How to Tag Stuff (A Basic Guide)

ophiuchusdenied:

houseofthornes:

Tags are extremely useful, but if you’re new to tumblr, you might not know what to do with them (hence this nifty little guide). Tags have three basic uses: Organization, Information, and Commentary.

Tags are used for organization by consistently tagging things into categories you’ll remember so you can search for them later from your blog. This is the most basic use for a tag. This is also how tracked tags work, on a much larger scale. Have something you want organized on your blog but also want it out of the major tracked tags? Get creative. Many bloggers have tags only they and their followers would recognize. using tags for organization is very useful if you ever want to find a specific post again. Ever.

Organization tags also include tagging people you’re talking about or to in a post. If they’ve tracked their tag (and they probably have) they’ll know when someone tags them in a post and will be able to find that post to comment or keep talking. Remember, username tags need to be exact or the user won’t see it in their tracked tag.

Using a tag for information is possibly the most important use for tags. Not only is it useful, it can help keep people safe while browsing tumblr. Information has two main categories: basic information and warnings.

Basic information includes what fandom the post is about and the characters in it (as well as the ships) or simply the subject of the post.This lets people know the subject matter and is a great way for people to find new series they might want to read/watch/play/listen to. Tagging fandoms, characters, and ships also lets your followers blacklist certain things if they like you, but not one of your fandoms.

Warning tags are specifically for other users to blacklist. Blacklisting is a feature of a program called Tumblr Savior (TS), which helps keep people with phobias or triggers safe while browsing. It’s also used to avoid spoilers or posts about things a user just really doesn’t like. The most common warning tags are for violence, death, or non-consensual sexual activity, though there are obviously many more. I, for example, have spiders tagged because spiders scare the crap out of me.

Warning tags are very important, please use them.


Commentary tags are the fun tags. They’re for making comments you don’t want in the body of the post for one reason or another and often include, grumbling, sarcasm, and reactions to fandom posts. Because of the restrictions on grammar, commentary tags are usually un-capitalized and lacking punctuation. Commentary tags break where a comma might normally be, for emphasis, or if that tag is getting too long.

I hope this guide has helped! Remember, it’s just a basic guide to get you started.

in addition:

i believe xkit also has a blacklisting feature?  i’ve never tried it because i still use tumblrsaviour.

it’s also worth noting that tracked tags do not include reblogged posts, only individual posts, so if you tag a reblog for a friend with their url and they have their url tracked, they still won’t see it—but it does make it easier to search their blog for posts they’ve made/reblogged for you later. ^^ 

Also, important note: tags with hyphens are for commentary only. Because of the way Tumblr uses hyphens to indicate spaces in tag URLs, tags with hyphens in them cannot be searched for.

(This means that if your URL contains a hyphen, you are screwed tracking-wise unless people know to tag your name using a space instead of a hyphen, which never happens. Tumblr should fix this, but we all know they won’t and it might well be too entrenched in the way things work now anyway.)


Tags:

#useful things #A User’s Guide to Tumblr #reply via reblog


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justice-turtle:

nurfherder:

surrexi:

sexyglances:

Tumblr 101: How Tags work!

  • Only the first 5 tags count.
  • Start with the important tags (ex. show name, actor name, artist name).
  • If you’re the kind of person who fangirl like there’s no tomorrow like me in their tags, save that until the end.
  • Don’t tag your hate, that’s rude, childish and immature.

the first five tags of new (i.e. not reblogged) posts will only show up in tracked tags. however, you can have up to 24 tags (? i think that’s the right number. please correct me if i’m wrong) of up to 140 characters each (after that tumblr will automatically cut off the tag with an ellipses), and those will still show up on your blog (and on your dashboard) for personal organization (or commentary) purposes.

Actually only the first TWENTY (20) tags will work for organizational purposes, but the total number of tags that will actually publish is THIRTY (30).

So for example, I just made a post and put forty tags on it. Here’s what will happen:

  • Only the first five (5) will show up in tracked tags
  • Only the first twenty (20) will cause the post to show up in the tag on my blog (i.e. surrexi.com/tagged/tag)
  • Only the first thirty (30) will actually publish; the rest will disappear into the ether

THIS MEANS THAT:

  • You have to prioritise things you want to show up in tracked tags first, and you only get FIVE TAGS, so you have to choose carefully.
  • You have a further fifteen tags that will count when you/your visitors browse the tags on your blog (so if you have a “mine” tag or a “resources” tag or a variation thereof, it’s best to put that in right after the tracked tags).
  • To know how many tags you have to use for FEELS etc, subtract the number of tags you’ve already made from 30. (So, for example, if I make a post with five “tracked” tags, a “stuff i made” tag, and four organizational tags, I have 20 tags left for my feelings, ten of which will be purely for decoration.)
  • And of course, all of your tags must be under 140 characters.

Thank you so much for doing all that research! I mean it, seriously. This is useful to the max.

This is confusing but useful! Thank you, OP!


