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TextFormattingFAQ 14 - 09 Jan 2003 - Main.PeterThoeny
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Text Formatting FAQ
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Text Formatting FAQ

 The most frequently asked questions about text formatting are answered. Also, TextFormattingRules contains the complete TWiki shorthand system on one quick reference page.

TextFormattingFAQ 13 - 28 Jun 2002 - Main.PeterThoeny
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 Text Formatting FAQ

The most frequently asked questions about text formatting are answered. Also, TextFormattingRules contains the complete TWiki shorthand system on one quick reference page.

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 This is a simple and automatic way of including inline images. Simply write the URL of the image file, this will create the inline image for you. NOTE: The images must be accessible as a URL.
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  • You enter: TWiki http://964871.nyc3kqvj.asia/twiki/pub/wikiHome.gif logo.
    Result: TWiki wikiHome.gif logo.
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  • You enter: TWiki http://964871.nyc3kqvj.asia/twiki/pub/TWiki/TWikiLogos/twikilogo88x31.gif logo.
    Result: TWiki twikilogo88x31.gif logo.
  You can upload images directly to your server with FTP access. You can also attach image files to a topic - you could even create a dedicated image topic, like ImageLibrary - and then link to the images directly:
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 This is a manual process where you have more control over the rendering of the image. Use the <img> tag of HTML to include GIF, JPG and PNG files. Note: The display of the topic is faster if you include the WIDTH and HEIGHT parameters that have the actual image size. http://www.htmlhelp.com/reference/wilbur/special/img.html has more on inline images.
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  • You enter: TWiki <img src="http://964871.nyc3kqvj.asia/twiki/pub/wikiHome.gif" width="46" height="50" border="0" alt="logo" /> logo.
    Result:
    TWiki logo logo.
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  • You enter: TWiki <img src="http://964871.nyc3kqvj.asia/twiki/pub/TWiki/TWikiLogos/twikilogo88x31.gif" width="88" height="31" border="0" alt="logo" /> logo.
    Result:
    TWiki logo logo.
 

Can I write colored text?


TextFormattingFAQ 12 - 22 Feb 2002 - Main.PeterThoeny
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 Text Formatting FAQ

The most frequently asked questions about text formatting are answered. Also, TextFormattingRules contains the complete TWiki shorthand system on one quick reference page.

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Can I write colored text?

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Sure. The quickest way is to go <font color="colorCode">colorize</font> - font is an HTML tag that works in any browser, although it's been phased out in the latest HTML specs.
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TWikiPreferences defines some commonly used colors: %YELLOW%, %RED%, %PINK%, %PURPLE%, %TEAL%, %NAVY%, %BLUE%, %AQUA%, %LIME%, %GREEN%, %OLIVE%, %MAROON%, %BLACK%, %GRAY%, %SILVER% and %ENDCOLOR%.
 
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You can also use the up-to-date style attribute - ex: style="color:#ff0000" - placed in most HTML tags. span is an all-purpose choice: "<span style="color:#ff0000">CoLoR</span>. Only old (like 3.x IE & NS) browsers have a problem with style.
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  • You enter: %RED% red text %ENDCOLOR% and %GREEN% green text %ENDCOLOR%

    Result: red text and green text

 
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"colorCode" is the hexadecimal RGB color code, which is simply Red, Green and Blue values in hex notation (base 16, 0-F). For pure red, the RGB components are 255-0-0 - full red (255), no green or blue. That's FF-0-0 in hex, or "#ff000=" for Web page purposes. For a basic color selection (you can StandardColor names instead of hex code in the =font tag only):
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Note: %<color>% text must end with %ENDCOLOR% . If you want to switch from one color to another one you first need to end the active color with %ENDCOLOR%, e.g. write %RED% some text %ENDCOLOR% %GREEN% more text %ENDCOLOR%.
 
