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This page lists modules that ship with MediaWiki core by default. It reflects the current development version of MediaWiki and may vary from the latest stable release. It does not claim to be as comprehensive and up to date as Wikimedia's JS documentation on doc.wikimedia.org, but offers much additional guidance. For older modules, see the Migration guide.

The modules jquery and mediawiki together form the base environment ("startup") and are always present. They must not be declared as dependencies.

mediawiki

[edit]

This is the MediaWiki base module. It initialises the mw global object.

mw.config

[edit]

For a list of stable config keys to read from mw.config, see Manual:Interface/JavaScript.

// Check existence
if ( mw.config.exists( 'wgGlobalGroups' ) ) {
	// CentralNotice has registered this variable...
}

// Or just a plain access for comparison.
// (No need to check exists first, it falls back to null).
if ( mw.config.get( 'wgPageName' ) === 'ResourceLoader' ) {
	// Do stuff...
}

// Access multiple ones for use throughout a larger code base.
// Returns an array containing the variables requested.
var conf = mw.config.get([
	'wgServer',
	'wgPageName',
	'wgCanonicalSpecialPageName',
	'wgUserLanguage'
]);

if ( conf.wgCanonicalSpecialPageName === 'Blankpage' ) {
	// Do stuff...
}

mw.hook

[edit]
MediaWiki version:
1.22
r56762

A framework for registering and firing events in JavaScript (as opposed to doing everything on document ready). For example, the snippet below provides a message once the categories on a page load:

mw.hook( 'wikipage.categories' ).add( function ( $content ) {
	if ( mw.config.get( 'wgCategories' ).length === 0 ) {
		alert( 'Please add categories to this page' );
	}
} );

In user scripts and gadgets you can fire hooks/events prefixed by "userjs.". E.g.:

function MyScriptInit() {
	var simpleVariable = 'done';
	var objectPassed = { me: this };
	mw.hook( 'userjs.myScript.postInit' ).fire( simpleVariable, objectPassed );
}
//...

Then you subscribe to this event like so:

// here we receive both variables (but we skip them too)
mw.hook( 'userjs.myScript.postInit' ).add( function ( simple, objectPassed ) {
	//...
} );

hook execution order

[edit]

Note that hooks are run in a sequence (and in place where they are fired).

function MyGadget() {
	var objectPassed = {
		abc: 'default'
	};
	this.objectPassed = objectPassed;
	console.log( 'before hooks', objectPassed );
	mw.hook( 'userjs.MyGadget.postInit' ).fire( objectPassed );
	console.log( 'after hooks', objectPassed );
}
mw.hook( 'userjs.MyGadget.postInit' ).add( function ( objectPassed ) {
	objectPassed.abc = 'changed in hook';
	console.log( 'inside a hook', objectPassed );
} );

( function() {
	console.log( 'before init' );
	var gadget = new MyGadget();
	console.log( 'after init', gadget.objectPassed );
} ) ()

Above will result in following order:

  1. before init
  2. before hooks, Object { abc: "default" }
  3. inside a hook, Object { abc: "changed in hook" }
  4. after hooks, Object { abc: "changed in hook" }
  5. after init, Object { abc: "changed in hook" }

mw.html

[edit]

Helper functions for escaping and creating strings of HTML.

mw.inspect

[edit]
MediaWiki version:
1.32

Shortcut for mw.inspect.runReports. Shows in the console a list of all ResourceLoader modules that are loaded on this page, sorted by the total size of each module's JavaScript, CSS, etc.

mw.log

[edit]

Collection of methods to help log messages to the console.

mw.message

[edit]

If the mediawiki.jqueryMsg module is loaded, the behaviour of this module changes significantly. See above link.

mw.now

[edit]
MediaWiki version:
1.23
Gerrit change 99547

Get the current time, measured in milliseconds since January 1, 1970 (UTC).

On browsers that implement the Navigation Timing API, this function will produce floating-point values with microsecond precision that are guaranteed to be monotonic. On all other browsers, it will fall back to using Date.

var totalTime, time = mw.now();
// some expensive code
totalTime = mw.now() - time;

mw.track

[edit]
MediaWiki version:
1.23
Gerrit change 99547

Publish arbitrary data into a buffer for later consumption.

The design of mw.track() encourages async and dependency-free interactions through a stable message contract, based on only topic string, and some data.

MediaWiki JavaScript code can call mw.track() to performantly capture and observe data from anywhere. There is a complete separation of concerns between publisher and subscriber. You do not need to know the name of the extension consuming the data, or to depend on its module, or to load it first, or even call its code in order for the data to be processed. Instead, if and when that other feature loads its module, it will call mw.trackSubscribe() to access the buffer and process it from that point.

