DPL:Manual - DPL parameters: Controlling output format

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Manual Controlling output format

You can select one of several default formats or define your own format (mode=userformat); output can be grouped in columns or rows.

General approach to output formatting

The general approach to output formatting is two-fold:

  1. There are a couple of simple predefined output formats which generate lists of articles
You will understand their meaning directly from reading
  1. There is a mode called "userformat" which puts complete control into your hands
This is somewhat complicated.

While the standard output formats are meant to be used for fast generation of simple page lists, the userformat approach aims at transcluding contents from other pages and requires some effort to understand. There is a system of three tags which are used to enclose (a) the whole output, (b) each item, (c) each transcluded section of an item. A forth tag is used to separate values between items of one section which occur more than once.

We assume that we have two documents which use templates x and y with varying arguments; while x is being used once within each document, y is used several times. In very short notation the structure might look as follows:

A: x(a) y(3) y(5)
B: x(b) y(4) y(1) y(2)

The following DPL parameters are used to define a set of tags which are used to construct the output:

The arguments of the above statements can contain references to %VARIABLES%. So sec-1-start might contain a reference like %PAGE% to output the page name. See format for more details on variable substitution.

Now think of the following page inclusion statement:

 includepage={x}.dpl,{y}.dpl

The output will then look like this:

 liststart
    itemstart
       sec-1-start
          x.dpl(a)
       sec-1-end
       sec-2-start
          y.dpl(3)
          multi-sep
          y.dpl(5)
       sec-2-end
    itemend
    itemstart
       sec-1-start
          x.dpl(b)
       sec-1-end
       sec-2-start
          y.dpl(4)
          multi-sep
          y.dpl(1)
          multi-sep
          y.dpl(2)
       sec-2-end
    itemend
 listend

Assuming that the tags (liststart, itemstart, etc.) contain wiki syntax for table definitions and multi-sep defines a horizontal line, the output might look like this:

 +------+---------------------+
 |      |          | y.dpl(3) |
 |  A   | x.dpl(a) |  ----    |
 |      |          | y.dpl(5) |
 +------+----------+----------+
 |      |          | y.dpl(4) |
 |      |          |  ----    |
 |  B   | x.dpl(b) | y.dpl(1) |
 |      |          |  ----    |
 |      |          | y.dpl(2) |
 +------+----------+----------+

In some situations, however, you may want to create an output table where each of the calls of template y is used to create a separate output row. Using a sortable table you could then easily rearrange the output.

 +------+---------------------+       +------+---------------------+
 |  A   | x.dpl(a) | y.dpl(1) |       |  B   | x.dpl(b) | y.dpl(1) |
 +------+---------------------+       +------+---------------------+
 |  A   | x.dpl(a) | y.dpl(2) |       |  B   | x.dpl(b) | y.dpl(2) |
 +------+---------------------+       +------+---------------------+
 |  B   | x.dpl(b) | y.dpl(3) |       |  A   | x.dpl(a) | y.dpl(3) |
 +------+---------------------+       +------+---------------------+
 |  B   | x.dpl(b) | y.dpl(4) |       |  A   | x.dpl(a) | y.dpl(4) |
 +------+---------------------+       +------+---------------------+
 |  B   | x.dpl(b) | y.dpl(5  |       |  B   | x.dpl(b) | y.dpl(5) |
 +------+---------------------+       +------+---------------------+

There is a special parameter called dominantsection which you can use to mark one section of your includepage statement as "dominant" (in our example: dominatsection=2 as {y}.dpl is the second argument of our includepage statement). You can only have one dominant section in a DPL statement. Marking a section as "dominant" makes only sense if you have multiple calls of the same template (or multiple chapters with the same heading) in your documents. Each piece of contents in the dominant section will generate an individual output row with the values of all other columns being repeated.


As all of the above is not very easy to understand there are additional DPL commands (table, tablerow) which make it fairly easy to create tabular output.

Setting the basic output mode

mode

mode Provide basic control over the output of DPL.

