Template:Page tabs/doc

This is the instruction page for Template:PageTabs, and is included from that page.

Usage
Usage: 1 to 9 parameters for each tab to put on the page. Whichever parameter is the current page is indicated by This= and the tab number to mark as the current tab, from 1 to 19. The "'This='" parameter allows the tab for the current page that the user is looking at to be white instead of blue. Note that in the example above (and below) the item 'main page' refers to the main page of WikiQueer; if you click on it, you will go there. This is to show that you can put links to pages that do not have tabs on them.

Generally, you'd use this macro where you had several pages and wanted them all to link to each other in the same way, and if you added new pages, they would consistently appear in the same place. Like your user page and comments on it.

Note that in the examples below, you would change "User_Example" to whatever user name it actually was, and "First Page", etc., to the page names you are going to use.

One way to do this is to create a tabs page, which would consist of the following:

In the above example, the last item makes the default white tab page the first example if you don't change it. So if you don't put 'This=' on the page, the first tab would be white regardless of which page they were looking at. The first item suppresses the table of contents.

Now, you'd save that page, lets say it was called  User_Example:Tabs  and then, go to each page, starting with   User_Example:First Page    and put a macro call at the top of that page, in the form  on that page, and use the same thing but use This=2  instead of This=1 on "Second Page", and so on for This=3, etc. You can have up to 9 pages using this macro.

An example has been done for this page at Template:PageTabs/tabs. Do not use this directly in your own set up, it is strictly for demonstrating how this works and documenting its use. Examine the page and the source to understand how to use this functionality. I think it is both fun to use and very useful in putting a condensed amount of information (such as cross-page links) in a very small space.

Here's how it looks if you put it on the bottom of the page, which is why you generally put it at the top: