Help:Infoboxes

Infoboxes are like fact sheets or sidebars in magazine articles; designed to present a summary of the topic of the page. They present important points in an organized and quickly readable format. Infoboxes are generally made using templates, to create consistency across a community.

Fandom has developed a consistent way to code infoboxes, called Portable Infoboxes, to enable them to display well across different devices, which this page details. There are no changes to how you use an infobox on an article — instead, the changes affect how it is written on a template page. Fandom considers use of Portable Infoboxes to be standard for their communities, and safe and stable for common practical use.

A tool to help with the migration of existing infoboxes has also been created. More information about this can be found on Help:Infobox migration, and a full step-by-step walkthrough can be found at Help:Infobox migration/Walkthrough.


 * Useful links
 * For a basic intro to the visual infobox editor, see Help:Infoboxes/editing
 * For a detailed list of all the standard options available for Portable Infoboxes, including samples of wikitext to use and their HTML output, see Help:Infoboxes/Tags
 * For detailed information about how to use CSS to theme an infobox, including detailed guides, see Help:Infoboxes/CSS
 * For step-by-step instructions on how to migrate from a 'classic' infobox to a portable infobox, see Help:Infobox migration/Walkthrough
 * Portability Hub: Guides, examples, and personal mentoring for migrating, customizing, and theming your infoboxes

How to add an infobox to an article
You can add an infobox to an article the same way as you would any other template, either via the editor's built-in tools, or through the editor's source mode. In the VisualEditor, Portable Infoboxes can quickly be inserted via the Infobox option on the 'Insert' dropdown.

Meanwhile, in source mode, you would generally start by copying the syntax from the template's documentation (normally found towards the bottom of the template's page) and pasting it into an article, changing the words after the equals signs to provide the desired information. For example:

With Portable Infoboxes, this works similar as with any other template. The template page markup is a little different, as detailed below.

How to create an infobox
First, start a new template with any name you like. To do this, create a new page with the title "Template:[name of your choice]" (e.g. Template:Example). While in the past you may have used tables and divs, we now use infobox tags. We'll begin with a basic 'stacked' infobox, with a title and an image:

This wikitext will tell your template to use name and image variables for title and image elements. Additionally you can provide the default tag, whose value will be used when a user does not specify a name/image/etc. on the article.

Now we just need two more fields containing additional information, so let's add one:

After adding one last field with source set to first and label to First seen, we end up with the following:

We can now use the template in an article, inserting the following parameters to get a working infobox:

Hiding values
Any field or element without a value will automatically be hidden. This applies to all tags with the exception of groups that are forcibly shown (see ). When all elements are empty the infobox itself will not appear. Inside an image tag, images that do not exist will not show a "redlink", but the file page will appear in Special:Wantedfiles.

How to alter the infobox layout
Infoboxes using this kind of code are automatically styled, taking cues from your community's custom theme. If any of the variables are empty, the relevant row of the template will not be displayed (unless the 'default' tag has been used).

Layout options
Two alternative layout options are available for infoboxes:

Custom theming
The default infobox theming can be overridden in two ways. There is a variable on your community's WikiFeatures page entitled Europa Infobox Theme (retired as of the introduction of Fandom Desktop). When you enable it, your infoboxes will pull the colors you chose for your Wiki Navigation in ThemeDesigner.

Your other option is to use local community CSS. Using the type, theme, or theme-source attributes on the infobox tag will make it easy to target specific infobox templates using classes.


 * The type attribute is used to define an infobox's logical type.
 * The theme attribute is used to specify a custom CSS class for the infobox template.
 * The theme-source attribute allows you to vary the CSS class via a template parameter.

For lots more information about how to use these attributes and theme an infobox, including detailed guides, please check out Help:Infoboxes/CSS, or find example styles and themes on the Portability Hub.

Accent colors
The colors of title and header backgrounds and text can be further repainted per-infobox by using the accent color feature. Like theme-source, the color used is the value of the template parameter indicated in accent-color-source (for backgrounds) and accent-color-text-source (for text).

As an example: if the infobox template declares accent-color-source="bkg" and the article's infobox declares bkg = #FFF, the background color of the headers and titles will be #FFF (the HEX value for the white color). The colors declared in this way must be in #FFF or #FFFFFF HEX format, or the recoloring will silently fail.

Accent colors will override colors declared using themes as well as defaults.

This also includes a parameter for default color, so using accent-color-default="#FFF" sets the color for all titles and headers backgrounds, and accent-color-text-default="#000000" works in a similar manner by setting the default text color using hex formats.

