All The Tropes:Style Guide

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.
Revision as of 10:44, 3 January 2014 by Labster (talk | contribs) (Created page with "This page documents the house style for All The Tropes. If you have a question about how to write and present information, you should find answers here. These rules aren...")
(diff) ← Older revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)

This page documents the house style for All The Tropes. If you have a question about how to write and present information, you should find answers here.

These rules aren't perfect, nor do they cover all situations. As such, these aren't official policy, but more like guidelines. However, like all style guides, it's a good idea to know the rules before you break them.

Page Titles

Capitalization

Capitalization of trope names follows our style of titlecase:

  • Capitalize all major words, and both words in hyphenated compounds.
  • Always capitalize the first word of a title, and any word after a colon or dash.
  • Conjunctions (and/or/nor), articles (a, an, the), and short prepositions (on, in, to, by, for, at, of, as, etc.) should be lowercased.
  • Longer prepositions (4 or more letters) should be capitalized (with, from, whereas, etc.).

Capitalization of page titles for works should match the original marketing, as nearly as possible -- and preferably the English-language marketing. However, feel free to create redirects for names in any other capitalization, or for the name of the work in its native language.

If the original language is does not use the Latin alphabet (A-Z), pages should be transliterated to the an English equivalent, or the the English-language marketing name should be used instead.

Japanese text, which is littered around this site, has a few more helpful rules for transliterations of titles.

  • Lowercase mid-sentence particles (ga, wa, no) and write them as separate words.
  • For sentence ending particles (yo, zo, ze, wa), either agglutinate them to the previous word (no space), or capitalize.
  • Honorifics should be lowercase, and be joined to their noun with a hyphen (e.g. Sakura-chan).

See Also