In this article, we will explore the fascinating history of Help:Introduction to editing with VisualEditor/3, exploring its origins, its impact on today's society, and its evolution over time. From its beginnings to the present, Help:Introduction to editing with VisualEditor/3 has played a crucial role in various aspects of human life, from politics to culture, technology and science. Throughout these pages, we will examine the many facets of Help:Introduction to editing with VisualEditor/3, from its most controversial aspects to its most notable contributions, with the aim of fully understanding the importance of Help:Introduction to editing with VisualEditor/3 in the contemporary world.
Opening the editor
How to activate editing mode
Toolbar basics
The tools at your disposal
Links and wikilinks
Connect pages up to each other
Publishing changes
Make it so
Creating new articles
Building a page from scratch
Summary
Review of what you've learned

Links (particularly wikilinks) are one of the key components of Wikipedia. A wikilink connects to another page on the encyclopedia and ties the whole thing together.
In general, wikilinks should be added for the first occurrence of important concepts for the topic that are not commonly used English words or major countries/cities. Links can be added through the
menu, or by using the shortcut Ctrl+K.

Using the linking menu or shortcut creates a dialog box that allows you to search for relevant internal links within Wikipedia. Pressing ↵ Enter or the "Done" button causes the link to appear on the VisualEditor page.

External links (to other websites) can be created using the "External site" tab, and entering a URL in the box. In articles, this is generally appropriate only in the External links section, at the bottom of the page. (To insert a URL as a supporting reference in an article, see the references tutorial)
To edit or remove a link already on a page, just click on the link.