Wanted files
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Showing below up to 38 results in range #1 to #38.
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- File:Franceia.jpg (3 links)
- File:;?Has date ;color=blue (1 link)
- File:;?Has deadline ;color=orange (1 link)
- File:Array has a display similar to the “list” format defined in Semantic MediaWiki, but allows for more customization of the separators used between page names, and between values. (1 link)
- File:Category = 18th century births (1 link)
- File:Category = Composers (1 link)
- File:Compound queries can also be used for more basic formats like tables and lists, though in practice that’s rarely done. (1 link)
- File:Cybergeek.jpg (1 link)
- File:DynamicPageList (1 link)
- File:Eventcalendar similar to the “calendar” format, but uses the FullCalendar JavaScript library to display a calendar, instead of HTML, which can make for a slicker user experience. (1 link)
- File:Figure 18.5 Map created using Semantic Compound Queries and the ’googlemaps’ format (1 link)
- File:Figure 18.6 A calendar created using Semantic Compound Queries and the ’calendar’ format (1 link)
- File:Figure 18.6 shows what such a query could generate. (1 link)
- File:Hash similar to the “array” format, but outputs display in a format that can be directly used by the MediaWiki extension HashTables (https://www.mediawiki.org/wiki/Extension:HashTables). (1 link)
- File:Https://www.mediawiki.org/wiki/Extension:DynamicPageList (Wikimedia) (1 link)
- File:Https://www.mediawiki.org/wiki/Extension:DynamicPageList (third-party) (1 link)
- File:Https://www.mediawiki.org/wiki/Extension:Semantic Compound Queries (1 link)
- File:Incoming shows the incoming properties pointing to each page in the results. (1 link)
- File:Large monkey.gif (1 link)
- File:Lets you display a group of images in one place. It takes in a group of image names and, optionally, their captions (which can include wikitext); a call to it would look like the following: (1 link)
- File:Listwidget splits up results into pages, with a clickable table of contents at the top the most common use is to split up results by alphabetically, by the first letter of their name. (1 link)
- File:Monkey.png (1 link)
- File:Most notably, DPL is used to find intersections of categories, as well as to display all the pages in one category. For instance, to show a sorted list of pages about 18th-century composers, you might have the following: (1 link)
- File:One thing the (1 link)
- File:Order = ascending (1 link)
- File:Outline splits up the set of queried pages by a set of properties that they have, grouping them so that the result resembles an outline. (1 link)
- File:Pagewidget intended to be a generic format for breaking up results into pages of display. It currently only supports one interface: “carousel”, which lets users use buttons to scroll back and forth through the different pages. (1 link)
- File:Rhesus monkey.jpg (1 link)
- File:Semantic Compound Queries (1 link)
- File:The call to (1 link)
- File:The first thing you would need to do is upload images for the icons you want to display. Let’s say you upload images for the two icons shown in Figure 18.5, and name them "Red cross.png" and "Dollar sign.png". (1 link)
- File:The syntax for (1 link)
- File:The two are fairly similar in their functionality. The Wikimedia version is the safer choice. For wikis where performance is not paramount, the “third-party” version is the more powerful, and seemingly more popular, choice. (1 link)
- File:The two geographical-coordinates properties being displayed in the query are in this both called “Has coordinates” here, but they could theoretically have different names. (1 link)
- File:There are a variety of other result formats defined in Semantic Result Formats. Here is the current list, and their descriptions: (1 link)
- File:Valuerank similar to “tagcloud”, but simply shows the number of instances of each value, instead of changing the font size. (1 link)
- File:What if we want to add to our map a third set of points, for all businesses that aren’t banks, each point represented with a picture of a building? Thankfully, (1 link)
- File:You can read more about Semantic Compound Queries here: (1 link)