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[[CategoryLesser Gods
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{{Deities
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[[Image:Yeraiah.jpg|150px|right]]
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'''Home Plane:''' The Outlands
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== Template:Sec (Section Transclusion) Documentation ==
'''Symbol:''' An apple


=== Credit ===
'''Colors:''' White


Darkfire stole this from [[User:Gorgon|Gorgon]] and then gave it to [[User:Sephira|Sephira]]
'''Alignment:''' [[Alignment#True_Neutral|True Neutral]]


'''Worshipper's Alignment:''' Any Female


The original test version of this template was created in [http://en.wikisource.org/wiki/User:Sanbeg/Sec Steve Sanbeg's userspace on Wikisource].
'''Area of Control:''' Femininity, Fertility, Strength
* Steve Sanbeg is also the author of [http://www.mediawiki.org/wiki/Extension:Labeled_Section_Transclusion Extension:Labeled Section Transclusion], which will hopefully replace this here one day (see the Description below).
* While the documentation and format of this template have been changed, the original code should be essentially the same.


=== Description ===
'''Clerical Domains:''' [[Magic:Level#Knowledge|Earth]], [[Magic:Level#Healing|Healing]], [[Magic:Level#Magic|Strength]]


This template is for transcluding pre-marked sections of articles.
'''Center of Worship''': [[Jechran]]
* [http://www.mediawiki.org/wiki/Extension:Labeled_Section_Transclusion Extension:Labeled Section Transclusion] is an improved method of doing this task, and this template should be considered [[Wikipedia:Deprecation | deprecated]] if that extension is implemented here.
* While Wikipedia's [[Wikipedia:Wikipedia:Transclusion#Without_using_the_labeled_section_method | Selective transclusion without using the labeled section]] method does work here, it is very limited/restricted, and this template allows more flexibility and ease of use.




=== Usage and Examples ===
''"Strength can be found not by emulating men, but by understanding the essence of feminity. We are, after all, the ones strong enough to bear children, not our husbands."'' –Teachings of Yeraiah


==== Step 1 ====
In ancient times, '''Yeraiah''' was one of the first goddesses to appear on Avlis. Originally, she was a mortal human woman whom [[Mikon]] fell in love with early on in his godhood. Though they never had any offspring together, Mikon loved Yeraiah deeply and elevated her the status of a lesser goddess around the time she began to grow old. With her newfound immortal vigor, Yeraiah began reaching out to the female inhabitants of Avlis, particularly those located in [[Jechran]]. She taught them how to survive in the wilds independently from the help of males, and she showed them the secrets of fertility and the power of feminity.
Add section tags to the article page that you want to transclude the information from, as shown below:


<pre style="white-space: pre-wrap">
To this day, her primary worshippers are in Jechran, which is a nation dominated by female humans and elves. The tribes that worship Yeraiah ask for her help in daily life, love, and child-rearing. Though Yeraiah is particularly venerated in the home, she is also well-known to those who are close to nature and the warrior ways. Ranger and druid maidens of the forests and jungles are known to pay homage to her.
This is a sample article, with a few sections
&lt;onlyinclude><nowiki>{{{sec1 |This is the first section}}}</nowiki>&lt;/onlyinclude>
&lt;onlyinclude><nowiki>{{{sec2 |This is the second section}}}</nowiki>&lt;/onlyinclude>
</pre>


* This is the article titled '''Test_Article''' used in '''Step 2''' below.
Deities like Yeraiah who are capable of producing druidic priests and priestesses each have a unique perspective on nature and the wilderness. In Yeraiah's point of view, Nature is the nurturing parent of all living things, and life is a circle. Those who are nurtured must also nurture others in return, and the cycle of nurturing must continue. Less focus is paid towards the disasterous aspects of nature, though Yeraiah and her followers are well-aware that there can be negative aspects to nurturing, which can sometimes be turned around and used as a weapon to smother unsuspecting dependents.
* This template has a limit of 25 numbered sections, so you can only use <code>sec1</code> through <code>sec25</code>.


