Template:Em/doc: Difference between revisions
meta>SMcCandlish documenting optional parameters |
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:{{em|text to be emphasized}} | :{{em|text to be emphasized}} | ||
This template puts intentional and explicit <code><nowiki><em>...</em></nowiki></code> (emphasis) markup around the text provided as the | This template puts intentional and explicit <code><nowiki><em>...</em></nowiki></code> (emphasis) markup around the text provided as the first parameter. It is safest to always use the {{para|1}} syntax. | ||
The purpose of this template is to make it faster and easier to apply HTML "emphasis" style to text, and more importantly to completely prevent bad-behaving bots from replacing intentionally and semantically meaningful <code><em></code> (which is usually rendered visually in an italic typeface by default on graphical browsers, but can be parsed and acted upon in customizable ways with style sheets, apps and text-to-speech screen readers) with purely typographic and semantically meaningless simple italicization (as used for book titles, etc.) in either <code><i></code> or <code><nowiki>''</nowiki></code> format. The average user, and average editor, do not and need not care about this distinction most of the time, but the distinction can be important and editors who understand it can use this template as a baseline insurance against accidental or careless replacement by bots (or humans for that matter). | The purpose of this template is to make it faster and easier to apply HTML "emphasis" style to text, and more importantly to completely prevent bad-behaving bots from replacing intentionally and semantically meaningful <code><em></code> (which is usually rendered visually in an italic typeface by default on graphical browsers, but can be parsed and acted upon in customizable ways with style sheets, apps and text-to-speech screen readers) with purely typographic and semantically meaningless simple italicization (as used for book titles, etc.) in either <code><i></code> or <code><nowiki>''</nowiki></code> format. The average user, and average editor, do not and need not care about this distinction most of the time, but the distinction can be important and editors who understand it can use this template as a baseline insurance against accidental or careless replacement by bots (or humans for that matter). |
Revision as of 09:13, 29 September 2010
This is a documentation subpage for Template:Em. It may contain usage information, categories and other content that is not part of the original template page. |
Usage
or
These both render as:
- text to be emphasized
This template puts intentional and explicit <em>...</em>
(emphasis) markup around the text provided as the first parameter. It is safest to always use the |1=
syntax.
The purpose of this template is to make it faster and easier to apply HTML "emphasis" style to text, and more importantly to completely prevent bad-behaving bots from replacing intentionally and semantically meaningful <em>
(which is usually rendered visually in an italic typeface by default on graphical browsers, but can be parsed and acted upon in customizable ways with style sheets, apps and text-to-speech screen readers) with purely typographic and semantically meaningless simple italicization (as used for book titles, etc.) in either <i>
or ''
format. The average user, and average editor, do not and need not care about this distinction most of the time, but the distinction can be important and editors who understand it can use this template as a baseline insurance against accidental or careless replacement by bots (or humans for that matter).
Optional parameters
Advanced HTML values can be passed through the template to the HTML code:
|class=
takes a class name (or multiple class names, separated by commas); addsclass="classname[s]"
to the HTML code|style=
takes inline CSS input; addesstyle="CSS directive[s]"
to the HTML code|lang=
takes ISO language codes in one or two part form (e.g.fr
orfr-CA
); addslang="language-code" xml:lang="language-code"
to the HTML code. Generally only used for foreign language material (e.g. in a quotation). Do not use for English unless the material enclosed in this markup is extremely dialectal, and the dialect has an ISO code (do not try to make up codes).|id=
takes a valid, unique HTML id (must begin with an alphabetic letter); addsid="name"
to the HTML code
See also
{{strong}}
- same thing but for preventing<strong>
markup being changed into<b>
or'''