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Lightweight markup language

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

A lightweight markup language (LML), also termed a simple or humane markup language, is a markup language with simple, unobtrusive syntax. It is designed to be easy to write using any generic text editor and easy to read in its raw form. Lightweight markup languages are used in applications where it may be necessary to read the raw document as well as the final rendered output.

For instance, a person downloading a software library might prefer to read the documentation in a text editor rather than a web browser. Another application for such languages is to provide for data entry in web-based publishing, such as blogs and wikis, where the input interface is a simple text box. The server software then converts the input into a common document markup language like HTML.

History

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Lightweight markup languages were originally used on text-only displays which could not display characters in italics or bold, so informal methods to convey this information had to be developed. This formatting choice was naturally carried forth to plain-text email communications. Console browsers may also resort to similar display conventions.

In 1986 international standard SGML provided facilities to define and parse lightweight markup languages using grammars and tag implication. The 1998 W3C XML is a profile of SGML that omits these facilities. However, no SGML document type definition (DTD) for any of the languages listed below is known.

Types

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Lightweight markup languages can be categorized by their tag types. Like HTML (<b>bold</b>), some languages use named elements that share a common format for start and end tags (e.g. BBCode [b]bold[/b]), whereas proper lightweight markup languages are restricted to ASCII-only punctuation marks and other non-letter symbols for tags, but some also mix both styles (e.g. Textile bq. ) or allow embedded HTML (e.g. Markdown), possibly extended with custom elements (e.g. MediaWiki <ref>'''source'''</ref>).

Most languages distinguish between markup for lines or blocks and for shorter spans of texts, but some only support inline markup.

Some markup languages are tailored for a specific purpose, such as documenting computer code (e.g. POD, reST, RD) or being converted to a certain output format (usually HTML or LaTeX) and nothing else, others are more general in application. This includes whether they are oriented on textual presentation or on data serialization.[clarification needed]

Presentation oriented languages include AsciiDoc, atx, BBCode, Creole, Crossmark, Djot, Epytext, Haml, JsonML, MakeDoc, Markdown, Org-mode, POD (Perl), reST (Python), RD (Ruby), Setext, SiSU, SPIP, Xupl, Texy!, Textile, txt2tags, UDO and Wikitext.

Data serialization oriented languages include Curl (homoiconic, but also reads JSON; every object serializes), JSON, and YAML.

Comparison of language features

[edit]
Comparing language features
Language HTML export tool HTML import tool Tables Link titles class attribute id attribute Release date
AsciiDoc Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes 2002-11-25[1]
BBCode No No Yes No No No 1998
Creole No No Yes No No No 2007-07-04[2]
Djot Yes Yes[3] Yes Yes Yes Yes 2022-07-30[4]
DokuWiki Yes Yes/No Yes Yes Yes/No Yes/No 2004-07-04[5]
Gemtext Yes ? No Yes No No 2020
GitHub Flavored Markdown Yes No Yes Yes No No 2011-04-28+
Jira Formatting Notation Yes No Yes Yes No No 2002+[6]
Markdown Yes Yes No Yes Yes/No Yes/No 2004-03-19[7][8]
Markdown Extra Yes Yes Yes[9] Yes Yes Yes 2013-04-11[10]
MediaWiki Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes 2002[11]
MultiMarkdown Yes No Yes Yes No No 2009-07-13
Org-mode Yes Yes[12] Yes Yes Yes Yes 2003[13]
PmWiki Yes[14] Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes 2002-01
POD Yes ? No Yes ? ? 1994
reStructuredText Yes Yes[12] Yes Yes Yes auto 2002-04-02[15]
setext Yes Yes No Yes No No 1992[16]
Slack No No No Yes No No 2013+[17][18]
Textile Yes No Yes Yes Yes Yes 2002-12-26[19]
Texy Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes 2004[20]
TiddlyWiki Yes No Yes Yes Yes No 2004-09[21]
txt2tags Yes Yes[22] Yes[23] Yes Yes/No Yes/No 2001-07-26[24]
WhatsApp No No No No No No 2016-03-16[25]

Markdown's own syntax does not support class attributes or id attributes; however, since Markdown supports the inclusion of native HTML code, these features can be implemented using direct HTML. (Some extensions may support these features.)

txt2tags' own syntax does not support class attributes or id attributes; however, since txt2tags supports inclusion of native HTML code in tagged areas, these features can be implemented using direct HTML when saving to an HTML target.[26]

