Unlisted playlists
Last revised by Frank Gaillard on 27 May 2021
Citation, DOI, disclosures and article data
Citation:
Gaillard F, Sharma R, crisostomo a, et al. Unlisted playlists. Reference article, Radiopaedia.org (Accessed on 10 Oct 2024) https://doi.org/10.53347/rID-33396
Permalink:
rID:
33396
Article created:
Disclosures:
At the time the article was created Frank Gaillard had no recorded disclosures.
View Frank Gaillard's current disclosures
Last revised:
Disclosures:
At the time the article was last revised Frank Gaillard had no recorded disclosures.
View Frank Gaillard's current disclosures
Revisions:
7 times, by
4 contributors -
see full revision history and disclosures
Tags:
Synonyms:
- Unlisted playlist
Unlisted playlists are a special type of playlist and a great way of creating collections of cases but restrict access to only some users.
Unlisted playlists are just the same as public playlists but:
- are not visible to users
- are not visible to search engines
- can include anyone's public cases
- can include your unlisted cases
- are able to be shared (see sharing cases and playlists)
Important notes:
- anyone with the 'share URL' can access the list, and therefore these URLs can be emailed to other users or posted on forums or social media; this makes unlisted playlists not suitable for assessment tasks
- unlisted playlists can only contain unlisted cases from the same user
Every user can have up to 10 unlisted playlists. If you need more than 10 unlisted playlists, you can become a Radiopaedia.org supporter; additional unlisted cases are one of the many perks.
Incoming Links
Related articles: Help and Style Guide
-
style guide and help
- general overview
- Radiopaedia.org supporters
- copyright/plagiarism/brand name issues
-
style guide
- how to use... (A-Z)
- a vs an
- accepted abbreviations
- acronyms
- apostrophe use and eponyms
- bold
- bulleted and numbered lists
- contractions
- dates
- describing recency
- italics
- names of individuals
- numbers, units and operators
-
punctuation
- ampersand
- capitalization
- colons
- commas in body text lists
- dashes and hyphens
- full stops (periods)
- quotation marks
- slashes
- spacing
- racial terminology
- scientific notation
- language
- how to use... (A-Z)
-
articles
- how to edit articles learning pathway (best place to start)
- have a play in our sandbox (test page)
-
anatomy of an article
- standard article structure
-
special types of articles
- anatomy article structure
- biographical article structure
- chemical article structure
- classification system article structure
- comparative article structure
- curriculum article structure
- CT protocol article structure
- examples of normal imaging article structure
- fracture article structure
- general radiography article structure
- imaging technology article structure
- interventional procedure article structure
- measurement article structure
- medical device article structure
- mnemonics article structure
- MRI protocol article structure
- short article structure
- summary article structure
- articles on conditions that affect multiple systems
- contributing a case to illustrate an article
- linking
- tags
- sections
- systems
- adding images to an article
- merging duplicate articles
- disambiguation
- synonyms (watch YouTube tutorial)
- stub
-
cases
- how to create cases learning pathway (best place to start)
- why upload cases to Radiopaedia.org
- featured cases (case of the day)
- uploading DICOM images to Radiopaedia
- uploaders (plugins and stand-alone apps)
- types of cases
- patient confidentiality
- case publishing guidelines
- anatomy of the perfect case
- case completeness
- text
- quiz mode
- images/series
- annotations
- selection tools
- push back to draft
- case of the day guidelines
- references
- multiple choice questions
-
playlists
- types of playlists
- medical illustrations and diagrams
- institutions
- Radiopaedia.org on your CV
- editorial board