Template:Molecular formula index/doc

Template documentation
will add this template to the article, in Category:Set index articles on molecular formulas

Adding an unnamed parameter, as in  will also affect the displayed title of the article, so the title can be displayed with the subscript numerals of a typical chemical formula, e.g.
 * C2H6O

where C2H6O is the actual page name.

Adding a prefix switch will place the page in a sub-category of the Category:Set index articles on molecular formulas instead of "directly" to the category. (This has only been used to create a sub-category for inorganic molecular formulae via Inorganic, but this was merged in 2022 as it only had 3 articles. Nevertheless, creation, assignment to the parent category, and updating this documentation are the only pre-requisites for using additional ones.)

This template adds the page that uses it to Category:Set index articles on molecular formulas, or to one of its subcategories. (The page was previously added to Category:Molecular formulas as well, but doing so added the page to both a category and an ancestor of that category, a practice deprecated as functionally redundant, and contributing to cluttering of the ancestor's member list.)

The organization of articles within Category:Set index articles on molecular formulas is currently in flux, while uses of the (enhanced) template are being edited to use the new heading switch. The organization of page names on the cat page is effected via that switch, but relies on users' codings of the heading switches. The coding currently in progress is as follows: the Cat member articles for specific-count, organic formulas are forced into 13 groups according to their switch values, with the Wiki engine sorting alphanumerically within those groups. The first 9 groups are numbered 1 to 9, with the number corresponding to the carbon-atom count. The low and high portions (boundary = 15.5) of the 10-19 carbon formulas are under A and B respectively. (C is reserved.) The 20-29-carbon ones form group D, and the rest (currently 30-45, and 56) form group E.