Usage

{{Cquote}} (for Centered pull-quote) is a template meant for pull-quotes, the visually distinctive text that is already present in the same article.

  • NOTE: This template should not be used for quotations if they are not repeated elsewhere in the main text. The Manual of Style recommendation is:
    • For visually distinctive quotation, use {{Quotation}} template.
    • For long quotations, use the HTML <blockquote> element, such as through the use of the {{Quote}} template.
  • Pull-quotes work best when used with short sentences, and at the start or end of a section, as a hint of the section's content.
  • For shorter pull-quotes of 50 words or fewer in a similar style, consider using {{Rquote}} which sets the quote off to either the right or left as in a magazine sidebar. This can be effective on essay pages and WikiProject homepages.

Syntax

  1. {{cquote|quote text}}
  2. {{cquote|quote text|quotewidth=40px}} or {{cquote|quote text|40px|}}
  3. {{cquote|quote text|quote width in pixels||author or speaker|title of article, speech, book, etc.}}
Only the first parameter is required.
But since sizes are slotted into the second parameter place by default, to cite a source one must deliberately define dummy parameters for those (abusing the template logic, which expects numbers), or explicitly define the source author and publication as 4= and 5= respectively (using them as named parameters—the preprocessor takes such fine):



which is generated by:

{{cquote|This is one.
|4=Author
|5=Publication}}

or

{{cquote|This is one.
|author=Author
|source=Publication}} 

Parameters

Parameter 1
text of the quote; use <br /> between paragraphs.
Required
Note: if the quote text contains one or more "=" (equal signs), then the template must be called as {{cquote|1=quote text}} (see "Equals sign in parameter value")
Parameter 2
"size", "quotewidth", or "width" can also be used. – deprecated; desired size of the quotation marks. Currently this value is ignored and the size is always 35px, except for the values 10px, 20px, 30px, 40px, 50px, and 60px retained for historical reasons. This was used to scale the graphical quotation marks up and down to suit larger or smaller quotes.
Parameter 3
"quoteheight" – it was used for desired height of the quotation marks, but no longer.
author / Parameter 4
Name of the person that wrote or spoke the text being quoted. Can include links.
Note: if the text contains one or more "=" (equal signs), then the template must be called as {{cquote|4=text}}
source / publication / Parameter 5
Source of the quote (publication title, speech, etc.). Can include links.
Note: if the text contains one or more "=" (equal signs), then the template must be called as {{cquote|5=text}}
bgcolor
The color of the background.
wide
When set to "yes", the quote expands to the entire width of the page. Usefull for small quotes, but may clash with other floating objects, such as infoboxes.

Examples

{{cquote|quote text}}
{{cquote|1=quote text}}

(quote text contains an equal sign)

{{cquote|quote text|40px}}
{{cquote|quote text|30px||Origin of quote|Cited source}}

For example:

{{cquote|And when they've given you their all / Some stagger and fall, after all it's not easy / Banging your heart against some mad bugger's wall.|30px||[[Pink Floyd]]|''[[The Wall]]''}}

is rendered as


Example with ref tags:

{{cquote|You don't get everything you want. A dictatorship would be a lot easier.|200px||George W. Bush<ref>http://www.governing.com/archive/1998/jul/bush.txt</ref>}}


See also

Direct variants

Template:Quotation templates see also