Template:Assumption/doc

From Angelina Jordan Wiki
Revision as of 10:23, 16 July 2024 by Dcljr (talk | contribs) (updated for consistency with similar templates)
This is a subpage documenting Template:Assumption. To change the template, edit that page; to change the template's documentation (seen below), edit this one.

Documentation

This template is used to mark text that contains some kind of assumption that may well be found to be false in the future. It can be called in two different ways: following the text it is marking or containing that text. (See the examples below.)

Articles containing calls to this template are listed in Category:Articles containing assumptions so they can be checked by other editors and possibly improved upon.

Usage

  • Some text.{{assumption}}
  • Some text.{{assumption|scope=}}
  • Some text.{{assumption|reason=}}
  • {{assumption|text|reason=}}

The optional parameter reason can be used to completely override the default "tooltip" provided by the template (as seen in the examples below). When the template is called with no input text, the parameter scope may be used to specify how much of the preceding text is being referred to. (It doesn't make sense to use it in the case where the text being marked is included in the template call.)

Note that if reason is used, scope will be ignored.

Examples

  • Presumably, this is the case.{{assumption}}
    ⇒ Presumably, this is the case. ! 
  • Presumably, this is the case.{{assumption|scope=sentence}}
    ⇒ Presumably, this is the case. ! 
  • Presumably, this is the case.{{assumption|reason=Can we find actual evidence for this?}}
    ⇒ Presumably, this is the case. ! 
  • Presumably, {{assumption|this is the case|reason=Can we find actual evidence for this?}}.
    ⇒ Presumably, this is the case.
  • Presumably, {{assumption|this is the case}}.
    ⇒ Presumably, this is the case.

"Hover" on the underlined text or the litte icon to see the "tooltip" provided by the template. The first and last examples show the default wording, which differs depending on how the template is called.

See also

Full list of similar templates:    [edit this list]

  • {{assumption}} – for statements that contain assumptions
  • {{inference}} – for statements that are inferences beyond known facts
  • {{opinion}} – for statements that are opinions not cited to specific sources
  • {{open question}} – for specific questions that are likely only answerable by Angelina herself, or by some other specific person
  • {{uncertain}} – for statements that express uncertainty (that might be cleared up if additional research were done)
  • {{unknown}} – for statements pointing out specific unknowns (that might be revealed by additional research)

Admittedly, it's not always clear which of these templates is appropriate in a given situation. For the most part, you can just choose whichever one seems to make the most sense based on the wording of the statement you're marking (which is why there are so many of them in the first place). Be sure to check the wording of the "tooltip" provided by the template you have chosen, to see if it applies. (And see the template documentation for any available parameters that might help.)