Convert your folksonomy label into an official taxonomy filter.

Folksonomy labels, AKA unofficial user-created and applied labels, vary in quality and the degree to which they help users understand and find content. Some folksonomy labels are downright awful, but some may be recognized for adding valuable descriptive or functional 'aboutness' to a piece of Confluence content, such as a page, blog, or attachment. You may want to take one of these beneficial folksonomy labels and add it to your official taxonomy, meaning your Targeted Search filters and filter groups.

Use h4 for section headings

If you don't want numbers in the section headings, simply remove the "numbered" class from this block.

Note/Tip/Warning/Info blocks below are collapsed by default. If you want to use any of these, try to keep to just one per page. You may use two if necessary, but in general, try to limit these.

If using:

  1. Replace me with something to note about this how-to entry that falls outside the scope of all other sections; and
  2. Add the tight-bottom class to the Steps block above to narrow the gap between the two blocks.

If using:

  1. Replace me with something to note about this how-to entry that falls outside the scope of all other sections; and
  2. Add the tight-bottom class to the next visible/non-collapsed block above this one to narrow the gap between the two blocks.

If using:

  1. Replace me with something to note about this how-to entry that falls outside the scope of all other sections; and
  2. Add the tight-bottom class to the next visible/non-collapsed block above this one to narrow the gap between the two blocks.

If using:

  1. Replace me with something to note about this how-to entry that falls outside the scope of all other sections; and
  2. Add the tight-bottom class to the next visible/non-collapsed block above this one to narrow the gap between the two blocks.