Template:Blockquote/doc: Difference between revisions
No edit summary |
m (1 revision imported) |
(No difference)
|
Latest revision as of 17:39, 18 November 2023
File:Edit-copy green.svg | This is a documentation subpage for Template:Terminate sentence It may contain usage information, categories and other content that is not part of the original template page. |
File:Lua-Logo.svg | This template uses Lua: |
Lua error in Module:TNT at line 159: Missing JsonConfig extension; Cannot load https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Data:I18n/Uses TemplateStyles.tab.
Warning | This template is used on 179,000+ 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. |
The Manual of Style guidelines for block quotations recommend formatting block quotations using the {{Blockquote}} template or the HTML <blockquote> element, for which that template provides a wrapper.
- Quotes work best when used with short sentences, and at the start or end of a section, as a hint of or to help emphasize the section's content.
- For typical quotes, especially those longer than the rest of the paragraph in which they are quoted, {{Cquote}} (for use outside of article space only) provides a borderless quote with decorative quotation marks, and {{Quote frame}} provides a bordered quote. Both span the page width.
- For very short quotes, {{Rquote}} (with decorative quotation marks, for use outside of article space only) or {{Quote box}} (framed) can be used to set the quote off to either the right or left as in a magazine sidebar. This can be effective on essay pages and WikiProject homepages.
Usage
{{Blockquote}}
adds a block quotation to an article page.
This is easier to type and is more wiki-like than the equivalent HTML <syntaxhighlight lang="html" class="" id="" style="" inline="1">
...
</syntaxhighlight> tags, and has additional pre-formatted attribution parameters for author and source (though these are not usually used in articles;
).Note: Block quotes do not normally contain quotation marks
.File:Ambox important.svg | This template is for actual quotations only. Do not use it for block indentation of other material; see {{Block indent}} for that purpose. |
Examples
Basic use:
Markup | Renders as |
---|---|
{{Blockquote |text=Quoted material. }} |
|
With attribution displayed:
Markup | Renders as |
---|---|
{{Blockquote |text=Quoted material. |author=First M. Last }} |
|
With more attribution:
Markup | Renders as |
---|---|
{{Blockquote |text=Quoted material. |author=First M. Last |title="Article Title" |source=''Book Title'' (date) }} |
|
Examples with "multiline":
Especially useful for translated quotes; see notes about this parameter.
- with "multiline" check
Markup | Renders as |
---|---|
{{blockquote|text= {{lang|fr|Ceci n'est pas une pipe.}} This is Not a Pipe. |multiline=yes |author=[[René Magritte]] |title=[[The Treachery of Images]] }} |
|
- for comparison without "multiline" ☒
Markup | Renders as |
---|---|
{{blockquote|text= {{lang|fr|Ceci n'est pas une pipe.}} This is Not a Pipe. |author=[[René Magritte]] |title=[[The Treachery of Images]] }} |
|
An ample example:
Markup | <syntaxhighlight lang="wikitext"><blockquote class="templatequote " >Cry "Havoc" and let slip the dogs of war.<div class="templatequotecite">— <cite>Mark Antony, in [[William Shakespeare]], ''[[Julius Caesar (play)|Julius Caesar]]'', act III, scene I</cite></div></blockquote></syntaxhighlight> |
---|---|
Renders as |
|
Parameters
Parameter list
{{Blockquote | text = | author = | title = | source = | character = | multiline = | class = | style = }}
See also section #TemplateData.
Quoted text
|text=
a.k.a. |1=
—The material being quoted, without quotation marks around it. It is always safest to name this parameter (rather than use an unnamed positional parameter), because, otherwise, any inclusion of a non-escaped "=" character (e.g., in a URL in a source citation) will break the template.
Displayed attribution
These parameters are for displaying attribution information below the quote; this should not be confused with citing a source [1]</syntaxhighlight> tag.
. These parameters are entirely optional, and are usually used with famous quotations, not routine block quotations, which are usually sourced at the end of the introductory line immediately before the quotation, with a normal <syntaxhighlight lang="html" inline>|author=
a.k.a. |2=
– optional author/speaker attribution information that will appear below the quotation, and preceded with an attribution dash.
|title=
a.k.a. |3=
– optional title of the work the quote appears in, to display below the quotation. This parameter immediately follows the output of |author=
(and an auto-generated comma), if one is provided. It does not auto-italicize. Major works (books, plays, albums, feature films, etc.) should be italicized; minor works (articles, chapters, poems, songs, TV episodes, etc.) go in quotation marks . Additional citation information can be provided in a fourth parameter, |source=
, below, which will appear after the title.
|source=
a.k.a. |4=
– optionally used for additional source information to display, after |title=
, like so: <syntaxhighlight lang="wikitext" class="" id="" style="" inline="1">|title="The Aerodynamics of Shaved Weasels" |source=Perspectives on Mammal Barbering, 2016</syntaxhighlight>; a comma will be auto-generated between the two parameters. If |source=
is used without |title=
, it simply acts as |title=
. (This parameter was added primarily to ease conversion from misuse of the pull quote template {{Quote frame}}
for block quotation, but it may aid in cleaner meta-data implementation later.)
