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convert template

[edit]

1 1/4 inches:

  • 1+14 in; 32 mm: {{convert|1.25|in|in mm|frac=4|disp=out}}
  • 1+14 inches (32 mm): {{convert|32|mm|in mm|frac=4|order=out}}
  • 1+14 inches (32 mm): {{convert|1+1/4|in}}

8 inches (20 cm): {{convert|8|in|cm}}

127 mm: {{convert|5|in|mm|0|disp=out}}


  • 50 megajoules (47,391 BTU)
  • 1 kilogram (2.20462 lb)
  • 50 megajoules (47,391 BTU) / 1 kilogram (2.20462 lb) ?= 50 megajoules per kilogram (21,496.13070 BTU/lb)
but using {{#expr }}, 47391 / 2.20462 = 21496.2
50 MJ/kg in BTU/lb, per Google, = 21496.1

Italics kerning

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Non-adjacent / no suffix
This is a sentence with italic text followed by regular text ← wiki-text
This is a sentence with italic text followed by regular text ← <i> with padding-right
font-family padding possessive punctuation plural hyphenated
(unspecified) 0 Heermann's Fletcher, Gearing, Gleaveses Benson-class
(unspecified) .1em Heermann's Fletcher, Gearing, Gleaveses Benson-class
sans-serif 0 Heermann's Fletcher, Gearing, Gleaveses Benson-class
sans-serif .1em Heermann's Fletcher, Gearing, Gleaveses Benson-class
Helvetica 0 Heermann's Fletcher, Gearing, Gleaveses Benson-class
Helvetica .1em Heermann's Fletcher, Gearing, Gleaveses Benson-class
Helvetica Neue 0 Heermann's Fletcher, Gearing, Gleaveses Benson-class
Helvetica Neue .1em Heermann's Fletcher, Gearing, Gleaveses Benson-class
-apple-system (SF) 0 Heermann's Fletcher, Gearing, Gleaveses Benson-class
-apple-system (SF) .1em Heermann's Fletcher, Gearing, Gleaveses Benson-class
BlinkMacSystemFont 0 Heermann's Fletcher, Gearing, Gleaveses Benson-class
BlinkMacSystemFont .1em Heermann's Fletcher, Gearing, Gleaveses Benson-class
Segoe UI 0 Heermann's Fletcher, Gearing, Gleaveses Benson-class
Segoe UI .1em Heermann's Fletcher, Gearing, Gleaveses Benson-class
Roboto 0 Heermann's Fletcher, Gearing, Gleaveses Benson-class
Roboto .1em Heermann's Fletcher, Gearing, Gleaveses Benson-class
Lato 0 Heermann's Fletcher, Gearing, Gleaveses Benson-class
Lato .1em Heermann's Fletcher, Gearing, Gleaveses Benson-class

2nd Battle of Philippines (Collier's Weekly citations)

[edit]
  • Reynolds, Quentin; Jones, George E.; Teatsorth, Ralph; Morris, Frank D. (January 13, 1945). "America's Greatest Naval Battle: Report on the Second Battle of the Philippines (First of three parts)". Collier's. pp. 11–13, 64–65.
  • Reynolds, Quentin; Jones, George E.; Teatsorth, Ralph; Morris, Frank D. (January 20, 1945). "America's Greatest Naval Battle: Report on the Second Battle of the Philippines (Second of three parts)". Collier's. pp. 18–19, 67–69.
  • Reynolds, Quentin; Jones, George E.; Teatsorth, Ralph; Morris, Frank D. (January 27, 1945). "America's Greatest Naval Battle: Report on the Second Battle of the Philippines (Third of three parts)". Collier's. pp. 18, 69–72.

Search testing

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Articles containing "</table>" and has template {{Episode table}}

Articles containing "dontclose" and has template {{Episode table}}

Articles containing "{{End|Episode table" and has template {{Episode table}}

  1. first item
  2. second item
  3. 3rd item

sbb (talk) 01:27, 4 April 2021 (UTC)[reply]

10 YΩ⋅m 10 kPa⋅m1/2  — sbb (talk) 20:28, 22 April 2021 (UTC)[reply]
10.0 mm/m (10,000 μm/m) 0.90/°C (0.5/°F)  — sbb (talk) 20:21, 24 March 2024 (UTC)[reply]

testing harvc

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So and so, said Förster,[1] but Klink said otherwise,[2] both of whom disagreed with Ueberschär.[3]

References

Compact glossary and deflists

[edit]
term 1
defn 1
term 2
defn 2
term A
defn A
term B
defn B

 — sbb (talk) 18:24, 10 June 2024 (UTC)[reply]

HTML comment

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  • no subst:
  • subst:

 — sbb (talk) 21:28, 29 July 2024 (UTC)[reply]

tbr

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this is some text that should break and break, ....

this is some text that should break and break, ... .

this is some text that should break and break, ... .