Syntax:

mode=modename

modename can be one of:

unordered
outputs an unordered list — HTML tag "ul" — (default)
ordered
outputs an ordered list — HTML tag "ol"
none
outputs a list using newlines and HTML tags "br" to separate each item
inline
outputs a list using symbol defined by the inlinetext parameter to separate items.
category
outputs resulting articles in a way category-pages are shown (you have to use ordermethod = title | titlewithoutnamespace | category,title | user,title with this option!)
userformat
will leave output control completely to the user;
see parameter listseparators and secseparators; in this mode DPL2 will offer built-in variables which must be referenced in the output format description provided by the user. mode=userformat is quite important to have complete control over the output.

For advanced use of DPL it is important to understand mode=userformat. Note that this mode is automatically implied when listseparators= or format= are used.

Example1

<DPL>
  category=Africa
  mode=ordered
</DPL>
This list will output pages that have [[Category:Africa]] shown in an <ol>...</ol> list:
  1. Nigeria
  2. Sudan
  3. Zimbabwe

Example2

<DPL>
  titlematch=%frica%
  mode=category
  ordermethod=titlewithoutnamespace
</DPL>

This list will output pages that have 'frica' in their name; pages will be ordered by their name regardless of category, the output will be shown in category style (i.e. with chapter capitals)

Related DPL extension variables: $wgDPL2CategoryStyleListCutoff.


mode 'Inline'

inlinetext

inlinetext To define the inline text used in mode=inline

Syntax:

inlinetext=wikitext, with wikitext some wiki text default is '&nbsp;-&nbsp;' except for mode=userformat where inlinetext is empty by default.

Extra whitespaces are stripped by DPL from the beginning and end of wikitext. If you want to show one or multiple spaces, use one or multiple '&nbsp;', or use 'nowiki' tags like in '<nowiki> - </nowiki>' which has same effect as '&nbsp;-&nbsp;'.

Example:

<DPL>
  category=Africa
  mode=inline
  inlinetext= &nbsp; &bull; &nbsp;
</DPL>

This list will output pages that have [[Category:Africa]] shown like Item1 • Item2 • Item3 • ...


mode 'Userformat'

listseparators

listseparators (alias for format) see the format parameter.

Note that format= automatically implies mode=userformat whereas listseparators does not.

format

format customize the output format completely. Implicitly sets mode=userformat. Uses variable references like %PAGE% to describe the output format. See also the secseparators parameter.

Note: listseparators is an alias for format which does not automatically imply mode=userformat.

Syntax:

format=Startall,Start,End,Endall

'Startall', 'Start', 'End' and 'Endall' are wiki tags used to separate the list items.

  • 'Startall' and 'Endall' define an outer frame for the whole list.
  • 'Start' and 'End' build an inner frame for each article item.

Because wiki syntax depends on newline characters the string \n must be used to explicitly insert newline characters into the output.

As we want to be able to control output completely we reference article names and other possible output by special symbols:


  • %NR% = the current article sequence number (starting from 1)
  • %PAGE% = the name of the article (including namespace)
  • %PAGESEL% = the name of a page which was used within the selection criteria (only applies to linksfrom and linksto)

  • %TITLE% = the title of the page (without the namespace)
  • %NAMESPACE% = the namespace of the page

  • %COUNT% = the usage counter (requires addpagecounter=true)
  • %SIZE% = the article size (requires addpagesize=true)
  • %SIZEFS% = a font size number which is based on the article size (logarithm of square root of counter)
  • %COUNTFS% = a font size number which is based on the usage counter (currently this is the logarithm of the usage counter)
  • %COUNTFS2% = similar to %COUNTFS%, but based on the logarithm of the square root of the usage counter.