Topic names consist of dot-separated path components, arranged from most general to most specific. Each path component should have a clear and well-defined purpose. Data handlers are registered via mw.trackSubscribe(), and receive the full set of events that match their subscription, including those that fired before the handler was bound.

Notable example: EventLogging extension:

mw.track( 'event.Sandbox', {
    name: 'grain',
    number: 12
} );
// ... if the optional EventLogging extension is installed and enabled,
// ... and after "ext.eventLogging" module has finished loading,
// ... it will call `mw.trackSubscribe( 'event.' )`
// ... and eventually call `mw.eventLog.logEvent()` for each event.

Notable example: statsd.jd in the WikimediaEvents extension (source):

// Statsd/Graphite
mw.track( 'counter.MediaWiki.foo.bar.quux' );

// Prometheus
mw.track( 'stats.mediawiki_foo_bar_total' ); // defaults to increment=1
mw.track( 'stats.mediawiki_foo_bar_total', 1, { something: 'quux' } );

// ... if WikimediaEvents is installed
// ... will eventually beacon increments to the StatsV service

To use stat counters in gadgets, refer to Gadget kitchen: recording metrics.

To learn how StatsV works, refer to Statsv on Wikitech.

mw.notify

[edit]
MediaWiki version:
1.20
Gerrit change 19199

Creates bubble notifications. Basic examples:

mw.notify( 'This is a notification.' ); // Send a plaintext notification
mw.notify( mw.message( 'some-message' ) ); // Use an i18n message to send a notification
mw.notify( $( '<span>This is an <u>HTML</u> notification.</span>' ) ); // Send an HTML notification with a jQuery instance (a DOM node also works)

mw.notify( 'Test', { title: 'Title!' } ); // Give the notification a title
mw.notify( 'Test', { autoHide: false } ); // Don't automatically hide the notification
mw.notify( 'Test', { tag: 'foobar' } ); // Send a notification tagged with a tag
mw.notify( 'Test 2', { tag: 'foobar' } ); // This one will replace the previous 'foobar' notification.

For available options, see Bubble notifications § API.

mw.loader

[edit]

mw.loader.load

[edit]

Load one or more modules, a script or a stylesheet. To load an external script or stylesheet, the URL must start with either "http://", "https://" or "//" (protocol-relative), or "/" (local path). Provide a MIME-type as second parameter (either "text/javascript" or "text/css"). If no MIME-type is provided, the default "text/javascript" is assumed. mw.loader creates an asynchronous request, if you need to run code that depends on a module, use mw.loader.using instead (which provides a callback). If you need a callback from an external script, use mw.loader.getScript (or jQuery.getScript).

Loader instructions represent the intent that a module by that name should be loaded. It will not load the same module a second time if it has already been loaded previously. This does not apply to scripts and stylesheets – they will be loaded each time, even if loaded previously. If a script defines window.Foo, you can use ( window.Foo !== undefined ) to check if that script has already been loaded.

// Module by name
mw.loader.load( 'oojs' );

// Multiple modules
mw.loader.load( [ 'oojs', 'mediawiki.Title' ] );

// Local gadget module. These must be defined in [[MediaWiki:Gadgets-definition]].
mw.loader.load( 'ext.gadget.Navigation_popups' );

// JavaScript page
mw.loader.load( 'https://www.mediawiki.org/w/index.php?title=MediaWiki:Gadget-UTCLiveClock.js&action=raw&ctype=text/javascript' );
mw.loader.load( 'https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?title=MediaWiki:Gadget-HotCat.js&action=raw&ctype=text/javascript' );

// CSS stylesheet
mw.loader.load( 'https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=User:Example/custom-foo.css&action=raw&ctype=text/css', 'text/css' );

// CSS stylesheet from wiki page using getUrl method
mw.loader.load( mw.util.getUrl( 'MediaWiki:Foo.css', { action:'raw' } )  + '&ctype=text/css' , 'text/css' );

// External stylesheet
mw.loader.load( 'https://wiki.example/mystyles.css', 'text/css' );

mw.loader.using

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Load one or more modules, and execute a function once those modules are loaded. See JS Documentation

Since MediaWiki 1.28 the promise returned by this function is resolved with a require function, which can be used to access the public interface of package modules. For example:

mw.loader.using( [ 'mediawiki.util' ], function ( require ) {
    var util = require( 'mediawiki.util' );
} );

mw.loader.getScript

[edit]
MediaWiki version:
1.33
Gerrit change 487566

Load a script by URL. Returns a jQuery promise object which can be used to specify callbacks.

