Template:Para
|
This template is used on approximately 862,000 pages, or roughly 78578% of all pages. To avoid major disruption and server load, any changes should be tested in the template's /sandbox or /testcases subpages, or in your own user subpage. The tested changes can be added to this page in a single edit. Consider discussing changes on the talk page before implementing them. |
Usage
This template is for giving examples of template parameter source code (useful in template documentation and talk page discussions of template code).
It must have at least one or two parameters itself. The first parameter is the name of the example parameter to display (this may be empty, but it must be present). The second (optional) parameter is a value for the first example parameter; or, if the first parameter is empty, the second illustrates an example unnamed parameter (which in some cases may serve as a pre-defined parameter that takes no |Error: The retired template Template:Tn has been transcluded; see mw:Help:Magic words#Other for details. To fix this, use only the code Template:Magic word to generate the = character.value
after it, e.g. the |section
in {{Refimprove|section}}
).
Examples
Code | Result | Notes |
---|---|---|
{{para|name}}
|
|name=
|
|
{{para|title|The Oxford English Dictionary}}
|
|title=The Oxford English Dictionary
|
|
{{para| |section}}
|
|section
|
For unnamed parameters; note empty first parameter in the code |
{{para|{{var|parameter}}|{{var|value}}}}
|
|parameter=value
|
When using literal, pre-specified parameter names and values, simply provide them (as in the first through third examples above). When illustrating hypothetical/example parameter names, or variable or user-definable values, use something like {{var|parameter}}
and/or Template:Tnull (as in the last example above).
Parameters
|1=
or first unnamed parameter – the parameter name. Give this parameter as explicitly blank and just fill in parameter 2 when you want to show an unnamed parameter (which, depending on the context, may serve as a valueless parameter name); e.g., Template:Tnull →|section
|2=
or second unnamed parameter – the value name. When the first parameter is given but is blank, the second represents an unnamed parameter's value (or a valueless parameter name), as illustrated above.|plain=y
(or any other value besides Template:Kbd) – removes the faint border and light-grey background, which may be useful in various situations. The border and text color are set to Template:Samp, to use the colors of the surrounding text. This parameter cooperates with the two below, in that if either are used, the text will be colorized while the border and background will still be removed.|mxt=y
or|green=y
– to apply the style (green text, but still monospaced as code) that would be applied by{{mxt}}
("monospaced example text"). This is so that Template:Tnull can be used inside a passage of Template:Tnull content without the
<code>
markup inside Template:Tnull overriding the color of Template:Tnull. This parameter cooperates with |plain=
in applying the color but respecting the removal of border and background.
|!mxt=y
or|red=y
– same as above, but applies the red of{{!mxt}}
, the "bad monospaced example text" template.|style=
– to apply arbitrary CSS style, for some specialized contextual purpose. Example:|style=background-color: Yellow;
. Any color, background-color, or border specified here will override those provided by any of the above parameters, regardless of the order in which the parameters are given in the template. As this template uses a
<span>
element, only CSS that can apply to inline elements (not block elements) will work. Like the above parameters, it applies to the entire output.
- If you want to only style the parameter name and/or the value, just do so directly;
e.g.:{{para|page|{{var|'''single''' page number}}}}
,{{para|page'''''<u>s</u>'''''|{{var|page '''range''', or '''multiple''' individual pages, or both}}}}
gives:|page=single page number
,|pages=page range, or multiple individual pages, or both
- If you want to only style the parameter name and/or the value, just do so directly;
TemplateData
Gives examples of template parameter source code
Parameter | Description | Type | Status | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Parameter name | 1 | The parameter name. Give this parameter as explicitly blank and just fill in parameter 2 when you want to show an unnamed parameter | String | suggested |
Value name | 2 | The value name. When the first parameter is given but is blank, the second represents an unnamed parameter's value (or a valueless parameter name). | String | suggested |
plain | plain | Removes the faint border and light-grey background | Boolean | optional |
mxt | mxt | no description | Unknown | optional |
green | green | no description | Unknown | optional |
!mxt | !mxt | no description | Unknown | optional |
red | red | no description | Unknown | optional |
style | style | Apply arbitrary CSS style, for some specialized contextual purpose.
| Content | optional |
See also
The three tables below describe the family of approximately forty templates built for talking about templates.
There are also some related templates or subjects not found in those tables:
{{Param}}
, for markup of examples of parameter names as they would appear in MediaWiki source code of templates, e.g. Template:Tnull gives: Template:Param{{Tag|...|attribs}}
, for markup of examples of HTML elements' attributes and values; e.g. Template:Tnull gives:
<a href=/demo.php>
Template:Tl-nav
Template:Semantic markup templates