Text Formatting FAQThe most frequently asked questions about text formatting are answered. Also, TextFormattingRules contains the complete TWiki shorthand system on one quick reference page.On this page:
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Text I enter gets wrapped around. How can I keep the formatting as it is?TWiki interprets text as HTML, so you can use thepreformatted 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> Unit Price Qty Cost ------- ------ --- ------ aaa 12.00 3 36.00 </verbatim>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?There are three possibilities:
<table border="1"> <tr> <th> Head A </th> <th> Head B </th> </tr><tr> <td> Cell A2 </td> <td> Cell B2 </td> </tr><tr> <td> Cell A3 </td> <td> Cell B3 </td> </tr> </table>Result:
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Can I include images on a page?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.
To place an image on any page, ther are two ways of including inline images.
1. Using URL ending in .gif, .jpg, .jpeg, .png
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.
ImageLibrary - and then link to the images directly:
WIDTH and HEIGHT parameters that have the actual image size. http://www.htmlhelp.com/reference/wilbur/special/img.html![]()
Can I write colored text?TWikiPreferences defines some commonly used colors: %YELLOW%, %RED%, %PINK%, %PURPLE%, %TEAL%, %NAVY%, %BLUE%, %AQUA%, %LIME%, %GREEN%, %OLIVE%, %MAROON%, %BLACK%, %GRAY%, %SILVER% and %ENDCOLOR%.
%<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% .
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 .
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.
-- PeterThoeny - 21 Feb 2002 -- MikeMannix - 14 Sep 2001 |