Yeraiah serves a complementary role to the warrior goddess, [[Dre'Ana]], emphasizing the balance of strength and femininity in women.  She favors the women in the world who are self-sufficient and strong.


==== Step 2 ====
The teachings of Yeraiah state that the balance of the land is tied directly to the fertility of women and their role as lifegivers and caretakers. She taught the women of Jechran the art of sowing and ploughing so they could survive and is credited for many of the herbal secrets that supposedly increase the chances of female births. Her focus on women and her drive for balance come from the belief that men habitually ill-treat the earth yet she, like a patient cow, keeps on serving them and, thus, keeping them alive. Particularly in Jechran, this emphasis on Yeraiah as a provider of bounty and maternal caretaker makes her double as a healer of the sick, although this aspect of the goddess is not practiced elsewhere.
Add the following code to the target article page that you want to transclude the previously defined section(s) of '''Test_Article''' to:


There is no official structure known as the Church of Yeraiah, although she does have a large temple that dominates part of the city center of [[Myleah]].  This building acts as a focal point of offerings where pilgrims from all around Jechran periodically assemble to pay homage.  Otherwise, Yeraiah's worshippers tend toward the druidic or ranger callings, and devote themselves to maintaining the balance of the lush forests of Jechran and the world.


'''Usage: ''' <code><nowiki>{{sec | PAGENAME | SECTIONNUMBER }}</nowiki></code>
By the general populace, both in and out of Jechran, Yeraiah is seen as the gentle nurturing Mother of Avlis, whom Mikon took on as a wife because of her endearing qualities and stern but infinitely wise and calm demeanor. Even women who do not worship her as a primary deity will come to Yeraiah or her priestesses for help with childbirth or conception, as well as matters of motherhood that occur later in life.


 
There are temples to Yeraiah in [[Mikona]] and [[Visimontium]].
* Replace PAGENAME with the source article page name ('''Test_Article''' in the example above). E.g., <code>Test_Article</code>
** If the source article page is outside of the '''Main''' namespace, include the namespace (and full path from it). E.g., <code>User:John/Test_Article</code>
* Replace SECTIONNUMBER with the matching section number that you want to transclude from the source article (''do not include the '''sec''' prefix''). E.g., <code>1</code> - <code>25</code>
 
 
==== Examples ====
 
To transclude the <code>sec1</code> section from the <code>Test_Article</code> example above, use:
<code><nowiki>{{sec | Test_Article | 1 }}</nowiki></code>
 
To transclude the <code>sec2</code> section from the <code>Test_Article</code> example above, use:
<code><nowiki>{{sec | Test_Article | 2 }}</nowiki></code>
 
 
==== Other Usage ====
 
The author gave a few other examples in his [http://en.wikisource.org/wiki/User:Sanbeg/Test test page], using an extra <code>ns =</code> parameter after the SECTIONNUMBER, to modify which namespace the PAGENAME belongs to, so it doesn't need to be included.
 
An example of the previous <code>User:John/Test_Article</code> PAGENAME done this way would be:
 
<code><nowiki>{{sec | John/Test_Article | 1 | ns = User }}</nowiki></code>
 
* In this case there isn't much improvement (more confusing even), since the username still needs to be included, but it may be useful for the Template namespace, or others.
 
 
One other example he gave didn't use this template. Only the markup in the source article page, and transclusion with extra parameters.
 
Still using the '''Test_Article''' in the example above as a source, with the example code:
 
<code><nowiki>{{Test_Article | sec1 = }}</nowiki></code>
 
This transcludes everything except section 1 ('''sec1'''), since the contents of that section are unset by the empty parameter value given.
 
'''Result: ''' <code>This is the second section</code>
 
* This is basically the inverse of how this template works, since the template transcludes all sections, then empties the values of all that aren't selected. With the transclusion method above, everything is transcluded, and you specify individual sections that you don't want to include (or replacements for them - read on).
 
