Template:In5/doc

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The indenter Template:in5 indents text by 5 spaces or the count specified by parameter 1 (range: 1 to 50 spaces).

Usage Indents by
{{in5}}             5 spaces
{{in5|8}}         8 spaces
{{in5|47}}       47 spaces

Spaces outside the double braces will add an extra space on either side,such as the 12 spaces inserted by {{in5|10}}.

It does not insert a newline (line break). To use on a series of lines, add <br /> at the end of the line before (each) {{in5}}. You can also use a blank line before the {{in5}}, which will introduce a paragraph break.

Examples[edit]

The following are examples showing larger amounts of spacing:

Example Produces
xx{{in5|10}}yy{{in5|10}}zz xx          yy          zz
xx{{in5|10}}yy{{in5|15}}zz xx          yy               zz
aa{{in5|20}}bb{{in5|20}}cc aa                    bb                    cc
"32.0{{in5|7}}" "32.0       "

Example 4 shows the ability to put trailing spaces, such as spaces after a number in a wikitable column (coded as: | 32.0{{in5}} ). Typical numbers (with align=right), in a table column, often appear crowded at the right-hand side, so appending {{in5}} can improve readability, in tables with lines between columns.

Comparison with letter-spacing[edit]

To insert spacing between each character of any text, then <span style="letter-spacing:value unit"> can be used. For example, with <span style="letter-spacing:1.2em">, spanning the text "example" (not including the quotation marks), it would look like: "example". (Note that the spacing applies to the last character; the intended result might actually be to span the characters exampl only: "example".) The spacing value may express any number from 0 on; also fractions like .45 are possible, and the unit may be em or any other standard HTML/CSS measurement unit (pt, px, cm, mm, in).

See also[edit]