This is a documentation subpage for Template:In lang. It may contain usage information, categories and other content that is not part of the original template page. |
This template is used on approximately 358,000 pages, or roughly 1905% of all pages. To avoid major disruption and server load, any changes should be tested in the template's /sandbox or /testcases subpages, or in your own user subpage. The tested changes can be added to this page in a single edit. Consider discussing changes on the talk page before implementing them. |
This template uses Lua: |
Template:In lang is used to denote that a text source is written in a specific language.
For citations using a citation template ({{cite web}}
, {{cite news}}
, {{cite journal}}
, etc.), that template's |language=
parameter should be used instead.
To note a span of text in a different language, {{lang}}
or one of the {{lang-x}}
templates ({{lang-fr}}
, {{lang-ast}}
, etc.) should be used instead.
Usage
Typical use of this template is inside <ref>...</ref>
tags where the reference is not templated and the referenced source is non-English:
<ref>[https://www.example.com "Non English Journal Article"]. ''Non-English Journal''. '''12'''(3): 231–241 {{in lang|xx}}.</ref>
Also finds use in External links sections to mark non-English link-targets:
[https://www.example.com Non English external link] {{in lang|xx}}
This template does not markup non-English text. For that, use {{lang}}
or an appropriate {{lang-??}}
template.
Parameters
This template accepts one or more positional language-tag parameters (<tag>
) and two named parameters:
{{In lang|<tag>|<tag2>|...|link=|cap=}}
Most common use is a single language:
{{In lang|de}}
→ (in German)
The positional parameters
<tag>
– required;<tag>
is a valid ISO-639 language tag or a valid IETF language tag; more than one language tag supported:{{In lang|cs|en|de|fr|es|ca-valencia|pl|ru|ja|zh}}
→- (in Czech, English, German, French, Spanish, Valencian, Polish, Russian, Japanese, and Chinese)
The named parameters are:
link
– accepts the single valueyes
; creates link to language article{{In lang|nv|link=yes}}
→<span class="languageicon">(in [[Navajo language|Navajo]])</span>
→ (in Navajo)
cap
– accepts the single valueyes
; capitalizes the first letter of "In":{{In lang|pt-BR|cap=yes}}
→ (In Brazilian Portuguese)
Error messages
This template has one error message of its own:
- error: {{In lang}} missing language tag – displayed when the template is transcluded without an ISO 639 language tag or IETF language tag.
All other error messages related to the use of this template are emitted by Module:Lang and are documented at Category:Lang and lang-xx template errors.
TemplateData
TemplateData for In lang
Produces the phrase "(in LANGUAGE)" with language codes.
Parameter | Description | Type | Status | |
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | 1 | no description | Unknown | optional |
2 | 2 | no description | Unknown | optional |
3 | 3 | no description | Unknown | optional |
4 | 4 | no description | Unknown | optional |
Categories
Transclusions in mainspace articles will add the article to the appropriate subcategory of Category:Articles with non-English-language sources. There are two forms of these subcategories:
- Category:Articles with <language name>-language sources (<tag>) – for individual languages[1] and for macrolanguages[2]
- Category:Articles with sources in <collective name> languages (<tag>) – for language collectives[3]
where <language name> and <collective name> is the name used in the template's rendering and <tag> is the ISO 639 tag or IETF language tag.
References
- ↑ "ISO 639-3: Scope of denotation for language identifiers: Individual languages". SIL International. Retrieved 5 December 2019.
- ↑ "ISO 639-3: Scope of denotation for language identifiers: Macrolanguages". SIL International. Retrieved 5 December 2019.
- ↑ "ISO 639-3: Scope of denotation for language identifiers: Collections of languages". SIL International. Retrieved 5 December 2019.