Template:Anchor

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[Edit] [Purge] Template-info.svg Template documentation

The template {{anchor}} inserts one or more HTML anchors in a page. Those locations can then be linked to using [[#link|...]] syntax. See Template:VisAnchor for adding one visible and clickable anchor to a page.

Examples

1. {{anchor|foo}}

could be linked to with [[#foo|...]] from within the same article,
or it could be linked to with [[articlename#foo|...]] from other articles and from redirects.

2. Anchors can be more suitable for inter-article linking than section titles are. For example,

== {{anchor|foo}} Section title ==
Here, links via [[articlename#foo]] would remain valid even if the section were renamed. Consider using {{Tlsp|anchor comment}} beneath the section title to generate an HTML comment alerting other editors to the purpose of anchors used in this manner.

3. The template can be used to create up to ten anchors with a single call. For example,

{{anchor|foo|bar|baz}}
will create three anchors that can then be linked to with [[#foo]], [[#bar]] and [[#baz]].
Specifying more than 13 anchors will cause an error message to be displayed.

Limitations

character code template meaning
" "
"
N/A (double) quotation mark
# # {{Sharp}} hash (sharp sign, number sign)
| | {{!}} pipe
= = {{=}} equals
  • Anchor names that contain any character shown in the table on the right will not work as expected. However, any of these characters can be replaced with the "&#" codes shown for them here. Or, the pipe symbol and equals sign can be worked around with {{!}} and {{=}}, respectively. Markup code such as sup=o and sub=o (superscript and subscript) cannot be used. Most other characters, including white space and punctuation, are not a problem.
  • The template can create a maximum of 13 anchors. Specifying more than 13 anchors will result in an error message.
  • Unlike with most templates, putting each anchor name on separate lines, for example:
    {{anchor
    |humpty
    |dumpty}}

    will not work as expected.
  • Anchor names should be unique on a page, and should not duplicate any heading titles. Duplicate anchors will not work as expected since the #links go to the first anchor with that name. Duplicate anchors also result in invalid HTML; you can check for duplicate anchors by running the page through the W3C Markup Validation Service.
  • If the template is transcluded to a section title then the code will appear in the edit summary when that section is edited, as in "/* {{anchor|Issues}}Limitations */ New issue". This can be fixed by substituting the template, which would prevent the anchor template call from appearing in the edit summary.
  • Anchor links are case sensitive in some browsers, so treat all anchor links as case sensitive.