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This template is a navigational template intended to be used to generate a scrollable navigation "bar", rather than a navigation box, in cases where there are a long list of items with a natural ordering (for example, alphabetical or numerical) that as a box would consume a large amount of vertical space in an article.
The name parameter is only mandatory if a title is specified, and the border parameter is not set, and the navbar parameter is not used to disable the navbar. state* [autocollapse, collapsed, expanded, plain, off] Defaults to autocollapse. A navbox with autocollapse will start out collapsed if there are two or more collapsible elements on the ...
Examples of horizontal and vertical scrollbars around a text box Examples of vertical scrollbar at right end of Wikipedia home page. A scrollbar is an interaction technique or widget in which continuous text, pictures, or any other content can be scrolled in a predetermined direction (up, down, left, or right) on a computer display, window, or viewport so that all of the content can be viewed ...
The table's horizontal scroll doesn't work with this template, so wide tables span outside of the main content area making the entire page wider and requiring you to instead horizontally scroll the entire page. Zooming out to see the entire table makes the headers sticky, but also makes the text smaller and less readable the wider the table is.
Footer boxes—for example {{Health in China}}, designed to appear at the bottom of each article, stacked with other similar templates. See also: Wikipedia:Footers for information on placement. For footer boxes, {} is the standard. Existing hard-coded collapsible elements should be converted to one of the templates in Category:Collapse templates
In the edit box: Highlight a [[wiki link]] to get an article popup. Diff links : On history or watchlist pages, hover over diff links like "(cur)" or "(prev)" to get a summary of the difference; the Actions menu allows you to revert or undo the edit.
Either an old revision (at least of an article, a talk page, etc.) that has a template either should show the template as it existed at the time of the revision or the old revision's heading box (where it says "[t]his is an old revision of this page, as edited by ...") should be edited to add something like "[t]emplates are present-day ...