Template:Tlc/doc
This is a documentation subpage for Template:Tlc. It contains usage information, categories and other content that is not part of the original template page. |
This is the {{tlc}}
template.
This page also provides the full documentation for the template {{tlf}}
, which works almost exactly identically.
Purpose and naming
When a template name with braces is to be shown in documentation, the braces have to be escaped in some way so it doesn't become an actual call to the template. Instead of using <nowiki></nowiki>
tags you can write it more simply and concisely by using the {{tlc}}
or {{tlf}}
templates.
These templates work similarly to {{tl}}
and {{tlx}}
, but don't make the template name into a link. When writing documentation you might want to avoid a lot of unnecessary links, since they can decrease readability. So on the first occurrence of a template name use {{tl}}
or {{tlx}}
, and then use {{tlc}}
or {{tlf}}
thereafter.
Template | Mnemonic | Format differentiation |
---|---|---|
{{tlc}}
|
Template link code | Uses the <code>...</code> tags meant for showing programming code.
|
{{tlf}}
|
Template link format-normal | Uses proportional-spaced font as is normal for regular text rather than a monospace font as typically used with programming code. Essentially the non-linking equivalent of {{tlp}} .
|
The three names were based on {{tl}}
template link', despite the fact that, unlike the actual {{tl}}
template, these three don't include an actual link. The mnemonics for {{tlf}}
was invented after the fact, since the template creator used the single letters still available rather than the preferred {{tlt}}
(using <tt>) and {{tln}}
(using "normal", non-coded text style) monikers.
Basic operation
Here is how these templates look. Code is to the left; actual rendering to the right:
{{tlc|name|parameters}}
={{name|parameters}}
{{tlf|name|parameters}}
= {{name|parameters}}
Documentation
Functional details
- This template takes another template-name and some associated pipe-tricked (numbered) parameters (or 'pass parameters'), and displays them as an 'example demonstration' of how the template-name template could be coded, literally. Its primary use is in instruction and documentation.
- Specifics here???
- Features of
{{tlc}}
and{{tlf}}
:- They show a template name and up to eight parameters.
- They also show empty parameters. (See examples hereafter.)
- They prevent line wraps in their output.
Usage
{{Tlc|Template|first_parameter|second|third|fourth|...|eighth}}
→ {{Template|first_parameter|second|third|fourth|fifth|sixth|seventh|eighth}}
{{Tlf|Template|first_parameter|second|third|fourth|...|eighth}}
→ {{Template|first_parameter|second|third|fourth|fifth|sixth|seventh|eighth}}
Examples
An alternative to using constructs such as {{=}}
and {{tlf|...}}
to prevent characters from getting interpreted syntactically is to use <code><nowiki>...</nowiki></code>
, which will prevent all characters from being interpreted. For example, in place of
{{tlc|name|one{{=}}{{tlf|IPA|/tʃ/}}|two}}
you can use
<code><nowiki>{{name|one={{IPA|/tʃ/}}|two}}</nowiki></code>
Both render as
{{name|one={{IPA|/tʃ/}}|two}}
If a vertical display with parameters on their own lines is desired, this can also be laid out manually in this manner, or more rapidly done with <pre>...</pre>
.
Here are the codes to emulate {{tlf}}
and {{tlc}}
using <nowiki>
:
Using templates: | Using <nowiki> : |
Rendered result: |
---|---|---|
{{tlf|name|one{{=}}a|two{{=}}b}}
|
<nowiki>{{name|one=a|two=b}}</nowiki>
|
{{name|one=a|two=b}} |
{{tlc|name|one{{=}}a|two{{=}}b}}
|
<code><nowiki>{{name|one=a|two=b}}</nowiki></code>
|
{{name|one=a|two=b}}
|