ππ°πΏππ°πΌπ΄π»π΄πΉπ½π:Var/doc
This is a documentation subpage for ππ°πΏππ°πΌπ΄π»π΄πΉπ½π:Var. It contains usage information, categories and other content that is not part of the original ππ°πΏππ°πΌπ΄π»π΄πΉπ½π page. |
This template is to help facilitate the displaying of variable names (in mathematics, computer source code, wikimarkup in template documentation, metasyntactic variables, etc.) with the semantically correct <var>...</var>
tags, which also renders the variable in italics, as is customary. This method is preferred to simply italicizing for many reasons, including accessibility, separation of presentation and content, semantic Web, and metadata; in XHTML and HTML, the <var>...</var>
element has semantic meaning, while simple italicization does not. This template provides a tiny hint of kerning to compensate for the italicization and enhance readability.
"Variable" in this sense may include arbitrary or unknown names or terms, examples of human input, arithmetical variables in equations, etc. This template (and the underlying XHTML) are generally ππ°πΏππ°πΌπ΄π»π΄πΉπ½π:Em used if MediaWiki's <math>...</math>
tags (or any other stand-alone mathematical markup) are being used.
- Example
- {Ttlxb|Var|username}}
outputs the following HTML:
<var>username</var>
which renders as:
- username
Note that on the screen or in print, this renders as simple italicization, as does ''username''
(using pairs of apostrophes) or <i>username</i>
(using HTML), yet it carries more semantic meaning than either of these methods.
At times, you may wish to use a serif font. This is especially true when attempting to render single-letter variables like "I" (upper-case "i") and "l" (lower-case "L"), since they are nearly indistinguishable (if at all). In such situations, use the {{Varserif}}
template instead of {{Var}}
, to make them more distinguishable, like these serif examples: ππ°πΏππ°πΌπ΄π»π΄πΉπ½π:Varserif, ππ°πΏππ°πΌπ΄π»π΄πΉπ½π:Varserif.
- More examples
ππ°πΏππ°πΌπ΄π»π΄πΉπ½π:Semantic markup templates