Minecraft Wiki:Style guide/Versions

All version articles should use the following layout, to allow for consistency between version articles.

Introduction
At the very top of the article, version history nav should be placed.

After the template should be an introduction with a general description. This description should contain the release date of the update, and a brief description of the update. If it is a development version, it should state which version of it is a development version.

A quote from the version changelog or from the developers may be placed before the introduction text.

Additions and changes
These two sections are combined in the guide due to similarity, in the actual article this is two separate sections called Additions and Changes. General changes in a version should go within the two sections as follows:
 * Additions: Any new features added in the version. This includes features added in development versions.
 * Changes: Any changes to old features from the version. This includes features changed in development versions.

If the version is a full release or has a lot of features, each section also should have the following subsections:


 * General: General features, such as options, splashes, and graphics changes.
 * Gameplay: Features relating to gameplay mechanics, such as achievements, status effects, game modes, and visual changes
 * Command format: Features related to block/entity tags or commands
 * World generation: Features related to world generation
 * Blocks: Features related to blocks
 * Items: Features related to items.
 * Mobs: Features related to mobs.
 * Non-mob entities Features related to non-mob entities, such as armor stands and minecarts.

If the features have not appeared in a development version yet, the feature should be contained in the separate but similar section Planned additions or Planned changes.

Unconfirmed features
This section is only for versions under development, and only contains features:
 * never released in a development version,
 * not (or no longer) confirmed as planned / upcoming for that (or any particular) version,
 * and evidenced, since the version started development, by:
 * a screenshot showing that a developer has worked on the feature,
 * or a developer's statement indicating they do plan to add the feature – not merely a statement responding to another person's idea.

It should start with the text: ''These features are not confirmed for, but they were mentioned or showcased by developers during development. Main article: Mentioned features''

Each feature should consist of:
 * A name or short description of the feature,
 * No details, beyond what it takes to identify the feature (these belong on Mentioned features),
 * The purpose of this section is just for readers to identify the features that are unconfirmed, and to communicate why that is so – not to get into the feature's details.
 * A brief explanation, with supporting references, of when the feature was mentioned and why it is not confirmed.

Fixes
Bugs fixed in this version using fixes. Bugs should also be organised into sections using the following headers:


 * Fixed in the  development versions
 * From released versions before
 * From the  development versions
 * From the previous development version
 * From the current version, hotfixed

Note that fixes supports shortcuts for common headers.

The titles from the bug tracker issues may be freely edited to comply with the style guide. While users are encouraged to fix the titles as they find them, fixing the titles is not required; specifically when first adding the issues. Editors may make major changes to the title (such as rewording the whole title), though this is discouraged unless the original title fails to adequately describe the issue.

Footer
After references, place a double space, then add any applicable navigation templates, like computer versions, and then any applicable categories.

The last thing on every version page will be the interwiki language links.

pt-br:Minecraft Wiki:Guia de estilo/Versões