Template:Inputbox/doc

Usage
  will display a short line of text as if being the content of a basic input box. One use is to emulate the display of the edit summary box.


 * Code :
 * Gives :

Options
Default values are usually inherited from.


 * overflow
 * How the text will overflow if longer than the box. Can be "hidden" (the box keeps it width, end of text is hidden), "scroll" (the box gets an underside horizontal scrollbar, end of text is available using it), or "visible" (the box will become as wide as needed to display a long text [works in Internet Explorer and Opera, reportedly does not work in Firefox]). (Defaults to "visible") – See also examples.


 * width
 * Width of the box, can be "50%", "20em", "40ex", etc. (defaults to "80%") – Relative values (such as %, em, and ex) are recommended over device-dependent ones (pixels).


 * style
 * Allows any additional semicolon-separated CSS style in the format "name:value; name:value; etc." (defaults to empty) – "width" and "overflow" can be specified here when using this free form string.

Examples

 * Code :
 * Gives :

This box isn't 20% wide but grows to make a long text visible (as per default overflow=visible).




 * Code :
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This box sticks to 20% width and hides the end of a too long text.




 * Code :
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This box sticks to 20% width but adds an underside scrollbar to make a too long text available.




 * Code :
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This box uses a freeform style to specify anything that can be done in CSS, including the width.



Proper security require that password fields obscure their contents.
 * Full example with hidden table

Technical
Since an actual isn't allowed by wikicode, the appearance has to be emulated. The CSS code is designed to avoid hard-coded colors and sizes and should be modified with care, with respect to the following concerns:


 * The  inherits the colors and width of the user's skin for a message box. So, even if the color scheme is white text on black background, our emulated box will render accordingly (instead of using hard-coded black text on white background that would stick out).
 * The  uses a non-absolute border width that will render approximately the same on any screen (as opposed to a hard-coded width in pixels).
 * The  tweaks the inherited "messagebox" appearance to give a 3D inset box approximation, as rendered by each browser for this value.
 * The  is required to avoid the text being stuck to the border in browsers that strictly respect the padding value, and use again a relative em value instead of pixels. (For instance in Opera, "padding:0" would do what it says).
 * The  is intended to avoid several boxes stuck one to the other, using a relative em value instead of pixels.

The result isn't a perfect 3D input box, but should provide decent results for everyone, regardless of browser, color settings, and resolution.