User talk:Pelliott

Welcome to ProofWiki! Since you're new, you may want to check out the general help page. It's the best first stop to see how things are done (next to reading proofs, of course!). Please feel free to contribute to whichever area of mathematics interests you, either by adding new proofs, or fixing up existing ones. If you have any questions please feel free to contact one of the administrators, or post your question on the questions page.

Here are some useful pages to help get you started:
 * Community Portal - To see what needs to be done, and keep up to date with the community.
 * Recent Changes - To keep up with what's new, and what's being added.
 * Check out our house style if you are keen on contributing.
 * Main Page talk - This is where most of the main discussions regarding the direction of the site take place. If you have any ideas, please share them!

Cheers! prime mover (talk) 12:03, 11 January 2019 (EST)

Stackexchange citations
Please see what I wrote here:

Talk:Derivative of Sine Function/Proof 5

and please try to understand our site philosophy. We do not disallow links for arbitrary reasons. It is a fact that material on the internet is ephemeral. Half an hour's browsing on Wikipedia, for example, and you will find that far too high a proportion of the external links are broken, referring as they do to pages that no longer exist (or have moved).

The same applies to sites like stack exchange. While one hopes that links are going to stay around for ever, there is no guarantee of this. It is possible that the entire site will up and move, and so a new URL will be needed for each and every page we link to on that site. Hence we request that all links to stack exchange are made via the template Stackexchange, so that if the format of the URLs change for any reason, all we have to do is change the template and all the pages invoking it will automatically update with it.

I alert you to house style, of course; note that the main nonconformance of the new page you added is its discursive style. We try to keep verbiage to a minimum. Unless something complicated really does need explaining in natural language it is a site convention that material consists of the mathematical steps in mathematical language, with the bare minimum of words to hold it together. --prime mover (talk) 19:34, 26 January 2019 (EST)