Introductory tutorial to PhysicsOverflow
As promised in the last answer, here is a short introduction on using PhysicsOverflow for new users.
Site Navigation
There are six parts to the site navigation system:
- The top-bar is located at the very top of the site, and is best described as a "User bar", as it's main purpose is for user administration. You can access your user page, edit your profile, logout, etc. from here.
- The header-bar is next to (on the right side of) the logo. It contains some quick, commonly used tools. Here you can go to the page for asking questions, and find commonly accessed lists, such as categories, tags, users.
- The admin-bar is the white bar you find below the logo. It's mainly for moderation and administration tools. For example, the Moderate link takes you to the main community moderation page, which contains links to the various community moderation threads accessible to users with 500 reputation points.
- The nav-bar is below the admin-bar, and is basically like an extension to the header-bar.
- The sub-nav-bar appears on some pages (like user pages and some question list pages, etc.) to complement the nav-bar.
- The side-bar is the sidepanel found on almost all pages (some exceptions are user pages, etc. It contains news and some tools. It also consists of some convinient navigation tools, like All categories, Most popular tags and Related Questions.
Site Organisation
Site organisation is done with categories and tags.
Categories
The main categories of the site are Q&A, Reviews, and Meta (there are a few others which are not as important to a new user). Questions and Submissions can be sorted into these categories. These categories also have subcategories, for example, Q&A has Theoretical Physics, Experimental Physics, Applied Physics, Computational Physics, Phenomenology, Astronomy, Mathematics, General Physics, Community Nowiki. Each category has a description which appears both in the Categories page (accessible from the HeaderBar) and when asking a question.
Tags
There are hundreds of tags that can be applied when asking questions. You can search for an applicable tag by typing it's name into the tags field while asking a question.
Discussion and Voting
Post editing is mostly straightforward. You can insert an image (upload is however not yet supported) by clicking the button that looks like a kite or the sun raising over a mountain range. LaTeX can be inserted from clicking the "TeX" button.
Q&A
Discussion in Q&A is simple - anyone can ask a question, post an answer to a question, or comment. Voting on comments requires 15 reputation, voting on questions requires 25 reputation, and voting on answers require 50 reputation. Each vote on a question yields 5 points to the author of the question. Each vote on an answer yields 10 points to the answerer.
Reviews
Submitting a paper is currently a slow process as we're still in the first phase of the reviews section. You need to request a submission creation here. A moderator will create the submission for you and it will be up for open community review.
There are two criteria for voting on submissions Originality and Accuracy. The overall score is calculated by
\(x= A \exp\left( \sqrt[3]{\frac{o}{5}} \right)\)
Open Problems
The "Open Problems" section is a platform for researchers to communicate with each other in solving open problems in physics.
Meta
Meta is for discussion about the site - feature requests, bugs, support, discussion, official posts. It uses the same software as Q&A, but discussions can be less focused.
Informal Discussion
There are various avenues for informal discussion, such as chat (a category). Chat discussions must however be about Physics, or other stuff relevant for physicists. It is welcome to ask fro discussion on informal notes or books you have written in a chat discussion. To communicate with a particular user, you can visit their user page and leave them a public wall message or send them a private message.
Notifications
When you receive an answer to your question, a comment to your post, or a ping (e.g. @JohnDoe), or if your post is edited, you receive an on-site notification. A yellow button will appear in the top-bar, next to your username, with the number of notifications written on it. If you click it, you're lead to your history page, where the recent notifications are listed.
Community Moderation
See here.