Tardis:In-universe perspective: Difference between revisions

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{{mosnav|p=Point of view|Out-of-universe perspective|Images and perspective|Neutral point of view|We're Wikipedia's evil twin|c=Point of view}}
{{mosnav|p=Point of view|Out-of-universe perspective|Images and perspective|Neutral point of view|We're Wikipedia's evil twin|c=Point of view}}
{{moss|When writing the in-universe portion of an article, imagine that you know everything about your topic, but that it no longer exists. Write in the '''past tense only'''.}}
{{moss|When writing the in-universe portion of an article, imagine that you know everything about your topic, but that it no longer exists. Write in the '''past tense only'''.}}
{{sc|T:IU}}It's important that our articles be consistently written from the same point of view. Otherwise, we'd end up with one article written in past tense, another in future tense, and yet another in present tense. Or maybe, some of the articles would be written from a character's perspective rather than the audience's.
{{sc|T:IU}}It's important that our articles be consistently written from the same point of view. Otherwise, we'd end up with one article written in past tense, another in future tense, and yet another in present tense. Or maybe, some of the articles would be written from a character's perspective rather than the audience's.  


We've therefore decided on a few simple rules:
We've therefore decided on a few simple rules:  


#Use past tense for in-universe portions of articles
#Use past tense for in-universe portions of articles
#Write from the perspective of a neutral observer who has access to all known facts about your topic. You, the writer of the article, are omniscient, even though the subject of your article is not.
#Write from the perspective of a neutral observer who has access to all known facts about your topic. You, the writer of the article, are omniscient, even though the subject of your article is not.
#Use only [[T:VS|valid sources]] — which is to say ''narratives'' — to write your article. Material from reference works, deleted scenes, or documentaries can only go in "behind the scenes" sections.
#Use only [[T:VS|valid sources]] — which is to say ''works of fiction'' — to write your article. Material from behind-the-scenes reference works, deleted scenes, or documentaries can only go in "behind the scenes" sections.
#All narratives, regardless of medium, have equal weight. Whether it's a comic strip, audio, novel or television story, it's all equally valid here.  
#All works of valid fiction, regardless of medium, have equal weight. Whether it's a comic strip, audio, novel or television story, it's all equally valid here.  


Here are some common situations:
Here are some common situations:
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