|character=
a.k.a. |char=
or |5=
– to attribute fictional speech to a fictional character, with other citation information. Can also be used to attribute real speech to a specific speaker among many, e.g. in a roundtable/panel transcript, a band interview, etc. This parameter outputs "[Character's name], in" after the attribution dash and before the output of the parameters above, thus one or more of those parameters must also be supplied. If you need to cite a fictional speaker in an article about a single work of fiction, where repeating the author and title information would be redundant, you can just use the |author=
parameter instead of |character=
.
Technically, all citation information can be given in a single parameter, as in: <syntaxhighlight lang="wikitext" class="" id="" style="" inline="1">|source=Anonymous interview subject, in Jane G. Arthur, "The Aerodynamics of Shaved Weasels", Perspectives on Mammal Barbering (2016), Bram Xander Yojimbo (ed.)</syntaxhighlight> But this is a bit messy, and will impede later efforts to generate metadata from quotation attribution the way we are already doing with source citations. This is much more usable:
<syntaxhighlight lang="wikitext">
|character=Anonymous interview subject
|author=Jane G. Arthur
|title="The Aerodynamics of Shaved Weasels"
|source=Perspectives on Mammal Barbering (2016), Bram Xander Yojimbo (ed.)
</syntaxhighlight>
Later development can assign a CSS class
and so forth to these separate parameters, upon which scripts would be able to operate (e.g. to look up things in WikiQuote).
Rarely used technical parameters
|multiline=
– keep forced linebreaks in output.Notes:- Will only be applied if at least one of these other parameters or its aliases is not empty (including implicit, unnamed parameters):
|author=
,|title=
,|source=
, or|character=
. - The value does not matter, as long it is not empty. Using a so called speaking parameter (such as
true
oryes
) is highly recommended. Avoid values that can surprise users (e.g.false
orno
).
- Will only be applied if at least one of these other parameters or its aliases is not empty (including implicit, unnamed parameters):
|style=
– allows specifying additional CSS styles (not classes) to apply to the <syntaxhighlight lang="html" class="" id="" style="" inline="1">
</syntaxhighlight> element....
|class=
– allows specifying additional HTML classes to apply to the same element.
Reference citations
A reference citation can be placed before the quote, after the quote, or in the |source=
parameter:
Please do not place the citation in a |author=
or |source=
parameter by itself, as it will produce a nonsensical attribution line that looks like this:
— [1]
Please also do not put it just outside the {{blockquote}} template, as this will cause a:
[1]
on a line by itself.
Limitations
If you do not provide text, the template generates a parser error message, which will appear in red text in the rendered page.
If any parameter's actual value contains an equals sign (=
), you must use a named parameter (e.g. |text="E=MC2" is a formula everyone knows but few understand
, not a blank-name positional parameter. The text before the equals sign gets misinterpreted as a named parameter otherwise. Be wary of URLs, which frequently contain this character. Named parameters are always safer, in this and other templates.
If any parameter's actual value contains characters used for wiki markup syntax (such as pipe, brackets, single quotation marks, etc.), you may need to escape it. See {{!}}
and friends.
Next to right-floated boxes
As of September 2015,[update] the text of a block quotation may rarely overflow (in Firefox or other Gecko browsers) a right-floated item (e.g. a {{Listen}}
box, when that item is below another right-floated item of a fixed size that is narrower. In Safari and other Webkit browsers (and even more rarely in Chrome/Chromium) the same condition can cause the block quotation to be pushed downward. Both of these problems can be fixed by either:
- removing the sizing on the upper item and letting it use its default size (e.g. removing
###x###px
sizing or|upright=
from a right-floated image above a wider right-floated object that is being overflowed by quotation text; or - using
|style=<syntaxhighlight lang="css" class="" id="" style="" inline="1">overflow:inherit;</syntaxhighlight>
in the quotation template.
There may be other solutions, and future browser upgrades may eliminate the issue. It arises at all because of the <syntaxhighlight lang="css" inline>blockquote {overflow: hidden;}</syntaxhighlight> CSS declaration in Mediawiki:Common.css, which itself works around other, more common display problems. A solution that fixes all of the issues is unknown at this time.
Vanishing quotes
In rare layout cases, e.g. when quotes are sandwiched between userboxes, a quotation may appear blanked out, in some browsers. The workaround for this problem is to add |style=<syntaxhighlight lang="css" class="" id="" style="" inline="1">overflow:inherit;</syntaxhighlight>
to such an instance of the template.
Line breaks
This template sets a text style which might ignore one blank line, and so the template must be ended with a break (newline) or the next blank line might be ignored. Otherwise, beware inline, as:
text here {{blockquote|this is quoted}} More text here
spans a blank line, unless a {{blockquote|...}} is ended with a line break, then the next blank line might be ignored and two paragraphs joined.
