Template:Crossreference/doc

The (a.k.a.  or ) template formats text into a standardized style for an  (not block-level) "(See also ...)"-type parenthetical Wikipedia crossreference to other Wikipedia material. When on different pages, these are unprintworthy Wikipedia self-references. When crossreferencing material on the same page, they are not. For block-level crossreferences, see the meta-template and its various progeny (, etc.). The output is ultimately produced by Module:Hatnote inline. It actually does support a block-level mode, however, for special cases (see parameter documentation below).

See Category:Cross-reference templates for other templates derived from or similar to this template.

Usage
The template does not automatically create links of any kind. Links and other desired formatting (round brackets, terminal punctuation) must be explicitly added, using normal Wikipedia markup.

Basic crossreference to another page:

Basic crossreference on same page:

All parameters:

Parameters
This template accepts the following parameters:
 * 1 or text or content – The cross-reference text (required). While the explicit naming of this parameter with 1, text, or content is not required, it is always safest to use it this way, since any = character in the text will break the template if the parameter is unnamed.
 * class or extraclasses – Any extra CSS classes to be added. This should not normally be used.
 * no – If set to (or, , , etc.), removes the default CSS class  , used to denote unprintworthy self-references to Wikipedia . This option should not be used on cross-article links, only links within the same article (and the shorthand templates  and  can be used for this purpose). The parameter aliases yes or yes (also with any other value, like , , , etc.) and no (or , , ) have the same effect as no.  This can also be used for cross-references between internal Wikipedia pages such as guidelines and policies; there is no rationale to suppress the printing-out of links in this case. Note: These parameters are not yet "smart", and do not detect opposite values; that is, no and yes will not have the desired effect (and would be redundant anyway, since unprintworthiness is the default).
 * inline – Defaults to . If set to (or, , , etc.), it will use a  element instead of a , so you can use block-level elements inside it, such as a list. The difference between  and  is that the former is not indented the way the latter is. This de-indentation is done by WP:TemplateStyles, specifically in Template:/styles.css.

CSS
This template always adds the CSS class, so you can use WP:User styles to do as you wish with it. You will need to use  probably only in the case that you want to override this template's non-indentation when it is in block mode (i.e., when you do want it indented the way  works), and you'll be doing this with on-site user style, such as Special:MyPage/common.css. This is because TemplateStyles actually load after on-site user styles, so you must override the TemplateStyle with the  priority flag.

Redirects
The following alternative names redirect to this template:

Template data
{	"params": { "text": { "aliases": [ "1",				"content" ]		},		"class": { "aliases": [ "extraclasses" ],			"label": "CSS classes" },		"inline": { "type": "boolean" },		"printworthy": { "aliases": [ "selfref" ],			"type": "boolean" }	},	"description": "formats text into a standardized style for an inline (not block-level) \"(See also ...)\"-type parenthetical Wikipedia crossreference to other Wikipedia material.", "paramOrder": [ "text", "printworthy", "class", "inline" ],	"format": "inline" }