 Next thing is we need some links. Wikipedia needs to have links so that everything is connected to something else. Your page should be connected to another page, another page should connect to you. So it's a little different for user pages, but if it's an article you're creating then your article should link to another page. On Wikipedia and Wikipedia's pages should link back to your page. So you don't want to underlink or overlink. If you're talking about a concept you only need to link it the first time you mention it. And we don't link common everyday expressions like dog, cat, house, football. Just anything that we feel that will add to the reader's comprehension or understanding of a subject or that they might be interested in learning more about having read our article. So to do links we're going to click edit to go in a visual editor and we're going to click on pages that we want to help the reader click through to. So University of Edinburgh we know has a Wikipedia page. Just highlight the text and we're going to click the link drop down this one. And if I scroll up, now that we're in the link menu we've got two options here. We can have the first one which is search pages and that brings up all the Wikipedia pages that relate to the University of Edinburgh. So it's a keyword search looking through all the Wikipedia pages. Alternatively there is a section if we wanted to add a website link to a page outside of Wikipedia. Say for example the University of Edinburgh's own website. But I'm wanting to link to the Wikipedia page and it's this first hit. So I'm going to click on that and now if I move my highlighting you can see that's now a blue clickable link. So if you haven't already now would be a good time to pause the video and create a sentence or a couple of words that you can now link to on your user page. And I can link a few more things while you're doing that. And I've created my example link section and just to show you how easy it is to link. It's important that you are very careful about which one you're linking to. If it comes up as a red link that means that page doesn't exist. And you need to make sure if it is someone that has many different pages for the same name. That they are disambiguated by having that little bit of extra text at the end to determine whether it's a lawyer, a comedian or a fighter or a footballer. It's the author I'm interested in so click on that to do that. Paul Oster. There we go. Novelist. Okay. Now I've got a fair few links on my page now. I'm happy with how they look. If you've done your link as well, you can click save page, added links. And there we have it. We've now done headings, a contents box, bold italics, bullet points, numbered bullet points. And we have clickable internal links. And that's part one done. Next part, I'll show you how to add an image, citation and some references.