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The HTML markup produced by this template includes an hCard microformat, which makes the person's details parsable by computers, either acting automatically to catalogue articles across Wikipedia or via a browser tool operated by a reader, to (for example) add the subject to an address book or database.
Template:Infobox is intended as a meta template: a template used for constructing other templates. Note : In general, it is not meant for use directly in an article, but can be used on a one-off basis if required.
When viewing the rendered template page itself (as opposed to its wikicode), what is usually visible right under the title is the rendered template itself, followed by a separate section to display the template's rendered documentation, followed by the categories to which the template belongs.
{{User unified login/userbox}} - userbox version, with parameters you can set for the image, background, and border {{User SUL Box}}} - userbox version with multi-icon graphic with parameters you can set for the language and the project of your main account; Help:Unified login - page on Wikimedia's Meta-Wiki about the unified login system
The replies that you made to the questions of @PrimeHunter about having the link of "Edit preview settings" at the bottom of pages, the matter of "whether or not login/logout has an affect on page preview", "Navigation popups" options disabled or not along with all the other factors you mentioned matches exactly with mine. But I solved it in a ...
Following common practice (e.g. the use of <cite> around links to author IDs in blog and forum software, and many other well-deployed uses for the element for more than work titles), Wikipedia is following the W3C HTML5.2 Recommendation, which has superseded HTML 4.01, XHTML 1.1, and all other previous W3C [X]HTML specs. Our citation template ...
A userbox (commonly abbreviated as UBX) is a small colored box (see examples to the right) designed to appear only on a Wikipedian's user page as a communicative notice about the user, in order to directly or indirectly help Wikipedians collaborate more effectively on articles.
A SPA moves logic from the server to the client, with the role of the web server evolving into a pure data API or web service. This architectural shift has, in some circles, been coined "Thin Server Architecture" to highlight that complexity has been moved from the server to the client, with the argument that this ultimately reduces overall complexity of the system.