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skin.txt

MediaWiki's default skin is called Monobook, after the black-and-white photo of
a book, in the page background. This skin has been the default since MediaWiki 
1.3 (2004). It is used on Wikipedia, and is popular on other sites.

There are three legacy skins which were introduced before MediaWiki 1.3:

* Standard (a.k.a. Classic): The old default skin written by Lee Crocker 
during the phase 3 rewrite, in 2002.

* Nostalgia: A skin which looks like Wikipedia did in its first year (2001). 
This skin is now used for the old Wikipedia snapshot at
http://nostalgia.wikipedia.org/

* Cologne Blue: A nicer-looking alternative to Standard.


And there are four Monobook-derived skins which have been introduced since 1.3:

* MySkin: Monobook without the CSS. The idea is that you customise it using user
or site CSS (see below)

* Chick: A lightweight Monobook skin with no sidebar, the sidebar links are
given at the bottom of the page instead, as in the unstyled MySkin.

* Simple: A lightweight skin with a simple white-background sidebar and no
top bar.

* Modern: An attractive blue/grey theme with sidebar and top bar.


== Custom CSS/JS ==

It is possible to customise the site CSS and JavaScript without editing any
source files. This is done by editing some pages on the wiki:

* [[MediaWiki:Common.css]] -- for skin-independent CSS
* [[MediaWiki:Monobook.css]], [[MediaWiki:Simple.css]], etc. -- for
skin-dependent CSS
* [[MediaWiki:Common.js]], [[MediaWiki:Monobook.js]], etc. -- for custom
site JavaScript

These can also be customised on a per-user basis, by editing
[[User:<name>/monobook.css]], [[User:<name>/monobook.js]], etc.

This feature has led to a wide variety of "user styles" becoming available,
which change the appearance of Monobook or MySkin:

http://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/Gallery_of_user_styles

If you want a different look for your wiki, that gallery is a good place to start.

== Drop-in custom skins ==

If you put a file in MediaWiki's skins directory, ending in .php, the name of 
the file will automatically be added as a skin name, and the file will be
expected to contain a class called Skin<name> with the skin class. You can then
make that skin the default by adding to LocalSettings.php:

$wgDefaultSkin = '<name>';

You can also disable dropped-in or core skins using:

$wgSkipSkins[] = '<name>';

This technique is used by the more ambitious MediaWiki site operators, to 
create complex custom skins for their wikis. It should be preferred over 
editing the core Monobook skin directly. 

See http://www.mediawiki.org/wiki/Manual:Skinning for more information.

== Extension skins ==

It is now possible (since MediaWiki 1.12) to write a skin as a standard
MediaWiki extension, enabled via LocalSettings.php. This is done by adding 
it to $wgValidSkinNames, for example:

$wgValidSkinNames['mycoolskin'] = 'My cool skin';

and then registering a class in $wgAutoloadClasses called SkinMycoolskin, which 
derives from Skin. This technique is apparently not yet used (as of 2008) 
outside the DumpHTML extension.