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The example also shows how the chart's overall style can be overridden by more specific styles set by {}. In this case, the color of the first row of cells is set to yellow using the features of the {} template; see that template's documentation for details on how to specify the CSS of rows and individual cells of a chart.
This template produces one row in a "family tree"-like chart consisting of boxes and connecting lines based loosely on an ASCII art-like syntax. It is meant to be used in conjunction with {{Tree chart/start}} and {{Tree chart/end}}. The chart is displayed as HTML tables using CSS attributes, and may contain arbitrary wiki markup within
This template produces one row in a "family tree"-like chart consisting of boxes and connecting lines based loosely on an ASCII art-like syntax. It is meant to be used in conjunction with {{Tree chart/start}} and {{Tree chart/end}}. The chart is displayed as HTML tables using CSS attributes, and may contain arbitrary wiki markup within
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Template:Article attribute decoration/styles.css Emits an icon, symbol, or text decoration for a given attribute of an article. This is geared towards WikiProject lists or tables which may want to economically and easily decorate article names with icons displaying some of its attributes.
<u> was presentational element of HTML that was originally used to underline text; this usage was deprecated in HTML4 in favor of the CSS style {text-decoration: underline}. [4] In HTML5, the tag reappeared but its meaning was changed significantly: it now "represents a span of inline text which should be rendered in a way that indicates that ...
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This is applied to those elements that CSS considers to be "block" elements, set through the CSS display: block; declaration. HTML also has a similar concept, although different, and the two are very frequently confused. %block; and %inline; are groups within the HTML DTD that group elements as being either "block-level" or "inline". [6]