I've got a wiki page that contains : \[[!toc ]] # header1 content1 # header2 \[[!template id=bla]] And `templates/bla.mdwn` contains : # header3 content3 # header4 content4 If no `\[[!map]]` directive is anywhere in the template, the page is rendered as expected. If `\[[!map]]` is used e.g. in content4, the wiki page is rendered with the following elements : > Surely you mean a toc directive, not map? --[[Joey]] >> No, I really mean map, but I forgot to escape the toc above (in the example wiki page content), which prevented you from understanding my point. -- intrigeri - an empty toc div - every markdown code before the first `\[[!map]]` directive is not interpreted and rendered as-is : `# header1 content1 # header2 content2 #header3 #header4 content4_before_the_map` - the correctly rendered map directive result If `\[[!map]]` is used in content3, the wiki page is rendered with the following elements : - a TOC containing only the last header (header4) - every markdown code before the first `\[[!map]]` directive is not interpreted and rendered as-is : `# header1 content1 # header2 content2 #header3 content3_before_the_map` - content3 (starting at the map), header4 and content4 are all rendered as expected Moving the `\[[!toc]]` directive from the page to the template gives the same results. Removing the `\[[!toc]]` directive or moving it at the end of the page makes the whole wiki page be rendered as expected. Hint : in all cases, the non-interpreted markdown code is copied as-is in the HTML output, without any leading `

` or any HTML formatting.