Example:

mw.loader.getScript( 'https://example.org/x-1.0.0.js' )
.then(
    function () {
        // Script succeeded. You can use X now.
    },
    function ( e ) {
        // Script failed. X is not available
        mw.log.error( e.message ); // => "Failed to load script"
    }
);

To get a single callback from multiple promises, use jQuery.when or Promise.all

$.when(
    mw.loader.getScript( 'https://example.org/x-1.0.0.js' ),
    mw.loader.getScript( 'https://example.org/y-2.0.0.js' )
)
.then(
    function () {
        // Both script succeeded. You can use X and Y now.
    },
    function ( e ) {
        // A script failed, and is not available
        mw.log.error( e.message ); // => "Failed to load script"
    }
);

mediawiki.user

[edit]

Module that represents information about the current user.

mw.user.clientPrefs

[edit]

Available since 1.41.0-wmf.20

Can be used to manipulate certain classes on the HTML element such that they do not result in a flash of unstyled content. This can be utilized where you need to make render blocking changes for anonymous users.

By design the only classes that can be manipulated are classes with the suffix -clientpref-[A-Za-z0-9]. This is to prevent unintended manipulation of classes as well as serving as an indicator to people viewing the HTML source of what classes are subject to manipulation.

// Returns the current value of the client preference "foo".
// The value of preference corresponds with a class on the HTML element that matches the
// form foo-clientpref-<value>.
// For example if there is a class on the HTML element foo-clientpref-1 then get will return 1.
// returns false if there is no class on the HTML element e.g. nothing matches the regular
// expression /foo-clientpref-[a-zA-Z0-9]+/
mw.user.clientPrefs.get('foo');

// Returns false if no class was found on the HTML element.
// If there is a class foo-clientpref-1 on the HTML element this will be replaced with
// foo-clientpref-5.
// Importantly: This replacement will persist across page views.
mw.user.clientPrefs.set('foo', '5');

user.options

[edit]

mw.user.options

[edit]

Contains the preferences of the user, or the defaults when logged out.

// Get a preference option and use it directly
alert( 'According to your preferences, your gender is ' + mw.user.options.get( 'gender' ) );

// Get several preferences and compare them
var opts = mw.user.options.get( [ 'diffonly', 'showhiddencats' ] );
if ( opts.diffonly === 0 && opts.showhiddencats === false ) {
	// User's preferences match
} else {
	// User's preferences don't match
}

This module is loaded asynchronously and may depend on a separate HTTP request for the user.defaults module. Always declare the relevant dependencies for your module, or use mw.loader.using().

mw.user.tokens

[edit]
MediaWiki version:
1.19
r88553

This contains an mw.Map object, pre-populated with tokens for use by #mediawiki.api.

mediawiki.api

[edit]
MediaWiki version:
1.18.1
r105646

This module provides the mw.Api and mw.Rest objects. The main methods of the mw.Api object are get(), post(), and ajax(). The mediawiki.api module (and its plugins) return a Promise – similar to jQuery.ajax (and its derivatives such as jQuery.get, jQuery.post and jQuery.getJSON).

Before MediaWiki 1.32 (Gerrit change 434179), the methods were part of separate modules named under mediawiki.api.*. These have been merged into the main module mediawiki.api, so you only have to depend on that module. The submodules have been deprecated with warnings. These submodules have been removed in MediaWiki 1.33.

Examples of methods that are available:

  • mw.Api#edit - Edit an existing page.
  • mw.Api#saveOptions - Changes one or more user preferences.
  • mw.Api#watch - Add a given title (or titles) to the user's watchlist.
// Example
var api = new mw.Api();
api.watch( 'Page to watch' );

mediawiki.cookie

[edit]
MediaWiki version:
1.24
Gerrit change 120806

Cookie module that uses the same settings as the MediaWiki server-side configuration (except for wgCookieSecure).

Usage example:

mw.cookie.set( 'myCookie', 'some-value' );

var value = mw.cookie.get( 'myCookie' );

This module prepends the cookie names with $wgCookiePrefix (e.g. "enwikimyCookie=some-value").

Avoid accessing the same cookie in different ways, for example via mw.cookie and via $.cookie, because you may encounter issues if doing so.

See the API documentation for available options.

mediawiki.errorLogger

[edit]
MediaWiki version:
1.36
Gerrit change 655435

Stub for logging Javascript errors; always loaded. Provides a method for logging caught exceptions:

try {
    // ...
} catch ( e ) {
    mw.errorLogger.logError( e, 'my-component' );
}

Sends two kinds of #mw.track events:

  • error_caught: this is where errors logged via logError go
  • global_error: uncaught exceptions reported by the browser

By default nothing is done with these events; an mw.trackSubscribe handler can forward them to the appropriate logging API. See e.g. clientError.js in WikimediaEvents, or Sentry.

mediawiki.feedback

[edit]
MediaWiki version:
1.19

User interface for collecting feedback, particularly on new features.

