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Video Help:WordToWiki



Microsoft Word

VisualEditor

VisualEditor, the WYSIWYG editor deployed on multiple Wikipedia allows for the copying/pasting of content from Word documents into a wiki page. Most formatting is kept intact - including tables. However, images and advanced formatting will need to be cleaned up upon import.

Word2MediaWikiPlus

The following extension from 2007, unmaintained as of 2017, may still work: Word2MediaWikiPlus Tested with Office 365 word, conversion works despite getting a warning several times.

Download it from: http://sourceforge.net/projects/word2mediawikip/files/word2MediaWikiPlus/1.0.0/Word2MediaWikiPlus-1.0.0.zip/download

Alternative Solution

Microsoft released an add-in that allows you to save your Microsoft Office Word 2007 or above documents straight into MediaWiki.

  1. Download the "Microsoft Office Word Add-in For MediaWiki" from Microsoft Download Center, and install it.
  2. Save the document as "MediaWiki (*.txt)" file type.
  3. Copy the text from the (*.txt) file into your Wiki page

Note that this extension does not work for Word 2013 by default, however it can be made to work with a registry change. See this page.

Possible issues with alternative solution

  • This add-in requires Windows as an operating system; it won't work with Mac OS X
  • This Microsoft add-in does not handle images. A placeholder is emitted.
  • End notes and footnotes can't be converted. Including them in a document will throw an error.
  • If you attempt to resolve the previous issue by inserting <ref> tags, upon conversion Word will replace the angled brackets with < and >
  • Some text will be enclosed by <nowiki> and </nowiki> tags.
  • Not supported for Office/Word 2013, see Word Add-in For MediaWiki not supported in Word 2013?

Nevertheless, for those who are unfamiliar with MediaWiki Markup Language and who are working on simple articles, the Microsoft Office Word Add-in For MediaWiki can be a useful tool.


Maps Help:WordToWiki



Two-stage conversion from Word to MediaWiki

The following methods both perform: Word -> HTML -> MediaWiki.

Quick

  1. Open your document in Word, and "save as" an HTML file.
  2. Open the HTML file in a text editor and copy the HTML source code to the clipboard.
  3. Paste the HTML source into the large text box labeled "HTML markup:" on the html to wiki page.
  4. Click the blue Convert button at the bottom of the page.
  5. Select the text in the "Wiki markup:" text box and copy it to the clipboard.
  6. Paste the text to a Wikipedia article.

Automated scripts

The conversion can also be done using a combination of two scripts and two software packages.

  1. The following two software packages must be installed:
    • wvHtml Word to HTML converter - part of the "wvWare" word viewing library. (Note: wvHtml is deprecated and the site recommends using AbiWord --to=html instead. AbiWord can be obtained at abisource.com.)
    • HTML::WikiConverter - a Perl module to convert HTML to wiki markup language.
  2. Write the bash script "doc2mw", and the perl script "html2mw", both shown below.
  3. Call doc2mw passing the word document as parameter. i.e.
  > doc2mw my_word.doc  


doc2mw: a bash script taking a single parameter, which calls wvHtml followed by html2mw.

   #!/bin/bash   #       doc2mw - Word to MediaWiki converter      FILE=$1   TMP="$$-${FILE}"      if [ -x "./html2mw" ]; then           HTML2MW='./html2mw'   else           HTML2MW='html2mw'   fi      wvHtml --targetdir=/tmp "${FILE}" "${TMP}"    # but see also AbiWord: http://www.abisource.com/help/en-US/howto/howtoexporthtml.html      # Remove extra divs   perl -pi -e "s/\<div[^\>]+.\>//gi;" "/tmp/${TMP}"      ${HTML2MW} "/tmp/${TMP}"   rm "/tmp/${TMP}"  

html2mw: a perl script called by doc2mw, which uses HTML::WikiConverter to convert html -> mediawiki.

   #!/usr/bin/perl   #       html2mw - HTML to MediaWiki converter      use HTML::WikiConverter;      my $b;   while (<>) { $b .= $_; }      my $w = new HTML::WikiConverter( dialect => 'MediaWiki' );      my $p = $w->html2wiki($b);      # Substitutions to get rid of nasty things we don't need   $p =~ s/<br \/>//g;   $p =~ s/\&nbsp\;//g;   print $p;  

Disclaimer: These scripts are probably not the best way to do this, only a possible way to do this. Please feel free to improve them.


4 Ways to Create a Flowchart - wikiHow
src: www.wikihow.com


OpenOffice or LibreOffice

LibreOffice (LO) Writer can send Word documents directly: go file/export/save as type Mediawiki. (for Linux user it can be necessary to install the library libreoffice-wiki-publisher)

OpenOffice versions 3.3 and later can send documents in formats it supports (including Microsoft Word) directly to a MediaWiki, but this does not seem to work under windows 7. (At least for the German version of OpenOffice 3.3.0 you need to install the 'Sun Wiki Publisher'-extension first! Server url: http://en.wikipedia.org/w/ ) Once you have added the MediaWiki-server of your choice, future submissions can happen automatically.

  1. Open the document in OpenOffice or LibreOffice Writer.
  2. Go to File > Send-To > To MediaWiki or File > Export > Save file as: Mediawiki
  3. Select your MediaWiki-server (or click on the button "Add..." to add a new site).
  4. Select a title and summary for your article, check the box if it's a minor revision.
  5. Click the send button.

Alternatively the manual 'export-function' can be used: File -> Export -> choose 'MediaWiki (.txt)'-format. LibreOffice Writer 5 can export as a MediaWiki .txt file under Windows 10 if the appropriate 32- or 64-bit Java Runtime Environment (JRE) has been installed and enabled in LO. The document to be converted has to use styles, etc.; for example headers must be in Heading 2 style to be bracketed by "==" when converted.


Create Wiki Page from Word Doc - YouTube
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See also

  • Commons: Convert tables and charts to wiki code or image files

Source of the article : Wikipedia

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