Template:Container

Use and Options
Makes an invisible container to hold coloured bullet strips. Needed to ensure that short bullet texts nonetheless still fill the space. Used with Lul and Dul to make the bullet strips. For full page widths or when the amount of text is sufficient to form more than one line for every bullet point, use Lightul and Darkul without a container, in a stack.

Example1
gives;

Example2

 * whereas in contrast,
 * with no container, but still using the Block call nesting around ... formatting:

gives;

... which on first look... would seem to be identical. On the gross level of this simple page flow, that is true. But 'container' will isolate presentations from the undesirable invasion by other sorts of page html elements in the hurly-burly of the different ways browsers assemble pages.
 * With container there is an invisible protective html wrapper not seen in either of the above examples, and an adamant clear in the termination protecting the turf of the 'container tribe'. (At least they let us stay on the Island!)

Options

 * align:  left, center, or right for the container wrapper and contents it bounds.
 * width:  defaults to auto, sets container width.
 * content: |content=  will override positional parameter-1  ... for such duality of legal inputs are template features to enable editors to easily toggle back and forth in previews to see the 'best' content text formation and grouping for the task at hand (just misspell 'content=' deliberately s.a. for example adding a glyph: '|content2=', and '|1=' becomes active instead!
 * [How shalleth we phrase thee sweet text? Leteth us count the ways...])


 * See companion templates...
 * Use Lul and Dul to make the bullet strips.
 * Use Lightul and Darkul without a container, in a stack for full page widths or when the amount of text is sufficient to form more than one line for every bullet point.
 * Use container to include and bound combinations of the above listed beside an image.