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Black: "#000000" Green: "#008000" Silver: "#c0c0c0" Lime: "#00ff00"
Gray: "#808080" Olive: "#808000" White: "#ffffff" Yellow: "#ffff00"
Maroon: "#800000" Navy: "#000080" Red: "#ff0000" Blue: "#0000ff"
Purple: "#800080" Teal: "#008080" Fuchsia: "#ff00ff" Aqua: "#00ffff"
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If you need more colors you can use HTML, like <font color="#ff0000"> red text </font>. You can also use the up-to-date style attribute - ex: style="color:#ff0000" - placed in most HTML tags. span is an all-purpose choice: <span style="color:#ff0000">CoLoR</span>. Only old (like 3.x IE & NS) browsers have a problem with style.
 
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  • You enter: <font color="#ff0000"> Red color </font> draws attention.

    Result: Red color draws attention.

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The code is the hexadecimal RGB color code, which is simply Red, Green and Blue values in hex notation (base 16, 0-F). For pure red, the RGB components are 255-0-0 - full red (255), no green or blue. That's FF-0-0 in hex, or "#ff000" for Web page purposes. StandardColors lists basic colors.
 
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-- PeterThoeny - 13 Sep 2001
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-- PeterThoeny - 21 Feb 2002
 -- MikeMannix? - 14 Sep 2001

TextFormattingFAQ 11 - 22 Feb 2002 - Main.PeterThoeny
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 Text Formatting FAQ

The most frequently asked questions about text formatting are answered. Also, TextFormattingRules contains the complete TWiki shorthand system on one quick reference page.


TextFormattingFAQ 10 - 15 Sep 2001 - Main.MikeMannix
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 Text Formatting FAQ

The most frequently asked questions about text formatting are answered. Also, TextFormattingRules contains the complete TWiki shorthand system on one quick reference page.

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How do I make a separator?

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You can make a horizontal separator by entering three dashes at the beginning of a line: ---.
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Create a separator - a horizontal rule - by entering three dashes at the beginning of a blank line: ---. You can enter more than three if you like, for a more visible separator in edit mode:
--------------
 
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How do I create a heading?

You can create six sizes of headings - <h1>...<h6> in HTML - by typing, from the beginning of a line, three dashes (-), from one to six plus signs (+), a space, and your heading text. The FAQ questions on this page are created with: ---+++ Have a question?.

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Text enclosed in angle brackets like <filename> is not displayed. How can I show it as it is?

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TWiki interprets text as HTML. The '<' and '>' characters are used to define HTML commands. Text contained in angle brackets is interpreted by the browser if it's a valid HTML instruction, or ignored if it isn't - either way, the brackets and its contents are not displayed.
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TWiki interprets text as HTML, and the '<' and '>' characters define where HTML commands start and end. Text inside angle brackets is treated as HTML, and ignored if it doesn't actually do anything - either way, the brackets and its contents are not displayed.
 If you want to display angle brackets, enter them as HTML codes instead of typing them in directly:
  • &lt; = <
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Text I enter gets wrapped around. How can I keep the formatting as it is?

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TWiki interprets text as HTML, so you can use the preformatted HTML text option to keep the new line of text as is. Enclose the text in <pre> </pre>, or in TWiki's own <verbatim> </verbatim> tags:
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TWiki interprets text as HTML, so you can use the preformatted HTML option to keep the new line of text as is. Enclose the text in <pre> </pre>, or in TWiki's own <verbatim> </verbatim> tag:
 
This text will keep its format as it is:
<verbatim>

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 </verbatim>
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The pre tag is standard HTML; verbatim is a special TWiki tag that also forces text to fixed font mode, and also prevents other tags and TWiki shortcuts from being expanded.
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The pre tag is standard HTML; verbatim is a special TWiki tag that forces text to fixed font mode, and also prevents other tags and TWiki shortcuts from being expanded.
 

How do I create tables?

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 See "Text enclosed..."


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Can I include images and pictures?

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Can I include images on a page?