DokuWiki does not support HTML import natively, but HTML to DokuWiki converters and importers exist and are mentioned in the official documentation.[27] DokuWiki does not support class or id attributes, but can be set up to support HTML code, which does support both features. HTML code support was built-in before release 2023-04-04.[28] In later versions, HTML code support can be achieved through plugins, though it is discouraged.[28]

Comparison of implementation features

[edit]
Comparing implementations, especially output formats
Language Implementations XHTML Con/LaTeX PDF DocBook ODF EPUB DOC(X) LMLs Other License
AsciiDoc Python, Ruby, JavaScript, Java XHTML LaTeX PDF DocBook ODF EPUB No Man page, etc. GNU GPL, MIT
BBCode Perl, PHP, C#, Python, Ruby (X)HTML No No No No No No Public Domain
Creole PHP, Python, Ruby, JavaScript[29] Depends on implementation CC_BY-SA 1.0
Djot Lua (originally), JavaScript, Prolog, Rust[3] HTML LaTeX, ConTeXt PDF DocBook ODF EPUB RTF MediaWiki, reST Man page, S5 etc. MIT
GitHub Flavored Markdown Haskell (Pandoc) HTML LaTeX, ConTeXt PDF DocBook ODF EPUB DOC AsciiDoc, reST OPML GPL
Java,[30] JavaScript,[31][32][33] PHP,[34][35] Python,[36] Ruby[37] HTML[31][32][33][35][36] No No No No No No Proprietary
Markdown Perl (originally), C,[38][39] Python,[40] JavaScript, Haskell,[12] Ruby,[41] C#, Java, PHP HTML LaTeX, ConTeXt PDF DocBook ODF EPUB RTF MediaWiki, reST Man page, S5 etc. BSD-style & GPL (both)
Markdown Extra PHP (originally), Python, Ruby XHTML No No No No No No BSD-style & GPL (both)
MediaWiki Perl, PHP, Haskell, Python XHTML No No No No No No GNU GPL
MultiMarkdown C, Perl (X)HTML LaTeX PDF No ODF No DOC, RTF OPML GPL, MIT
Org-mode Emacs Lisp, Ruby (parser only), Perl, OCaml XHTML LaTeX PDF DocBook ODF EPUB[42] DOCX[42] Markdown TXT, XOXO, iCalendar, Texinfo, man, contrib: groff, s5, deck.js, Confluence Wiki Markup,[43] TaskJuggler, RSS, FreeMind GPL
PmWiki PHP XHTML 1.0 Transitional, HTML5 No PDF export addons No No EPUB export addon No GNU GPL
POD Perl (X)HTML, XML LaTeX PDF DocBook No No RTF Man page, plain text Artistic License, Perl's license
reStructuredText Python,[44][45] Haskell (Pandoc), Java, HTML, XML LaTeX PDF DocBook ODF EPUB DOC man, S5, Devhelp, QT Help, CHM, JSON Public Domain
Textile PHP, JavaScript, Java, Perl, Python, Ruby, ASP, C#, Haskell XHTML No No No No No No Textile License
Texy! PHP, C# (X)HTML No No No No No No GNU GPL v2 License
txt2tags Python,[46] PHP[47] (X)HTML, SGML LaTeX PDF DocBook ODF EPUB DOC Creole, AsciiDoc, MediaWiki, MoinMoin, PmWiki, DokuWiki, Google Code Wiki roff, man, MagicPoint, Lout, PageMaker, ASCII Art, TXT GPL

Comparison of lightweight markup language syntax

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Inline span syntax

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Although usually documented as yielding italic and bold text, most lightweight markup processors output semantic HTML elements em and strong instead. Monospaced text may either result in semantic code or presentational tt elements. Few languages make a distinction, e.g. Textile, or allow the user to configure the output easily, e.g. Texy.

LMLs sometimes differ for multi-word markup where some require the markup characters to replace the inter-word spaces (infix). Some languages require a single character as prefix and suffix, other need doubled or even tripled ones or support both with slightly different meaning, e.g. different levels of emphasis.

