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A bracket is either of two tall fore- or back-facing punctuation marks commonly used to isolate a segment of text or data from its surroundings. [3] They come in four main pairs of shapes, as given in the box to the right, which also gives their names, that vary between British and American English. [1] "
Template names are added to pages inside double curly brackets. In addition, user-typed parameters are allowed, so that the template has some input to work with. The parameters allow the templates to be tailored to the specific needs of different articles and pages.
This template is a simple wrapper around the [ and ] HTML entities that produce starting and ending brackets, respectively. The template cannot output just an ending bracket. You will have to use ] to produce the "]" ending bracket. This template is not necessary in Citation Style 1 templates. You can simply use square brackets, and ...
Use this template to generate a pair of left (open) and right (close) angle brackets (also called chevrons) that will display correctly, even on operating systems and browsers that normally cannot display these characters when they are used in text. The template includes a 'nowrap' instruction, to prevent the brackets from separating from the ...
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This is a documentation subpage for Module:Bracket. It may contain usage information, categories and other content that is not part of the original module page. Wrapper for bracket templates, which can be used in place of the following for reduced Post-expand include size :
When you enclose certain codes in double curly braces, you get all sorts of interesting results: {{PAGENAME}} - the title of current page, with regular spaces between each word of it Curly braces {{localurl:{{PAGENAME}}}} - a fragment of the URL that refers to the page you put the code in (note that the page title has underscores between each word)