Guide: Write cool posts and comments with Markdown for newbies
Hey everyone, I figured that some new users might not know that comments and posts have a formatting standard called Markdown.
In simple terms, Markdown is a (semi)universal language that uses formatting symbols to give a certain style to a portion of text.
This quick guide can help you to write in a way that's more appealing and easy to read.
FORMATTING
SYNTAX
EXAMPLE
New line
put two spaces at the end of the line you want to break
Line__
New paragraph
return two times at the end of the paragraph
Line↵↵
Horizontal rule
between each paragraph put three "-" or "*"
***
Bold
put your text between two "**" or "__"
**Bold** or __Bold__
Italic
put your text between two "*" or "_"
*Italic* or _Italic_
Subscript
put your text between two "~"
~Subscript~
Superscript
put your text between two "^"
^Superscript^
Inline code
put your text between two "`"
`sudo rm -rf /`
Headings and Titles
put one or more "#" at the beginning of the line
# Headings for level 1, ## Headings for level 2...
You can also do unordered lists using "-" at the beginning of each line:
- Salt
- Potatoes
- Beans
will become
Salt
Potatoes
Beans
Or ordered list by putting "1." at the beginning of each line:
1. Salt
2. Potatoes
3. Beans
will become
Salt
Potatoes
Beans
You can save other users from spoilers by encasing a paragraph between a section that starts with ":::" followed by a space and the word "spoiler" + the title of the spoiler and ends with ":::". The spoiler will be hidden inside a menu and you'll be able to see it if you click on it
::: spoiler warning! spoiler!
the butler did it
:::
will become
warning! spoiler!
the butler did it
In the end you can also format big code blocks by putting "```" at the beginning and at the end of each paragraph
```
println("Hello World!")
```
will become
println("Hello World!")
Last but not least remember that you can always use break formatting syntax by putting "\" in front of a character:
so if I want "^" in my text without having the rest of the paragraph in superscript, I'm simply going to write "\^"
Just want to plug markdown as a phenomenal resource. You can use it to write documentation both online and offline, and with pandoc you can even use it to create beautiful PDF documents from your computer. Here's some places I use markdown daily, some additional resources, and tips
GitHub parses markdown files from their web UI by default
Obsidian uses markdown for their note taking application
Pandoc can convert Markdown files to other formats including PDF
Because it's plaintext, there are fewer formatting errors when moving between applications and you don't even need an application to read them
Plaintext also means documents can be easily tracked via source control
Markdown is notoriously understandized, so there are lots of unofficial extensions. This is a major downside of markdown, as you cannot trust a renderer to properly show the formatting beyond the basics.
It's still really nice, because of two great features:
it's super easy to learn. Just look at a few examples and off you go.
even when it's not rendered, it's still easy to read (which I think contributes to making it easy to learn).
The Markdown will be passed in the ActivityPub messages in plaintext, so it's up to the app developer how to interpret the Markdown. Looks like someone already created a ticket on GitHub so I'd recommend either adding a thumbs up to increase visibility or make the change yourself if you're able!
I'm so confused about the new line syntax. Why can't I just do a single new line and keep typing? Why does the previous line have to end with a double space?
It's weird, what is the benefit there?
If I would guess, then it has to do with making long lines fit in a window without requiring horizontal scrolling.
Markdown is used a lot in the context of software development. Software code is usually accompanied by a readme, detailing what it does, how to setup your environment for development, how to contribute, etc.
The defacto standard is to write this in markdown. Since it's written in a software development program (an IDE), you don't have text wrapping, meaning lines continue when they don't fit in the window. This is because otherwise the code becomes unreadable. Most code can also be kept to fairly short lines, normally not requiring any horizontal scrolling. However, a long sentence in a readme will easily become much longer than a line of code. So being able to break a line anywhere without having an actual line break in your rendered output is super useful for that.
This is btw how html also behaves. Markdown gets rendered to html.
Using Connect? The various third-party apps seem to have different troubles with Markdown, I get that same result viewing this post on Connect, but it seems to work fine on Jerboa.
If you're seeing this witha a smartphone client, some of them might display markdown in a weird way.
On browser everything works fine, on Jerboa most of it works fine
I use VS Code with a few markdown extensions to write my longer, more complex posts. It gives a preview in real time. The extension "markdown all in one is" awesome.