Comparison of text formatting syntax
HTML output <strong>strongly emphasized</strong> <em>emphasized text</em> <code>code</code> semantic
<b>bold text</b> <i>italic text</i> <tt>monospace text</tt> presentational
AsciiDoc *bold text* _italic text_ `monospace text` Can double operators to apply formatting where there is no word boundary (for example **b**old t**ex**t yields bold text).
'italic text'[a] +monospace text+[a]
BBCode [b]bold text[/b] [i]italic text[/i] [code]monospace text[/code] Formatting works across line breaks.
Creole **bold text** //italic text// {{{monospace text}}} Triple curly braces are for nowiki which is optionally monospace.
Djot *bold text* _italic text_ `monospace text`
DokuWiki **bold text** //italic text// <code>code</code>
''monospace text''
Gemtext ```alt text
monospace text
```
Text immediately following the first three backticks is alt-text.
Jira Formatting Notation *bold text* _italic text_ {{monospace text}}
Markdown[48] **bold text** *italic text* `monospace text` semantic HTML tags
__bold text__ _italic text_
MediaWiki '''bold text''' ''italic text'' <code>monospace text</code> mostly resorts to inline HTML
Org-mode *bold text* /italic text/ =code=
~verbatim~
PmWiki '''bold text''' ''italic text'' @@monospace text@@
POD B<bold text> I<italic text> C<monospace text> Indented text is also shown as monospaced code.
reStructuredText **bold text** *italic text* ``monospace text``
Setext **bold text** ~italic text~ `monospace text`
Slack *bold text* _italic text_ `monospace text` ```block of monospaced text```
Textile[49] *strong* _emphasis_ @monospace text@ semantic HTML tags
**bold text** __italic text__ presentational HTML tags
Texy! **bold text** *italic text* `monospace text` semantic HTML tags by default, optional support for presentational tags
//italic text//
TiddlyWiki ''bold text'' //italic text// `monospace text`
``monospace text``
txt2tags **bold text** //italic text// ``monospace text``
WhatsApp *bold text* _italic text_ ```monospace text```

Gemtext does not have any inline formatting, monospaced text (called preformatted text in the context of Gemtext) must have the opening and closing ``` on their own lines.

Emphasis syntax

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In HTML, text is emphasized with the <em> and <strong> element types, whereas <i> and <b> traditionally mark up text to be italicized or bold-faced, respectively.

Microsoft Word and Outlook, and accordingly other word processors and mail clients that strive for a similar user experience, support the basic convention of using asterisks for boldface and underscores for italic style. While Word removes the characters, Outlook retains them.

Italic type or normal emphasis
Code
AsciiDoc
ATX
Creole,
DokuWiki
Jira
Markdown
MediaWiki
Org-mode
PmWiki
reST
Setext
Slack
Textile
Texy!
TiddlyWiki
txt2tags
WhatsApp
*italic* No No No No Yes No No No Yes No No No Yes No No No
**italic** No No No No No No No No No No No No No No No No
_italic_ Yes Yes No Yes Yes No No No No No Yes Yes No No No Yes
__italic__ Yes No No No No No No No No No No Yes No No No No
'italic' Yes/No[a] No No No No No No No No No No No No No No No
''italic'' Yes/No[a] No No No No Yes No Yes No No No No No No No No
/italic/ No No No No No No Yes No No No No No No No No No
//italic// No No Yes No No No No No No No No No Yes Yes Yes No
~italic~ No No No No No No No No No Yes No No No No No No
Bold face or strong emphasis
Code
AsciiDoc
ATX
Creole,
DokuWiki
Jira
Markdown
MediaWiki
Org-mode
PmWiki
reST
Setext
Slack
Textile
Texy!
TiddlyWiki
txt2tags
WhatsApp
*bold* Yes Yes No Yes No No Yes No No No Yes Yes No No No Yes
**bold** Yes No Yes No Yes No No No Yes Yes No Yes Yes No Yes No
__bold__ No No No No Yes No No No No No No No No No No No
''bold'' No No No No No No No No No No No No No Yes No No
'''bold''' No No No No No Yes No Yes No No No No No No No No

Editorial syntax

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In HTML, removed or deleted and inserted text is marked up with the <del> and <ins> element types, respectively. However, legacy element types <s> or <strike> and <u> are still also available for stricken and underlined spans of text.

Underlined or inserted text
Language
Code
DokuWiki Jira Markdown Org-mode Setext TiddlyWiki txt2tags
_underline_ No No Optional Yes Yes No No
__underline__ Yes No Optional No No Yes Yes
+underline+ No Yes No No No No No

AsciiDoc, ATX, Creole, MediaWiki, PmWiki, reST, Slack, Textile, Texy! and WhatsApp do not support dedicated markup for underlining text. Textile does, however, support insertion via the +inserted+ syntax.

Strike-through or deleted text
Language
Code
Jira Markdown Org-mode Slack Textile TiddlyWiki txt2tags WhatsApp
~stricken~ No No No Yes No No No Yes
~~stricken~~ No GFM No No No Yes No No
+stricken+ No No Yes No No No No No
-stricken- Yes No No No Yes No No No
--stricken-- No No No No No No Yes No

ATX, Creole, MediaWiki, PmWiki, reST, Setext and Texy! do not support dedicated markup for striking through text.

DokuWiki supports HTML-like <del>stricken</del> syntax, even with embedded HTML disabled.

AsciiDoc supports striken text through a built-in text span[b] prefix: [.line-through]#stricken#.

Programming syntax

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Quoted computer code is traditionally presented in typewriter-like fonts where each character occupies the same fixed width. HTML offers the semantic <code> and the deprecated, presentational <tt> element types for this task.

Monospaced font, teletype text or code
Code
AsciiDoc
ATX
Creole
Gemtext
Jira
Markdown
Org-mode
PmWiki
reST
Slack
Textile
Texy!
TiddlyWiki
txt2tags
WhatsApp
@code@ No No No No No No No No No No Yes No No No No
@@code@@ No No No No No No No Yes No No No No No No No
`code` Yes No No No No Yes No No No Yes No Yes Yes No No
``code`` Yes No No No No Yes No No Yes No No No Yes Yes No
```code``` No No No Yes No Yes No No No Yes/No No No Yes No Yes
=code= No No No No No No Yes No No No No No No No No
~code~ No No No No No No Yes No No No No No No No No
+code+ Yes/No[a] No No No No No No No No No No No No No No
++code++ Yes/No[a] No No No No No No No No No No No No No No
{{code}} No No No No Yes No No No No No No No No No No
{{{code}}} No No Yes No No No No No No No No No No No No
|code| No Yes No No No No No No No No No No No No No
;;code;;

