Thread:LWChris/@comment-497139-20160701222558/@comment-1588401-20160711195825

Okay, thanks, I will try to figure it out then.

By the way, here's a short (and hopefully comprehensive) cheat sheet on wiki tables:

Tables are always consisting out of these tags in source code:

This generates a table with 2 rows (tr = table row) and 3 cells per row (td = table data).

There are equivalent wikisyntax elements for each tag type. It is worth noting that the linebreak (noted as &#8617;) is part of the wikisyntax for tables.

{| =

The beforementioned table is written like this:

Then we have the headlines; HTML source (now with the optional but syntactically more correct  and   tags for the table header and body):

In wikisyntax, this is achieved by starting the cells with  rather than  :

To save some space, you can condense multiple cells into the same source code line, by separating them with  (or   for headlines) rather than a linebreak +  / :

So by now, our cheat sheet looks like this:

{| =

And last but not least for wikitables, you can modify a cell tag with additional attributes by adding them as first content of the wikisyntax cell and separating the actual content with another. This works for the one-cell-per-line syntax as well for the condensed notation, as well as for headers:

equals

Now a last word on wikisyntax for tables in the context of a template: obviously, the pipes will mess with the template syntax, that uses   to separate parameters. That is why most wikis define shortcut templates for the tables' wikisyntax, so that the pipe will not appear in the actual source code; common practise is to use *, ,  , and  * for  ,  ,  , and.

While this won't work:

this will (or would, see *):

Hope that helps! :)

* I noticed your wiki uses Template:) differently and Template:( does not yet exist at all. Since the )-template is not yet used except for a few user generated content pages, maybe you should fix that while you can.