Markdown

From Sustainability Methods
Revision as of 15:13, 29 October 2022 by HvW (talk | contribs)
  1. Markdown
    1. What is Markdown?

Markdown is an easy-to-use markup language that is used with plain text to add formatting elements (headings, bulleted lists, URLs) to plain text without the use of a formal text editor or the use of HTML tags.

    1. Why Markdown?

- Can be used for everything (websites, documents, notes, books, presentations, email messaged, and technical documentation). - Portability: Files containing Markdown-formatted text can be opened using virtually any application. - Platform independent: You can create Markdown-formatted text on any device running any operating system. - Future proof: You’ll always be able to read Markdown-formatted text using a text editing application. - It is everywhere: Websites like Reddit and GitHub support Markdown, and lots of desktop and web-based applications support it.

    1. How does Markdown work?

1. Create a Markdown file using a text editor or a dedicated Markdown application. The file should have an .md or .markdown extension. 2. Open the Markdown file in a Markdown application. 3. Use the Markdown application to convert the Markdown file to an HTML document. 4. View the HTML file in a web brower or use the markdown application to convert it to another file format, like PDF.


    1. Pros && Cons

- simplicity, being fast and easy to learn made it very popular - all features of HTML can be used in Markdown and it is more readable rather than HTML - Markdown is not able to map different element types to each other, so it is less useful as a semantic tool - Creation of table of contents, reusing content, mixing parts together and managing larger documents are not possible

    1. Basics - more on [docs.github](https://docs.github.com/en/get-started/writing-on-github/getting-started-with-writing-and-formatting-on-github/basic-writing-and-formatting-syntax)
          1. *Create Heading*:

`# The largest heading` `## The second largest heading` `##### The smallest heading`

  1. Like This Heading


          1. *Styling text*:

`**This is bold text**` `*This text is italicized* or _This text is italicized_` `**This text ist bold and _partly italicized_**` `***The entire text is bold and italicized***`

    • Like this bold text**
          1. *Quoting*:

`> Text is a quote` >Like this quote `Use backticks (``) to code quote ` ``` \``` without backslash (\) This is a code quote block \```` ``` A code block like this ```

          1. *Links*:

`This normal text includes the website [website text](https://docs.github.com)`


          1. *Relative Links*:

`We can link a relative to the current file by [text](path/file.md)`

          1. *Images*:

`We can display an image using ![image text](image_link)`

          1. *List*:

``` [A link Like this to run Markdown ](https://stackedit.io/app#) ![test imge](https://picsum.photos/200/300) ```markdown - George Washington - John Adams - Thomas Jefferson ``` - We can also created - unordered lists 1. or create 2. ordered lists ```

          1. *Nested Lists*:

``` 1. First list item

  - either (-) or (*) needs to be under the first character of the previous item
    * this would be the third nested list item

```

          1. *Mentioning people and Teams*:

`@name Do you understand how it works?`

``` @https://github.com/teslamotors

          1. *Footnotes*:

``` Simple footnote[^1] Footnote with several lines[^2] It is also possible to use words[^note]

[^1]: First reference [^2]: Second reference

  with multiple lines

[^note]: words are still converted to numbers but makes it more readable for you as you edit. ```