Markdown reference guide

From diaspora* project wiki
Revision as of 16:27, 20 July 2013 by Goob (talk | contribs) (Added image code.)

Diaspora supports a number of ways to format messages. These are basically a part of the description language Markdown.

Paragraphs

Paragraphs are separated by blank lines.

This is one paragraph.

This is another.

Sometimes the line breaks are important, such as when you're entering poetry. To do this, add two spaces to the end of each line.

Roses are red.
Violets are blue.
I am very bad at poetry.

Indenting the lines of a paragraph by four spaces will result in a block of pre-formatted text, which is handy for code samples.

Hey guys, look at my code!

    10 PRINT "HELLO"
    20 GOTO 10

Text formatting

*Italic Text*

becomes "Italic Text".

**Bold Text**

becomes "Bold Text".

***Bold Italic Text***

becomes "Bold Italic Text".

Similarly, we can also use "_":

___Bold Italic Text___

This allows for nesting:

_Italic **Bold** Text_

becomes "Italic Bold Text".

If needed, a "*" or "_" inside the text can be escaped with the "\" character:

__Use Two \_ for Bold Text__

becomes "Use Two _ for Bold Text". Of course, this can also be used to prevent formatting:

\_Italic_ \**Bold**

becomes "_Italic_ *Bold*".

Links

Full URLs, for example http://example.org , are automatically converted into links. This also works for ftp:// like ftp://example.org . Furthermore, everything starting with www. is converted into a link, for example www.example.org.

For more control, the Markdown syntax also allows the link to be named. For example

[Official Website](http://example.org)

is Official Website. Key point: square brackets before round.

Images

To embed an image in a post, use the above syntax with an exclamation mark at the beginning:

![Image title](http://example.org/image.jpg)

For this to work, the URL needs to be a direct link to a valid image file (ending in .jpg, .gif, etc), not to a web page containing an image.