Committed identity: ef0c1336af2af342220c61bc1445a5f9d766225c95a209355b5311bddbf9a08e3add1f1dad6d70aa3ca46a1ac586a54c7d68debf95e4de08ab161b34c036e6e4 is a SHA-3commitment to this user's real-life identity.
Yutah123 is busy and is going to be on Wikipedia in off-and-on doses, and may not respond swiftly to queries.
This user is a member of WikiProject Userboxes.
This WikiProject aims to organize, expand and improve all Wikipedia's userboxes. We want to make it easy for users to make their own, and to find others, as well as create a standard for all userboxes, including naming conventions and content standards.
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Ang tagagamit na ito ay nakakapag-ambag ng Tagalog sa mababang antas.
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Hi, This is Yutah123, I registered this account on January 31, 2014 (that is, if you are in UTC) and made my first edit on February 2, 2014. I live in either Japan.
04:12, 29 September 2024 UTC[refresh] | 2024-09-29T13:12 JST[refresh](note:This time may not show the current time, to check out the current time, please Purge)
Topic lists link to articles on a particular subject. There are two types of topic lists on Wikipedia: outlines, and alphabetical article indexes. Outlines differ from categories found in Wikipedia's category system in that categories are usually limited to one level each in a tree, while an outline can be an entire tree, with many branches and many levels. This gives the benefit of having all the topics on a given subject in one place - this allows you to scroll down and read the whole tree, and every topic in that tree's subject. Indexes are single-level topic lists, with topics ordered alphabetically.
Topic lists allow for centralized management of all the links on a subject, as opposed to the decentralized approach of the category system.