Module:Yesno/doc/en
This is a documentation subpage for Module:Yesno/doc. It contains usage information, categories and other content that is not part of the original Module page. |
Warning: | This page is shared between multiple wikis. All changes to this page will be automatically copied to all wikis listed in the left side bar. To avoid unnecessary page regeneration and server load, changes should be tested on the page's sandbox. |
This Lua module is used on many pages. To avoid large-scale disruption and unnecessary server load, any changes to this module should first be tested in its /sandbox or /testcases subpages. The tested changes can then be added to this page in one single edit. Please consider discussing any changes on the talk page before implementing them. |
This module is used in system messages. Changes to it can cause immediate changes to the MediaWiki user interface. To avoid large-scale disruption, any changes should first be tested in this module's /sandbox or /testcases subpage, or in your own user space.The tested changes can then be added in one single edit to this module. Please discuss any changes on the talk page before implementing them. |
This module is rated as ready for general use. It has reached a mature form and is thought to be bug-free and ready for use wherever appropriate. It is ready to mention on help pages and other resources as an option for new users to learn. To reduce server load and bad output, it should be improved by sandbox testing rather than repeated trial-and-error editing. |
This module is subject to page protection. It is a highly visible module in use by a very large number of pages. Because vandalism or mistakes would affect many pages, and even trivial editing might cause substantial load on the servers, it is protected from editing. |
This module provides a consistent interface for processing boolean or boolean-style string input.
While Lua allows the true
and false
boolean values, wikicode templates can only express boolean values through strings such as "1", "0", "yes", "no", etc.
This module processes these kinds of strings and turns them into boolean input for Lua to process.
It also returns nil
values as nil
, to allow for distinctions between nil
and false
.
The module also accepts other Lua structures as input, i.e. booleans, numbers, tables, and functions.
If it is passed input that it does not recognise as boolean or nil
, it is possible to specify a default value to return.
Module Quality
- Diff sandbox code
Syntax
yesno(value, default)
value
is the value to be tested.
Boolean input or boolean-style input (see below) always evaluates to either true
or false
, and nil
always evaluates to nil
.
Other values evaluate to default
.
Usage
First, load the module. Note that it can only be loaded from other Lua modules, not from normal wiki pages. For normal wiki pages you can use {{yesno}} instead.
local yesno = require('Module:Yesno')
Some input values always return true
, and some always return false
.
nil
values always return nil
.
-- These always return true:
yesno('yes')
yesno('y')
yesno('true')
yesno('t')
yesno('1')
yesno(1)
yesno(true)
-- These always return false:
yesno('no')
yesno('n')
yesno('false')
yesno('f')
yesno('0')
yesno(0)
yesno(false)
-- A nil value always returns nil:
yesno(nil)
String values are converted to lower case before they are matched:
-- These always return true:
yesno('Yes')
yesno('YES')
yesno('yEs')
yesno('Y')
yesno('tRuE')
-- These always return false:
yesno('No')
yesno('NO')
yesno('nO')
yesno('N')
yesno('fALsE')
You can specify a default value if yesno
receives input other than that listed above.
If you don't supply a default, the module will return nil
for these inputs.
-- These return nil:
yesno('foo')
yesno({})
yesno(5)
yesno(function() return 'This is a function.' end)
-- These return true:
yesno('foo', true)
yesno({}, true)
yesno(5, true)
yesno(function() return 'This is a function.' end, true)
-- These return "bar":
yesno('foo', 'bar')
yesno({}, 'bar')
yesno(5, 'bar')
yesno(function() return 'This is a function.' end, 'bar')
Note that the blank string also functions this way:
yesno('') -- Returns nil.
yesno('', true) -- Returns true.
yesno('', 'bar') -- Returns "bar".
Although the blank string usually evaluates to false
in wikitext, it evaluates to true
in Lua.
This module prefers the Lua behaviour over the wikitext behaviour.
If treating the blank string as false
is important for your module, you will need to remove blank arguments at an earlier stage of processing.