  • %DATE% = the date selected, eg. lastedit; requires addeditdate=true or similar; the formatting of the date can be influenced using userdateformat=
  • %USER% = the user who changed the document last; requires adduser=true

  • %CONTRIBUTOR% = the user who made a contribution; requires addcontribution=true
  • %CONTRIBUTION% = the number of bytes changed; requires addcontribution=true
  • %CONTRIB% = an asterisk bar to indicate the amount of change; requires addcontribution=true

  • %CATLIST% = a pipe-separated list of links to all categories to which the article belongs
  • %CATNAMES% = a comma-separated list of all categories to which the article belongs

  • %REVISION% = the name of the revision of the article; this will only be available if you made a selection based on revisions

These symbols will be replaced by the corresponding values if they occur within 'Start' or 'End' or within the corresponding tags of the secseparators= parameter.

This means that the classical default output of DPL2 can also be produced with the following statements:

Example:

<DPL>
  category = Africa
  format   = ,\n* [[%PAGE%|%TITLE%]],,
</DPL>

Note that a bullet point list in wiki syntax is defined by a "*" at the beginning of a line -- therefore we have to use a special symbol '\n' or '¶' to refer to the beginning of a new line of wiki text. Replace the "*" by a "#" and you will get a numbered list. 'Startall' and 'Endall' are empty (note that we start with a comma, note the two commas at the end), the 'Start' tag is used to create a new line with an initial "* " followed by the page name, written as a link. That´s all.

Creating a top-five hitlist with access rates and bold article names of varying size could be done like this:

<DPL>
  category       = Africa
  ordermethod    = counter
  order          = descending
  addpagecounter = true
  count          = 5
  format         = ,\n%COUNT%  --- <font size="%COUNTFS%">'''[[%PAGE%]]'''</font>,<br/>,
</DPL>

You can also use HTML syntax for the tags, although this is discouraged.

<DPL>
  linksto        = Africa
  format         = <ul type="disc">,<li>[[%PAGE%]],</li>,</ul>
</DPL>

Now let us create a table using wiki syntax:

<DPL>
  linksto        = Africa
  format         = {| class="wikitable"¶!pages found,¶|-¶|[[%PAGE%]],,¶|}
</DPL>

We use 'Startall' to define the table header and 'Endall' for the footer. Each article is presented in a table row using wiki syntax for table layout.

we could also produce image galleries:

<DPL>
  namespace = Image
  format    = <gallery>,%PAGE%\n,,</gallery>
</DPL>

secseparators

secseparators customize the output format of included sections. Can be used with standard output modes and with mode=userformat.

Syntax

secseparators=Start1,End1,Start2,End2,..,..

or

secseparators=Start

Please note that the semantics of this parameter have changed with version 0.9.6!. When upgrading to 0.9.6 it will probably be necessary to change the secseparator statements.

In the first syntax variant, specify pairs of tags which correspond to the includepage statement. StartN and EndN are HTML strings or wiki tags which will be put around each transcluded section (see includepage=name1,name2,...).

In the second syntax variant, specify just one element which will then be used as 'StartN' for all sections; in this case the second tag (EndN) will be empty for all transcluded sections.

Symbolic replacements of %PAGE% etc. take place as described in listseparators. In addition, the symbol %SECTION% can be used to refer to the section found (works only for chapter headings).

If the same section occurs more than once in an article (or an article includes the same template more than once) all such occurences will be transcluded as a block and the secseparator tags will only be put once around the whole block (but see dominantsection).

Example

<DPL>
  linksto        = Africa
  mode           = userformat
  listseparators = {|¶!pages found¶!fruit¶!color,¶|-¶|[[%PAGE%]],,¶|}
  includepage    = #fruit,#color
  secseparators  = ¶|,,¶|,,
</DPL>

Which produces,

pages found fruit color
Amethyst
Nigeria

The fruit of Nigeria is big and round.

Nigeria is blue.

Sudan

Use listseparators to define a table with three columns and put a link to the article in the first column of each row. Use secseparators to add more columns for each section found. There are two pairs for each transcluded section; the first element of each pair is a linefeed and a pipe (which define a new column in the table) and the second element of each pair is empty. Have a careful look at the '¶' symbols ('\n' can be used as an alternative). They always appear before a wiki syntax element which must be placed at the beginning of a new line. Thus, make sure that the wiki parser will understand them. Note: if an article does not contain a section named "fruit", it will result in an empty cell in the table.