Per-item styling
Individual items in an infobox may include markers inside the HTML results that allow them to be indicated with CSS selectors known as data attributes.


 * All Portable Infobox elements that have an input of source will now render in HTML with that parameter name in a data-attribute, such as data-source="ATK" . This will allow you to write CSS or jQuery selectors such as .pi-item[data-source=ATK] to style and identify individual items. Used in combination with type, this should eliminate the need for nth-of-type style selection and opens up other possibilities for design and interactivity.
 * The new name parameter allows explicit selection of elements whether they accept a source input or not, including identification of, , tag.

For more information about this feature, see this thread.

To add a video into an infobox, simply use the  tag, just as you would with an image. When a video is inserted instead of an image, a thumbnail with a play icon and duration info will be shown in the infobox, and clicking on the video will pop up a video player. If you want to add multiple videos, add a new  tag per each video.

How to group data
Now that you have created a simple infobox, you can learn how to use more advanced options. In the section below we show how to build the infobox seen on the right.

This infobox begins with three  fields, then single   and   fields. As you can see, the  field does not have to be the first field.

Grouping information inside the group tags
The  field will let you group fields together and give them a header. Remember: fields that are declared but don't have a value won't appear. This rule also applies to groups. If none of the fields (other than the header tag) inside a group have a value, that whole group won't show up.

Details

Horizontal layout for groups
Instead of a vertical list,  fields can have a horizontal layout where all the content is displayed next to each other in single line. This can be achieved by adding layout="horizontal" attribute to the group tag.

Smart layout for groups
Similar to horizontal layout (which provides rigid, structured rows) is "smart" layout. This allows data fields to flow in a single group from one row to the next. When the number of fields reaches a defined limit, the next data field will appear on a new row. The items in a row will adjust to fill all available width.

To use smart groups, add row-items="3" (or some other number that sets the limit). All items in a smart group use horizontal layout by default, so it is not necessary to add that attribute if you are using smart groups. However, it is possible to mix horizontal and vertical data fields in a smart group by adding the layout="default" attribute to an individual  tag.

To make a given data field take up more than a single space, use the span="2" attribute in a  tag.

Force all group elements to be displayed
Using show="incomplete", you can force all group elements to be displayed, even when empty, unless all are empty — then the group is not rendered at all.

Now adding all this together, we come to the final template code:

Details  Combatants

Now we can use it in an article:

Collapsible groups
Groups can be made collapsible by adding either collapse="open" or collapse="closed" to the  tag. This will make the group header row clickable (to expand and collapse the group), and the group will initially start open or closed, respectively.

Note: A header row containing content must immediately follow the group tag for this to work.

Panels
Data items and groups can now be structured in tabbed panels, which allow more flexibility and smarter data display on desktop and mobile views. Each &lt;panel> — as a child of the root &lt;infobox> element — can be labeled (with &lt;label> ) and one or more &lt;section> elements to make a tab set. Any element that could otherwise be a child of &lt;infobox> can be a child of &lt;section>. This should reduce clutter and the necessity for groups of infoboxes on pages, while structuring infoboxes in more dynamic ways.

The  tag represents the contents of a tab. The clickable toggle is represented by a  tag. Labels default to their zero-based index if omitted; if all tabs within a panel are unlabeled, then they are contained in the infobox as if they were groups.

4E Details

Formatting
If you want to append some additional information to your data – like adding some icons, categories – or to process the passed values, the field formatting allows you to do that.


 * When the format tag is used, the variable provided in source= is then formatted or modified as specified inside the format tag. For this purpose, the parameter has to be provided in triple braces; e.g.,  for.
 * If the variable provided in source= is empty, the node renders the value as provided in the default tag (or doesn’t render if no default tag is specified). The contents of default is never available to parser functions; e.g., parameter  would remain empty. It can be thought of as meaning ‘default format’, not ‘default value’.

A few sample use cases:
 * Adding extra text:
 * Linking a page:
 * Linking to a category:
 * Categorizing a page:

For example, we can insert a  template:

The effect shown to the right can be achieved with the following syntax:

Parser functions
Parser functions can be added to any infobox. However, the results will be automatically hidden if the parameter, tag, or data source do not contain any text.

It would not make sense to test for the empty string in the switch statement; e.g.,, because that is already covered by the default tag.

Examples

 * Kratos ( source )
 * Beatrix Kiddo ( source )
 * Battle of Arrakeen ( source )
 * Connie Beauchamp ( source )

Further help and feedback

 * For information on the 'classic' method of writing infoboxes, see Help:Classic infoboxes.
 * For more infobox help, see the Portability Wiki, it also covers the InfoboxBuilder extension.

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