I like boats.
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An uppercase <nowiki><WRAP></nowiki> (or alternatively <nowiki><block></nowiki> or <nowiki><div></nowiki>) creates a div and should be used for "big" containers, surrounding paragraphs, lists, tables, etc.
div
<WRAP classes #id width :language> "big" content </WRAP> or <block classes #id width :language> "big" content </block> or <div classes #id width :language> "big" content </div>
A lowercase <nowiki><wrap></nowiki> (or alternatively <nowiki><inline></nowiki> or <nowiki><span></nowiki>) creates a span and should be used for "small" containers, inside paragraphs, lists, tables, etc.
span
<wrap classes #id width :language>"small" content</wrap> or <inline classes #id width :language>"small" content</inline> or <span classes #id width :language>"small" content</span>
Please note, some things won't work with lowercase spans:
if the according wrap isn't floated as well.
You can have columns easily by adding the class column and a width, e.g.
column
<WRAP column 30%>...content...</WRAP>
The example below uses the following structure:
<WRAP group> <WRAP third column>...content...</WRAP> <WRAP third column>...content...</WRAP> <WRAP third column>...content...</WRAP> </WRAP>
<WRAP group> <WRAP third column>
Normally you would only need the class column, but for more sophisticated uses (not only for columns, but for any other classes, like boxes and notes as well) you can have several kinds of "floats":
left
right
center
A table inside a column or box will always be 100% wide. This makes positioning and sizing tables possible.
</WRAP>
<WRAP third column>
You can set any valid widths (but only on divs): %, px, em, ex, pt, pc, cm, mm, in, but most of the time you'd only want either
%, px, em, ex, pt, pc, cm, mm, in
%
30%
px
420px
em
20em
</WRAP> <WRAP third column>
With certain width keywords you can fit your columns automatically to fill the available horizontal space. Those columns will also react to the screen size, so will be responsive and wrap underneath each other on mobile devices.
There are three width keywords. These should not be combined with any other width.
half
third
quarter
Attention: In order to work properly, wraps with width keywords need an additional <nowiki><WRAP group></nowiki> around a set of them.
<nowiki><WRAP group></nowiki>
You can use the same options with spans (as each element that floats is automatically a block level element), but it probably doesn't make too much sense. Widths on spans normally do not work (by design), but can make sense, when it is floating.
Attention: What is the difference between widths and width keywords and when is it best to use which? Widths can cause problems and will never fully add up, therefore will break the layout under some circumstances. (See box model for a technical explanation.) So, getting widths right will need some fiddling around and testing in various browsers. Width keywords on the other hand fit automatically and work better on mobile devices. But the drawback is that they need an extra wrap around them and don't work properly in older browsers (IE8 and under).
All of those options will also work in the boxes and notes wraps (see below).
Every <nowiki>//**__text like this__**//</nowiki> or <nowiki>//**like that**//</nowiki> will create an "emulated headline" when used within a box or a column. Now that headlines within wraps are supported, they are not needed anymore, but are still supported for backwards-compatibility.
<nowiki>//**__text like this__**//</nowiki>
<nowiki>//**like that**//</nowiki>
If you need text that is bold and italic, simply use it the other way around: <nowiki>**//No Headline//**</nowiki>
<nowiki>**//No Headline//**</nowiki>
<WRAP col3> For modern browsers (Firefox, Chrome and Safari, IE10+) you can use multi-columns. Just use <nowiki>col2</nowiki> for 2 columns, <nowiki>col3</nowiki> for 3 columns, <nowiki>col4</nowiki> for 4 columns and <nowiki>col5</nowiki> for 5 columns.
<nowiki>col2</nowiki>
<nowiki>col3</nowiki>
<nowiki>col4</nowiki>
<nowiki>col5</nowiki>
Note: Multi-columns don't make sense for spans. </WRAP>
Don't use this for bigger columns containing more than just text. Use the columns and floats mentioned above instead.
You can use these different text alignments:
leftalign
rightalign
centeralign
justify
<WRAP centeralign> Center aligned text … </WRAP>
<WRAP rightalign> … and right aligned. </WRAP>
<WRAP centeralign> Center aligned text ... </WRAP> <WRAP rightalign> ... and right aligned. </WRAP>
You cannot add alignments to spans.
