This Manual of Style for Wikiproject Contract bridge has the objective of furthering a consistent style for bridge-related articles - a style adapted from that most commonly used and/or preferred in bridge literature.
Each article should be consistent within itself as to the style of English used, i.e. USA or UK (honor or honour, etc.)
An article shall retain the style of English used when first written, i.e. no overhauls of substantially complete articles
An article should reflect the English style of its audience (if discernable), e.g. Acol is a bidding system common in the UK but not the USA, so UK English should be used
Many terms have alternative spelling treatments, e.g. cuebid, cue-bid and cue bid.
In general, the preferred treatment should be the one which is the head entry in the Glossary. The general exception is that the English style of an article takes precedence.
Where an article title and Glossary entry differ in treatment, the debate and conclusion should be addressed in the Talk pages of the Glossary and thereafter the Glossary treatment should prevail.
When discussing bidding, use text not numerals; for example: "a four-level bid" and not "a 4-level bid".
When discussing suit length, use text not numerals; for example: "a five-card suit" and not "a 5-card suit".
In the versions of the official Laws of Duplicate Bridge issued by the World Bridge Federation and the American Contract Bridge League, the collective term for the suits and notrump is denomination. However, The Official Encyclopedia of Bridge, 6th Edition, states[1] that the "modern term is strain".
Use templates {{Clubs}}, {{Diams}}, {{Hearts}} and {{Spades}} to display the suit symbols ♣, ♦, ♥ and ♠ respectively. Lowercase works as well {{clubs}}, {{diams}}, {{hearts}} and {{spades}} as does {{diamonds}}.
Do not use the upper or lower case letters C, D, H or S.
Suit distribution notation will follow this convention:
Four numbers with hyphens as separators when specific suit lengths are not designated, e.g. 4-4-3-2 denotes any hand with two four card suits, a tripleton and a doubleton
Four numbers with equal signs as separators when specific suit lengths are designated, e.g. 4=6=1=2 denotes a hand with four spades, six hearts, one diamond and two clubs
Players are generally described by their nominal seating position, i.e. North, West, East and South.
In the description of competitive bidding and of bidding systems, players may also be referred to as either the Opener, the Intervener (opener's opponent who makes his side’s first bid), the Responder (partner of the Opener) or the Advancer (partner of the Intervener).
A call may be represented by text (e.g. one heart, three notrump) or as a numeral/strain couplet (e.g. 1♥, 3NT). The article style should be consistent and so, in general, the use of numeral/strain couplets is recommended.
An auction can be presented as an inline string of couplets or in a table. Table notation can be used in all cases; inline notation should only be used for short bidding sequences, i.e. at most five calls.
Give proper distinction to the terms call and bid.
When presented by symbols, the level should precede the denomination, e.g. 2♣ or 3NT. There is no space between the number and the symbol;
Separate the calls of the same round with en-dash (–) or use the first symbol (–) from the editing toolbar. There should be a space between;
Separate the rounds with a semicolon without preceding space;
In text format (i.e. not a bidding sequence), use 'Pass', 'Double' or 'Redouble' and not 'pass', 'double', 'redouble', 'No bid' or 'No';
When used in an inline bidding sequence, use 'P', 'Dbl' and 'Rdbl';
When used in an inline bidding sequence, omit the ending three Pass calls;
Use {{nowrap| }} around each round of bidding and incorporate the round ending semi-colon;
If an opponent's calls are included, put them in parentheses, e.g. 1♥ – (1♠) – 2♥ – (2♠);3♥
Use "M" for "a major suit" and "m" for "a minor suit" for inline bidding, when the intent is to refer to either major or to either minor. For example, 1♦ – 1M; 2♣ subsumes both 1♦ – 1♥; 2♣ and 1♦ – 1♠; 2♣. Similarly, use "OM" for "other major suit" and "om" for "other minor suit".
^Francis, Henry G., Editor-in-Chief; Truscott, Alan F., Executive Editor; Francis, Dorthy A., Editor (2001). Official Encyclopedia of Bridge, 6th Edition. American Contract Bridge League, (Memphis). p. 114. ISBN0-943855-44-6. {{cite book}}: |first1= has generic name (help)CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)