Mediawiki and Gemtext do not provide lightweight markup for inline code spans.

Heading syntax

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Headings are usually available in up to six levels, but the top one is often reserved to contain the same as the document title, which may be set externally. Some documentation may associate levels with divisional types, e.g. part, chapter, section, article or paragraph. This article uses 1 as the top level, but index of heading levels may begin at 1 or 0 in official documentation.

Most LMLs follow one of two styles for headings, either Setext-like underlines or atx-like[50] line markers, or they support both.

Underlined headings

[edit]
Level 1 Heading
===============

Level 2 Heading
---------------

Level 3 Heading
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

The first style uses underlines, i.e. repeated characters (e.g. equals =, hyphen - or tilde ~, usually at least two or four times) in the line below the heading text.

Underlined heading levels
Character
Language
= - ~ * # + ^ _ : " ' ` . Min. length
AsciiDoc[a] 1 2 3 No No 5 4 No No No No No No 2[c]
Markdown 1 2 No No No No No No No No No No No 1
reStructuredText Heading structure is determined dynamically from the succession of headings heading width
Setext 1 2 No No No No No No No No No No No ?
Texy! 3 4 No 2 1 No No No No No No No No 3

Headings may optionally be overline in reStructuredText, in addition to being underlined.

Prefixed headings

[edit]
# Level 1 Heading
## Level 2 Heading ##
### Level 3 Heading ###

The second style is based on repeated markers (e.g. hash #, equals = or asterisk *) at the start of the heading itself, where the number of repetitions indicates the (sometimes inverse) heading level. Most languages also support the reduplication of the markers at the end of the line, but whereas some make them mandatory, others do not even expect their numbers to match.

Line prefix (and suffix) headings
Character
Language
= # * ! + Suffix Levels Indentation
AsciiDoc Yes No No No No Optional 1–6 No
Creole Yes No No No No Optional 1–6 No
DokuWiki Yes No No No No Yes 6-1 No
Gemtext No Yes No No No ? 1–3 No
Markdown No Yes No No No Optional 1–6 No
MediaWiki Yes No No No No Yes 1–6 No
Org-mode No No Yes No No No 1– +∞ alternative[51][52][53]
PmWiki No No No Yes No Optional 1–6 No
Texy! Yes Yes No No No Optional 6–1, dynamic No
TiddlyWiki No No No Yes No No 1–6 No
txt2tags Yes No No No Yes Yes 1–6 No

Org-mode supports indentation as a means of indicating the level.

