User:Amgine/SG Details

A style guide can, and should, cover the tiny details of a text publication, in an attempt to maintain a uniform set of methods and as a way to avoid disputes. But a style guide is always a guide - not a straitjacket.

A style guide includes rules, and special exceptions to rules, and niggling details as they are to be done in a specific context. For example, on Wikinews it is preferred to use the hyphen, -, rather than the n-dash (–) or the m-dash (&mdash;). The others aren't wrong, nor are they right, it's just that here it is preferable to use the normal hyphen. Solecisms, textual faux pas, common mis-spellings, misuses, and misconceptions might all be highlighted with the preferred method of handling, spelling, or avoiding problems in writing.

This particular collection is Amgine's Personal Style Guide Details - in no way is it complete, nor is it in any way related to policy on Wikinews. It may be useful for some editors, even hoped to be, but it is not presented with any claims for either usefulness or accuracy, and any browsing of it may be harmful to your physical, mental, or economic health (nor are the possible harms limited to those.)

So, use or not at your own risk.



Additional resources

 * BBC Radio News Style Guide | BBC Academy: Style Guide
 * Economist Style Guide 2017-10-09 Archive.org
 * Guardian style guide
 * Voice of America Stylebook - 2010, PDF
 * AP Stylebook
 * Archive.org search results (Many editions in various media.)
 * Purdue OWL - (Online Writing Lab, AP Style basics - not the complete guide.)
 * AP Stylebook official, pay site.
 * The New York Times Stylebook (not found yet, but also see https://open.nytimes.com/)
 * New York Times Manual of Style and Usage on Worldcat
 * Karla's Guide to Citation Style Guides | U of Iowa: Journalism and Mass Communication Resources
 * Guide to punctuation
 * The Slot: A spot for copy editors - Old skool great - that is, the content is gold. But, you may have a hard time figuring out why it is insanely good.
 * A guide to copy-editing everything - basic, but useful.
 * Radical Copyeditor blog. Language is not neutral. Some useful advice about how to work to make language less biased/harmful.