 
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Yes, this is possible. The easiest way of including images is to attach a GIF, JPG or PNG file to a topic and then to include it with text %ATTACHURL%/myImage.gif . FileAttachment has more.
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Yes. The easiest way is to attach a GIF, JPG or PNG file to a topic and then to place it with: %ATTACHURL%/myImage.gif. This works only for the page that the image is attached to.
 
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There are actually two ways of including inline images.
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To place an image on any page, ther are two ways of including inline images.
 1. Using URL ending in .gif, .jpg, .jpeg, .png
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This is a simple and automatic way of including inline images. Simply write the URL of the image file, this will create the inline image for you. Note: The images must be accessible as a URL.
>
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This is a simple and automatic way of including inline images. Simply write the URL of the image file, this will create the inline image for you. NOTE: The images must be accessible as a URL.
 
  • You enter: TWiki http://964871.nyc3kqvj.asia/twiki/pub/wikiHome.gif logo.
    Result: TWiki wikiHome.gif logo.
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You can upload images directly to your server with FTP access. You can also attach image files to a topic - you could even create a dedicated image topic, like ImageLibrary - and then link to the images directly:
  • Attach pic.gif to Someweb.SomeTopic
    Display with http://964871.nyc3kqvj.asia/twiki/pub/Someweb/SomeTopic/pic.gif
 2. Using <img> tag
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This is a manual process where you have more control over the rendering of the image. Use the <img> tag of HTML to include GIF, JPG and PNG files. Note: The display of the topic is faster if you include the WIDTH and HEIGHT parameters that have the actual image size. http://www.htmlhelp.com/reference/wilbur/special/img.html has more on inline images.
>
>
This is a manual process where you have more control over the rendering of the image. Use the <img> tag of HTML to include GIF, JPG and PNG files. Note: The display of the topic is faster if you include the WIDTH and HEIGHT parameters that have the actual image size. http://www.htmlhelp.com/reference/wilbur/special/img.html has more on inline images.
 
Changed:
<
<
  • You enter: TWiki <img src="http://964871.nyc3kqvj.asia/twiki/pub/wikiHome.gif" width="46" height="50" /> logo.
    Result:
    TWiki logo.
>
>
  • You enter: TWiki <img src="http://964871.nyc3kqvj.asia/twiki/pub/wikiHome.gif" width="46" height="50" border="0" alt="logo" /> logo.
    Result:
    TWiki logo logo.
 

Can I write colored text?

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Sure. The quickest way is to use the <font color="colorCode"> and </font> tags - they're HTML tags that work in any browser, (although they've been phased in the latest version).
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Sure. The quickest way is to go <font color="colorCode">colorize</font> - font is an HTML tag that works in any browser, although it's been phased out in the latest HTML specs.
 
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You can also use a style attribute: style="color:#ff0000", placed in most HTML tags - span is an all-purpose choice: "<span style="color:#ff0000">.
>
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You can also use the up-to-date style attribute - ex: style="color:#ff0000" - placed in most HTML tags. span is an all-purpose choice: "<span style="color:#ff0000">CoLoR</span>. Only old (like 3.x IE & NS) browsers have a problem with style.
 "colorCode" is the hexadecimal RGB color code, which is simply Red, Green and Blue values in hex notation (base 16, 0-F). For pure red, the RGB components are 255-0-0 - full red (255), no green or blue. That's FF-0-0 in hex, or "#ff000=" for Web page purposes. For a basic color selection (you can StandardColor names instead of hex code in the =font tag only):

Revision 14r14 - 09 Jan 2003 - 04:59:29 - PeterThoeny?
Revision 13r13 - 28 Jun 2002 - 08:07:00 - PeterThoeny?
Revision 12r12 - 22 Feb 2002 - 08:42:00 - PeterThoeny?
Revision 11r11 - 22 Feb 2002 - 06:16:13 - PeterThoeny?
Revision 10r10 - 15 Sep 2001 - 05:12:41 - MikeMannix?
Revision 9r9 - 14 Sep 2001 - 10:42:53 - PeterThoeny?
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