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author | Daniel Zendejas <daniel8647@hotmail.com> | 2014-07-23 20:19:10 -0500 |
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committer | Daniel Zendejas <daniel8647@hotmail.com> | 2014-07-23 20:19:10 -0500 |
commit | 2c511db07ac4cc4d4fa8f438a200d4fb98a80884 (patch) | |
tree | 5b6135c14020f0c91d21d0afd48d217db0f2e833 /es-es | |
parent | 19a5676798f2315778d07e9271fd5e9d750bb5ef (diff) |
Create markdown-es.html.markdown
Diffstat (limited to 'es-es')
-rw-r--r-- | es-es/markdown-es.html.markdown | 234 |
1 files changed, 234 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/es-es/markdown-es.html.markdown b/es-es/markdown-es.html.markdown new file mode 100644 index 00000000..c7d408b5 --- /dev/null +++ b/es-es/markdown-es.html.markdown @@ -0,0 +1,234 @@ +<!-- Markdown is a superset of HTML, so any HTML file is valid Markdown, that +means we can use HTML elements in Markdown, such as the comment element, and +they won't be affected by a markdown parser. However, if you create an HTML +element in your markdown file, you cannot use markdown syntax within that +element's contents. --> + +<!-- Markdown está basado en HTML, así que cualquier archivo HTML es Markdown +válido, eso significa que + +--> + +<!-- Markdown also varies in implementation from one parser to a next. This +guide will attempt to clarify when features are universal or when they are +specific to a certain parser. --> + +<!-- Headers --> +<!-- You can create HTML elements <h1> through <h6> easily by prepending the +text you want to be in that element by a number of hashes (#) --> +# This is an <h1> +## This is an <h2> +### This is an <h3> +#### This is an <h4> +##### This is an <h5> +###### This is an <h6> + +<!-- Markdown also provides us with two alternative ways of indicating h1 and h2 --> +This is an h1 +============= + +This is an h2 +------------- + +<!-- Simple text styles --> +<!-- Text can be easily styled as italic, bold, or strikethrough using markdown --> + +*This text is in italics.* +_And so is this text._ + +**This text is in bold.** +__And so is this text.__ + +***This text is in both.*** +**_As is this!_** +*__And this!__* + +<!-- In Github Flavored Markdown, which is used to render markdown files on +Github, we also have: --> + +~~This text is rendered with strikethrough.~~ + +<!-- Paragraphs are a one or multiple adjacent lines of text separated by one or +multiple blank lines. --> + +This is a paragraph. I'm typing in a paragraph isn't this fun? + +Now I'm in paragraph 2. +I'm still in paragraph 2 too! + + +I'm in paragraph three! + +<!-- Should you ever want to insert an HTML <br /> tag, you can end a paragraph +with two or more spaces and then begin a new paragraph. --> + +I end with two spaces (highlight me to see them). + +There's a <br /> above me! + +<!-- Block quotes are easy and done with the > character. --> + +> This is a block quote. You can either +> manually wrap your lines and put a `>` before every line or you can let your lines get really long and wrap on their own. +> It doesn't make a difference so long as they start with a `>`. + +> You can also use more than one level +>> of indentation? +> How neat is that? + +<!-- Lists --> +<!-- Unordered lists can be made using asterisks, pluses, or hyphens --> + +* Item +* Item +* Another item + +or + ++ Item ++ Item ++ One more item + +or + +- Item +- Item +- One last item + +<!-- Ordered lists are done with a number followed by a period --> + +1. Item one +2. Item two +3. Item three + +<!-- You don't even have to label the items correctly and markdown will still +render the numbers in order, but this may not be a good idea --> + +1. Item one +1. Item two +1. Item three +<!-- (This renders the same as the above example) --> + +<!-- You can also use sublists --> + +1. Item one +2. Item two +3. Item three + * Sub-item + * Sub-item +4. Item four + +<!-- Code blocks --> +<!-- You can indicate a code block (which uses the <code> element) by indenting +a line with four spaces or a tab --> + + This is code + So is this + +<!-- You can also re-tab (or add an additional four spaces) for indentation +inside your code --> + + my_array.each do |item| + puts item + end + +<!-- Inline code can be created using the backtick character ` --> + +John didn't even know what the `go_to()` function did! + +<!-- In Github Flavored Markdown, you can use a special syntax for code --> + +\`\`\`ruby <!-- except remove those backslashes when you do this, just ```ruby ! --> +def foobar + puts "Hello world!" +end +\`\`\` <!-- here too, no backslashes, just ``` --> + +<-- The above text doesn't require indenting, plus Github will use syntax +highlighting of the language you specify after the ``` --> + +<!-- Horizontal rule (<hr />) --> +<!-- Horizontal rules are easily added with three or more asterisks or hyphens, +with or without spaces. --> + +*** +--- +- - - +**************** + +<!-- Links --> +<!-- One of the best things about markdown is how easy it is to make links. Put +the text to display in hard brackets [] followed by the url in parentheses () --> + +[Click me!](http://test.com/) + +<!-- You can also add a link title using quotes inside the parentheses --> + +[Click me!](http://test.com/ "Link to Test.com") + +<!-- Relative paths work too. --> + +[Go to music](/music/). + +<!-- Markdown also supports reference style links --> + +[Click this link][link1] for more info about it! +[Also check out this link][foobar] if you want to. + + + + +<!-- The title can also be in single quotes or in parentheses, or omitted +entirely. The references can be anywhere in your document and the reference IDs +can be anything so long as they are unique. --> + +<!-- There is also "implicit naming" which lets you use the link text as the id --> + +[This][] is a link. + + + +<!-- But it's not that commonly used. --> + +<!-- Images --> +<!-- Images are done the same way as links but with an exclamation point in front! --> + +![This is hover-text (alt text) for my image](http://imgur.com/myimage.jpg "An optional title") + +<!-- And reference style works as expected --> + +![This is the hover-text.][myimage] + + + +<!-- Miscellany --> +<!-- Auto-links --> + +<http://testwebsite.com/> is equivalent to +[http://testwebsite.com/](http://testwebsite.com/) + +<!-- Auto-links for emails --> + +<foo@bar.com> + +<!-- Escaping characters --> + +I want to type *this text surrounded by asterisks* but I don't want it to be +in italics, so I do this: \*this text surrounded by asterisks\*. + +<!-- Tables --> +<!-- Tables are only available in Github Flavored Markdown and are slightly +cumbersome, but if you really want it: --> + +| Col1 | Col2 | Col3 | +| :----------- | :------: | ------------: | +| Left-aligned | Centered | Right-aligned | +| blah | blah | blah | + +<!-- or, for the same results --> + +Col 1 | Col2 | Col3 +:-- | :-: | --: +Ugh this is so ugly | make it | stop + +<!-- The end! --> |