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When a section is a summary of another article that provides a full exposition of the section, a link to the other article should appear immediately under the section heading. You can use the {{ Main }} template to generate a "Main article" link, in Wikipedia's "hatnote" style.
Download as PDF; Printable version; In other projects Wikidata item; Appearance. move to sidebar hide. Template documentation. This is a group of templates which aim ...
Discharge summary (following inpatient care) History & physical; Specialist reports, such as those for medical imaging or pathology; An XML element in a CDA supports unstructured text, as well as links to composite documents encoded in pdf, docx, or rtf, as well as image formats like jpg and png. [3]
The to/from and article title parameters are optional, but it is highly recommend that you fill them out so that people know why the template is there. If the page name you provide in the article title parameter does not exist, the template will display without the article name (it will still make sense, but vaguely suggest only "another article".
Template:See also, a template used at the top of article sections (excluding the lead) to create hatnotes to point to a small number of other related titles; Template:Split section, a cleanup message box suggesting a split; Template:Summary in, a template placed on the talk page of the summarized article to make the relationship explicit to editors
Template:Major topic editnotice – editnotice that provides summary style reminder; Template:Summary style section; Template:Over-quotation; Template:Main – hatnote to use atop the summary section, linking to the subtopic's dedicated article
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A short description, with the {{Short description}} template; A disambiguation hatnote, most of the time with the {} template (see also Wikipedia:Hatnote § Hatnote templates) No-output templates that indicate the article's established date format and English-language variety, if any (e.g., {{Use dmy dates}}, {{Use Canadian English}})