![]() (This I've also tested and can vouch for.) It won't show in drafts folder, but will in NEXT CHAPTER.Write it, and then PREVIEW IT (this auto-saves draft chapter), done.Speaking of, this CSS work skin tutorial has a sequel: “ How to make and fix series on AO3 ”, if you need help with that.īonus: I know how hard it can be to find good research information sometimes, so if you're a physics geek (or curious), then you might enjoy “ An illustrated periodic table of hadrons” - pretty much self-explanatory (or just skim through my Worldbuilding collection).Īlso-also (I ran into this at the end of April): you know how you can save a new work's draft, but good luck doing that for a new chapter? Well, thanks to Lanani's Corner on Tumblr (AKA LananiA3O), here's how : ![]() This doesn't teach you basic HTML (though footnote 3 explains and shows the shortest possible syntax for AO3 links), or how to use tags. Here's a good one by MohnblumenKind for that.Īlso, though not CSS/HTML: You know that glitch that kicks in when you edit a series - the glitch wherein “Next Work →” links don't show up in the top data block? Here's a workaround to fix that: click any affected story's “Edit” button, don't even bother editing anything, just scroll down and hit “Post”, and the “Next Work →” link should now display in that story's data block where it belongs. Unlike the summary, this headnote 1 does contain CSS effects (obviously) if you don't see colored text or highlighted words here, then click here ►“ Show Creator's Style”◄. It also shows how to make red, green, and blue text (or even highlight it), and you can easily do other colors (fun for Halloween, Thanksgiving, Christmas, Easter, or any other holiday), along with a few other things (good for effects in MMORPG GUI blurbs). Changing font size is covered (good for epistolary fics with missives and posters, or reports and official looking documents - even Homestuck and Undertale make appearances), complete with code. The CSS herein will render diacritics properly (as long as the readers haven't disabled work skins, and do have at least one of the fonts named) for at least these test cases: “ ầ”, “ ị”, & “ ồ”, without breaking words such as “g ầu” or “v ịt”. ![]()
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