mw.ForeignApi

[edit]
MediaWiki version:
1.26

Al. mediawiki.ForeignApi, an extension of mediawiki.api specifially geared toward handling everything required to communicate with another MediaWiki wiki via cross-origin requests (CORS). See Manual:CORS.

mw.ForeignRest

[edit]
MediaWiki version:
1.36

Extension of mw.Rest. See Manual:CORS.

mw.ForeignUpload

[edit]

Extension of mw.Upload.

mediawiki.jqueryMsg

[edit]

This module upgrades the mw.message parser to support basic wikitext localisation and formatting features. For example, mediawiki.jqueryMsg is required for plural and gender support, the int: magic word and links.

mediawiki.router

[edit]

Register and match a set of in-page navigation routes (i.e. hash fragments). It is based on OOjs.

mediawiki.storage

[edit]

Wrapper for HTML5 Web Storage (localStorage, and sessionStorage).

If you are migrating from $.jStorage, note that mw.storage.get() and mw.storage.set() only store string values. Use JSON.stringify() and JSON.parse() or parseInt/parseFloat accordingly when setting and getting non-string values. You may also use mw.storage.getObject() and mw.storage.setObject() (Gerrit change 506145) so that MediaWiki transparently interleaves a JSON serialization.

mediawiki.ui

[edit]
MediaWiki version:
1.22

(deprecated in 1.29) Please use Codex instead.

UI module developed as part of the Agora project. It defines mw-ui-* CSS styles. It is used in the Login and Create account forms and several extensions. It provides one appearance for Vector and another for the rest of the skins.

mediawiki.widgets

[edit]

Module providing MediaWiki-specific OOUI widgets like user input widget or namespace input widget.

mediawiki.util

[edit]

addCSS

[edit]

Adds a ‎<style> element to the HEAD and returns the CSSStyleSheet object.

The CSSStyleSheet object can be used to disable the CSS rules at any later time and re-enable them as well. This can be done through the 'disabled' attribute. When setting this to true, the rules no longer apply. When setting to false, the rules apply again.

See also W3 on CSSStyleSheet for more info.

// Add a simple stylesheet rule
mw.util.addCSS( '.plainlinks { color: green; }' );

// Add a rule and set a variable to the sheet
var myCssRules = mw.util.addCSS( '.plainlinks { color: green; }' );
$( '#myButton' ).click( function () {
	// When button is clicked, toggle the stylesheet from true to non-true (false), or from false to non-false (true)
	myCssRules.disabled = !myCssRules.disabled;
} );

addPortlet

[edit]

This function allows you to create a new portlet in the page.

Only the first argument is required which is the ID of the new portlet. When only using the first argument, no portlet will be added to the page and you must insert it yourself using the return value. When only specifying the first value, you must append the portlet before using the mw.util.addPortletLink API.

const p = mw.util.addPortlet( 'detached' );
document.body.appendChild(p);
mw.util.addPortletLink( 'detached', '#', 'My test link' );

The second argument allows you to create a label - which is important for menus that appear in the sidebar or as dropdowns.

The third parameter when used will automatically append the portlet to the page before the provoided selector. It also provides a hint to skins which will make the new portlet mimic the styling of that portlet.

See the mw.util JS documentation for more details.

// create a portlet that is appended before #p-interaction and mimics the styling of #p-interaction.
mw.util.addPortlet( 'p-mytest', 'My test portlet', '#p-interaction' );
mw.util.addPortletLink( 'p-mytest', '#', 'My test link' );

Styling portlets

[edit]

For many use cases, the menu may not appear styled as expected and the portlet is provided as is. In these situations you should provide your own styling.

Appending portlets in different locations

[edit]

Sometimes you will want to use the third parameter to mimic the styling of the portlet, but not to append before. To do this you must use the return value, and relocate it to another location.

const p = mw.util.addPortlet( 'p-mytest', 'My test portlet', '#p-interaction' );
mw.util.addPortletLink( 'p-mytest', '#', 'My test link' ); 
// move portlet to end of list.
if ( p ) { p.parentNode.appendChild(p); }
[edit]

The Vector (2022) and Vector legacy (2010) skins support adding portlets as dropdown menus in the tab bar. This is implemented by trapping requests to create a portlet with the selector #p-cactions in the before argument and mimicking the style the skin uses for its own dropdown menus.

// create a dropdown menu in Vector legacy and Vector
mw.util.addPortlet('p-mytest', 'My test dropdown', '#p-cactions');
mw.util.addPortletLink('p-mytest', '#', 'My test link');

In Monobook this will instead create a regular portlet in the left sidebar. In Timeless it will create one in the right sidebar. In skins where the element #p-cactions doesn't exist (for example Minerva on mobile for anonymous users) it is essentially a NOOP. Note, skins are not required to support this function (for example Minerva as a desktop skin) so please test thoroughly across different skins and guard your code accordingly.

