Template:Random old school

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Revision as of 23:22, 21 October 2013 by CzechOut (talk | contribs) (This version of randomisation taken from https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Template:Random_number&action=edit&oldid=62771306, a 2005-6 version of the template which doesn't depend on {{#time:U}})
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Instructions for {{Random old school}}
{{Random old school}} is a randomisation template which comes from a point in the development of wikipedia:template:random number before it depended on {{#time:U}}. To you, the user, it should still function much like {{random}}, so those instructions are included below.

Remember, however, that the instructions below are written for {{random}} and therefore you will have to substitute {{random}} with {{random old school}}. Also, there are currently, as of 23:33, October 21, 2013 (UTC), bugs with {{random}} that prevent it from randomising properly. Therefore, you may not see the example below change on page load.

This example, however, should randomly display a number between one and 52 for you:

3

{{random}} generates a random number, at least to the extent that non-mathematicians will be happy with the term "random", through simple markup. The number can be from 1 to whatever number you choose, up to 1000.

Syntax is straightforward:

{{random|1000}} = 470

This number will change every time the page loads.

Though this simple aspect is enough to power any number of functions — such as determining which random, numbered subpage to call on a page, the template does have additional sophistication, detailed at template:random on Wikipedia.

Example of calling forth a page[[edit source]]

If you type the following, you will get a different quote of the week on every page load:

{{qotw/{{#expr:{{random|52}} + 1}}}}
Test it out by reloading this page several times. What you get below will be different on almost every page, though with a sample size of only 52, you're bound to get some repeats. The reason is because there are 53 pages in the following format:
{{qotw/n}}
However, there is no {{tlx|qotw/0}}. Thus by adding 1 to the randomly selected number between 0 and 52, we ensure the choice will be between the numbers 1 and 53.
Roz Forrester: (to the Seventh Doctor) What's cricket?
Bernice Summerfield: I think that's in the top ten of the most dangerous questions in the universe, right up there with "Excuse me, Mr Dalek, what does that stick do?"
PROSE: Happy Endings