&xi; &omicron; &pi; &rho;  &sigma; &sigmaf; <br/>
&tau; &upsilon; &phi; &chi; &psi; &omega;<br/>
&Gamma; &Delta; &Theta; &Lambda; &Xi; &Pi; <br/>
&Sigma; &Phi; &Psi; &Omega;
</td>
<td><pre><nowiki>
&amp;alpha; &amp;beta; &amp;gamma; &amp;delta; &amp;epsilon; &amp;zeta;
&amp;eta; &amp;theta; &amp;iota; &amp;kappa; &amp;lambda; &amp;mu; &amp;nu;
&amp;xi; &amp;omicron; &amp;pi; &amp;rho;  &amp;sigma; &amp;sigmaf;
&amp;tau; &amp;upsilon; &amp;phi; &amp;chi; &amp;psi; &amp;omega;
&amp;Gamma; &amp;Delta; &amp;Theta; &amp;Lambda; &amp;Xi; &amp;Pi;
&amp;Sigma; &amp;Phi; &amp;Psi; &amp;Omega;
</nowiki></pre></td>
</tr>
<tr valign="top">
<td>
'''Math characters:''' <br/>
&int; &sum; &prod; &radic; &minus; &plusmn; &infin;<br/>
&asymp; &prop; &equiv; &ne; &le; &ge;<br/>
&times; &middot; &divide; &part; &prime; &Prime;<br/>
&nabla; &permil; &deg; &there4; &alefsym; &oslash;<br/>
&isin; &notin; &cap; &cup; &sub; &sup; &sube; &supe;<br/>
&not; &and; &or; &exist; &forall; &rArr; &hArr;<br/>
&rarr; &harr; &uarr;<br/>
</td>
<td valign="middle"><pre><nowiki>
&amp;int; &amp;sum; &amp;prod; &amp;radic; &amp;minus; &amp;plusmn; &amp;infin;
&amp;asymp; &amp;prop; &amp;equiv; &amp;ne; &amp;le; &amp;ge;
&amp;times; &amp;middot; &amp;divide; &amp;part; &amp;prime; &amp;Prime;
&amp;nabla; &amp;permil; &amp;deg; &amp;there4; &amp;alefsym; &amp;oslash;
&amp;isin; &amp;notin; &amp;cap; &amp;cup; &amp;sub; &amp;sup; &amp;sube; &amp;supe;
&amp;not; &amp;and; &amp;or; &amp;exist; &amp;forall; &amp;rArr; &amp;hArr;
&amp;rarr; &amp;harr; &amp;uarr;
</nowiki></pre></td>
</tr>
<tr valign="top"><td><i>x</i><sup>2</sup>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&ge;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;0 true.
</td>
<td><pre><nowiki>
<i>x</i><sup>2</sup>&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;ge;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;0 true.
</nowiki></pre></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>
'''Complicated formulae:'''<br/>
&nbsp;&nbsp;<math>\sum_{n=0}^\infty \frac{x^n}{n!}</math>
* See [[MediaWiki User's Guide: Editing mathematical formulae:TeX markup|TeX markup]]
</td>
<td><pre><nowiki>
<math>\sum_{n=0}^\infty \frac{x^n}{n!}</math>
</nowiki></pre>
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>
'''For comparison for the following examples:'''
 
arrow      &rarr;
 
''italics''
[[link]]
</td>
<td valign="bottom">
<pre><nowiki>arrow      &amp;rarr;
 
''italics''
[[link]]</nowiki></pre>
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>
'''Use &lt;nowiki> to suppress interpretation of wiki markup, but interpret character references and remove newlines and multiple spaces:'''
 
<nowiki>arrow      &rarr;
 
''italics''
[[link]]
</nowiki>
</td>
<td valign="bottom">
<pre><nowiki><nowiki>arrow      &amp;rarr;
 
''italics''
[[link]]</nowiki></nowiki></pre>
 
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>
'''Use <nowiki><pre></nowiki> to suppress interpretation of wiki markup and keep newlines and multiple spaces, and get typewriter font, but interpret character references:'''
 
<pre>arrow      &rarr;
 
''italics''
[[link]]
</pre>
</td>
<td valign="bottom">
<pre><nowiki><pre>arrow      &amp;rarr;
 
''italics''
[[link]]</pre></nowiki></pre>
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>
'''Use leading space on each line to keep newlines and multiple spaces, and get typewriter font:
arrow      &rarr;
 
''italics''
[[link]]
</pre>
</td>
<td valign="bottom">
<pre> <nowiki>arrow      &amp;rarr;
 
