Help:ImageMap

The ImageMap extension allows you to add client-side clickable image maps to an article.

See Example page for how to format an image map.

Syntax
The contents of an &lt;imagemap> tag consists of blank lines, comments (starting with #) and logical lines. The first logical line specifies the image to be displayed. This must be in the same format as an ordinary image link, except without the enclosing and.

Further lines are split into tokens, separated by whitespace. The function of each line is determined by the first token in the line. All coordinates are in relation to the full-size image, not the visible image.


 * desc : Specifies the location of the image description link. May be either top-right, bottom-right, bottom-left, top-left or none. This puts a blue "i" icon in the specified corner, linking to the image description page. The default is bottom-right.


 * rect : A rectangle. The parameters are the coordinates of the top-left and bottom-right corners, followed by a title to link to in square brackets.


 * circle: A circle. The first two parameters are the coordinates of the center, the third is the radius. The coordinates are followed by a link in square brackets.

Note: polygons must be defined before any other form!
 * poly: A polygon. The coordinates of the vertices are given, followed by a link in square brackets.


 * default: This gives the default link, where no other regions are specified.

All coordinates are specified relative to the source image. The image can be scaled using thumbnail syntax, in which case the image map coordinates will be automatically scaled as well.

All links are given in either the form Page title or description. In the latter case, the part after the pipe ("|") becomes the title attribute of the link – in most browsers, it will pop up as a tooltip when the user hovers over it. If no explicit link description is given, the page title will be used.

Syntax example
Output of this example:

Image map editor

 * A graphical tool to determine the coordinates of an image map by Dapete at MetaWiki