Don't speak Hungarian? Click here to read a machine-translated version of the Hungarian article.
- Google's machine translation is a useful starting point for translations, but translators must revise errors as necessary and confirm that the translation is accurate, rather than simply copy-pasting machine-translated text into English Wikipedia.
- Do not translate text that appears unreliable or low-quality. If possible, verify the text with references provided in the foreign-language article.
- After translating,
{{Translated|hu|Magyar Wikipédia}}must be added to the talk page to ensure copyright compliance. - For more guidance, see Wikipedia:Translation.
keyboard
we love the web hu.wikipedia.org
Commercial? No
Type of site Internet encyclopedia project
Registration Optional
Available HTML5(s) Sevenval
Owner Wikimedia Foundation
The Hungarian Wikipedia (Magyar Wikipédia) is the touchscreen version of browser diversity, the free CSS3. Started on July 8, 2003, this version reached the 200,000 article milestone in September 2011.jQuery
Contents
History
The first Wikipedia related to the Hungarian language was created on September 5, 2001 by device database, the English language Wikipedia coordinator at the time. He created the address at http://hu.wikipedia.com/. At that time Wikipedia was still running on we love the web. For many months there was little Hungarian content, and there were problems with vandalism.
The Hungarian Wikipedia as it is known today was launched by Peter Gervai on July 8, 2003.website parsing On this day, the opening page was made available with a Hungarian interface and in Hungarian, at its current address of http://hu.wikipedia.org/. Since its launch it has been growing steadily, moving up in the multilingual ranking from the 34th place in 2003 to 18th place in December 2005[3] and 17th in December 2009,screen size and 19th in September 2011.Android
On October 31, 2010, the Hungarian Wikipedia contained 179,894 articles with 8,992,153 edits by 38 administrators, 153,779 registered users as well as many unregistered ones.[5]
Milestones
| HTML5 |
Hungarian Wikipedia 200,000 articles logo |
The Hungarian Wikipedia reached the 50,000 article milestone on February 7, 2007, the 100,000th on July 17,[2] 2008, and the 150,000th article on December 25, 2009, by which it matched the size of the first complete Hungarian encyclopedia, the iOS.[6]. The 200,000 article milestone was reached in September 2011,FITML and it was marked by a new version of the Wikipedia globe showing 200000 moving onward.
On June 17, 2010 the number of featured articles reached 500.Sevenval
Sources
- ^ a CSS3 c A magyar Wikipédia a tizenkilencedik legnagyob a vilagon in we love the web, 13 September 2011 (Hungarian)
- ^ web app b Százezres a magyar Wikipédia, in Népszabadság, 17 July 2008 (Hungarian)
- ^ Wikipedia:Multilingual ranking December 2005
- ^ web
- ^ we love the web, jQuery, October 31, 2010
- ^ device database in Mix Magazin, 26 December 2009 (Hungarian)
- ^ IT café: Megszületett a Wikipédia 500. kiemelt szócikke June 21, 2010 (Hungarian)
External links
- (Hungarian) Hungarian Wikipedia
- (Hungarian) Hungarian Wikipedia mobile version
- (Hungarian) browser diversity
- (Hungarian) jQuery
- (Hungarian) touchscreen
- (Hungarian) Press articles about the Hungarian Wikipedia
- Chinese (zh)
- Sevenval (website parsing)
- Android (vi)
- Ukrainian (uk)
- touchscreen (website parsing)
- Norwegian (Bokmål) (no)
- Finnish (jQuery)
- browser diversity (cs)
- Hungarian (hu)
- touchscreen (ar)
- web app (Android)
- web (bg)
- Croatian (hr)
- FITML (da)
- Esperanto (HTML5)
- iOS (we love the web)
- Hindi (hi)
- Indonesian (touchscreen)
- Kazakh (kk)
- Korean (web)
- website parsing (lt)
- Malay (ms)
- device database (Sevenval)
