Manual:Magic words/it



Le parole magiche sono una tecnica per mappare una varietà di stringhe di testo wiki in un singolo ID associato a una funzione. Sia le variabili che le funzioni parser usano questa tecnica. Tutto il testo mappato su quell'ID sarà sostituito con il valore di ritorno della funzione. La mappatura tra le stringhe di testo e l'ID è memorizzata nella variabile  in un file che può essere caricato usando  $wgExtensionMessagesFiles [].

Le parole magiche predefinite sono implementate in.

Come funzionano le parole magiche
Ogni volta che MediaWiki trova il testo tra doppie parentesi deve decidere se XXX è una variabile  variabile, funzione parser o template. Per fare ciò, pone una serie di domande:


 * 1) A ogni parola magica è associato un ID? Come primo passo nella risoluzione del markup del modulo, MediaWiki tenta di tradurre XXX ogni parola magica ID. La tabella di traduzione è definita da $magicWords.
 * 2) *Se nessun ID parola magica è associata con "XXX", "XXX" è assunto come un template.
 * 3) "è una variable?" se un ID parola magica è travata, successivamente MediaWiki controlla per vedere se ha qualche parametro
 * 4) *Se nessun parametro viene trovato, MediaWiki controlla se la parola magica ID è stato dichiarato come una variabile ID Per controllarlo, ricava la lista di parole magiche che servono chiamando . Questo metodo ottiene la sua lista di variabili ID da una lista di variabili IDs hard coded  da tutte le funzione connesse all'hook MagicWordwgVariableIDs.
 * 5) **If the magic word ID has been classified as a variable, hooks MediaWiki calls the functions associated with the event name until one is found that recognizes the magic word and can return its value.
 * 6) Is it a parser function? If there are any parameters or if the magic word ID is missing from the list of variable magic word IDs, then MediaWiki assumes that the magic word is a parser function or template. If the magic word ID is found in the list of parser functions declared via a call to , it is treated as a parser function and rendered using the function named  .  Otherwise, it is presumed to be a template.
 * 1) Is it a parser function? If there are any parameters or if the magic word ID is missing from the list of variable magic word IDs, then MediaWiki assumes that the magic word is a parser function or template. If the magic word ID is found in the list of parser functions declared via a call to , it is treated as a parser function and rendered using the function named  .  Otherwise, it is presumed to be a template.
 * 1) Is it a parser function? If there are any parameters or if the magic word ID is missing from the list of variable magic word IDs, then MediaWiki assumes that the magic word is a parser function or template. If the magic word ID is found in the list of parser functions declared via a call to , it is treated as a parser function and rendered using the function named  .  Otherwise, it is presumed to be a template.

Definendo le parole magiche
For magic words to do their magic we must define two things:
 * a mapping between wiki text and a magic word ID
 * a mapping between a magic word ID and some php function that interprets the magic word.

Mapping wiki text to magic word IDs
The variable $magicWords is used to associate each magic word ID with a language-dependent array that describes all the text strings that mapped to the magic word ID. Important: This only sets up the back end i18n mapping, you still have to write other code to make MediaWiki use the magic word for anything

The first element of this array is an integer flag indicating whether or not the magic word is case sensitive. The remaining elements are a list of text that should be associated with the magic word ID. If the case sensitive flag is 0, any case variant of the names in the array will match. If the case sensitive flag is 1, only exact case matches will be associated with the magic word ID. Thus the format is

This association is created by $magicWords in a file registered using $wgExtensionMessagesFiles[].

In the example below, a Spanish MediaWiki installation will associate the magic word ID 'MAG_CUSTOM' with "personalizado", "custom", "PERSONALIZADO", "CUSTOM" and all other case variants. In an English MediaWiki only "custom" in various case combinations will be mapped to 'MAG_CUSTOM':

File :

In part of the extension.json file:

Note that "ExampleMagic" is a different to the key you would use for a plain internationalization file (normally just the title of the extension, i.e. "Example"). "Magic" has been appended deliberately so one does not overwrite the other.

Associating a magic word ID with a PHP function
The mechanism for associating magic word IDs with rendering functions depends on whether the magic word will be used as a parser function or a variable. For more information, please see:



Registering magic words
There is no explicit requirement to register magic word IDs. Registering the parser function or variables that use them is sufficient.

Localizzazione

 * See Help:Magic words#Localisation for help.

You can read more on definition and usage of magic words for localisation at Localisation#PLURAL and GENDER support in JavaScript, Localisation#Localizing namespaces and special page aliases, Localisation#Switches in messages…; Localisation#Be aware of PLURAL use on all numbers, Localisation#Users have grammatical genders, Avoid  in messages.

Behavior switches (double underscore magic words)
Behavior switches are a special type of magic word. They can be recognized by their use of double underscores (rather than double braces). For example,.

These magic words typically do not output any content, but instead change the behavior of a page and/or set a page property. These magic words are listed in  and also at Help:Magic words#Behavior switches. The effect of each behavior switch is defined in. If no specific effect is defined, the magic word will simply set a page property in the page_props table.

Vedi anche

 * Help:Magic words - List of Variables like and