Template:Nutritionalvalue



Explanation
The following optional variables are converted into percentages of RDA (taken as averages for males and females aged 25-50 years from the USDA 2000 recommendation): Other optional variables and flags: Further remarks: Nutritional values can be found e.g. in the USDA National Nutrient Database. Note that fibers are counted as carbohydrates.
 * Required variables: name, kJ, carbs, fat, protein. Supply units (except for kJ which is in kJ).
 * Optional variables: sugars, lactose, satfat, transfat, monofat, polyfat, omega3fat, omega6fat, fiber, fibre, starch, water, alcohol, caffeine. Supply units (normally g).
 * Optional freeformat variables (name and value): opt1n, opt1v, etc. up to opt4n and opt4v.
 * Optional minerals (in mg): calcium_mg, iron_mg, phosphorus_mg, magnesium_mg, sodium_mg, potassium_mg, zinc_mg
 * Optional vitamins (in mg, &mu;g, or international units): vitA_ug, betacarotene_ug (subcategory of vitamin A!), thiamin_mg (Vit. B1), riboflavin_mg (Vit. B2), niacin_mg (Vit. B3), pantothenic_mg (pantothenic acid), vitB6_mg, folate_ug, vitB12_ug, vitC_mg, vitD_ug, vitD_iu (in IU), vitE_mg, vitK_ug.
 * Optional footnote: note
 * Optional data source: source, or as a flag: source_usda=1 for the USDA database
 * Optional suppression of RDA explanation: noRDA=1
 * Optional flags: right=1 (table will be floating on the right)
 * According to convention, there should be a space between the number and the unit: "14 g" and not "14g".
 * Don't specify numbers in too many decimals. Food is often very variable; the USDA tables provide a standard deviation as an indication for how accurate the number is. If it says 1.2345 g with a standard deviation of 0.08 g, then 1.2 g is the highest accuracy worth mentioning.
 * Splitting up components that are present in trace amounts is not very meaningful (e.g. 1.5 g fats of which 0.5 g unsaturated).
 * The author of the template recommendeds to include only vitamins and minerals for which this product is considered to be a major source, in order to prevent clogging up the article with a huge table. As a guideline:
 * staple foods: an amount that provides 10,000 kJ should provide well over 100% of the RDI.
 * meats and such: same, but for 4,000 kJ.
 * vegetables, other low-calorie solid food, fruits: same, but for 400 g.
 * other products: use an amount that one could reasonably eat on a daily basis.

Template editing
Don't put linebreaks into the template around the parser functions, because they will end up as linebreaks above the table.

Maybe someone can do this in wikitable format rather than raw HTML, if you know how to combine that with the conditionals. Please experiment in Template:NutritionalvalueTest to prevent breaking article pages.