User:Go for it!/table tests
Your original
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Your original but without the transcluded text
[edit]This should retain all the formatting but will be easier to manage during this testing.
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Rewrite from scratch as a single table
[edit]There seems to be a lot of junk code in your original version. Rather than clean it out line by line, I'm just going to start over and see how closely I can replicate your result. Rossami (talk)
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Portal:Philosophy/Branches | Portal:Philosophy/Gentopics |
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Doubled (tripled?) border
[edit]In your request, you specifically said you needed to retain the double border but didn't say for what purpose. If it's just for looks, the easiest way is to change the border style.
And since this may be as good as I can make it, I'm also going to re-transclude the text so you can compare it to the original. Shoot me a note if you have any more questions. I'm not all that good at tables but I'm learning. Rossami (talk) 21:46, 3 March 2006 (UTC)
Philosophy ('love of wisdom' in Ancient Greek) is a systematic study of general and fundamental questions concerning topics like existence, reason, knowledge, value, mind, and language. It is a rational and critical inquiry that reflects on its own methods and assumptions. Historically, many of the individual sciences, such as physics and psychology, formed part of philosophy. However, they are considered separate academic disciplines in the modern sense of the term. Influential traditions in the history of philosophy include Western, Arabic–Persian, Indian, and Chinese philosophy. Western philosophy originated in Ancient Greece and covers a wide area of philosophical subfields. A central topic in Arabic–Persian philosophy is the relation between reason and revelation. Indian philosophy combines the spiritual problem of how to reach enlightenment with the exploration of the nature of reality and the ways of arriving at knowledge. Chinese philosophy focuses principally on practical issues in relation to right social conduct, government, and self-cultivation. Major branches of philosophy are epistemology, ethics, logic, and metaphysics. Epistemology studies what knowledge is and how to acquire it. Ethics investigates moral principles and what constitutes right conduct. Logic is the study of correct reasoning and explores how good arguments can be distinguished from bad ones. Metaphysics examines the most general features of reality, existence, objects, and properties. Other subfields are aesthetics, philosophy of language, philosophy of mind, philosophy of religion, philosophy of science, philosophy of mathematics, philosophy of history, and political philosophy. Within each branch, there are competing schools of philosophy that promote different principles, theories, or methods. Philosophers use a great variety of methods to arrive at philosophical knowledge. They include conceptual analysis, reliance on common sense and intuitions, use of thought experiments, analysis of ordinary language, description of experience, and critical questioning. Philosophy is related to many other fields, including the sciences, mathematics, business, law, and journalism. It provides an interdisciplinary perspective and studies the scope and fundamental concepts of these fields. It also investigates their methods and ethical implications. (Full article...) | ||
Philosophy ponders the most fundamental questions humankind has been able to ask. These are increasingly numerous and over time they have been arranged into the overlapping branches of the philosophy tree:
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The following Wikimedia Foundation sister projects provide more on this subject:
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By the way, you might want to check out this reference for other border options.
Catherine's version
[edit]I'm sorry Rossami, I was working on the table at the same time you were, without realizing it. It looks like we came to the same conclusions though. — Catherine\talk 22:12, 3 March 2006 (UTC)
Here's what I did with it:
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An alternate technique based on aggressive transclusion
[edit]This technique can be used to build a table in wiki. It uses the transclusion feature that let's you pull in content from other pages. If the other page is also a table, it should nest the tables. Be very cautious with border and format commands, though. It's not always clear to me which format takes precedence. Rossami (talk) 15:25, 5 March 2006 (UTC)
- Okay. I'm going to stop this experiment. It works but the time it would take to reset the borders will be prohibitive. You'd have to set borders by hand so that each nested table only incorporated internal borders and no external borders. Otherwise, you get this nasty mess of nested lines the deeper you go. (That advice might change if there's an easy code to suppress the external borders like MS Office products do but I don't know how to do it in a wiki-table grammar.) Rossami (talk)
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