From 77deda68beb468f2ba67c1eb2899f834de5ab317 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001
From: bt
Date: Sat, 8 Jun 2024 11:56:18 -0400
Subject: Use openrsync for OpenBSD systems, alter README
---
build/markdown-examples/index.html | 81 ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++--
1 file changed, 78 insertions(+), 3 deletions(-)
(limited to 'build/markdown-examples/index.html')
diff --git a/build/markdown-examples/index.html b/build/markdown-examples/index.html
index 44f972e..25683ea 100644
--- a/build/markdown-examples/index.html
+++ b/build/markdown-examples/index.html
@@ -16,12 +16,17 @@
Markdown Examples in barf
+
2023-01-05
+
This following was lifted from https://github.com/karlb/smu
+
smu
Syntax
+
smu was started as a rewrite of
markdown but became something
more lightweight and consistent. It differs from CommonMark in the following ways:
+
- No support for reference style links
- Stricter indentation rules for lists
@@ -29,13 +34,17 @@ more lightweight and consistent. It differs from original smu by
Enno Boland (gottox). The main differences to the
original smu are:
+
- Support for code fences
- Improved CommonMark compatibility. E.g.
+
- Code blocks need four spaces indentation instead of three
- Skip empty lines at end of code blocks
@@ -49,10 +58,14 @@ original smu are:
- Added a simple test suite to check for compliance and avoid regressions
+
Inline patterns
+
There are several patterns you can use to highlight your text:
+
-Emphasis
+
Emphasis
+
- Surround your text with
*
or _
to get emphasised text:
This is cool.
@@ -68,29 +81,39 @@ This is cool, too.
This is a wontfix bug because it would make the source too complex.
Use this instead:
Hello you
-
+
inline Code
+
You can produce inline code by surrounding it with backticks.
+
Use rm -rf /
if you’re a N00b.
Use rm -rf /
if you’re a N00b.
Use rm -rf /
if you’re a N00b.
+
Double and triple backticks can be used if the code itself contains backticks.
+
Titles
+
Creating titles in smu is very easy. There are two different syntax styles. The
first is underlining with at least three characters:
+
Heading
=======
Topic
-----
+
This is very intuitive and self explaining. The resulting sourcecode looks like
this:
+
<h1>Heading</h1>
<h2>Topic</h2>
+
Use the following prefixes if you don’t like underlining:
+
# h1
## h2
### h3
@@ -98,127 +121,179 @@ this:
##### h5
###### h6
+
Links
+
The simplest way to define a link is with simple <>
.
+
<http://s01.de>
+
You can do the same for E-Mail addresses:
+
<yourname@s01.de>
+
If you want to define a label for the url, you have to use a different syntax
+
[smu - simple mark up](http://s01.de/~gottox/index.cgi/proj_smu)
+
The resulting HTML-Code
+
<a href="http://s01.de/~gottox/index.cgi/proj_smu">smu - simple mark up</a></p>
+
Lists
+
Defining lists is very straightforward:
+
* Item 1
* Item 2
* Item 3
+
Result:
+
<ul>
<li>Item 1</li>
<li>Item 2</li>
<li>Item 3</li>
</ul>
+
Defining ordered lists is also very easy:
+
1. Item 1
2. Item 2
3. Item 3
+
Only the first number in a list is meaningful. All following list items are
continously counted. If you want a list starting at 2, you could write:
+
2. Item 1
2. Item 2
2. Item 3
+
and get the following HTML which will render with the numbers 2, 3, 4:
+
<ol start="2">
<li>Item 1</li>
<li>Item 2</li>
<li>Item 3</li>
</ol>
+
Code & Blockquote
+
Use the >
as a line prefix for defining blockquotes. Blockquotes are
interpreted as well. This makes it possible to embed links, headings and even
other quotes into a quote:
+
> Hello
> This is a quote with a [link](http://s01.de/~gottox)
+
Result:
Hello
This is a quote with a link
+
You can define a code block with a leading Tab or with 4 leading spaces
+
this.is(code)
this.is(code, too)
+
Result:
this.is(code)
this.is(code, too)
+
Please note that you can’t use HTML or smu syntax in a code block.
+
Another way to write code blocks is to use code fences:
+
```json
{"some": "code"}
```
+
This has two advantages:
* The optional language identifier will be turned into a language-
class name
* You can keep the original indentation which helps when doing copy & paste
+
Tables
+
Tables can be generated with the following syntax:
+
| Heading1 | Heading2 |
| -------- | -------- |
| Cell 1 | Cell2 |
+
Aligning the columns make the input nicer to read, but is not necessary to get
correct table output. You could just write
+
| Heading1 | Heading2 |
| --- | --- |
| Cell 1 | Cell2 |
+
To align the content of table cells, use |:--|
for left, |--:|
for right
and |:--:|
for centered alignment in the row which separates the header from
the table body.
+
| Heading1 | Heading2 | Heading3 |
| :------- | :------: | -------: |
| Left | Center | Right |
+
+
Here is an example of using Markdown footnotes1. And incase you were looking for more examples, here is another one2.
+
Other interesting stuff
+
to insert a horizontal rule simple add - - -
into an empty line:
+
Hello
+
+
Hello2
+
Result:
Hello
+
Hello2
Any ASCII punctuation character may escaped by precedeing them with a
backslash to avoid them being interpreted:
-!”#$%&’()*+,-./:;<=>?@[]^_`{|}~\
+
+!”#$%&’()*+,-./:;<=>?@[]_`{|}~\
To force a linebreak simple add two spaces to the end of the line:
+
No linebreak
here.
But here is
one.
+
embed HTML
+
You can include arbitrary HTML code in your documents. The HTML will be
passed through to the resulting document without modification. This is a good
way to work around features that are missing in smu. If you don’t want this
behaviour, use the -n
flag when executing smu to stricly escape the HTML
tags.
+