summaryrefslogtreecommitdiffhomepage
path: root/markdown.html.markdown
diff options
context:
space:
mode:
authorJacob Ward <jacobward1898@gmail.com>2015-10-31 20:27:51 -0600
committerJacob Ward <jacobward1898@gmail.com>2015-10-31 20:27:51 -0600
commit5d09566ee4881028cd53dee83ae27343beb8269d (patch)
treed5d48488f23e08690f1ec54610c9fe81e34d2fe8 /markdown.html.markdown
parent08b43e21f1a273d5ca471e0accdf46ba706a4cd5 (diff)
parentdbe6184519860e526432c4987a6f67d6c0acf38e (diff)
Merge remote-tracking branch 'adambard/master'
Diffstat (limited to 'markdown.html.markdown')
-rw-r--r--markdown.html.markdown34
1 files changed, 17 insertions, 17 deletions
diff --git a/markdown.html.markdown b/markdown.html.markdown
index d5ed284b..b956a5f2 100644
--- a/markdown.html.markdown
+++ b/markdown.html.markdown
@@ -11,7 +11,7 @@ Give me as much feedback as you want! / Feel free to fork and pull request!
```markdown
-<!-- Markdown is a superset of HTML, so any HTML file is valid Markdown, that
+<!-- Markdown is a superset of HTML, so any HTML file is valid Markdown. This
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
@@ -23,7 +23,7 @@ specific to a certain parser. -->
<!-- Headings -->
<!-- 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 (#) -->
+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>
@@ -31,7 +31,7 @@ text you want to be in that element by a number of hashes (#) -->
##### This is an <h5>
###### This is an <h6>
-<!-- Markdown also provides us with two alternative ways of indicating h1 and h2 -->
+<!-- Markdown also provides us with two alternative ways of indicating h1 and h2. -->
This is an h1
=============
@@ -39,7 +39,7 @@ This is an h2
-------------
<!-- Simple text styles -->
-<!-- Text can be easily styled as italic or bold using markdown -->
+<!-- Text can be easily styled as italic or bold using markdown. -->
*This text is in italics.*
_And so is this text._
@@ -85,7 +85,7 @@ There's a <br /> above me!
> How neat is that?
<!-- Lists -->
-<!-- Unordered lists can be made using asterisks, pluses, or hyphens -->
+<!-- Unordered lists can be made using asterisks, pluses, or hyphens. -->
* Item
* Item
@@ -103,21 +103,21 @@ or
- Item
- One last item
-<!-- Ordered lists are done with a number followed by a period -->
+<!-- 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 -->
+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 -->
+<!-- You can also use sublists. -->
1. Item one
2. Item two
@@ -136,13 +136,13 @@ This checkbox below will be a checked HTML checkbox.
<!-- Code blocks -->
<!-- You can indicate a code block (which uses the <code> element) by indenting
-a line with four spaces or a tab -->
+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 -->
+inside your code. -->
my_array.each do |item|
puts item
@@ -152,7 +152,7 @@ inside your code -->
John didn't even know what the `go_to()` function did!
-<!-- In Github Flavored Markdown, you can use a special syntax for code -->
+<!-- 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
@@ -174,11 +174,11 @@ 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 () -->
+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 -->
+<!-- You can also add a link title using quotes inside the parentheses. -->
[Click me!](http://test.com/ "Link to Test.com")
@@ -186,7 +186,7 @@ the text to display in hard brackets [] followed by the url in parentheses () --
[Go to music](/music/).
-<!-- Markdown also supports reference style links -->
+<!-- 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.
@@ -198,7 +198,7 @@ the text to display in hard brackets [] followed by the url in parentheses () --
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 -->
+<!-- There is also "implicit naming" which lets you use the link text as the id. -->
[This][] is a link.
@@ -211,7 +211,7 @@ can be anything so long as they are unique. -->
![This is the alt-attribute for my image](http://imgur.com/myimage.jpg "An optional title")
-<!-- And reference style works as expected -->
+<!-- And reference style works as expected. -->
![This is the alt-attribute.][myimage]
@@ -233,7 +233,7 @@ 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\*.
<!-- Keyboard keys -->
-<!-- In Github Flavored Markdown, you can use a <kbd> tag to represent keyboard keys -->
+<!-- In Github Flavored Markdown, you can use a <kbd> tag to represent keyboard keys. -->
Your computer crashed? Try sending a
<kbd>Ctrl</kbd>+<kbd>Alt</kbd>+<kbd>Del</kbd>