<WRAP round box 500px center>
box
style.ini
<nowiki>__background_alt__</nowiki>
<nowiki>__text__</nowiki>
info
tip
important
alert
help
download
todo
danger
warning
caution
notice
safety
round
<WRAP info 300px left>
<WRAP info></WRAP>
<WRAP tip 300px left>
<WRAP tip></WRAP>
<WRAP important 300px left>
<WRAP important></WRAP>
<WRAP alert 300px left>
<WRAP alert></WRAP>
<WRAP round help 300px left>
<WRAP round help></WRAP>
<WRAP download 300px left>
<WRAP download></WRAP>
<WRAP todo 300px left>
<WRAP todo></WRAP>
<WRAP clear></WRAP>
Safety Notes:
<WRAP danger 30% left>
<WRAP danger></WRAP>
<WRAP warning 30% left>
<WRAP warning></WRAP>
<WRAP caution 30% left>
<WRAP caution></WRAP>
<WRAP round notice 30% left>
<WRAP round notice></WRAP>
<WRAP round safety 30% left>
<WRAP round safety></WRAP>
You can use notes and boxes also inside text with spans like this: <wrap info>info</wrap>, <wrap help>help</wrap>, <wrap alert>alert</wrap>, <wrap important>important</wrap>, <wrap tip>tip</wrap>, <wrap download>download</wrap>, <wrap todo>todo</wrap> and <wrap round box>round box</wrap> and <wrap danger>danger</wrap>, <wrap warning>warning</wrap>, <wrap caution>caution</wrap>, <wrap notice>notice</wrap>, <wrap safety>safety</wrap>.
<wrap info>info</wrap>, <wrap help>help</wrap>, ...
You can mark text as <wrap hi>highlighted</wrap>, <wrap lo>less significant</wrap> and <wrap em>especially emphasised</wrap>.
This might look ugly in some templates and should be adjusted accordingly.
You can create a row of tabs by simply wrapping a list of links in <nowiki><WRAP tabs></WRAP></nowiki>.
<nowiki><WRAP tabs></WRAP></nowiki>
<WRAP tabs>
<WRAP tabs> * [[Some page]] * [[example|This page]] * [[Another page]] </WRAP>
Please note, the styling of these tabs depend on the template you are using and not on the wrap plugin. If you only see a list of links and no tabs, please make sure to add "tabs" to the noPrefix config option and that your template supports at least the 2012-01-25 "Angua" DokuWiki release.
noPrefix
After using any of the float classes, you might come across following text protruding into the space where only the floating containers should be. To prevent that, you should simply add this after your last column:
<wrap indent>This text will appear indented.</wrap>
<wrap outdent>This text will appear "outdented".</wrap>
<WRAP prewrap 250px>
Inside this code block the words will wrap to a new line although they are all in one line.
<WRAP prewrap 250px> <code> Inside this code block the words will wrap to a new line although they are all in one line. </code> </WRAP>
Here follows a spoiler: <wrap spoiler>Darth Vader is Luke's father.</wrap>
Just select the text in the spoiler box to be able to read its content.
The following text is hidden: <wrap hide>John, please revise that sentence.</wrap>
Warning: The text will still appear in the source code, in non-modern browsers and is searchable. Do not hide any security risky secrets with it!
The following will add a pagebreak: <WRAP pagebreak></WRAP>
This has no effect on the browser screen. A pagebreak will force a new page in printouts.
The following will try to avoid a pagebreak: <WRAP nopagebreak>much content, belonging together (like a long table)</WRAP>
This also has no effect on the browser screen. It will try to avoid a page break in printouts.
<wrap noprint>This text appears on the screen, but not in print.</wrap>
<wrap onlyprint>This text does not appear on the screen, but only in print.</wrap>
You can combine and nest all classes and types of boxes, e.g.
<WRAP box 350px right :en>
<WRAP 165px left> Inner nested box floats left and is partly <wrap em hi>emphasized and highlighted with a nested <wrap notice>notice</wrap> inside</wrap>. </WRAP>
Text inside outer right box, but beneath inner left box.
<WRAP round tip> Round tip box underneath, after a clear. </WRAP>
clear
<WRAP box 350px right :en> === Outer box floats right === <WRAP 165px left> Inner nested box floats left and is partly <wrap em hi>__em__phasized and __hi__ghlighted with a nested <wrap notice>__notice__</wrap> inside</wrap>. </WRAP> Text inside outer right box, but beneath inner left box. <WRAP clear></WRAP> <WRAP round tip> Round tip box underneath, after a ''clear''. </WRAP> </WRAP>
You can change the language and the reading direction of a wrap container by simply adding a colon followed by the language code, like this:
<WRAP :he> זה עברית. ((<wrap :en>This means "This is Hebrew.", at least according to [[http://translate.google.com/|Google Translate]].</wrap>)) </WRAP>
<WRAP :he> זה עברית. 1) </WRAP>
The text direction (rtl, right to left or ltr, left to right) will get inserted automatically and is solely dependent on the language. The list of currently supported languages is taken from: http://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/Template:List_of_language_names_ordered_by_code (If you specify a language not listed there, it simply won't do anything.)
rtl
ltr