the image size should only be specified if the image is smaller than 220 pixels width. Enter the width in pixels without "px", for example 250.
landscape
set to yes when using wide, short images. The image height (rather than width) will be limited to 200 pixels.
border
inserting yes here will result in a 1px grey border around the image, useful for instances where the image and the background will blend together (such as a concert poster with a white background). If no border is necessary, this parameter should not be used.
alt
alternative text for the image, for visually impaired and other readers who cannot see the image.
caption
a caption for the image
type
type of tour with capital letter; entry will be followed by the word "tour" (ex: World, Free, Benefit, Festival, Promotional, Revival, Reunion, etc.)
artist
artist or organization holding the concert
location
The location(s) of where the tour took place (ex: cities, states, countries, continents). Avoid unnecessarily long lists: If a tour covered multiple continents, or many cities across the same continent, simply name the continents (ex: North America, Europe, Australia). If it covered just a few countries or states, name them (ex: United States, United Kingdom or California, Arizona). Only list specific cities for very short tours covering only a few cities. For "United States" and "United Kingdom", it is preferred that they be abbreviated "U.S." and "UK", but political subdivisions should never be (never "MA" for "Massachusetts", "ON" for "Ontario", etc.). See Notes[1] for details.
venue
venue of where the concert took place
album
If the tour is associated with a specific album, then name the album. Use a wikilink to link to the album's article.
start_date
the date when the tour began, usually the date of the first performance of the tour. Use {{Start date|YYYY|MM|DD}}, replacing YYYY with the year, MM with the numerical month, and DD with the day (ex: {{Start date|2010|08|13}}).
end_date
the date when the tour ended, usually the date of the final performance of the tour. Use {{End date|YYYY|MM|DD}}.
number_of_legs
some tours have multiple "legs", often separated by gaps of time (ex: a West coast leg and an East coast leg, or a North American leg and a European leg). If so, enter the number of legs. If the tour consisted of one continuous string of dates, leave this field blank.
number_of_shows
the total number of shows on the entire tour.
website or URL
the single web address for the tour's primary official website. Use {{URL}} as {{URL|example.com}}.
budget
the budget for the tour, if known. Use templates to link to specific currencies, for example {{US$}}
gross
the total gross revenue for the tour, if known
last_concert or last_tour
the artist or organization's previous concert, followed by a <br /> and the concert's year in parenthesis (type N/A if none)
this_concert or this_tour
the artist or organization concert in which the infobox is about in bold text, followed by a <br /> and the concert's year in parenthesis
next_concert or next_tour
the artist or organization's next concert, followed by a <br /> and the concert's year in parenthesis (type ... if a future tour may occur; type N/A if there will be no future tour)
↑As per RfC "Naming countries in infoboxes": When identifying a location, city or region in the United States or United Kingdom, the preferred approach is to use the country abbreviations allowed by MOS:ACRO, such as "Portsmouth, New Hampshire, U.S." and "Cardiff, Wales, UK", rather than spelling out the full country name. Avoid using abbreviations for states or provinces in all nations. New Hampshire rather than NH, New South Wales rather than NSW, or British Columbia rather than BC (see MOS:POSTABBR). Cities such as New York City and London may be rendered as "New York City, U.S." and "London, UK" or simply "New York City" and "London". Also, these should not be linked when the context makes it clear (see MOS:OVERLINK). If only the country name is included, it may be written out in full.
The HTML mark-up produced by this template includes an hCalendar microformat that makes event details readily parsable by computer programs. This aids tasks such as the cataloguing of articles and maintenance of databases. For more information about the use of microformats on Wikipedia, please visit the Microformat WikiProject.