/  — sbb (talk) 06:33, 17 October 2024 (UTC)[reply]

Testing {{wrap at}}

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Below is a test of breaking lines for visual purpose only, but still flows for screenreaders.

This is wrapped text like such.

This is a paragraph with sentences. But they aren't split. Reading should sound natural.

This should be broken into lines and will be read continuously


hdr Wrapped

header

not wrapped header
Data 1 Data 2 Data 3

 — sbb (talk) 16:05, 3 November 2024 (UTC)[reply]

chess score

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2½ – 3½

2½–3½  — sbb (talk) 08:28, 20 May 2025 (UTC)[reply]

testing new Template Gmain

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testing

Main article: Machine gun

Main article: Machine gun

a machine gun
 — sbb (talk) 04:34, 25 May 2025 (UTC)[reply]

more Harvc (web based dictionary)

[edit]

statement[1][2]

another statement[2]

And referencing by {{sfnp}}...[3]

Another sfnp ref.[3][4][5]

References

  1. ^ Read (2014a); Read (2014b).
  2. ^ a b Read (2014c). "C". In Read (2014).
  3. ^ a b Read (2014c).
  4. ^ Read (2014a).
  5. ^ Hamersly (1858), p. 134.
  • Read, David (11 November 2014). "Glossary of Nautical Terms". Practical Boat Owner. Archived from the original on 2025-05-02.
  • [Hamersly (1858)] Blah Blah. J. R. Hamersly. 1858.

Diopters references

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I have no idea about any governing body in the field of optometry. But regarding what's in texts, or what's being taught in optics, there's several examples that mostly show "D" (Many fewer referred to "dpt").

  • "Dioptres (D)" Ray (2002), p. 36.
  • "When dealing with powers, the term diopter with symbol “D” is usually used instead of inverse meters," Atchison (2018), p. 44.
  • "more commonly referred to as diopters (D). Diopters is the preferred unit in ophthalmic and visual optics because ..." Thibos (2018), p. 109.
  • "image quality in the presence of 1.5 diopters (D) of anisometropia ... vary from 1D to 2D. ... the largest interocular difference occurred at distance (0D) and intermediate (1.5D) object distances." Zheleznyak, Sabesan & Geunyoung (2018), p. 125.
  • "The mean spherical equivalent was reduced from −6.2 to −3.7 diopters (D) ... and to −2.1 D ... from −4.2 to −3.0 D ...", and "led to an average improvement of 2.3 diopters (D) 1 week postoperative." Mrochen, Lemanski & Pajic (2018), pp. 135–136.
  • "The relationship between power (K) and focal length (f) is that a focal length of 1000 mm is a power of one dioptre (1 D)," Jacobson et al. (2000), p. 101.
  • "The refractive power Vi is measured in units of diopters (dpt) with 1 dpt = 1/m." Teubner & Brückner (2019), p. 114.
  • "When f is in meters, the unit of power is the inverse meter, or diopter, symbolized by D: 1 m−1 = 1 D." Hecht (2017), p. 211.
  • "The units of optical power are called “diopters” (D). That is, 1 D = 1/m, or 1 m−1." LibreTexts (2025)
  • "The dioptric power is measured in units of m−1, also called diopters (dpt)." Parschotta (n.d.).
References
  • Guenther, Bob D.; Steel, Duncan G., eds. (2018). Encyclopedia of Modern Optics. Vol. 5 (2nd ed.).
  • Hecht, Eugene (2017). Optics (5th ed.). Pearson.
  • Jacobson, Ralph E.; Ray, Sidney F.; Attridge, Geoffrey G.; Axrod, Norman F. (2000). The Manual of Photography (9th ed.). Focal Press.
  • [LibreTexts] "The Eye". LibreTexts Physics. 16 March 2025.
  • Parschotta, Rüdiger (n.d.). "Dioptric Power". RP Photonics Encyclopedia.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: ref duplicates default (link)
  • Ray, Sidney F. (2002). Applied Photographic Optics (3rd ed.). p. 36.
  • Teubner, Ulrich; Brückner, Hans Josef (2019). Optical Imaging and Photography. de Gruyter.