Tags:

#useful things #shouldn’t be but it is #bookmarking this as well

justice-turtle:

Air & Angels: Handbag/purse/backpack/WHATHAVEYOU meme

airandangels:

if you habitually carry around a handbag, purse, backpack or other bag with your DAY TO DAY LIFE STUFF in it, kindly itemise its contents here, as shall I

it will all be very revelatory

you do not have to count, like, old receipts and tissues but now would be a good time to get them out of your…

I’m going to count both my pocket-stuff and my backpack-stuff, but omit day-specific schoolbooks…

  • Cell phone
  • Keys (about a dozen, all of which I use)
  • Half a dozen pens of my favorite ergonomic style
  • Swiss Army knife
  • Leather wallet with money, IDs, various plastic cards and gift certificates, and a USB thumb drive (for printing documents at school)

That’s all in my pockets. Backpack:

  • Graphing calculator
  • Checkbook
  • Colored pencils
  • “Clicker”, which is a polltaking device for school and looks rather like a remote control
  • Wee portable pencil-sharpener, the kind that is just a plastic frame with a blade in
  • iPod charger
  • Receipts for all the textbooks I’ve rented this semester
  • Day planner
  • Hardcover address book with my To Read list in (this is a new experiment, suggested by Bookblather from LJ; my reading lists are always going missing)
  • Small spiral-bound memo book with my shopping list in
  • Thermos bottle full of peanut M&Ms for snacking on
  • Water bottle
  • Three or four unused pads in their wrappers
  • and a bottle of OTC painkillers. ;P

Ooh, neat idea. Maybe by reading others’ posts I’ll find new Useful Things to add to my collection.

My own Useful Things collection, kept in a utility belt belly bag utility belt, in order of what I pulled out:

Main compartment:

  • Some clean napkins
  • A notebook, which is nearly full and I should replace it
  • A big scrunchie (for ponytails, as opposed to small scrunchies that go at the bottom of braids)
  • A paperback copy of Eric, by Terry Pratchett (emergency use only; I don’t have an e-reader)
  • A pen
  • An electronic dictionary, which also plays Hangman, is a calculator, and can tell you what day of the week a given day was/will be
  • Wallet
  • The one cell phone owned by my family, which is usually kept in Mom’s backpack
  • A bottle of pumpkin-scented hand sanitiser from Bath and Body Works, which I haven’t yet used and forgot I had
  • A tiny flashlight only good for reading by
  • An Occupy Toronto flyer from November (I didn’t go)
  • A plastic bag I got from the bulk section, which might come in handy
  • A spare battery for the flashlight
  • A comfortingly smooth honey-coloured rock
  • A twisty tie

Front compartment:

  • A miniature blue Sharpie
  • A pair of clip-on sunglasses
  • A one-metre tape measure
  • Two packets of cranberry-almond biscotti
  • A magnifying glass
  • Six peppermints
  • A tiny sowing kit consisting of a needle, six different colours of thread wrapped around some cardboard, a safety pin, and a button
  • A penknife with scissors and tweezers
  • A rubbery toy lizard
  • A non-rubbery toy turtle
  • A length of stretchy string (originally intended to be a bracelet) about…um…*uses tape measure* 16 in/40 cm long
  • …you know what, I’m just going to throw away this five-year-old Tootsie Roll
  • A couple inches of braided rope with one of those keychain loops at each end
  • A paperclip
  • Instructions on how to tie various knots
  • A slice of blue agate, also comfortingly smooth and pretty
  • A piece of amethyst that used to be a keychain before it broke (rocks are good, okay?)

Back compartment:

  • One tampon
  • Two menstrual pads
  • Two panty liners
  • Ziploc bags: one snack, one quart
  • A Ziploc bag containing some wipes of the type used on babies’ butts, dried out but could probably be brought back to life with a bit of water
  • A tightly-folded emergency poncho, never used
  • A foil blanket, also never used
  • A small geode (yay rocks!)
  • …so that’s where my Star of David necklace went! (Like I’ll actually be able to dig it out in time if I happen to encounter a Jewish vampire. Also good (well, bad) for werewolves.)

Attached to the belt:

  • Bike key
  • House key
  • P.O. box key
  • Keychain shaped like a Samoa (I’m not very fond of them, but it was the only kind of cookie keychain they had left in stock)
  • A pouch containing a penknife with fork, spoon, and corkscrew
  • A bottle of hand sanitiser that I do use
  • (not actually attached at the moment, but I always put it on before leaving the house) A pouch containing a Sansa (MP3 player), set of headphones, and docking cable (The Sansa also acts as a thumb drive to backup my diary.)
  • A first aid bag

Inside the first aid bag:

  • A tube of Polysporin
  • Band-aid: one medium-large, three medium, two large/knee
  • Five packets of alcohol wipes
  • A Ziploc bag containing a disposable CPR mask
  • Instructions on what to do in case of heat exhaustion, blisters, insect stings, and sprains
  • Moleskin bandage
  • Three pseudoephedrine tablets
  • Two Dramamine tablets
  • One Imodium tablet
  • Another safety pin
  • Two emergency quarters, though I can’t actually rely on pay phones existing
  • A whistle-compass-mirror combo (it was the only spot I had space)
  • A chocolate bar (ditto, though I could argue it’s medicinal)
  • A tube of anti-itch ointment (the kind with Benadryl)
  • A roll of gauze bandage
  • An Ace bandage
  • A small tube of sunscreen
  • A lighter
  • A container of floss, possibly to be used for string-related purposes
  • Two pairs of gloves
  • A small bottle of bug repellent
  • A tiny hairbrush I forgot I had (again, too bulky to fit anywhere else)

Can you tell how proud I am of my collection? And that I’ve obtained a reputation for always having the right tool for the situation?


Tags:

#utility belt   #meme   #Useful Things


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