(This section is transcluded from Template:Blockquote paragraphs)
The <syntaxhighlight lang="html" class="" id="" style="" inline="1">
</syntaxhighlight> element and any templates that use it do not honor newlines:
Markup Renders as <blockquote> Line 1 Line 2 Line 3 Line 4 </blockquote>An easy solution is to use the {{poem quote}} template instead of
<blockquote>...</blockquote>
. This is effectively the same as using the<poem>
tag inside <syntaxhighlight lang="html" class="" id="" style="" inline="1"></syntaxhighlight>, which converts line breaks to <syntaxhighlight lang="html" class="" id="" style="" inline="1">
</syntaxhighlight> tags:
Markup Renders as <blockquote><poem> Line 1 Line 2 Line 3 Line 4 </poem></blockquote>To markup actual paragraphs within block quotations, entire blank lines can be used between them, which will convert to <syntaxhighlight lang="html" class="" id="" style="" inline="1">
...
</syntaxhighlight> tags:
Markup Renders as <blockquote> Paragraph 1 Paragraph 2 Paragraph 3 </blockquote>Note that it may be necessary to put a line break in the wikitext before <blockquote> and after </blockquote> in order for the paragraphs to render with the intended separation. (This also makes the wikitext easier to read.)
This paragraph style also works with {{blockquote}}, which is a replacement for
<blockquote>
that also has parameters to make formatting of the attribution more convenient and consistent.Blockquote and templates that call it, and are indented with colon (:), bulleted with asterisk (*), or numbered with number (#), will generate errors and incorrectly display anything after a newline character.
Markup Renders as :<blockquote>Paragraph 1 Paragraph 2</blockquote>
Markup Renders as *<blockquote>Paragraph 1 Paragraph 2</blockquote>
Markup Renders as #<blockquote>Paragraph 1 Paragraph 2</blockquote>
Nested quotations
The <syntaxhighlight lang="html" class="" id="" style="" inline="1">
...
</syntaxhighlight> element has styles that change the font size: on desktop, text is smaller; on mobile, it is larger. This change is relative to the enclosing context, meaning that if you quote from a source that itself uses a block quotation, you'll find that the inner quotation is either really tiny and hard to read, or really large and barely fits on the screen. To fix this issue, add the parameter
|style=<syntaxhighlight lang="css" class="" id="" style="" inline="1">font-size:inherit;</syntaxhighlight>
on any inner {{blockquote}} templates.Technical issues with block templates
If the block-formatted content begins with a list (or any other wikimarkup that is dependent upon a specific markup character being at the beginning of a line) then due to a bug in MediaWiki, a
<nowiki />
and a new line must exist before the list (or whatever) starts. Compare:
code result FAIL {{ Blockquote|1= *Firstly, ... *Secondly, ... *Thirdly, ... }}*Firstly, ...
- Secondly, ...
- Thirdly, ...
Works as intended {{ Blockquote|1=<nowiki /> *Firstly, ... *Secondly, ... *Thirdly, ... }}
- Firstly, ...
- Secondly, ...
- Thirdly, ...
To embed a table in block markup like this, the block template's content parameter must be named or numbered and include the self-closing noinclude – as in
</syntaxhighlight>, <syntaxhighlight lang="html" class="" id="" style="" inline="1"></syntaxhighlight>, <syntaxhighlight lang="html" class="" id="" style="" inline="1">|1=<nowiki />
– then every|
character in the table markup must be escaped with{{!}}
. An alternative is to use explicit HTML <syntaxhighlight lang="html" class="" id="" style="" inline="1">
</syntaxhighlight>, and <syntaxhighlight lang="html" class="" id="" style="" inline="1"> </syntaxhighlight> markup. TemplateData
This is the TemplateData for this template used by TemplateWizard, VisualEditor and other tools. See a monthly parameter usage report for Template:Blockquote in articles based on its TemplateData.TemplateData for Blockquote
Adds a block quotation.
Parameter Description Type Status text text
1
quote
The text to quote
- Example
- Cry "Havoc" and let slip the dogs of war.
Content required author author
2
cite
sign
The writer of the source
- Example
- William Shakespeare
Content suggested title title
3
The work being quoted from
- Example
- Julius Caesar
Content suggested source source
4
A source for the quote
- Example
- act III, scene I
Content suggested character character
5
char
The speaker within the work who is being quoted
- Example
- Mark Antony
Content optional multiline multiline
Keeps forced linebreaks in output
- Example
- true
String optional style style
Additional CSS styles (not classes) to apply
- Example
- font-size:inherit;
String optional class class
Additional HTML classes to apply
- Example
- pullquote
String optional Tracking categories
- Category:Pages incorrectly using the quote template (0)
- Category:Pages using Blockquote template with unknown parameters (0)
See also