''italics''
[[link]]</nowiki></pre>
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>
'''Use typewriter font:'''
 
<tt>arrow      &rarr;</tt>
 
<tt>''italics''</tt>
<tt>[[link]]</tt>
 
</td>
<td valign="bottom">
<pre><nowiki><tt>arrow      &amp;rarr;</tt>
 
<tt>''italics''</tt>
<tt>[[link]]</nowiki></tt></pre>
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>
'''Show character references:'''
 
&amp;rarr;
</td>
<td valign="bottom">
&amp;amp;rarr;</pre>
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>
'''Commenting page source:'''<br/>
''not shown in page''
* Used to leave comments in a page for future editors.
</td>
<td>
<pre><nowiki><!-- comment here --></nowiki></pre>
</td>
</tr>
</table>
 
==Spacing things out==
To space things out, use non-breaking spaces: "<tt>&amp;nbsp;</tt>"  (they also prevent line breaks in the middle of text, this is useful in formulas).
 
Alternatively, use table syntax, see e.g. {{tim|hs}} and {{tim|vs}}. In these templates there are empty cells for the spacing, but one can also use large cells for the contents, and specify, if needed, the desired alignment. In that case one specifies the amount of space including that taken by one of the items. See e.g {{tim|hs1}}.
 
==Hover box==
A hover box without a link is possible: <nowiki><span title="2.54 cm" style="border-bottom:1px dotted">inch</span></nowiki> gives <span title="2.54 cm" style="border-bottom:1px dotted">inch</span>. With {{tcw|Title}} one can use <nowiki>{{</nowiki>title|2.54 cm|inch}}.
 
Combined with a link, with an independent hover box text: [[w:en:inch|inch]] <span title="2.54 cm" style="border-bottom:1px dotted">*</span>
 
Since it depends on the browser whether the hover box appears, it should only be used for non-essential information, for example information one can also find by following the link.
 
Some browsers show the hover box only a number of seconds. Even though it reappears when the cursor is moved away and back, this makes the hover box unsuitable for long or complicated text. {{Title|Some browsers show the hover box only a number of seconds. Even though it reappears when the cursor is moved away and back, this makes the hover box unsuitable for long or complicated text.
 
Since it depends on the browser whether the hover box appears, it should only be used for non-essential information, for example information one can also find by following the link.|Example: this is too long.}}
 
Details of what the browser shows may vary, e.g. "Title:" in front, indentation, code like <nowiki>"</p><p>"</nowiki> being shown, with or without newline, etc.
 
==Templates==
Some part of a page may correspond in the edit box to just a reference to another page, in the form <nowiki>{{</nowiki>''name''<nowiki>}}</nowiki>, referring to the page "Template:''name''" (or if the name starts with a namespace prefix, it refers to the page with that name; if it starts with a colon it refers to the page in the main namespace with that name without the colon). This is called a [[help:template|template]]. For changing that part of the page, edit that other page. Sometimes a separate edit link is provided for this purpose. A convenient way to put such a link in a template is with a template like [[m:Template:ed]]. Note that the change also affects other pages which use the same template.
 
==Page protection==
 
In a few cases the link labeled "{{MediaWiki:Editthispage}}" is replaced by the text "{{MediaWiki:Viewsource}}" (or equivalents in the language of the project). In that case the page cannot be edited. Protection of an image page is automatically also protection of the image itself.
 
==Position-independent wikitext==
 
Wikitext for which the result does not depend on the position in the wikitext page:
 
*[[interlanguage link]]s (see also above) - the mutual order is preserved, but otherwise the positions within the page are immaterial
*[[category]] specification - ditto
*<nowiki>__NOTOC__, __FORCETOC__</nowiki>, see [[Help:Section]]
 
==Separating edits==
 
When moving or copying a piece of text within a page or from another page, and also making other edits, it is useful to separate these edits. This way the [[Help:Diff|diff function]] can be usefully applied for checking these other edits.
 
==Error message==
 
If, due to server problems, a save command results in an error message, either the saving has failed, or just the confirmation. Check e.g. My Contributions to find out.
 
==See also==
 
*[[Help:Automatic conversion of wikitext]]
*[[Help:Calculation]]
*[[Help:Editing toolbar]]
*[[Help:Html in wikitext]]
*[[Help:Administration#Page_protection| Protecting pages]]
*[[Help:Starting a new page]]
*[[Help:Variable]]
*[[Parser testing]]
*[[en:UseModWiki|UseModWiki]] and [[en:Wikipedia:PHP script|Wikipedia:PHP script]].
*[[en:HTML tag|HTML tag]].
*[[w:en:User:Pilaf/Live Preview|Live preview]] - i.e., by the local computer without the need of the server.
 