Appending this portlet and moving it to mimick the dropdown style works in Vector legacy (2010), but will not work in Vector (2022) because the skin wraps it in additional markup (your portlet exists inside a dropdown menu the skin created for you, but it is not itself a dropdown menu). So in order to move it elsewhere, for example to get a dropdown next to the main page tabs on the left, you will have to find the DOM node representing the actual dropdown and move that. This is not recommended because it relies on the skin's internal implementation (markup structure and styling) so it will break when the implementation changes, but if you need this you can currently do something like this:

// create a dropdown menu in Vector legacy and Vector
const p = mw.util.addPortlet('p-mytest', 'My test dropdown', '#p-cactions');
mw.util.addPortletLink('p-mytest', '#', 'My test link');
if (mw.config.get("skin") === "vector-2022") {
  // rely on Vector using the ID you provided for the portlet and
  // appending "-dropdown" to it as the ID for the actual dropdown.
  $('#p-mytest' + '-dropdown').appendTo("#left-navigation");
} else {
  // use the node returned by mw.util.addPortlet()
  $(p).appendTo("#left-navigation");
}
[edit]

This function is ported from the legacy wikibits keeping it fully backwards compatible, with a few adjustments that support all core skins and with added support for a CSS-selector as nextnode. Note that it doesn't support MobileFrontend with the Minerva skin for logged-out users.

Only the first three arguments are required. In case you need to execute a custom function when the user clicks on a portlet, use the jQuery(...).on('click', .. ) on returned Element object to attach a callback that runs the code that should be executed.

See the mw.util documentation for details.

// First wait for mediawiki.util to load, and the page to be ready.
$.when( mw.loader.using( 'mediawiki.util' ), $.ready ).then( function () { 

	// General usage pattern:
	// mw.util.addPortletLink( portletId, href, text /* Optional: , id, tooltip, accesskey, nextnode */ );

	// Example: Add a link to mediawiki.org to the Tools area, above the "Special pages" link.
	var newElement = mw.util.addPortletLink(
		'p-tb',
		'https://www.mediawiki.org/',
		'Link to mediawiki.org',
		't-mworg',
		'Go to www.mediawiki.org',
		'm',
		'#t-specialpages'
	);

	// The old way of passing a DOM-node also works
	mw.util.addPortletLink(
		'p-tb',
		'https://www.mediawiki.org/',
		'Link to mediawiki.org',
		't-mworg',
		'Go to www.mediawiki.org',	
		'm',
		document.getElementById( 't-specialpages' )
	);

} );

Note about icons: The id will be used to construct an icon class in certain skins (for example mw-ui-icon-vector-gadget-cx-language in Vector). Callers are expected to add their own CSS in addition to calling addPortletLink if needed.

hidePortlet

[edit]

This function allows you to hide a portlet (menu) consistently across skins.

// First wait for mediawiki.util to load, and the page to be ready.
$.when( mw.loader.using( 'mediawiki.util' ), $.ready ).then( function () { 
	/// hide toolbox
	mw.util.hidePortlet( 'p-tb' );
} );

addSubtitle

[edit]
// First wait for mediawiki.util to load, and the page to be ready.
$.when( mw.loader.using( 'mediawiki.util' ), $.ready ).then( function () { 
	mw.util.addSubtitle( 'Hello' );
	var sub = document.createElement('div');
	sub.textContent = ' world';
	mw.util.addSubtitle( sub );
} );

clearSubtitle

[edit]

Usually called alongside addSubtitle when you want to refresh the subtitle contents. Given you can only add to the subtitle, you must clear its existing contents if you want to redraw.

// First wait for mediawiki.util to load, and the page to be ready.
$.when( mw.loader.using( 'mediawiki.util' ), $.ready ).then( function () { 
	mw.util.clearSubtitle();
} );

$content

[edit]

A jQuery object for a page's overall content area regardless of the skin used. This is, for example, #content in the Vector-skin (before 1.20 it was #bodyContent).

This does not refer to the area where the page content goes. If you wish to work with that area of the page instead of the overall content area you should use $( '#mw-content-text' ) instead.

This property is populated on document ready. To use it, wait for $.ready and be sure to have a module dependency on mediawiki.util which will ensure your document ready handler fires after initialization.

Because of the lazy-initialised nature of this property, you are discouraged from using it.

/* Add some HTML to the page content */
mw.util.$content.append( '<h2>Lorem ipsum</h2><p>This section was just added to the bottom of the wiki page.</p>' );

/* Count number of tables in the page's content with a class of "wikitable" */
var $wikitablesInPage = mw.util.$content.find( 'table.wikitable' );

if ( $wikitablesInPage.length ) {
	alert( 'There are ' + $wikitablesInPage.length + ' wikitables on this page.' );
} else {
	alert( 'There are no wikitables on this page.' );
}

Here is a more advanced example involving loading in extra content with an AJAX request. Run this example on a page other than the main page.

