Template:FormatInfo
From Just Solve the File Format Problem
Revision as of 19:26, 28 December 2013 by Dan Tobias (Talk | contribs)
Contents |
Usage
{{FormatInfo | name = | formattype = | subcat = | subcat2 = | subcat3 = | subcat4 = | subcat5 = | thiscat = | extensions = | mimetypes = | locfdd = | fourccs = | pronom = | type code = | uniform type = | conforms to = | released = | image = | caption = }}
Parameters
- name
- (optional) The name of the file format. Default: {{PAGENAME}}
- formattype
- (optional) The type of the file format. Choose 'electronic', 'physical', or 'organic', or specify your own. Default: electronic
- subcat
- (optional) The subcategory of the file format.
- subcat2
- (optional) An additional subcategory of the file format.
- subcat3
- (optional) An additional subcategory of the file format.
- subcat4
- (optional) An additional subcategory of the file format.
- subcat5
- (optional) An additional subcategory of the file format.
- thiscat
- (optional) Special parameter for indicating ontology of a non-terminal subcategory page.
- extensions
- (optional) The format's known filename extensions. Use {{ext}}.
- mimetypes
- (optional) The MIME type of the format. Use {{mimetype}}.
- locfdd
- (optional) Identifier for this format from the Library of Congress Sustainability of Digital Formats, e.g. "fdd000314". Use {{LoCFDD}}.
- fourccs
- (optional) FourCC code
- pronom
- (optional) The PRONOM ID of the format, e.g. "fmt/45". Use {{PRONOM}}.
- type code
- (optional) The Type Code of the file, used by Mac OS Classic.
- uniform type
- (optional) The Uniform Type Identifier (UTI), used by Mac OS X and iOS.
- conforms to
- (optional) The UTI of the parent format in the conformance hierarchy.
- released
- (optional) The date the format was publicly released.
- image
- (optional) Illustration to show in infobox.
- caption
- (optional) Caption for image
Potential Parameters
This is a list of parameters that could be included in this template.
- mime & mime aliases
- Split mimetypes into primary type and known aliases.
- charset
- For character encodings, the value of the charset parameter used to identify it in MIME headers
- version
- The version of the format, e.g. "1.4" for PDF 1.4
- previous version
- Link to page about the previous version of this format.
- next version
- Link to page about the next version of this format.
- back compat
- Whether this version is backwards compatible with the previous version.
- wikipedia
- Name of the Wikipedia page that describes this format, e.g. "JPEG 2000" will be rendered as JPEG 2000
- magic
- A sequence of byte values that can be used to identify the file contents, usually located close to the start of the file.
- container for
- A list of formats this format can contain.
- contained by
- A list of formats that may contain this format.
- extended from
- Any formats this one was based upon.
- extended to
- Any formats that have been derived from this one.
- spec
- URL of the format specification.
- spec availability
- Type of availability the specification, e.g. commercial, free.
- patent license
- Unknown, Disputed, Encumbered, (F)RAND, Royalty-Free, Unencumbered.
- compression
- Types of compression. Whether Lossy, Lossless, or Both, and whether Optional or Always compressed. i.e. JPEG is Always Lossy.
- endianness
- Big-endian or Little-endian byte ordering.
- developed by
- Who developed the format.
- maintained by
- Who now maintains the format.
- reference impl
- Link to page about the reference implementation of this format, if any.
- embeddable metadata
- Kinds of metadata that can be embedded in this format.
- tpm
- Technical Protection Mechanisms supported by the format, e.g. encryption.
- dependencies
- External resources that files in this format may depend upon, e.g. fonts, or even hardware.
- error resiliance
- Is this format able to detect damage or recover from damage to the bitstream.
- namespace
- The namespace-uri that defines the file format if it is XML-based.