BBCode does not support section headings at all.

POD and Textile choose the HTML convention of numbered heading levels instead.

Other heading formats
Language Format
POD
=head1 Level 1 Heading
=head2 Level 2 Heading
Textile,[49] Jira[6]
h1. Level 1 Heading
h2. Level 2 Heading
h3. Level 3 Heading
h4. Level 4 Heading
h5. Level 5 Heading
h6. Level 6 Heading

Microsoft Word supports auto-formatting paragraphs as headings if they do not contain more than a handful of words, no period at the end and the user hits the enter key twice. For lower levels, the user may press the tabulator key the according number of times before entering the text, i.e. one through eight tabs for heading levels two through nine.

[edit]

Hyperlinks can either be added inline, which may clutter the code because of long URLs, or with named alias or numbered id references to lines containing nothing but the address and related attributes and often may be located anywhere in the document. Most languages allow the author to specify text Text to be displayed instead of the plain address http://example.com and some also provide methods to set a different link title Title which may contain more information about the destination.

LMLs that are tailored for special setups, e.g. wikis or code documentation, may automatically generate named anchors (for headings, functions etc.) inside the document, link to related pages (possibly in a different namespace) or provide a textual search for linked keywords.

Most languages employ (double) square or angular brackets to surround links, but hardly any two languages are completely compatible. Many can automatically recognize and parse absolute URLs inside the text without further markup.

Hyperlink syntax
Languages Basic syntax Text syntax Title syntax
AsciiDoc http://example.com[Text] http://example.com
BBCode, Creole, MediaWiki, PmWiki
Slack <http://example.com|Text>
TiddlyWiki [[Text|http://example.com]]
Textile "Text":http://example.com "Text (Title)":http://example.com
Texy! "Text .(Title)":http://example.com
Jira [http://example.com] [Text|http://example.com]
MediaWiki [http://example.com Text]
txt2tags [Text http://example.com]
Creole, MediaWiki, PmWiki, DokuWiki [[Name]] [[Name|Text]]
Org-mode [[Name][Text]]
TiddlyWiki [[Text|Name]]
Creole [[Namespace:Name]] [[Namespace:Name|Text]]
Org-mode [[Namespace:Name][Text]]
Creole, PmWiki [[http://example.com]] [[http://example.com|Text]]
BBCode [url]http://example.com[/url] [url=http://example.com]Text[/url]
Markdown <http://example.com> [Text](http://example.com) [Text](http://example.com "Title")
reStructuredText `Text <http://example.com/>`_
Gemtext => gemini://example.com => gemini://example.com Text
POD L<http://example.com/> L</Name>
setext ^.. _Link_name URL

Gemtext and setext links must be on a line by themselves, they cannot be used inline.

Reference syntax
Languages Text syntax Title syntax
AsciiDoc
… [[id]] …
<<id>>
… [[id]] …
<<id,Text>>
… anchor:id …
xref:id
… anchor:id …
xref:id[Text]
Markdown
… [Text][id] …
[id]: http://example.com
… [Text][id] …
[id]: http://example.com "Title"
… [Text][] …
[Text]: http://example.com
… [Text][] …
[Text]: http://example.com "Title"
… [Text] …
[Text]: http://example.com
… [Text] …
[Text]: http://example.com "Title"
reStructuredText
… Name_ …
.. _Name: http://example.com
setext
… Link_name_ …
^.. _Link_name URL
Textile
… "Text":alias …
[alias]http://example.com
… "Text":alias …
[alias (Title)]http://example.com
Texy!
… "Text":alias …
[alias]: http://example.com
… "Text":alias …
[alias]: http://example.com .(Title)

Org-mode's normal link syntax does a text search of the file. You can also put in dedicated targets with <<id>>.

List syntax

[edit]

HTML requires an explicit element for the list, specifying its type, and one for each list item, but most lightweight markup languages need only different line prefixes for the bullet points or enumerated items. Some languages rely on indentation for nested lists, others use repeated parent list markers.