As mentioned above, a single element can be used in the secseparators statement in order to apply this as a start tag to all transcluded sections; so it could have also been written:

Example 2

<DPL>
  linksto          = Africa
  mode             = userformat
  listseparators   = {|\n!pages found\n!fruit\n!color,\n|-\n|[[%PAGE%]],,\n|}
  includepage      = #fruit[50],#color[100 more..]
  secseparators    = \n|
</DPL>

Assuming that the chapters on fruit and color contain long texts, they can be truncated to 50 or 100 characters. A link which refers directly to those chapters will be generated automatically if needed.

multisecseparators

multisecseparators put a tag between multiple transcluded parts which refer to the same template or chapter.

Syntax:

multisecseparators=sep1,sep2,...

The tags correspond to the transcluded section (see includepage=name1,name2,...).

Symbolic replacements of %PAGE% etc. take place as described in listseparators. In addition the symbol %SECTION% can be used to refer to the section found (works only for chapter headings).

If an article uses the same template more than once you will get all references with "sepN" as a separator.

Example:

<DPL>
  category=TestSSt
  includepage={interfaces_overview} dpl
  mode=userformat
  listseparators=¶{|class=sortable ¶!Interface ¶!Source system ¶!Target system ¶!Technology,¶|-¶|[[%PAGE%]] ¶,¶,¶|}
  secseparators  = \n|
  multisecseparators=¶|-¶|&nbsp;|
</DPL>

dominantsection

dominantsection define a section with multiple occurencies as dominant, i.e. each piece of contents of this section (which is associated with a template call or a chapter within the original document) will create a separate output line.

Syntax:

dominantsection=number between 1 and the number of arguments in your includepage= statement

If there is only 0 or 1 piece of contents for the dominant section you will see no difference from normal DPL behaviour.

Example:

See the explanations at the top of this document to understand the meaning of dominantsection.

Note: Using dominantsection together with table may lead to strange result formatting.


Generating tabular output

table

table a simple syntax to create standard tabular output; see also tablerow

Syntax:

table= tableatr, linkheader, (column headlines) ..

The table statement is a shortcut which implicitly sets certain values for other DPL parameters, namely mode, listseparators / format, secseparators, and multisecseparators.

The layout is less flexible than the individual use of all of the above parameters but will probably be sufficient in many cases, especially when used together with tablerow.

If you use table in a DPL statement, it does not make sense to use one of the other options mentioned because their values will be overwritten without notice. There is one exception of this rule: It can make sense to specify the THIRD argument for format in combination with table. Therefore this parameter is NOT overwritten by the table command. The third argument can be used to output meta data like %COUNT%, %USER% etc. as columns in an output table. If you want to do so, the third parameter must contain wiki syntax for output columns like this:

include = {some template}:parm1,#some heading
table   =,,tplparm,chapter,#hits
format  =,,\n%COUNT%

Do not forget to escape the '|' symbol if your DPL statement uses parser function syntax. You will get a table which contains template parameters, chapter contents and the usage counter as a third column. Meta data can only be placed AFTER normal contents as we use the THIRD parameter of the format statement.

The use of table requires an include statement which should, for reasons of readability, directly precede the tablestatement). Each argument of the include statement will produce one or more columns in the output table desribed in the table statement.

table expects a comma-separated list of parameters:

