Template:Infobox protected area of Australia
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
{{{name}}} | |
---|---|
Nearest town/city: | {{{nearest_town_or_city}}} |
Coordinates: | {{{coordinates}}} |
Area: | {{{area}}} |
Visitation: | {{{visitation_num}}} (in [[{{{visitation_year}}}]]) |
Managing authorities: | {{{managing_authorities}}} |
Official site: | {{{official_site}}} |
This template is part of the Protected Areas WikiProject.
Using the Template
To get started, you can simply copy this blank definition into your page, and fill in the data. Be sure to read the notes below it.
{{Infobox_protected_area_of_Australia | name = | iucn_category = | image = | caption = | locator_x = | locator_y = | nearest_town_or_city = | coordinates = | area = | established = | visitation_num = | visitation_year = | managing_authorities = | official_site = }}
- Each group of items above is optional.
- You may include an image with no caption, but a caption will not be shown if there is no image.
- To hide the locator dot, leave locator_x and locator_y blank
- The IUCN category must be one of the following (case-sensitive): Ia, Ib, II, III, IV, V, or VI.
- locator_x and locator_y are the number of pixels to offset the locator dot from the left and top edges of the base map. Note: there is a 3px y-axis difference between Internet Explorer and Firefox.
- For coordinates, use {{coord}}, with display=inline,title.
- Wiki links [[]] are fine in any of the Infobox fields except IUCN category and coordinates.
- Include the HTML comments before and following the template; they help inexperienced editors.
- Please spend some time at the Protected Areas WikiProject article and its talk page for standards on presenting names and other data.
Finding Coordinates for the Locator Dot
To assist in quickly finding the right x and y coordinates, this map are provided as a reference (for a width of 288px only):
See also: Template talk:Locator grid
Microformat
The HTML mark up produced by this template includes an hCard microformat, which makes the place-name and location parsable by computers, either acting automatically to catalogue article across Wikipedia, or via a browser tool operated by a person, to (for example) add the subject to an address book. Within the hCard is a Geo microformat, which additionally makes the coordinates (latitude & longitude) parsable, so that they can be, say, looked up on a map, or downloaded to a GPS unit. For more information about the use of microformats on Wikipedia, please see the microformat project.
hCard uses HTML classes including:
- "adr"
- "county-name"
- "fn"
- "label"
- "locality"
- "nickname"
- "note"
- "org"
- "region"
- "street-address"
- "vcard"
Geo is produced by calling {{coord}}, and uses HTML classes:
- "geo"
- "latitude"
- "longitude"
Please do not rename or remove these classes.
When giving coordinates, please don't be overly precise.