Editing guide

Tips and tricks

 * The authors voice is usually formal for lists and tables, but much more loose and informal for prose. Mad science articles especially have a large margin for wild moods and other fun.
 * Reference a Wikipedia page by using  Wikipedia page , where "Wikipedia" is the article name in this example and "Wikipedia page" is the text to display.
 * If an article makes an assertion outside the realm of common knowledge without a citation, then please add a notice by using    at the end of the assertion.

Avoid giving medical advice
We are not trying to provide medical advice for people on this site.
 * Things that we do want to provide:
 * Known risks involved with treatments.
 * How the relevant biochemistry and anatomy works.
 * How the treatments affect these biochemical and anatomical systems.
 * Summaries of official treatment standards.
 * Collections of hypothetical experiments that professionals could use to advance trans healthcare.
 * Things that we should not provide:
 * Suggestions that non-professionals should try our hypothetical experiments.
 * Explicit directions for self medication.
 * Information on treatments that is not either very clearly either a hypothetical experiment or a direct quote from official treatment standard.
 * Explicit directions on how to attempt hypothetical experiments that look like a guide for non-professionals.
 * Fine details like guesses at dosages.
 * How to obtain the materials for the experiments.
 * Simplified directions anyone can follow.

Inclusiveness

 * The language should be as inclusive as possible, ideally taking into account a wide range of gender identities, and intersex conditions too.
 * Try to use gender neutral language wherever possible, for example:
 * Avoid binary pronouns where they can be replaced by gender neurtral alternatives like singular they pronouns in order to include as many people as applicable.
 * Use AMAB/AFAB and potentially AXAB as the X gender marker becomes gradually available on birth certificates, when specifying the gender someone was assigned prior to transition.
 * When talking about transition methods that may only be effective for a specific sex, accurately describe the anatomy involved as assigned genders can involve various anatomical variants in the case of intersex people.
 * Use feminizing/masculinizing (rather than MTF/FTM, which assume binary genders and ignore trans people born with intersex bodies).

Official colors

 * If adding color, keep in mind that we are trying to avoid the stereotypical male= blue  female= pink  enby= purple  trope
 * Instead we use the secondary colors:  orange ,  green , and  violet . Usually with the hex codes  #ed9d53 ,  #3ad769 , and  #bd6dbd  respectively.
 * None are assigned to any where on the gender spectrum in particular, in order to avoid the odd concept that arbitrary colors are somehow bound to gender.

Templates

 * Put an   notice at the top of the page if it covers very experimental trans health stuff. This looks like so:


 * Put a   notice at the top of the page if it covers DIY trans health information. Facts and conjecture are fine without it, but anything that looks like a guide needs this. This looks like so:


 * Put a   notice at the top of the page if it is largely incomplete and needs to be filled in more. You should also add  to the bottom of the page so we know which pages to work on. This looks like so:


 * If you have created a new article that has not yet been peer reviewed pleased add an  notice, you should visit our peer review article if you want to know how to get an article reviewed.


 * If another wiki has an article on this topic, declare  . Example:


 * If there's a Wikipedia page on this topic, declare  . Example:


 * If you are creating an article on a drug, please fill in a Drugbox template to transclude, below is an example template you can find at