Dear Folks,
I am just starting out with Markdown and am trying to get two elements
working:
(1) An inline HTML link; and
(2) An inline mailto: link
as shown in the text below:
We invite you to [browse] (http://academy.swanlotus.com/index.html) this
website. Take a look and see if you find
Are you putting spaces between ] and ( ? You shouldn't.
ajh
On Jan 13, 2012, at 9:52 AM, R (Chandra) Chandrasekhar chyav...@gmail.com
wrote:
Dear Folks,
I am just starting out with Markdown and am trying to get two elements
working:
(1) An inline HTML link; and
(2) An inline
Wow, that was a quick reply!
Yes, indeed, I was putting a space between ] and (. I have corrected
that and now both the links work as they should :-).
May I ask a supplementary question please: How are em-dashes and
en-dashes handled in Markdown?
Thank you.
Chandra
On Friday 13 January
How are em-dashes and en-dashes handled in Markdown?
You can include Unicode characters in Markdown documents, so go ahead and
use the actual characters if you want to. On OS X, ⌥- produces an en dash
and ⇧⌥- an em dash.
Many Markdown implementations offer extensions which allow -- to be used
On Fri, Jan 13, 2012 at 1:15 PM, R (Chandra) Chandrasekhar
chyav...@gmail.com wrote:
Wow, that was a quick reply!
Yes, indeed, I was putting a space between ] and (. I have corrected that
and now both the links work as they should :-).
May I ask a supplementary question please: How are
On Saturday 14 January 2012 12:05 AM, David Chambers wrote:
How are em-dashes and en-dashes handled in Markdown?
You can include Unicode characters in Markdown documents, so go ahead
and use the actual characters if you want to. On OS X, ⌥- produces an en
dash and ⇧⌥- an em dash.
Many
On Saturday 14 January 2012 12:06 AM, Waylan Limberg wrote:
On Fri, Jan 13, 2012 at 1:15 PM, R (Chandra) Chandrasekhar
chyav...@gmail.com wrote:
May I ask a supplementary question please: How are em-dashes and en-dashes
handled in Markdown?
They aren't. You may want to check out
The only problem as I see it is that three dashes produce a long dash
and a hyphen rather than an em-dash, although two dashes seem to work
well. But investigating that will have to wait for the morrow!
I'm afraid you are confusing two different replies. SmartyPants looks for two
hyphens
On Saturday 14 January 2012 01:15 AM, John Laudun wrote:
The only problem as I see it is that three dashes produce a long
dash and a hyphen rather than an em-dash, although two dashes seem
to work well. But investigating that will have to wait for the
morrow!
I'm afraid you are confusing two