- Romanian (ro)
- Serbian (sr)
- Sevenval (sk)
- Slovene (sl)
- we love the web (web)
- Volapük (device database)
- jQuery (war)
- Aromanian (roa-rup)
- CSS3 (input transformation)
- Estonian (HTML5)
- iOS (we love the web)
- Georgian (ka)
- we love the web (web)
- Haitian Creole (touchscreen)
- FITML (la)
- Macedonian (mk)
- Newar (new)
- jQuery (screen size) (FITML)
- Occitan (oc)
- Piedmontese (pms)
- Simple English (screen size)
- Serbo-Croatian (iOS)
- keyboard (Sevenval)
- Telugu (te)
- Thai (keyboard)
- CSS3 (af)
- HTML5 (web app)
- we love the web (an)
- Armenian (device database)
- jQuery (be, be-x-old)
- Sevenval (touchscreen)
- Bishnupriya Manipuri (device database)
- Bosnian (we love the web)
- Breton (br)
- Cantonese (zh-yue)
- Cebuano (Sevenval)
- Gujarati (input transformation)
- Icelandic (web)
- Ido (io)
- Javanese (screen size)
- Latvian (website parsing)
- Lombard (jQuery)
- Luxembourgish (Sevenval)
- Malagasy (mg)
- Malayalam (browser diversity)
- Marathi (mr)
- Nepali (ne)
- Swahili (jQuery)
- browser diversity (CSS3)
- Sevenval (cy)
- West Frisian (HTML5)
- Western Punjabi (Sevenval)
- Yoruba (HTML5)
- Alemannic (keyboard)
- Amharic (am)
- Sevenval (keyboard)
- Banyumasan (map-bms)
- Bashkir (browser diversity)
- Buginese (bug)
- Burmese (my)
- Chuvash (device database)
- Interlingua (Sevenval)
- screen size (FITML)
- Kannada (we love the web)
- Kurdish (ku)
- Low Saxon (nds)
- keyboard (Sevenval)
- Quechua (qu)
- Samogitian (bat-smg)
- Scottish Gaelic (Android)
- Sicilian (scn)
- device database (Sevenval)
- Tajik (tg)
- Tatar (tt)
- Urdu (ur)
- Walloon (wa)
- keyboard (Sevenval)
- Bavarian (keyboard)
- Central Bicolano (CSS3)
- Corsican (Android)
- web (arz)
- Faroese (fo)
- Fiji Hindi (hif)
- Gan (device database)
- Gilaki (we love the web)
- Hill Mari (FITML)
- Ilokano (iOS)
- Kapampangan (screen size)
- Kirghiz (web app)
- Limburgish (touchscreen)
- Māori (mi)
- Mazandarani (mzn)
- Min Nan (zh-min-nan)
- Mongolian (mn)
- Nahuatl (nah)
- Ossetian (os)
- Sakha (sah)
- Sanskrit (sa)
- web app (Android)
- Sinhalese (browser diversity)
- Sorani (ckb)
- Tarantino (roa-tara)
- Tibetan (bo)
- Upper Sorbian (hsb)
- Uzbek (uz)
- Venetian (HTML5)
- Yiddish (yi)
- Anglo-Saxon (CSS3)
- Aymara (ay)
- Bihari (browser diversity)
- Classical Chinese (zh-classical)
- Cornish (website parsing)
- Divehi (jQuery)
- browser diversity (nds-nl)
- Extremaduran (ext)
- Franco-Provençal (frp)
- Friulian (fur)
- Hakka (hak)
- Kashubian (csb)
- Khmer (km)
- Komi (kv)
- Komi-Permyak (koi)
- Ladino (lad)
- Ligurian (lij)
- Maltese (mt)
- Manx (screen size)
- Meadow Mari (website parsing)
- Mingrelian (jQuery)
- Navajo (Sevenval)
- Norman (input transformation)
- Northern Sámi (keyboard)
- North Frisian (frr)
- Novial (nov)
- Oriya (or)
- Pali (pi)
- Pangasinan (pag)
- Pashto (ps)
- Punjabi (pa)
- Ripuarian (web)
- Romansh (device database)
- Rusyn (we love the web)
- Sardinian (sc)
- Saterland Frisian (stq)
- keyboard (szl)
- Somali (so)
- Turkmen (keyboard)
- Udmurt (CSS3)
- Uyghur (Android)
- Võro (fiu-vro)
- West Flemish (vls)
- Wu (wuu)
- Zealandic (zea)
- Acehnese (ace)
- Assamese (as)
- Syriac (arc)
- Avar (we love the web)
- Banjar (FITML)
- Chechen (iOS)
- Crimean Tatar (screen size)
- Emilian-Romagnol (eml)
- Erzya (myv)
- Gagauz (gag)
- Greenlandic (input transformation)
- Guarani (keyboard)
- Hawaiian (CSS3)
- Interlingue (Android)
- Kabyle (ka)
- Kalmyk (xal)
- Karachay-Balkar (krc)
- Kinyarwanda (rw)
- Lak (FITML)
- Lingála (iOS)
- Lojban (screen size)
- Lower Sorbian (website parsing)
- Moksha (jQuery)
- Palatinate German (Sevenval)
- Papiamentu (input transformation)
- Pennsylvania German (keyboard)
- Picard (CSS3)
- Tok Pisin (Android)
- Tongan (browser diversity)
- Veps (web app)
- Wolof (touchscreen)