Unordered, bullet list items
Character
Language
* - + # . · _ : indent skip nest
AsciiDoc Yes Yes No No No No No No No No No 0[d] ? repeat or alternate the marker
DokuWiki Yes No No No No No No No No No No 2+ 0+ indent
Gemtext Yes No No No No No No No No No No 0 1+
Jira Yes Yes No No No No No No No No No 0 1+ repeat
Markdown Yes Yes Yes No No No No No No No No 0–3 1–3 indent
MediaWiki, TiddlyWiki Yes No No No No No No No No No No 0 1+ repeat
Org-mode Yes[54] Yes Yes No No No No No No No No 0+ indent
Textile Yes No No No No No No No No No No 0 1+ repeat

Microsoft Word automatically converts paragraphs that start with an asterisk *, hyphen-minus - or greater-than bracket > followed by a space or horizontal tabulator as bullet list items. It will also start an enumerated list for the digit 1 and the case-insensitive letters a (for alphabetic lists) or i (for roman numerals), if they are followed by a period ., a closing round parenthesis ), a greater-than sign > or a hyphen-minus - and a space or tab; in case of the round parenthesis an optional opening one ( before the list marker is also supported.

Languages differ on whether they support optional or mandatory digits in numbered list items, which kinds of enumerators they understand (e.g. decimal digit 1, roman numerals i or I, alphabetic letters a or A) and whether they support to keep explicit values in the output format. Some Markdown dialects, for instance, will respect a start value other than 1, but ignore any other explicit value.

Ordered, enumerated list items
Character
Language
+ # - . #1 1. 1) 1] 1} (1) [1] {1} a. A. i. I. indent skip nest
AsciiDoc No No No Yes No Yes No No No No No No Yes[e] 0[d] ? repeat or alternate the marker
DokuWiki No No Yes No No No No No No No No No No No No No 2+ 0+ indent
Jira, MediaWiki, Textile, TiddlyWiki No Yes No No No No No No No No No No No No No No 0 1+ repeat
Markdown No No No No No Yes Yes No No No No No No No No No 0–3 1–3 indent
Org-mode No No No No No Yes Yes No No No No No Optional No No 0+ indent

Slack assists the user in entering enumerated and bullet lists, but does not actually format them as such, i.e. it just includes a leading digit followed by a period and a space or a bullet character in front of a line.

Labeled, glossary, definition list syntax
Languages Term being defined Definition of the term
MediaWiki ; Term : Definition
Textile
TiddlyWiki
Org-mode - Term :: Definition

Historical formats

[edit]

The following lightweight markup languages, while similar to some of those already mentioned, have not yet been added to the comparison tables in this article:

See also

[edit]

Notes

[edit]
  1. ^ a b c d e f g Deprecated in Asciidoctor 2.0, which acts as the reference implementation for the language, but remains available through a compatibility mode.
  2. ^ Text spans in AsciiDoc are termed quoted text attributes in legacy implementations.
  3. ^ Width of title ± 2 characters
  4. ^ a b Indenting by a single whitepace in AsciiDoc will preformat the text of that line.
  5. ^ The modern language specification only supports a full stop as a delimiter for any ordered list. In the legacy AsciiDoc.py syntax, only a right parenthesis was acceptable for either lower alpha or Roman numerals.

