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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 ...
The heading ends up directly above the image (making it look somewhat like a label) and puts the subsection text to the right of the image, disconnecting it from the heading. If you want an image left-aligned in a subsection, make sure there is at least a paragraph of text between the image and the subheading.
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:
align: right (default), left, center direction: horizontal (default), vertical background color: To set the background color of the box in which the images appear. header_background: header_align: center (default), left, right header: width: Use to set the same width for each image (i.e. overrides any width[n] below). Do not include if ...
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.
Since the MediaWiki software dynamically scales inline images, there is no technical reason to reduce file size via scaling or quality reduction when uploading images, although non-free images may require scaling due to copyright concerns (see the non-free image resolution guidelines for further information). Also, compressing PNGs may be ...
<center>[[Image:NAME|Alt text]]<br>''Caption''</center> If your caption is longer than a few words, you may need to explicitly set the div width. Some browsers adjust the width of the div based on the width of the text, and if there is a large caption, the div may become too large.