You can pick as item to see how to apply in markdown.
This note demonstrates some of what Markdown is capable of doing.
And that’s how to do it.
This note **demonstrates** some of what [Markdown][some/link] is *capable of doing*.
There are six levels of headings. They correspond with the six levels of HTML headings. You’ve probably noticed them already in the page. Each level down uses one more hash character. But we are using just 4 of them.
# Heading
## Heading
### Heading
#### Heading
1. Item 1
2. A second item
3. Number 3
* An item
* Another item
* Yet another item
* And there's more...
Here is a quote. What this is should be self explanatory. Quotes are automatically indented when they are used.
> Here is a quote. What this is should be self explanatory.
URLs can be made in a handful of ways:
* A named link to [MarkItDown][3].
* Another named link to [MarkItDown](http://markitdown.net/)
* Sometimes you just want a URL like <http://markitdown.net/>.
A horizontal rule is a line that goes across the middle of the page. It’s sometimes handy for breaking things up.
---
Markdown can also contain images. I’ll need to add something here sometime.
![Markdowm Image][/image/url]
Figure Caption?
![Markdowm Image][/image/url]
<figcaption class="caption">Photo by John Doe</figcaption>
Bigger Images?
![Markdowm Image][/image/url]{: class="bigger-image" }
A HTML Example:
<!DOCTYPE html>
<html lang="en">
<head>
<meta charset="UTF-8">
<title>Document</title>
</head>
<body>
<h1>Just a test</h1>
</body>
</html>
A CSS Example:
pre {
padding: 10px;
font-size: .8em;
white-space: pre;
}
pre, table {
width: 100%;
}
code, pre, tt {
font-family: Monaco, Consolas, Inconsolata, monospace, sans-serif;
background: rgba(0,0,0,.05);
}
A JS Example:
// Sticky Header
$(window).scroll(function() {
if ($(window).scrollTop() > 900 && !$("body").hasClass('show-menu')) {
$('#hamburguer__open').fadeOut('fast');
} else if (!$("body").hasClass('show-menu')) {
$('#hamburguer__open').fadeIn('fast');
}
});