==External links==
*[http://home.earthlink.net/~awinkelried/keyboard_shortcuts.html Special characters in HTML]
{{h:f|enname=Editing}}

Revision as of 06:57, 24 December 2023

The idea of the #dungeon32 "contest" was to build a megadungeon by creating a brief outline of one room, each day, for the year of 2023, in a particular kind of notebook. This is the result of mine, with an introduction written after it was all done.

Introduction

This presentation of what turned into Descent Into Pandemonium explains, up front in this introduction, some things that became only clear as the design went on. This makes the megadungeon a bit easier to understand, particularly the glossary. For the most part, however, the sections after the introduction remain mostly as they were originally written, so you can sort of see the evolution of the idea. There are a couple of places where an idea from later in the process necessitated changing a prior location slightly, but this was avoided most of the time.

Premise

The #dungeon23 pitch suggested making the dungeon have a level a month, but this one is done a level a week. The rough plan was a decent ever downwards, with order giving way to chaos the deeper you go. By the time you get to the bottom, you're accessing planes of chaos.

Given that, it seemed right to start with a temple devoted to order at the top, abandoned for two millennia. As it turns out, this time frame obliterates a lot of what you might normally see in a dungeon. Some research discovered that, over 2000 years in an underground, slightly damp environment with breathable air…

  • …stalactites average about 20cm of growth.
  • …all wood, cloth, leather, and organic materials decompose to dust and dirt
  • …bones will have decomposed to dust
  • …teeth will have fully or mostly decomposed; a few might remain intact
  • …most metals (e.g. copper, iron, silver) corrode to dust
  • …brass and some other metals may or may not have survived, based on their immediate environment
  • …glass, stone, gold, platinum, and bronze remain mostly to fully unchanged
  • …some crystals (e.g. quartz) remain intact and some (e.g. salt) do not, depending on their chemical makeup

This last fact led to the early idea that this temple to order was specifically attracted to crystals as expressions of order spontaneously created in nature, making crystals a theme through much of the megadungeon.

Sources

Rough History

  • The “Kiooliciti” (kiːuˈlɪsɪtiː) refers to a religious movement/culture centered around worship of order and law, particularly in how it manifested in crystals. Though advanced, the Kiooliciti have been forgotten, the Kioolicit language extinct.
  • Two thousand years ago, a Kioolicit temple flourished here, on the slope of a temperate mountain forest, part of a magically advanced, but now extinct, civilization.
  • Though some activity took place above ground, the bulk of the temple descends, in levels, into the rock.
  • Geomantic forces concentrated a potent source of order into a huge geode deep in the rock, with the temple built here to protect and access.
  • The Kiooliciti forged a powerful artifact, The Axiom, to harness and use this source of order, ultimately constructing most of their society around it.
  • While the priests spread Kioolicit teaching and culture to extend their influence, the culture’s mages became obsessed with using portals to capitalize on that influence, and built a tesseract connecting their labs across the globe.
  • Three chaotic gods bristled at the existence of The Axiom, and became briefly obsessed with the idea of corrupting its power to stabilize a permanent path between the plane of Pandemonium and the center of Kioolicit society.
  • The machinations of these gods arranged an unlikely alliance of extraplanar chaotic forces, which breached the temple’s tesseract and moved up to attack the temple.
  • Kioolicit defenders managed to stall the invaders before they reached the surface.
  • The short stalemate was broken by necromantic plague, turning many of the temple defenders into an undead horde.
  • Remaining defenders managed to confine the horde to the lower levels of the temple, then gathered what they could and abandoned the temple entirely, burying the surface entrances, and severing portal connections.
  • In time, the invaders shattered The Axiom and absconded with its heart.
  • The invaders, having accomplished their actual goal, never breached through to the surface as the Kiooliciti feared and, over two centuries, the garrison guarding the surface faded to nothing, along with what was left of the Kioolicit culture.
  • Within the temple’s somewhat humid conditions, two millennia have taken their toll on what was left behind.
  • Over that time, most of the potent wards and spells used to seal the temple have also faded.

Glossary

The Temple Beneath

A. The Surface

Half-way up a forested mountain, an ancient trail leads to ruins.

