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Framing an Image will automatically set the Image to the right side of the screen and frame it. (Like a picture frame) To frame an Image type in: [[File:Cscr-featured.svg|frame]] Which will appear like this: NOTE: This will force the image to be in its original size (to change the size use thumbnails or do not use the frame).
Put a small border around the image. Location right, left, center or none. Determine the horizontal placement of the image on the page. This defaults to right for thumbnails and framed images. Alignment baseline, middle, sub, super, text-top, text-bottom, top, or bottom. Vertically align the image with respect to adjacent text. This defaults to ...
It is to right align in-line elements on a page. The only parameter is the content to be aligned. The only parameter is the content to be aligned. See also Template:Align for more options and flexibility.
The frame tag automatically floats the image right. The frame tag is only of use with very small images or ones using the px tag; The attributes left, center or centre override this, and places the image to the left or the centre of the page. The last parameter is the caption that appears below the image.
Note: If you trying to align a table column (left, center, or right) use Template:Table alignment. This is a generic template for handling the horizontal alignment of elements on a page. Use the template like this:
right – shifts the image to the right margin; center – shifts the image to center between left/right margins; Each of the above sizing options can be used in any image link coded into a Wikipedia page, in the form [[File:Example.jpg|thumb|upright|left|Description]]. When a user views the page, the image will be resized based on the user's ...
For large amounts of caption text, use text-align:left; to make it left-justified. Alternate text is optional but recommended. See Alternate text for images for hints on writing good alternate text. To have some text to the left of an image, and then some more text below the image, then put in a single <br clear="all">.
Normally a picture links to its image page, which describes the image, who created it, and links to the original image at full resolution. This is usually best for the reader, and is often required by the uploader's choice of a CC-BY-SA license for the image.