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  2. Wikipedia : Manual of Style/Captions

    en.wikipedia.org/.../Captions

    [a] Most captions draw attention to something in the image that is not obvious, such as its relevance to the text. A caption may be a few words or several sentences. Writing good captions takes effort; along with the lead and section headings, captions are the most commonly read words in an article, so they should be succinct and informative.

  3. Caption (text) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Caption_(text)

    A caption is a short descriptive or explanatory text, usually one or two sentences long, which accompanies a photograph, picture, map, graph, pictorial illustration, figure, table or some other form of graphic content contained in a book or in a newspaper or magazine article. [1] [2] [3] The caption is usually placed directly below the image.

  4. Wikipedia:Manual of Style - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Manual_of_style

    The English-language titles of compositions (books and other print works, songs and other audio works, films and other visual media works, paintings and other artworks, etc.) are given in title case, in which every word is given an initial capital except for certain less important words (as detailed at Wikipedia:Manual of Style/Capital letters ...

  5. Wikipedia talk : Manual of Style/Captions/Archive 1

    en.wikipedia.org/.../Captions/Archive_1

    If a reader wonders about the relevance of the caption, let him or her actually read the article. 3. When the article is on a particular topic, a caption depicting the subject need not have anything longer than a few words. For example: consider the article Nikola Tesla. The caption for the first picture is more than enough. 4.

  6. Wikipedia:Citing sources - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Citing_sources

    Image captions should be referenced as appropriate just like any other part of the article. A citation is not needed for descriptions such as alt text that are verifiable directly from the image itself, or for text that merely identifies a source (e.g., the caption "Belshazzar's Feast (1635)" for File:Rembrandt-Belsazar.jpg).

  7. Wikipedia:Extended image syntax - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Extended_image...

    The empty string, if there is an explicitly requested Caption and the image type has a visible caption. The image file name if there is no explicitly requested Alt or Caption. This is never a satisfactory option. It is possible to specify the link title text only for images with no visible caption (as described above).

  8. Wikipedia : Manual of Style/Infoboxes

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Manual_of_Style/...

    The template should have a large, bold title line. Either a table caption or a header can be used for this. It should be named the common name of the article's subject but may contain the full (official) name; this does not need to match the article's Wikipedia title, but falling back to use that (with {{PAGENAMEBASE}}) is usually fine. It ...

  9. Contrastive Language-Image Pre-training - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Contrastive_Language-Image...

    The CLIP models released by OpenAI were trained on a dataset called "WebImageText" (WIT) containing 400 million pairs of images and their corresponding captions scraped from the internet. The total number of words in this dataset is similar in scale to the WebText dataset used for training GPT-2, which contains about 40 gigabytes of text data. [1]