 
This also can be used to replace individual sections of the whole transcluded article page, by supplying a new value for each parameter.
 
E.g., <code><nowiki>{{Test_Article | sec1 = Hello World! }}</nowiki></code> adds <code>Hello World!</code> before also transcluding <code>This is the second section</code>.
 
 
With source article pages that have many sections set up this way, several can be left out or replaced. If '''Test_Article_2''' has 3 or more sections marked the same as the original '''Test_Article''', this can be demonstrated with the following example:
 
<code><nowiki>{{Test_Article_2 | sec1 = Hello World! | sec3 = }}</nowiki></code>
 
* This would add <code>Hello World!</code> instead of section 1, transclude section 2 normally with <code>This is the second section</code>, skip transcluding section 3, and then transclude whatever other sections come after that normally.
 
 
=== Technical details ===
 
If you intend to use <span class="plainlinks">[http://www.mediawiki.org/wiki/Help:Tables wikitables]</span> as parameter values in this template, then you need to know this:
 
<span class="plainlinks">[http://www.mediawiki.org/wiki/Help:Templates Templates]</span> have a problem handling parameter data that contains pipes "<code>|</code>", unless the pipe is inside another template <code><nowiki>{{name | param1 }}</nowiki></code>, or inside a piped link <code><nowiki>[[Help:Template | help]]</nowiki></code>. Therefore templates can not handle wikitables as input, unless you escape them by using the '''<nowiki>{{!}}</nowiki>''' magic word (parser function - see: <span class="plainlinks">[http://www.mediawiki.org/wiki/Help:Magic_words#Other Help:Magic words#Other]</span>). This makes it hard to use wikitables as parameters in templates. Instead, the usual solution is to use [[Wikipedia:Help:Table#Other_table_syntax | HTML wikimarkup]] for the table code, which is more robust.
 
'''''Note:''' [[Template:!]] functionality was replaced in MediaWiki version 1.24 by the '''<nowiki>{{!}}</nowiki>''' magic word, and the template is ignored when using it.''
 
 
=== Copy of Original Documentation ([http://en.wikisource.org/wiki/User:Sanbeg/Sec Steve Sanbeg's Userspace on Wikisource]) ===
 
* This was also in the Template namespace before he finalized [http://www.mediawiki.org/wiki/Extension:Labeled_Section_Transclusion Extension:Labeled Section Transclusion], and the template name was recycled. It can still be viewed in its [http://en.wikisource.org/w/index.php?title=Template:Sec&oldid=4659477 last revision] before being recycled as a redirect.
* [http://wikisource.org Wikisource] and [http://www.mediawiki.org Mediawiki] links have been reformatted to work here (and a few typo fixes).
 
 
<div name="Original Documentation" class="boilerplate metadata" id="odoc" style="margin: 0 1em; padding: 0 10px; border: 1px solid #aaa;">
Now that the [http://www.mediawiki.org/wiki/Extension:Labeled_Section_Transclusion Extension:Labeled Section Transclusion] extension is active here, this template is deprecated; please use the extension for any future work.
 
This template is intended as a proof of concept, to demonstrate transcluding sections of articles. 
 
To transclude larger sections, it may be more useful to split the section into a daughter page, or some other separate page/template, then transcluding that where necessary.  If you always transclude the same section, i.e. to transclude the body of text without extra boilerplate, then it should be simple to use &lt;onlyinclude&gt;.
 
However, when there are many smaller sections, it's simpler to mark the sections, and call them by name.  For example, if you have a a large article with small numbered sections, marked like
 
 
  This is a sample article, with a few sections
  &lt;onlyinclude><nowiki>{{{sec1|This is the first section}}}</nowiki>&lt;/onlyinclude>
  &lt;onlyinclude><nowiki>{{{sec2|This is the second section}}}</nowiki>&lt;/onlyinclude>
 
Then, you could transclude section 1 with
  <nowiki>{{User:Sanbeg/Sec|Article|1}}</nowiki>
 
 
All text between &lt;onlyinclude> and &lt;/onlyinclude> should be marked with a section (or marked somehow) to prevent unconditional transclusion.  Of course, it's possible to have multiple &lt;onlyinclude> blocks.
 