/* Loads in main page (or any page for that matter) over AJAX (may be useful for Special:BlankPage) */

// Put a loading message on top of the page
mw.util.$content.prepend( '<p><em>Loading...</em></p><hr/>' );

// To get the article contents, use #mw-content-text instead.
$( '#mw-content-text' ).load( mw.util.getUrl( '' ) + ' #mw-content-text', function () {
	mw.notify( 'Load complete!' );
} );

getParamValue

[edit]

This function returns the value of the specified URL parameter. By default it uses the current window's address. Optionally you can pass it a custom location.

It returns null if the parameter is not present. Returns an empty string("") if it was an empty parameter (such as /page.php?some=parameter&emptyparameter=&id=12

// Location: https://www.mediawiki.org/w/index.php?title=ResourceLoader/Default_modules&action=edit&section=28
// Suppose we're editing a page section, this will return the number of the edit section
mw.util.getParamValue( 'section' ); /* returns '28'; */

// Extract a value from a custom url
// For example on a diff page where there is: "← Older edit" and you need the oldid of the previous edit
var oldid = mw.util.getParamValue( 'oldid', '//www.mediawiki.org/w/index.php?title=ResourceLoader/Default_modules&diff=prev&oldid=365296' );
if ( oldid !== null ) {
	alert( 'The previous text version of this page has id: ' + oldid );
} else {
	alert( 'No "oldid" parameter found in the given address.' );
}

isIPv4Address

[edit]
MediaWiki version:
1.18
r83202

This function returns bool for passed string is valid IPv4 Address or not.

// true
mw.util.isIPv4Address( '192.0.2.0' );

// false (range is invalid IPv4 Address)
mw.util.isIPv4Address( '192.0.2.0/24' );

// false
mw.util.isIPv4Address( 'string' );

messageBox

[edit]
MediaWiki version:
1.43
r83202

This function allows you to render an error or warning message. This method should only be called in environments where Codex styles have been loaded (for example mediawiki.codex.messagebox.styles module)

document.body.appendChild( mw.util.messageBox( 'Error occurred',  'error' ) );
document.body.appendChild( mw.util.messageBox( 'Warning occurred',  'warning' ) );
document.body.appendChild( mw.util.messageBox( 'Notice about something.,',  'notice' ) );

isIPv6Address

[edit]
MediaWiki version:
1.18
r83202

This function returns bool for passed string is valid IPv6 Address or not.

// true
mw.util.isIPv6Address( '2001:db8:a:0:0:0:0:0' );

// true
mw.util.isIPv6Address( '2001:db8:a::' );

// false (range is invalid IPv6 Address)
mw.util.isIPv6Address( '2001:db8:a::/32' );

// false
mw.util.isIPv6Address( 'string' );

rawurlencode

[edit]

This function returns an encoded string in its raw form for use in urls.

var exFooUrl = 'http://example.org/foo/' + mw.util.rawurlencode( mw.config.get( 'wgPageName' ) );

For building query strings, you may want to use jQuery.param instead:

var query = {
	page: 'MyPage',
	value: mw.config.get( 'skin' ),
	action: 'foo'
};

var fooQuery = 'http://example.com/stuff.php?' + $.param( query );

wikiScript

[edit]
MediaWiki version:
1.18
r88513

This function returns the location of a script on the current wiki. Much like wfScript in GlobalFunctions.php.

Parameters: str - Name of the script (e.g. 'api'), defaults to 'index'.

jQuery.getJSON( mw.util.wikiScript( 'api' ), {
	format: 'json',
	action: 'query',
	titles: 'Main Page',
	prop: 'revisions'
} ).done( function ( data ) {
	// data.query
} );

mediawiki.RegExp

[edit]
MediaWiki versions:
1.26 – 1.35

(deprecated in 1.34)

See ResourceLoader/Migration guide § mediawiki.RegExp

mediawiki.Title

[edit]

This sets the mw.Title constructor, which has several methods in its prototype. Basic example:

var t = new mw.Title( 'Image: foo_bar baz.jpg' );
t.getMain(); // "Foo_bar_baz.jpg"
t.getNamespaceId(); // 6
t.getNamespacePrefix(); // "File:"

mediawiki.Uri

[edit]

(deprecated in 1.43)

Use browser's native URL interface instead.

moment

[edit]

Moment.js can parse, manipulate, and format date-time timestamps. Localisation is automatically loaded and configured for the current user interface language.

