From: Yaron K. <ya...@wi...> - 2013-09-12 17:32:26
|
Hi Simon, Yes, you could put the header at the bottom of the template that goes above the multiple-instance, though perhaps that is "wrong" to some extent. :) The other solution is to embed the multiple-instance template in a field of the main template, using "holds template" and "embed in field". That's the less-hacky solution. I'd be interested to hear your first impressions, and I bet other people would as well; if you're willing to do it, I think ideally you could send an email to this list with your thoughts so far. -Yaron On Thu, Sep 12, 2013 at 1:01 PM, Simon Heimler <hei...@gm...>wrote: > Hi there! > > Just playing around with Templates and Forms. I've got one Problem: > > If I want multiple Instances of a Template stored into the Page itself, I > have to make a Template which contains just the Element I want to repeat. > So I add this to my Form and set it to |multiple. > But now I want to give this a Heading for all repeated Elements. How and > where do I store this? > I could write it in a non-repeating Template thats used before, but this > just feels wrong (The Heading would be in the entirely wrong Template). I > could also make a own Template just for the Heading and add it to the Form > - but this would lead to MANY small Template just for tiny things. > > Something that would feel naturally to me would be a Form Template, which > contains then all the Templates that the Form is using. But this would need > to nested templates and therefore to ugly behaviour with Pipes, etc.. so I > guess this is not a good Solution either? > > *(Right now I'm writing my Bachelor Thesis on Semantic Knowledge > Management, and I'm using MediaWiki & Semantic Bundle for it. If somebody's > interested: I've got some first Impressions (i guess rather unbiased since > im new to MediaWiki) and Ideas written down, while I'm on this - maybe > someone's interested to chat about that?)* > > Greets, > Simon > > ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ > How ServiceNow helps IT people transform IT departments: > 1. Consolidate legacy IT systems to a single system of record for IT > 2. Standardize and globalize service processes across IT > 3. Implement zero-touch automation to replace manual, redundant tasks > http://pubads.g.doubleclick.net/gampad/clk?id=51271111&iu=/4140/ostg.clktrk > _______________________________________________ > Semediawiki-user mailing list > Sem...@li... > https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/semediawiki-user > -- WikiWorks · MediaWiki Consulting · http://wikiworks.com |