  • The first parameter will be used to describe general parameters for the table
    • it is recommended to make a CSS reference here, using something like class=wikitable or class=mytable if mytable is defined in the Mediawiki:Common.css document.
    • class=wikitable is the default value.
  • The second parameter is the headline for the first column.
    • The first column will automatically contain a reference to the article, so something like Article should be o.k.
    • Article is the default value.
    • if you use a single - (dash), the column with the hyperlink to the article will be suppressed. You can supply a hyperlink to the article in any other column if you use [[{{{%PAGE%}}}|{{{%TITLE%}}}]] within a phantom template.
  • All subsequent parameters are column headings which correspond to the arguments of the include parameter. Note that if you call a phantom template (like {Some Template}.dpl) in the include statement, you will have to provide as many headlines as the phantom template produces columns.
  • mode will be set to userformat
  • listseparators will be configured to produce wiki syntax which defines a table
  • secseparators will be configured to produce wiki syntax which creates a table row. The first column will always contain a hyperlink to the article of the query result (except you set the link header to '-' as described above.
  • multisecseparators will be configured to produce wiki syntax which creates another table row for multiple occurencies of the first include argument. For all other arguments a linebreak will be used if we are dealing with template parameters and a horizontal separation line will be used when dealing with chapter contents. The background for this is the following: If you have an article which calls the same template several times, you may want to have a table where each template invocation becomes a row in your table.

When using phantom templates (i.e. templates which are called during DPL execution instead of the original template) they must be written to produce output according to wiki table syntax. When entering such a template we are already at the beginning of a column (i.e. a preceding line with a | has already been put into the output stream). So start directly with the contents of the first column. To add more columns use a | in a separate line. Example:

   some output for the first column: {{{1|}}}
   |
   some output for the next column: {{{2|}}}
   |
   some output for the next column: {{{3|}}}

It may sound complicated, but is a huge improvement compared to the native use of mode, listseparators, secseparators and multisecseparators.

A typical DPL statement using the table parameter would contain:

include =                          #Chapter X,{T1}:parm1,#Chapter Y,{T2}.dpl
table   = class=sortable, Article,      X    ,     t-p  ,     Y    , T2-a, T2-b
 

Note that we have written the above statement in a way to show the correspondence between include and table. You can see the first two parameters which define the table characteristics and a headline for the hyperlink to the article. Then follow headlines for each argument of include. Note that there are TWO headlines which correspond to the last argument of the include statement (assuming that Template:T2.dpl outputs TWO columns). Template:T2 itself might have more or less than 2 arguments -- it only matters how many columns are output by Template:T2.dpl).

Now look at the examples

tablerow

tablerow a simple syntax to create customized tabular output; see also table

Syntax:

tablerow= coldef, ..

Where coldef contains wiki code which uses the symbol '%%' to refer to the corresponding element of an include statement.

The table statement (which must be used as a prerequisite for tablerow) cares for the basics of table generation. So, when you define a column definition, you only need to specify the code for the field contents itself. You can start with field attributes like "bgcolor" or skip them. You can add a leading "\n" to make sure that the field contents is displayed correctly if it contains wiki syntax that depends on linebreaks (e.g. enumeration list). You must specify all columns. i.e. you must have as many entries in the tablerow statement as there are columns in your table. Skipping a column would suppress output for that column completely.

The tablerow command is best explained by an example (you can also find this example on the title page of this wiki):

<dpl>
  category=African Union member states
  nottitlematch=Sudan
  addpagecounter=true
  includepage ={Infobox Country or territory}:area:population_estimate,%0[100]
  format      =,,\n|align=right|²{#ifexpr:%COUNT%>300¦<big>'''%COUNT%'''</big>¦%COUNT%}²,
  table       =,Country,Area,Population,Text,#hits
  tablerow    =align=right|%%,align=right|%%,bgcolor=lightyellow|<small>%%</small>,\n|align=right|%%
</dpl>
Country Area Population Text #hits
Cameroon 475,442 16,323,000
     ..→</small>
  • We select some African countries, we exclude Sudan
  • We acquire a piece of meta data about the articles we will find (in our case the usage counter)
  • We include two named parameters from a template call
  • We include a short text passage from the text before the first chapter
  • We use the third parameter of format to output the usage counter (we could even highlight values above 100 here, for example)
  • We highlight usage values above 300
  • We define a standard wiki table with the article name in the first column (named "Country")
  • We define column headers for transcluded contents and for the usage counter
  • We care for right alignment of the numerical values and define a bgcolor for the text

Heading mode

headingmode

Nigeria 923,768 133,530,0001 Template:Let me test this

<table class="infobox geography vcard" style="width:46ex; ..→

Somalia 637,657 8,228,000
     ..→</small>
headingmode To control the output of the headings in a DPL with complex/multi-parameter ordermethods. (No effect with single-param ordermethods.) For ordermethod=method1,method2,..., method1 is used for headings. E.g. headingmode affects category headings in ordermethod=category,title (2-param ordermethod). See also headingcount=

Syntax:

headingmode=modename

modename can be one of:

  • none — headings are not displayed, no heading — (default)
  • unordered — outputs an unordered list — HTML tag "ul"
  • ordered — outputs an ordered list — HTML tag "ol"
  • definition — outputs a definition list — HTML tag "dl"
  • H2 — outputs sections — HTML tags "H2"
  • H3 — outputs sections — HTML tags "H3"
  • H4 — outputs sections — HTML tags "H4"

Example:

<DPL>
  category=Africa|Europe
  ordermethod=category,title
  headingmode=definition
  mode=ordered
</DPL>

This list will output pages that belong to one of the categories Africa, Europe in a list similar to this (HTML source), with pages 1 and 2 in the Africa category, Page 1 in the Europe category as well (in fact, the titles are replaced with the appropriate links):

<dl>
  <dt>Africa</dt>
  <dd>
    <ol>
      <li>Page1</li>
      <li>Page2</li>
    </ol>
  </dd>
  <dt>Europe</dt>
  <dd>
    <ol>
      <li>Page1</li>
    </ol>
  </dd>
</dl>

Headingmode can be used with multi-column output but the length of the columns may in this case vary more than you would expect.

headingcount

headingcount In combination with headingmode this parameter decides whether we show a text line with the number of articles per group or not.

Syntax:

headingcount=true

default is headingcount=false


listattr

listattr Adds attributes to HTML list elements, depending on mode (HTML element is ol for ordered, ul for unordered, div for others). Can be used with pseudo mode=inline where inline text contains one or more <BR/>.

Not applicable to mode=category or mode=inline (with no <BR/> in inline text).

Syntax: listattr= attribute1="val1" attribute2="val2" ...

Examples:

Input (HTML) Output Actual Output
<DPL>
ordermethod=category,title
headingmode=ordered
mode=none
listattr= class="submenul"
itemattr= class="submenuli" style="font-style: italic;"
</DPL>
<ol>
  <li> Cat1 (link)
    <div class="submenul">
      <span class="submenuli" style="font-style: italic;"> Page1_1 </span> <br/>
      <span class="submenuli" style="font-style: italic;"> Page1_2 </span>
    </div>
  </li>
  <li> Cat2 (link)
    <div class="submenul">
      <span class="submenuli" style="font-style: italic;"> Page2_1 </span> <br/> 
      <span class="submenuli" style="font-style: italic;"> Page2_2 </span>
    </div>
  </li>
</ol>
  1. Cat1 (link)
  2. Cat2 (link)
<DPL>
ordermethod=category,title
headingmode=ordered
mode=unordered
listattr= class="submenul"
itemattr= class="submenuli" style="font-weight: bold;"
</DPL>
<ol>
  <li> Cat1 (link)
    <ul class="submenul">
      <li class="submenuli" style="font-weight: bold;"> Page1_1 </li> 
      <li class="submenuli" style="font-weight: bold;"> Page1_2 </li>
    </ul>
  </li>
  <li> Cat2 (link)
    <ul class="submenul">
      <li class="submenuli" style="font-weight: bold;"> Page2_1 </li> 
      <li class="submenuli" style="font-weight: bold;"> Page2_2 </li>
    </ul>
  </li>
</ol>
  1. Cat1 (link)
  2. Cat2 (link)

itemattr

itemattr Adds attributes to HTML list items, depending on 'mode' (element is 'li' for ordered/unordered, 'span' for others).

