If you need to convert files from one markup format into another, pandoc is your swiss-army knife. Pandoc can convert between the following formats: (â = conversion from; â = conversion to; âï¸ = conversion from and to) Lightweight markup formats âï¸ Markdown (including CommonMark and GitHub-flavored Markdown) âï¸ reStructuredText â AsciiDoc âï¸ Emacs Org-Mode âï¸ Emacs Muse âï¸ Textile â Markua â txt2t
ï¼¼ééäºå®ã®ãµã¤ãã売ããããï¼ï¼ ã¢ã¯ã»ã¹ããªããµã¤ããã³ã³ãã³ã価å¤ã§å£²ããå ´åã⦠ãã¡ã¤ã³ã®æå¹æéãæ´æ°ãã¦ãµã¤ã売å´ã«ãã©ã¤ãã¦ã¿ã¾ããã
Textile is a simple text markup. Simple symbols mark wordsâ emphasis. Blocks of text can be easily tagged as headers, quotes, or lists. A Textile document can then be converted to HTML for viewing on the web. You can try Textile out on the Textile home page. Textile is also available as RedCloth for Ruby or PyTextile for Python.
A Humane Web Text Generator what does it do? Quick block modifiers: Header: hn. Blockquote: bq. Footnote: fnn. Numeric list: # Bulleted list: * Quick phrase modifiers: _emphasis_ *strong* ??citation?? -deleted text- +inserted text+ ^superscript^ ~subscript~ %span% To apply attributes: (class) (#id) {style} [language] To align blocks: < right > left = center <> justify To insert a table: |a|table|r
ã©ã³ãã³ã°
ã©ã³ãã³ã°
ã¡ã³ããã³ã¹
ãªãªã¼ã¹ãé害æ å ±ãªã©ã®ãµã¼ãã¹ã®ãç¥ãã
ææ°ã®äººæ°ã¨ã³ããªã¼ã®é ä¿¡
å¦çãå®è¡ä¸ã§ã
j次ã®ããã¯ãã¼ã¯
kåã®ããã¯ãã¼ã¯
lãã¨ã§èªã
eã³ã¡ã³ãä¸è¦§ãéã
oãã¼ã¸ãéã
{{#tags}}- {{label}}
{{/tags}}