var moment = require( 'moment' );

moment( '2011-04-01 09:00' ).format( 'LLLL' );
// "Friday, 1 April 2011 9:00 AM"

moment.version
//> "2.25.2"

oojs

[edit]
MediaWiki version:
1.23

OOjs is a libary that provides a consistent way of implementing object-oriented design in JS.

oojs-ui

[edit]
MediaWiki version:
1.23

OOUI is a user interface toolkit based on OOjs. Note that oojs-ui is just a legacy name for the module. See all the known OOUI module names.

jquery

[edit]

More information about jQuery's presence in MediaWiki, see jQuery. For more about jQuery in general and all its core functions, refer to https://api.jquery.com/

ResourceLoader provides jQuery as part of its base environment (the loader client uses jQuery internally), therefore this module is always loaded and should not (and in fact can not) be loaded through ResourceLoader (as dependency or otherwise).

jquery.chosen

[edit]

“Chosen is a jQuery plugin that makes long, unwieldy select boxes much more user-friendly.” — harvesthq.github.io

In fact, it turns a select into a combo box with autocomplete functionality by default but also supports grouping, and "tagging" (i.e. multiple values).

$( 'select' ).chosen( { /* options */ } );

jquery.client

[edit]

A plugin that extracts information about the client's browser, layout engine, and operating system.

jQuery.client.profile

[edit]

Here a few examples:

if ( $.client.profile().layout == 'gecko' && $.client.profile().platform == 'linux' ) {
	// This will only run on Gecko browsers (ie. Mozilla Firefox) on Linux.
}

if ( $.client.profile().name == 'msie' ) {
	// Only for good ol' Internet Explorer
}

// Shortcut
var prof = $.client.profile();
if ( prof.name == 'firefox' && prof.versionBase == '2' && prof.platform == 'win' ) {
	// Target Mozilla Firefox 2.x on Windows
}

Check jquery.client.js for possible values of browser names, layout engines and platforms.

jquery.color

[edit]
MediaWiki version:
1.17

jquery.cookie

[edit]
MediaWiki version:
1.41

(deprecated in 1.41)

To use jQuery cookie methods, load the mediawiki.cookie module. It is recommended that you use mw.cookie interface as it automatically applies appropiate settings based onMediaWiki site configuration (such as domain, path, and retention).

This plugin allows you to set, get and delete cookies.

// Set cookie (simple, current page/path)
$.cookie( 'myName', 'Flower' );

// Set cookie (extra options)
$.cookie( 'myName', 'Flower', {
	expires: 7, // expires in 7 days
	path: '/' // domain-wide, entire wiki
} );

// Get cookie
var name = $.cookie( 'myName' );

// Delete cookie
// Deprecated since 1.2 please use $.removeCookie( 'foo' ) instead
$.cookie( 'myName', null );

$.removeCookie( 'foo' )

When deleting a cookie, you must use the same path and domain used when the cookie was set.

Note that when MediaWiki server-side code sets a cookie it usually prefixes it with the database name; this prefix is available to JavaScript code as the mw.config variable wgCookiePrefix.

Note that users will likely get separate cookies for /wiki/ and /w/ paths in page URLs if you do not specify the extra option { path: '/' } when setting a cookie.

jquery.i18n

[edit]
MediaWiki version:
1.26
Gerrit change 223201

jquery.makeCollapsible

[edit]
MediaWiki version:
1.18
r78914
See also Manual:Collapsible elements.

Makes elements collapsible. It supports lots of variations such as:

Simple
Add "mw-collapsible" to an element (a <div> for example) with some content and save the page. The inner content of this element will be treated as collapsible content. Prepended to the element, before the collapsible content, is a toggle-link with a localized label (collapsible-expand, collapsible-collapse)
Initial state
Adding "mw-collapsed" as additional class will cause the element to be initially collapsed when the page is loaded.
Custom label
HTML5 only Using the data-collapsetext and data-expandtext attributes one can define a custom text for the toggle labels added by the script. When added in wikitext these could be populated by a localized message like:
<div class="mw-collapsible" data-expandtext="{{int:show}}" data-collapsetext="{{int:hide}}">
Remote toggle
If you don't want the script to put the default toggle link (whether or not with a custom label) in your element, you can make one of your own. This could reside anywhere inside or outside the collapsible element. Its relationship to the collapsible element is detected by using an ID attribute with the prefix mw-customcollapsible and a corresponding class attribute with prefix mw-customtoggle for the collapsible element and the togglelink respectively.
Example: Simple collapsible div or table

Input:

{| class="wikitable"
! Foo
! Bar
|-
| Lorem
| Ipsum
|-
| More info
|<!--
-->
{| class="wikitable mw-collapsible mw-collapsed" style="width: 100%;"
! Head
! Top
|-
| Cell
| content
|-
| This table is collapsible
| Because it has the "mw-collapsible" class
|-
| It was initially hidden, because it
| had the "mw-collapsed" class
|}<!--
-->
|-
|}

