Help:Standards and Formatting

Grammar Styles

The standard language used on D&D Wiki is U.S. English. The only exception to this is proper nouns that are spelled in a way to reflect in-game culture. This is not with intent to alienate anyone, but is simply following the practices of the WoTC. (e.g. favorite instead of favourite, maneuver instead of manoeuvre, -ize instead of -ise, armor instead of armour, or aluminum instead of aluminium.)

You are not required to create your articles in U.S. English, but it is encouraged, and you should not revert attempts to change your spelling to U.S. variants.

Common Misspellings

Misspellings Correct
lightening (illuminating)lightning (electricity)
mithril (J. R. R. Tolkien)mithral (Gygax)
rouge (a color)rogue (a scoundrel)
diety (weight-lossy)deity (god[dess])

"Effect" and "Affect"

The common usage of "affect" is a verb. (This only affects non-living matter.) The common usage of "effect" is a noun. (Living matter is not subject to this effect.)

However, there are less common usages of these words where the reverse is true. An "affect", as a noun, is a physical manifestation of an emotion, such as a frown indicating sadness. To "effect", as a verb, is to put into practice; "to effect a change" is to make that change happen.

Commonly Used Special Characters

CharacterCodeDescription
−Minus sign
–En dash: literally means "through" (1920, 1st9th)
—Em dash: used to represent values of N/A or Nil (e.g. a non-ability "Con ")
××Multiplication sign
→Right arrow: used for the "Back to" footers
‘Left single quotation mark
’Right single quotation mark; also used as an apostrophe
“Left double quotation mark
”Right double quotation mark

gollark: https://qntm.org/hypercomputer
gollark: Hacking time is easy, you can do that off a bunch of potatoes wired together.
gollark: I could genuinely believe that Lyric didn't now how they worked but "reinvented" it.
gollark: They are like regular computers but magic and faster because they do computing in parallel universes which is totally how it works.
gollark: Yes, that is how quantum computers work.
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