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Quite a few broken legacy /wiki/ links in the documentation #297

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@cleary
advanced/understanding-innards/Haskell_resources.md:-   [Understanding the $](/wiki/Understanding_the_$ "wikilink")
advanced/understanding-innards/Haskell_resources.md:-   [Type signatures](/wiki/Type_signatures "wikilink")
advanced/understanding-innards/Haskell_resources.md:-   [What is a pattern?](/wiki/What_is_a_pattern? "wikilink")
getting-started/Tutorial.md:syntax](/wiki/Sequence_parser_syntax "wikilink")
getting-started/Tutorial.md:that are available](/wiki/Combining_pattern_structure "wikilink").
getting-started/MacOS_installation.md:    alternatives](/wiki/List_of_tidal_editors "wikilink"))
getting-started/MacOS_installation.md:time](/wiki/Start_tidalcycles_and_superdirt_for_the_first_time "wikilink").
getting-started/editor/Vim.md:[Vim](https://www.vim.org) is the [classic and ubiquitous](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vim_(text_editor)) text editor. This editor is famous for its minimalistic approach, flexibility, and for its unique approach to [modal editing](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vi#Interface). Vim and [Neovim](https://neovim.io/) are free, cross-platform and open-source. They can be extended through the help of plugins, and are generally more configurable than other text editors. Vim has a very long history and has the reputation of being very stable and fast.
resource/History_of_Tidal.md:McLean](/wiki/User%3AYaxu "wikilink") (who is writing this bit right now),
reference/harmony_melody.md:It is possible to embed pitch metadata in WAV files in the form of a [smpl chunk](https://www.recordingblogs.com/wiki/sample-chunk-of-a-wave-file). This is used by some samplers to automatically map samples to MIDI notes. SuperDirt also reads the pitch metadata for all loaded samples, allowing them to be pitched correctly (assuming the metadata is correct) by setting the `metatune` parameter to 1.
reference/mini_notation.md:Euclidian rhythms are rhythms obtained using the greatest common divisor of two numbers. They were described in 2004 by [Godfried Toussaint](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Godfried_Toussaint), a canadian computer scientist. Euclidian rhythms are really useful for computer/algorithmic music because they can accurately describe a large number of rhythms used in the most important music world traditions. The algorithm work by providing two numbers:
patternlib/tutorials/course1.mdx:-- waves here: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Waveform
working-with-patterns/Controller_Input.md:section](/wiki/Controller_Input#MIDI "wikilink").
working-with-patterns/Controller_Input.md:With version 1.0.0 [installed](/wiki/Installation "wikilink") and
working-with-patterns/Controller_Input.md:[configured](/wiki/Configuration "wikilink"), then by default Tidal will

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