Not applicable to 'mode=category'.

Syntax: itemattr= attribute1="val1" attribute2="val2" ...

Example: see listitemattr.

hlistattr

hlistattr Adds attributes to the HTML list element at the heading/top level, depending on 'headingmode' (HTML element would be 'ol' for ordered, 'ul' for unordered, 'dl' for definition, 'div' for others)

Not yet applicable to 'headingmode=none'.

Syntax: hlistattr= attribute1="val1" attribute2="val2" ...

Example:

Input (HTML) Output Actual Output
<DPL>
ordermethod=category,pagetouched
headingmode=H2
mode=ordered
hlistattr= class="topmenul" id="dmenu"
</DPL>
<div class="topmenul" id="dynamicmenu">
  <H2> Category 1 (link) </H2>
  <ol>
      <li>Page1_1</li>
      <li>Page1_2</li>
  </ol>
  <H2> Category 2 (link) </H2>
  <ol>
      <li>Page2_1</li>
  </ol>
</div>

Category 1 (link)

  1. Page1_1
  2. Page1_2

Category 2 (link)

  1. Page2_1

See also hitemattr.

hitemattr

hitemattr Adds attributes to HTML list items (headings) at the heading level, depending on 'headingmode' (HTML element would be 'li' for ordered/unordered, 'div' for others).

To be used with headingmode='unordered' or 'ordered'. (Not yet applicable for others.)

Syntax: hitemattr= attribute1="val1" attribute2="val2" ...

Example:

Input (HTML) Output Actual Output
<DPL>
ordermethod=category,title
headingmode=unordered
mode=ordered
hlistattr= class="topmenul" id="dmenu"
hitemattr= class="topmenuli" style="color: red;"
</DPL>
<ul class="topmenul" id="dmenu">
  <li class="topmenuli" style="color: red;"> Category 1 (link)
    <ol>
      <li>Page1_1</li>
      <li>Page1_2</li>
    </ol>
  </li>
  <li class="topmenuli" style="color: red;"> Category 2 (link)
    <ol>
      <li>Page2_1</li>
    </ol>
  </li>
</ul>
  • Category 1 (link)
    1. Page1_1
    2. Page1_2
  • Category 2 (link)
    1. Page2_1

userdateformat

userdateformat Define a special layout for date formatting.

Syntax:

userdateformat=formatstring

The formatstring may contain letters like "y,Y,m,M,d,D,h,H,i,I,s" for year, month day. Other characters are printed as they are. See the documentation for php function gmdate() for more details. The "userdateformat" applies to all date/time fields, see the parameters: addeditdate,addpagetoucheddate,addfirstcategorydate

Example:

userdateformat=Y-m-d (D)

Control the way article names are displayed

shownamespace

shownamespace To restrict the appearance of the namespace name of a page before the page. As the switch is true by default it should be set to false if you want to avoid namespaces to be shown in the output.

Syntax:

shownamespace=false

Example:

<DPL>
  category      = Africa
  namespace     = Talk
  shownamespace = false
</DPL>

This list will output all Talk pages in [[Category:Africa]], listed without the Talk: prepended to page names.

Note that in "mode=userformat" there is a different way to decide whether you want to output the title with or without namespace. In mode=userformat two built-in variables are provided which contain the page name including the namespace (%PAGE%) and the base title name (%TITLE%).


escapelinks

escapelinks Regarding images and categories this parameter allows you to decide whether
  • you want to see a link to the image or to the category page (escapelinks=true, this is the default)
  • you want to see the image or make the page which contains the DPL statement part of the categories which are returned by DPL (escapelinks=false)

Syntax:

escapelinks=false

Note: You can use this parameter to show images; an other way to do this is to use the gallery extension in combination with DPL; there is an example for this on the dpldemo website.


titlemaxlength

titlemaxlength To limit the number of characters of the title to display. If the page title (this does not include the namespace or any other prefix before the title) is bigger than the titlemaxlength value, the title is truncated and ended by '...'.