<div class="toccolours mw-collapsible" style="width: 400px;">
This is text is collapsible. {{Lorem}}
</div>

Output:

Foo Bar
Lorem Ipsum
More info
Head Top
Cell content
This table is collapsible Because it has the "mw-collapsible" class
It was initially hidden, because it had the "mw-collapsed" class
This is text is collapsible. Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipisicing elit, sed do eiusmod tempor incididunt ut labore et dolore magna aliqua. Ut enim ad minim veniam, quis nostrud exercitation ullamco laboris nisi ut aliquip ex ea commodo consequat. Duis aute irure dolor in reprehenderit in voluptate velit esse cillum dolore eu fugiat nulla pariatur. Excepteur sint occaecat cupidatat non proident, sunt in culpa qui officia deserunt mollit anim id est laborum.



Example: Hide the collapsible element by default, the toggle element resides outside of it

Input:

<div class="mw-customtoggle-myDivision" style="background:#e0e8ff">Click here to toggle the element</div>

<div class="mw-collapsible mw-collapsed" id="mw-customcollapsible-myDivision">
<div class="toccolours mw-collapsible-content">Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet...</div>
</div>

<div class="mw-customtoggle-myDivision" style="background:#e8ffe0">Clicking will toggle it also!</div>

Output:

Click here to toggle the element
Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet...
Clicking will toggle it also!

For other live examples, see Test Wikipedia - Collapsing Testpage.

jquery.suggestions

[edit]

jquery.spinner

[edit]

jquery.tabIndex

[edit]
MediaWiki versions:
1.18 – 1.35
r86088

(deprecated in 1.34)

jquery.tablesorter

[edit]
MediaWiki version:
1.18
r86088

jquery.textSelection

[edit]
mw.util.jsMessage( 'The selected text is "' + mw.html.escape( $( '#wpTextbox1' ).textSelection( 'getSelection' ) ) + '".' );

jquery.tipsy

[edit]

(deprecated in 1.28)

The library will be available for the forseeable future, but overlaps with functionality within OOUI and provides a suboptimal experience to mobile users. Where jQuery.tipsy is being used, we encourage developers to inspect OOUI and feedback on how the library might be improved to support the usecase that jquery.tipsy provides.

Example page; jQuery project page

Option Type Possible values Default Description
gravity string / call-back function 'nw' | 'n' | 'ne' | 'w' | 'e' | 'sw' | 's' | 'se' / $.fn.tipsy.autoNS | $.fn.tipsy.autoWE | pointer or anonymous 'n' sets the positioning of the tooltip relative to the element
fade bool true | false true use fading effect (fadeIn / fadeOut)
title string (an attribute) / call-back function style, class, id, ..., function () { return 'some string'; } title (or if not specified fallback-value; see below) Which string to display as a "tool-tip"?
fallback string 'valid string' used if an element has no tooltip
html bool true | false false interpret the tooltip text as HTML
delayIn number in ms 0, 1, 2, ... 0 How long to wait after onmouseover to show the tip?
delayOut number in ms 0, 1, 2, ... 0 How long to wait after onmouseout to close the tip?
trigger string 'focus' | 'manual' | 'hover' hover When to show the tooltip (useful for forms)
live bool true | false false dynamical add to selectors- see JQuery's live interpretation
offset number in px 0 offset from tooltip to element
opacity number (float) 1.0 opacity of the tooltip
mw.loader.using( 'jquery.tipsy', function () {
	$someObject.prepend(
		$( '<span>', {
			title: 'Some tipsy test title'
		} )
		.append( 'Hover here' )
		.tipsy( {
			option: 'value',
			option2: 'value2'
		} )
	);
} );

jquery.ui

[edit]

(deprecated in 1.29) Please use Codex instead.

For more information on and demos for jQuery UI, refer to http://jqueryui.com/.

site

[edit]

This module loads site scripts from the pages:

  • MediaWiki:Common.js,
  • and MediaWiki:Vector.js (depending on the current skin).

If $wgUseSiteJs is disabled by configuration, then the module is empty.

user

[edit]

This module loads:

  • User:<name>/common.js,
  • User:<name>/vector.js (depending on current skin),
  • MediaWiki:Group-user.js,
  • MediaWiki:Group-<groupname>.js (for each group the current user is a member of, e.g. "sysop", "bureaucrat" etc.)

If $wgAllowUserJs is disabled by configuration, then the "User" sub pages are not included.

If $wgUseSiteJs is disabled by configuration, then the "MediaWiki:Group-" pages are not included.

See also

[edit]