Cut and paste from MediaWiki appears to working with only minor edits noted below.
MediaWiki uses standard HTML syntax to create tables. Dokuwiki doesn't read HTML, so the syntax is a bit different. An example of correct Dokuwiki table syntax:
| ^ Heading 1 ^ Heading 2 ^ ^ Heading 3 | Row 1 Col 2 | Row 1 Col 3 | ^ Heading 4 | no colspan this time | | ^ Heading 5 | Row 2 Col 2 | Row 2 Col 3 |
This comes out as:
Heading 1 | Heading 2 | |
---|---|---|
Heading 3 | Row 1 Col 2 | Row 1 Col 3 |
Heading 4 | no colspan this time | |
Heading 5 | Row 2 Col 2 | Row 2 Col 3 |
Unlike MediaWiki that used Sidebar to change the left menu, Docuwiki uses a navigation page. The top-level bar is ://wiki.cs.byu.edu/navigation. Class pages can have separate navigation as well. For example, the navigation page for cs-486 is cs-486/navigation. Edit it the same as in MediaWiki. The navigation page is the navigation bar.
Unlike the MediaWiki plugin on ://facwiki.cs.byu.edu that uses <source> and </source> tags, DocuWiki uses code instead of source in the tags. After the code keyword, you can include an optional language. Here is an example
BDD BDD::SwapVariables(std::vector<BDD> x, std::vector<BDD> y) const; BDD AndAbstract(const BDD& g, const BDD& cube, unsigned int limit = 0) const; double BDD::CountMinterm(int nvars) const; void Cudd::DumpDot( const std::vector<BDD>& nodes, char ** inames = 0, char ** onames = 0, FILE * fp = stdout) const;
The MathJax plugin is installed. A single dollar sign is inline mode, $x^2$, and the double dollar sign indicates display mode.
$$ x = \sum_{i=0}^n i^2 $$