References

[edit]
  1. ^ "AsciiDoc ChangeLog". Retrieved 2017-02-24.
  2. ^ "WikiCreole Versions". Retrieved 2017-02-24.
  3. ^ a b "djot". Retrieved 2023-08-26.
  4. ^ "djot 0.1.0". GitHub. Retrieved 2023-08-26.
  5. ^ "DokuWiki old_changes". Retrieved 2024-11-26.
  6. ^ a b Jira. "Text Formatting Notation Help". Atlassian. Retrieved 2020-12-22.
  7. ^ "Markdown". Aaron Swartz: The Weblog. 2004-03-19.
  8. ^ "Daring Fireball: Markdown". Archived from the original on 2004-04-02. Retrieved 2014-04-25.
  9. ^ "PHP Markdown Extra". Michel Fortin. Retrieved 2013-10-08.
  10. ^ "PHP Markdown: History". Michel Fortin. Retrieved 2020-12-23.
  11. ^ "MediaWiki history". Retrieved 2017-02-24.
  12. ^ a b c Pandoc, which is written in Haskell, parses Markdown (in two forms) and ReStructuredText, as well as HTML and LaTeX; it writes from any of these formats to HTML, RTF, LaTeX, ConTeXt, OpenDocument, EPUB and several other formats, including (via LaTeX) PDF.
  13. ^ "Org mode for Emacs – Your Life in Plain Text". orgmode.org. OrgMode team. Retrieved 2016-12-09.
  14. ^ "PmWiki Cookbook - Export addons". Retrieved 7 January 2018.
  15. ^ "An Introduction to reStructuredText". Retrieved 2017-02-24.
  16. ^ "TidBITS in new format". TidBITS. 1992-01-06. Retrieved 2022-07-01.
  17. ^ "Slack Help Center > Using Slack > Send messages > Format your messages". Retrieved 2018-08-07.
  18. ^ "Slack API documentation: Basic message formatting". Retrieved 2018-08-07.
  19. ^ "Textism › Tools › Textile". textism.com. Archived from the original on 26 December 2002.
  20. ^ "What is Texy". Retrieved 2017-02-24.
  21. ^ "History of TiddlyWiki". tiddlywiki.com.
  22. ^ "Html2wiki txt2tags module". cpan.org. Retrieved 2014-01-30.
  23. ^ "Txt2tags User Guide". Txt2tags.org. Retrieved 2017-02-24.
  24. ^ "txt2tags changelog". Retrieved 2017-02-24.
  25. ^ "WhatsApp FAQ: Formatting your messages". Retrieved 2017-11-21.
  26. ^ "Txt2tags User Guide". Txt2tags.org. Retrieved 2017-02-24.
  27. ^ "DokuWiki Tips htmltowiki". Retrieved 2024-11-26.
  28. ^ a b "DokuWiki FAQ html". Retrieved 2024-11-26.
  29. ^ "Converters". WikiCreole. Retrieved 2013-10-08.
  30. ^ pegdown: A Java library for Markdown processing
  31. ^ a b gfms: Github Flavored Markdown Server
  32. ^ a b marked: A full-featured markdown parser and compiler, written in JavaScript. Built for speed.
  33. ^ a b node-gfm: GitHub flavored markdown to HTML converter
  34. ^ Parsedown: Markdown parser written in PHP
  35. ^ a b Ciconia: Markdown parser written in PHP
  36. ^ a b Grip: GitHub Readme Instant Preview
  37. ^ github-markdown: Self-contained Markdown parser for GitHub
  38. ^ peg-markdown is an implementation of markdown in C.
  39. ^ Discount is also an implementation of markdown in C.
  40. ^ "Python-Markdown". Github.com. Retrieved 2013-10-08.
  41. ^ Bruce Williams. "kramdown: Project Info". RubyForge. Archived from the original on 2013-08-07. Retrieved 2013-10-08.
  42. ^ a b "Via ox-pandoc and pandoc itself". GitHub.
  43. ^ Atlassian. "Confluence 4.0 Editor - What's Changed for Wiki Markup Users (Confluence Wiki Markup is dead)". Retrieved 2018-03-28.
  44. ^ Docutils is an implementation of ReStructuredText in Python
  45. ^ Sphinx is an implementation of ReStructuredText in Python and Docutils with a number of output format Builders
  46. ^ Aurelio Jargas www.aurelio.net (2012-01-11). "txt2tags". txt2tags. Retrieved 2013-10-08.
  47. ^ "txt2tags.class.php - online convertor [sic]". Txt2tags.org. Retrieved 2013-10-08.
  48. ^ "Markdown Syntax". Daringfireball.net. Retrieved 2013-10-08.
  49. ^ a b Textile Syntax Archived 2010-08-12 at the Wayback Machine
  50. ^ "atx, the true structured text format" by Aaron Swartz (2002)
  51. ^ "The Org Manual: section "A Cleaner Outline View"". Retrieved 14 June 2020.
  52. ^ "using org-adapt-indentation".
  53. ^ "using org-indent-mode or org-indent".
  54. ^ Footnote in official manual "When using ‘*’ as a bullet, lines must be indented so that they are not interpreted as headlines. Also, when you are hiding leading stars to get a clean outline view, plain list items starting with a star may be hard to distinguish from true headlines. In short: even though ‘*’ is supported, it may be better to not use it for plain list items."
  55. ^ "EtText: Documentation: Using EtText". ettext.taint.org. Retrieved 2022-06-30. originally from the WebMake[1] project.
  56. ^ "Un naufragio personal: The Grutatxt markup". triptico.com. Retrieved 2022-06-30. Public domain format (since version 2.20); originally used in the Gruta CMS system.
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