Talk:Financial economics/Related Articles: Difference between revisions

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imported>Chris Day
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imported>Chris Day
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{{rpl|Electron shell|Shell|:}}
{{rpl|Electron shell|Shell|:}}


For more information and examples see [[Template:Rpl/Doc]].
For more information and examples see [[Template:Rpl/Doc]]. By the way discussion always trumps overreacting. I hope you'll find I am the least of your worries but if you come across people that persist on editing ''your'' articles you will have to collaborate in a [[CZ:Professionalism|professional way]].  Reading that link will help you understand the expected proceedures. [[User:Chris Day|Chris Day]] 16:02, 22 May 2008 (CDT)

Revision as of 16:02, 22 May 2008

Can some CZ expert please advise how an author should respond if alterations to his work are made without explanation. I have no experience of such treatment, and I do not want to overreact. Nick Gardner 15:48, 22 May 2008 (CDT)

Are you referring to this edit? Should it not be all capitals as the current article has been named? If your worry is that the you want lower case, you can easily do the following if the original title is not correct or undesirable. I removed the colons too since they are not usually used with this template. If you don't like this kind of default setting you can change it. Here are some examples of the formating you can do:
{{rpl|Electron}}
{{rpl|Electron configuration||**}}
{{rpl|Electron orbital||**}}
{{rpl|Electron shell||**}}
  • Stub Electron: Elementary particle that carries a negative elementary charge −e and has mass 9.109 382 91 × 10−31 kg. [e]
    • Stub Electron configuration: The arrangement of electrons of an atom, a molecule, or other physical structure, distributed in the orbitals of the given system. [e]
    • Developed Article Electron orbital: Quantum mechanical quadratically integrable one-electron function (function of the coordinates of one electron) [e]
    • Developing Article Electron shell: A group of electron orbitals that share the same principal quantum number (n). [e]
{{rpl|Electron||#}}
{{rpl|Electron configuration||#}}
{{rpl|Electron orbital||#}}
{{rpl|Electron shell||#}}
  1. Stub Electron: Elementary particle that carries a negative elementary charge −e and has mass 9.109 382 91 × 10−31 kg. [e]
  2. Stub Electron configuration: The arrangement of electrons of an atom, a molecule, or other physical structure, distributed in the orbitals of the given system. [e]
  3. Developed Article Electron orbital: Quantum mechanical quadratically integrable one-electron function (function of the coordinates of one electron) [e]
  4. Developing Article Electron shell: A group of electron orbitals that share the same principal quantum number (n). [e]
{{rpl|Electron}}
{{rpl|Electron configuration|Configuration|**}}
{{rpl|Electron orbital|Orbital|**}}
{{rpl|Electron shell|Shell|**}}
  • Stub Electron: Elementary particle that carries a negative elementary charge −e and has mass 9.109 382 91 × 10−31 kg. [e]
    • Stub Configuration: The arrangement of electrons of an atom, a molecule, or other physical structure, distributed in the orbitals of the given system. [e]
    • Developed Article Orbital: Quantum mechanical quadratically integrable one-electron function (function of the coordinates of one electron) [e]
    • Developing Article Shell: A group of electron orbitals that share the same principal quantum number (n). [e]
{{rpl|Electron||}}
{{rpl|Electron configuration|Configuration|:}}
{{rpl|Electron orbital|Orbital|:}}
{{rpl|Electron shell|Shell|:}}

Stub Electron: Elementary particle that carries a negative elementary charge −e and has mass 9.109 382 91 × 10−31 kg. [e]

Stub Configuration: The arrangement of electrons of an atom, a molecule, or other physical structure, distributed in the orbitals of the given system. [e]
Developed Article Orbital: Quantum mechanical quadratically integrable one-electron function (function of the coordinates of one electron) [e]
Developing Article Shell: A group of electron orbitals that share the same principal quantum number (n). [e]

For more information and examples see Template:Rpl/Doc. By the way discussion always trumps overreacting. I hope you'll find I am the least of your worries but if you come across people that persist on editing your articles you will have to collaborate in a professional way. Reading that link will help you understand the expected proceedures. Chris Day 16:02, 22 May 2008 (CDT)