Syntax:

titlemaxlength=number of characters

replaceintitle

replaceintitle execute a string replacement operation on the %TITLE% var

Syntax:

replaceintitle=search for,replacement

The "search for" argument must be an expression which can be used in a php preg_replace() function call.

Example:

to remove the string "demo" in article names, you must write

replaceintitle=/demo/,

Note that standard regexp rules apply. The regexp must start with a non-alphanumeric character -- but not with a backslash! It is good habit to use a '/' if this character is not needed within the regexp itself. Read the php manual to understand the details of regular expressions.


Arranging article lists in columns and rows

columns

columns Define a column layout for the output.

Syntax:

columns=ncols

In mode=userformat the outer tags from listseparators will be repeated for each column.

Example:

<DPL>
  category=Africa
  addpagesize=true
  ordermethod=size
  mode=userformat
  listseparators={|class=sortablewikitable id=2\n!Rank\n!Article\n!Bytes\n|-,\n|%NR%.\n|[[%PAGE%]]\n|align=right|%SIZE%,\n|-,\n|}
  count=12
  columns=3
</DPL>

The output will contain a list of the 12 largest articles on Africa, arranged in three columns. Each column consists of a table which has itself three columns: rank, article name and size.


Simpler example:

<dpl>
  category=Test
  columns=3
  rowcolformat=width=100%
</dpl>


Simply displays all articles and subcategories in Category:Test in 3 columns (rowcolformat is used to make the table width 100%).

rows

rows Define a row layout for the output. A "row" is a group of output lines for which the heading is repeated. If you do not know how big your result will be, it may be better to use the "rowsize" parameter.

Syntax:

rows=nrows

In "mode=userformat" the outer tags from "listseparators" will be repeated for each column. Thus you can create long lists where the table heading is repeated from time to time.

Example:

<DPL>
  category=Africa
  addpagesize=true
  ordermethod=size
  mode=userformat
  listseparators={|class=sortablewikitable id=2\n!Rank\n!Article\n!Bytes\n|-,\n|%NR%.\n|[[%PAGE%]]\n|align=right|%SIZE%,\n|-,\n|}
  count=12
  rows=2
</DPL>

The output will contain a list of the 12 largest articles on Africa, arranged in two rows (of 6 lines each). Each row consists of a table which has itself three columns: rank, article name and size.

rowsize

rowsize Define a row layout for the output. A "row" is a group of n output lines for which the heading will be repeated.

Syntax:

rowsize=nrowsize

In "mode=userformat" the outer tags from "listseparators" will be repeated after each group of "rowsize" output lines. Thus you can create long lists where the table heading is repeated in regular intervals.

Example:

<DPL>
  category=Africa
  addpagesize=true
  ordermethod=size
  mode=userformat
  listseparators={|class=sortablewikitable id=2\n!Rank\n!width=200px|Article\n!Bytes\n|-,\n|%NR%.\n|[[%PAGE%]]\n|align=right|%SIZE%,\n|-,\n|}
  rowsize=20
</DPL>

The output will contain a list of all articles on Africa. After each group of 20 entries (article names) the table heading will be repeated. It may be useful to set the width of the column with the article names explicitly, so that the tables in each row have equal width.

rowcolformat

rowcolformat Defines layout properties (using HTML table tag parameters) for the row/column grid.

Syntax:

rowcolformat=html tags

Example:

<DPL>
  category=Africa
  columns=3
  rowcolformat=cellspacing=20
</DPL>

There will be more space around the columns than normal. See columns above for another example.

The ideal way to use rowcolformat is to assign a CSS class to your DPL table which has been defined in your mediawiki:Common.css article.

Example:

<DPL>
  category=Africa
  columns=3
  rowcolformat=class=dpl3columns
</DPL>

In your Common.css article you might have written something like

table.dpl3columns td {
  background: #f2f2f2;
  padding: 0.5em;
  border:3px;
  width:33%;
}