You see ah, when it comes to learning, you need to know enough of the subject so that you can ask specific questions. How do you know what to ask? By experiencing the shoot for yourself, because every event is different, and even within the same event, different people may encounter different challenges, due in some part to the photographer's style and personality. And different wedding photographers will have differing styles, so everybody's going to give his/her two cents and in the end, TS will end up with a sackful of cents but don't know how to make heads or tails of it.
I find that "how to shoot wedding?" is too general a question that will yield too much information that may or may not be relevant to what TS may be facing, and he'd be overloaded with these thoughts instead of concentrating on the shoot.
I know I may have sounded sarcastic (purposely so, but more directed towards couples who arrow photographers, and then get upset when said photographer ****s up the shoot), but I believe in what I say to be true. i.e. just go and enjoy yourself. For all you know, without all the inputs from fellow photographers, this might be the way TS finds out his unique style?
But for those who still insist on hard tips, here's my set for the absolute newbie:
Shoot everything in P-mode, auto-everything, with kit lens.
Anything you see that is interesting/important, just shoot, full stop.
For starters, I believe it doesn't have to get more complicated than that.