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Once you have made the template—for example Template:foo—you can add {{foo}} to the pages that you want to use it on. Every page using this template uses the same boilerplate text each time that a user visits it. When the template is updated, all pages containing the template tag are automatically updated.
This image or media file is available on the Wikimedia Commons as File:Template-info.svg, where categories and captions may be viewed. While the license of this file may be compliant with the Wikimedia Commons, an editor has requested that the local copy be kept too.
This template is designed to make passing tables to templates less of a hassle. Oftentimes, adding wikitable markup to a template or other parser tag generates gibberish when one fails to escape every | and =. Moreover, escaping pipe characters with {} everywhere can make for some rather ugly-looking markup.
PostScript can be converted to SVG with pstoedit (it works both on Linux and Microsoft Windows). On Linux, this tool can be invoked for example as; pstoedit -f plot-svg Picture.ps Picture.svg. Also you can use Scribus. Direct SVG output is probably better if the program supports it.
To save slides as svg, use file / save as / browse / save as type --> svg. If your slide has text, open the exported svg into Notepad and replace all the existing font-family specifications with font-family="Liberation Sans,sans-serif". This specification will make Wikimedia render SVG fonts similarly to how browsers render Wikipedia fonts.
This image needs to be converted to the SVG format. Once that is done, it should be moved to Wikimedia Commons in accordance with Wikipedia's image policy. Once the image is improved, see moving files to Commons for information on how to proceed. If you can not convert to SVG, go ahead and move to the Commons anyway. See Move-to-commons assistant.
In addition, the separate |url= parameter can be used to add an URL Tooltip uniform resource locator to existing vector data that may help in obtaining an SVG file. This can be an image in a different vector format (e.g. PDF, PS, EPS, AI, or CDR) but also a similar SVG that already contains parts of the image that needs to be converted. If this ...
Open the PDF file you want convert in Inkscape (not Acrobat) Click OK on the box that comes up; Wait a little while as Inkscape converts it; Click File>Save As.. Click Save in the bottom right corner; Done! You now have an SVG file with the same name as the PDF, but with the .svg extension; Upload the SVG and check that it displays properly