1.1 Stone-Capped Well

  • Rune-covered
  • Repellent

1.2 Feet of the Colossus

  • All that remains of a massive granite statue, created by magic.
  • Overgrown, no paths remaining.
  • Scattered haphazardly on all sides of the left foot are balls of hair and bones (like owl pellets), about volleyball size, as well as larger solitary bones, skulls, and antlers.
  • Ancient and weathered

Map

Week title

Week description

rooms

Map

Week title

Week description

rooms

Map

Week title

Week description

rooms

Map

Appendices

Appendix A: The Arch Keys

The early Kiooliciti experiments with portals led to the five "polyhedral" portals. The location of these are summarized here, in addition to the location of the keys that allow their use:

  • Tetrahedral (yellow): 3.26, tesseract entrance. Keys: 2.2, 4.7, 4.8
  • Cubic (orange): 1.28, smashed. Keys (shattered): 2.14, 4.26
  • Octahedral (purple): 3.11, near geode. Keys: 1.13, 2.14, 4.7
  • Dodecahedral (green): 4.16. Keys: 2.11, 4.4, 4.14
  • Icosahedral (blue): 5.17. Keys: 5.3, 5.10, 5.27

Appendix B: Shards of the Axiom

Since reassembling the Axiom forms an overriding goal of this megadungeon, here is a list all the locations that mention containing shards of the shattered artifact:


Appendix C: Tesseract Connections

When the Kiooliciti built their tesseract, they labelled the edges of its graph not the nodes. (After all, it is the edges that are the hard things to create and monitor.) Each edge (a connection between rooms of the tesseract) has been given an alchemical symbol. Most are two way (↔), some are one way (→), and some are broken (—). The edges are:

  • 🜁 air 3.26 → random destination.
  • 🜂 fire 1.21 — 3.26
  • 🜃 earth 3.26 ↔ 4.15
  • 🜄 water 3.26 ↔ 5.1
  • 🜉 aqua vitæ 4.15 ↔ 6.2
  • 🜌 vinegar 4.15 ↔ 5.1
  • 🜍 sulphur 4.29 ↔ 5.11
  • 🜎 philosophers sulfur
  • 🜏 black sulfur 5.7 ↔ 5.17
  • 🜑 mercury sublimate 5.10 ↔ 5.17
  • 🜔 salt 5.6 ↔ 5.7
  • 🜕 nitre 5.11 ↔ 5.21
  • 🜖 vitriol 5.3 ↔ 5.7
  • 🜨 verdigris 5.21 ↔ 5.30
  • 🜶 alkali 5.17 ↔ 5.31
  • 🜳 regulus 5.4 ↔ 5.5
  • 🜬 sublimate of antimony 5.4 ↔ 5.8
  • 🜢 sublimate of copper 5.5 ↔ 5.8
  • 🝁 quicklime 5.15 ↔ 6.3
  • 🝅 alum 5.15 ↔ 6.3
  • 🜩 tin 5.2 ↔ 5.8
  • 🜚 gold 5.16 ↔ 5.19
  • 🜛 silver 5.20 ↔ 6.1
  • 🜠 copper 5.29 ↔ 6.2
  • 🜪 lead 5.2 ↔ 5.14
  • 🜜 iron 5.8 ↔ 5.31
  • 🜫 antimony 5.20 ↔ 6.1
  • 🜾 bismuth 5.16 ↔ 6.4
  • 🜺 arsenic 5.8 ↔ 5.13
  • 🜼 realgar 5.30 ↔ 6.4
  • 🜸 marcasite 5.20 ↔ 6.4
  • 🜿 tartar 5.10 ↔ 5.16
  • 🝃 borax 5.31 ↔ 6.1
  • 🜘 rock salt 5.2 ↔ 5.11
  • 🝉 gum 5.9 ↔ 5.13
  • 🝊 wax 5.2 ↔ 5.20
  • 🝕 urine 5.2 ↔ 5.29
  • 🝖 horse dung
  • 🝞 sublimation 5.2 ↔ 5.22
  • 🝟 precipitate 5.10 ↔ 5.24
  • 🝠 distill 5.15 ↔ 5.23
  • 🝢 dissolve 5.8 ↔ 5.25
  • 🝣 purify 5.2 ↔ 5.27
  • 🝤 putrefaction 5.17 ↔ 5.26
  • 🝩 crucible 5.9 ↔ 5.28
  • 🝪 alembic 5.25 ↔ 7.3
  • 🝭 retort 5.23 ↔ 7.31
  • 🝑 trident 5.24 ↔ 6.5
  • 🝎 caput mortuum 5.20 ↔ 5.27
  • ⍚ “evaporate” 5.26 ↔ 6.1
  • ⍝ “encase” 5.27 ↔ 5.31
  • ⍢ “grind” 5.27 ↔ 6.2
  • ⌱ “extract” 5.28 ↔ 6.3