Wikipedia:WikiProject QRpedia/user guide - Wikipedia (original) (raw)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

  1. Find the Wikipedia article you want to link to.
  2. Copy its URL.
  3. Go to http://qrpedia.org. (Note: Any other QR code generator will not produce the multi-language options.)
  4. Paste the URL into the box. (The code will automatically generate.)
  5. Click on the QR code image and save it.
  6. Import the QR code image into a word processor programme or graphics package.
  7. (Optionally) Add text labels.
  8. Print the code a minimum of 1 inch (2.5 cm) across, where possible 2 inches (5 cm).
  9. Alternatively, open the downloaded images in a program that can print several images at once, as thumbnails (e.g. Windows Photo Viewer).
  10. Display it in a suitable location (see below).
  11. Test that it works and takes you to the expected page.
  12. Add {{WikiProject QRpedia|article=yes}} to the article talk page.
  13. Drop a note on the project talk page to tell us of your success!

For additional information, see the QRpedia Wikipedia article.

You can display QRpedia codes in a number of ways...

There is no QRpedia API, but you can use, say, the Google QR code API (other QR code APIs exist) to generate a code with the relevant qrwp.org short URL. for example:

http://en.qrwp.org/Amsterdam

or:

http://sv.qrwp.org/Vincent_van_Gogh

Note the use of underscores in the latter; and that you can use any two-letter language code ("en, "sv", etc.) so long as the article exists in that language, and the title given is from that language Wikipedia; so use:

http://en.qrwp.org/Cheese

or:

http://nl.qrwp.org/Kaas

but not:

http://nl.qrwp.org/Cheese

It is possible to generate your own, downloadable QRpedia code images programmatically, by minting a URL in the form:

http://qrpedia.wikimedia.org.uk/qr/php/qr.php?size=800&download=NASA%20QRpedia&e=L&d=http://en.qrwp.org/NASA

Note that you can amend some parameters. |size= is the dimension of the (square) image in pixels. |e= is the error correction rate. This has four options:

The higher the value, the greater the redundancy that is included in the code, allowing it to be read even if dirty or damaged. Use higher values for codes that will be displayed outdoors, in vulnerable locations. See QR code#Error correction for more.