Template:Flatlist/doc

Usage
Flatlist starts a horizontal list, such as:


 * cat
 * dog
 * horse
 * cow
 * sheep
 * pig

The bottom margin is inherited from the current container. Normally this will be 0.5em. This template can be used with or without endflatlist.

For navigation boxes using navbox, one can set, and achieve the same styling without using this template.

Examples
cat

dog

horse

cow

sheep

pig

cat

dog

horse

cow

sheep

pig


 * Alternative syntax:


 * cat
 * dog
 * horse
 * cow
 * sheep
 * pig


 * cat
 * dog
 * horse
 * cow
 * sheep
 * pig

class=hnum |
 * Syntax for ordered lists:
 * 1) first
 * 2) second
 * 3) third
 * 4) fourth
 * 5) fifth
 * 6) sixth

class=hnum |
 * 1) first
 * 2) second
 * 3) third
 * 4) fourth
 * 5) fifth
 * 6) sixth

Parameters

 * class – adds a CSS class to the containing div. Passing  will cause ordered lists to have numbers.
 * style – adds CSS style options. Complex styles should not be used in articles but may be acceptable on user, project, and talk pages.
 * Example:


 * indent – indents the list by a number of standard indents (one indent being 1.6em), particularly handy for inclusion in an indented discussion thread.
 * Example:

Technical details
This template uses the  CSS class defined in Common.css to generate horizontal lists. It causes ordinary html list items to be dispayed inline (horizontally), where they would normally display as block elements (vertically). The class also generates the interpuncts between list items and parentheses around nested lists. Some of the CSS used is not compatible with all browsers, notably Internet Explorer 6 and 7. In these cases, JavaScript in Common.js generates the interpuncts and parentheses.

Bugs
There is one situation where the  class will fail in one or more browsers:
 * When a horizontal list, built using wiki markup, is displayed on Special: pages (where it may be transcluded from MediaWiki: pages), horizontal lists will not wrap to the next line. This is due to HTML Tidy not being active on these pages. This may be fixed in the future (39617). As a workaround, use HTML instead of wiki markup to build the lists.