Template:Shared Draft 101

Extracted Notes
<!-- To learn more about each template type, including examples, please visit Help:Template Types. InfoboxDisplays the most essential information about an article in a box at the top of the page, usually to the right side. QuoteHighlights notable snippets of text such as lyrics, book passages, or spoken dialog. Can contain dialog between one person or multiple people. NavboxDisplays a list of organized links in a box for readers to navigate to related articles, usually at the bottom of the page. NoticeAlso known as tophats or alerts, these templates notify the reader about the status of the article itself, such as stub, disambiguation, or spoiler. Context-linkSuggests another page to readers that is related to the current page or section. Usually these include “Main article” or “See also” and display as italicized text. InfoiconThis template is used for creating a link with a small icon. ScrollboxThis template displays its contents in a scrollable box. Citation or referenceOrganizes and standardizes how sources of content on an article page are annotated. Image, video, or galleryThis template will standardize or modify the display of one or more images or videos. DataThis template is used to display data on an article page. DesignThis template is used to design or structure article pages. NavigationThis template is used for navigation. Non-articleThis template is not used on article pages. UnknownI don't know.

https://community.fandom.com/wiki/Help:Template_types

Help:Template types (Redirected from Help:Template Types) Edit Help-Template-types-1

Template type choices

Template classification is the act of assigning your templates a type that then determines how that template will appear on mobile web. Types also make your wiki smarter and your templates easier to manage. As of July 2022, wikis which were created on Gamepedia don't support template classification.

The biggest difference is what happens in the mobile experience. Classification tells the software whether to employ certain editing tools – like the Infobox Builder GUI – and it helps give an accurate census on which to base Fandom's development priorities.

When do you need to classify a template?

When you create a new template and you are classifying it for the first time When a template isn't showing up properly on mobile and you need to change its classification

If you don't have a specific reason to think you need to change a template's classification, you probably can ignore its classification. How it works Help-Template-types-2

Template type shown on a template page Contents

A template's current type is shown just under the page title on a template page. This type can be changed by logged-in users who have edit permissions on that template.

Updates can be made via the template page and via the right rail of the editor when you're editing the template. Clicking the listed type or the pencil icon next to it will open a dialog that lets you select the template type.

Additionally, a dialog will ask you for the template type when creating a new template or when publishing an edit to a template page which has no type set.

Any automated classifications - those detected by the "machine" systems - are overridden by your classification choices. Log

Changes made to a template's classification can be seen on Special:Log and be filtered under the 'Template type' option. Template types

The current template types are listed below. There are some overlaps between the types, so we recommend you choose the type that is most specific to each template. Infobox

Infoboxes display the most essential information about an article in a box at the top of the page. These usually float to the right side of the page but sometimes they span the entire width of the page. Giving an infobox the classification of "Infobox" will help the server's census to identify infoboxes correctly.

A template should only be classed as an infobox when its contents only and entirely create an infobox. Templates that help constitute an infobox – that is, parts of an infobox – are better classed as "non-article" templates. Conversely, if the infobox is merely a part of a template that creates a page – or a substantial part of a page – then it's actually better to use "Design".

Examples

IndianaJones – Template:Infobox Artifact Scrubs – Template:Character DragonBall – Template:Volume Infobox

Quote

Many communities use quote templates to highlight notable snippets of text such as lyrics, book passages, spoken phrases, or extracts from interviews or news articles. These templates usually contain a quote from a single source.

The quote template type uses a default fandom-supplied template on the mobile web which encloses the text as an italicized and indented block. As such, this classification should not be used for dialogue between two parties or any other specialised use of templates. "Design" is suggested for those cases.

Examples

TheHungerGames – Template:Quote Ben10 – Template:Quote

Navbox

Navbox templates display a list of organized links in a box for readers to navigate to related articles, usually at the bottom of the page.

Elements that use the navbox class are hidden by default on mobile web, unless the immediate parent element has the article-table class.

Examples

RuneScape – Template:Weapon Undertale – Template:Navbox characters Disney – Template:Rescue Rangers

Notice

Also known as message boxes, alerts, or maintenance tags, these templates notify the reader about the status of the article itself. Most notices are editing notes (like "delete this page", "update these sections", or "clean up the links") – notes that most non-editing mobile users will disregard.

Notice templates often appear at the very top of an article page or section.

Hidden by default on mobile web.

Examples

Fallout – Template:Update FinalFantasy – Template:Section Warframe – Template:Speculation

Notices meant for all readers should be classified as "Design"; if it links to an internal article (for example, a "spoiler warning" notice linked to the spoilers policy), Context-link may also be appropriate. Context-link

These templates (often called "hatnotes") suggest another page that is related to the current page or section. The two most frequent uses of this type are "Main article" or "See also" and display as italicized text. These are used at the top of an article page or at the top of a section within an article page.

On mobile web, this type is an indented block element, offset by significant vertical space.

Examples

VampireDiaries – Template:Main MLP – Template:See also PowerListing – Template:For

Infoicon

These templates are used for creating a link or text with a small icon. These are very popular on gaming communities to represent currency, items, or controller symbols. The icons are sometimes linked to other pages.

Infoicons can appear inside paragraph text, inside infoboxes, or in bulleted lists.

On mobile web, these templates render only the icon, with no corresponding text nor any other content beyond the image.

Visual Examples

Horde icon Horde ↑ image is part of Infoicon template, but text is not PlayStation X Button X-button ↑ image is part of Infoicon template, but text is not Smiley

Example Templates

Fallout – Template:Icon Wowpedia – Template:Horde

Scrollbox

These templates display their contents in a scrollable box. Scrollboxes are used to conserve space on article pages for very long lists.

Might be partially hidden on mobile web.

Examples

StarWars – Template:Scroll box Simpsons – Template:Scroll LotR – Template:Scroll

Citation or reference

These templates organize and standardize the display how sources of content on an article page are annotated. These can be either used to place a single reference in an article or to build a references list at the bottom of the article page.

These templates can optionally use tags or build in-line citations.

Examples

ArrestedDevelopment – Template:Ep Fringe – Template:Crossref Logos – Template:Reflist

Image, video, or gallery

The purpose of any template in the image, video, or gallery type is to standardize or modify the display of one or more images or videos on an article page.

These are often used to build a gallery or to format how an image thumbnail displays.

Examples

OnePiece – Template:Gallery Lostpedia – Template:I DragonAge – Template:Icon

Data

Any templates that do not fall into the types above but add information or data to an article page should be classified as data. This includes (but is certainly not limited to) templates that are used to build tables, templates that are used to generate math equations, or pieces of data (e.g. price of an item, release version of a game, etc.) that are inserted on multiple pages.

Examples

YuGiOh – Template:DM card Borderlands – Template:Item table row ArrestedDevelopment – Template:Season 3 Episodes

Design

If a template's sole purpose is to modify how an article page (or a piece of an article page) looks, it should be classified as design. Common uses include adding tabs, modifying the visual display of text or tables, or relocating the table of contents. This is also the suggested classification for multi-person dialogue, due to quote handling on mobile devices.

Examples

StarWars – Template:Credits Simpsons – Template:Tab LadyGaga – Template:Scroll box GameOfThrones – Template:Dialogue a-b

Navigation

If a template's sole purpose is to help readers or other editors find another article page or category it should be classified as navigation. Example uses include page-top icons, recommended links to other websites, categorizers, or succession boxes.

The most popular types of navigation templates are navboxes and context links, which are listed above.

Navigation templates that contain, , or elements are hidden by default on mobile web. This includes elements generated by wikitext, e.g. by newlines.

Example: Scrubs – Template:Music floater Non-article

Assign this type if a template is not used on any article (content) pages. For example, if the template is only used on talk pages, template pages, file pages, user pages, or only on your community's main page. Examples of what can go into this classification are documentation templates, main page modules, sub-templates, and image licensing templates.

"Non-article" does not mean, "This template won't appear on article pages". It means only that the template is not meant to be used directly on article pages. Template documentation pages (namely, those in /doc sub-pages) should always be "Non-article", regardless of what they're documenting.

Examples

TheodoreTugboat – Template:Talk header AssassinsCreed – Template:CC-BY-SA

Unknown

This type is used by default if no other template type is chosen. Template types and categories

The template types feature is separate from template categories. Since the usage of such categories vary hugely across Fandom, template classification and categories do not affect each other. You can continue to use template categories exactly as the same as before. See also

For more general background on this feature, please read this blog post. Since this feature mostly has to do with how templates appear on mobile, you may also want to check out this mobile-centric view. -->