See [http://en.wikisource.org/wiki/User:Sanbeg/Test Wikisource:User:Sanbeg/Test] for an example.
 
Please contact me with any feedback. -[http://en.wikisource.org/wiki/User:Sanbeg | Sanbeg] 19:28, 5 August 2006 (UTC)
</div>
 
{{ns detect | template = [[Category:Templates |{{PAGENAME}}]] }}</noinclude>

Latest revision as of 00:28, 14 November 2023

[[CategoryLesser Gods {{Deities


Home Plane: The Outlands

Symbol: An apple

Colors: White

Alignment: True Neutral

Worshipper's Alignment: Any Female

Area of Control: Femininity, Fertility, Strength

Clerical Domains: Earth, Healing, Strength

Center of Worship: Jechran


"Strength can be found not by emulating men, but by understanding the essence of feminity. We are, after all, the ones strong enough to bear children, not our husbands." –Teachings of Yeraiah

In ancient times, Yeraiah was one of the first goddesses to appear on Avlis. Originally, she was a mortal human woman whom Mikon fell in love with early on in his godhood. Though they never had any offspring together, Mikon loved Yeraiah deeply and elevated her the status of a lesser goddess around the time she began to grow old. With her newfound immortal vigor, Yeraiah began reaching out to the female inhabitants of Avlis, particularly those located in Jechran. She taught them how to survive in the wilds independently from the help of males, and she showed them the secrets of fertility and the power of feminity.

To this day, her primary worshippers are in Jechran, which is a nation dominated by female humans and elves. The tribes that worship Yeraiah ask for her help in daily life, love, and child-rearing. Though Yeraiah is particularly venerated in the home, she is also well-known to those who are close to nature and the warrior ways. Ranger and druid maidens of the forests and jungles are known to pay homage to her.

Deities like Yeraiah who are capable of producing druidic priests and priestesses each have a unique perspective on nature and the wilderness. In Yeraiah's point of view, Nature is the nurturing parent of all living things, and life is a circle. Those who are nurtured must also nurture others in return, and the cycle of nurturing must continue. Less focus is paid towards the disasterous aspects of nature, though Yeraiah and her followers are well-aware that there can be negative aspects to nurturing, which can sometimes be turned around and used as a weapon to smother unsuspecting dependents.

Yeraiah serves a complementary role to the warrior goddess, Dre'Ana, emphasizing the balance of strength and femininity in women. She favors the women in the world who are self-sufficient and strong.

The teachings of Yeraiah state that the balance of the land is tied directly to the fertility of women and their role as lifegivers and caretakers. She taught the women of Jechran the art of sowing and ploughing so they could survive and is credited for many of the herbal secrets that supposedly increase the chances of female births. Her focus on women and her drive for balance come from the belief that men habitually ill-treat the earth yet she, like a patient cow, keeps on serving them and, thus, keeping them alive. Particularly in Jechran, this emphasis on Yeraiah as a provider of bounty and maternal caretaker makes her double as a healer of the sick, although this aspect of the goddess is not practiced elsewhere.

There is no official structure known as the Church of Yeraiah, although she does have a large temple that dominates part of the city center of Myleah. This building acts as a focal point of offerings where pilgrims from all around Jechran periodically assemble to pay homage. Otherwise, Yeraiah's worshippers tend toward the druidic or ranger callings, and devote themselves to maintaining the balance of the lush forests of Jechran and the world.

By the general populace, both in and out of Jechran, Yeraiah is seen as the gentle nurturing Mother of Avlis, whom Mikon took on as a wife because of her endearing qualities and stern but infinitely wise and calm demeanor. Even women who do not worship her as a primary deity will come to Yeraiah or her priestesses for help with childbirth or conception, as well as matters of motherhood that occur later in life.

There are temples to Yeraiah in Mikona and Visimontium.