LionWiki-t2t
TXT2TAGS SAMPLE
Aurelio Jargas
%11/%21/%2024
This text is before the introduction.
But it's OK.
Introduction
Welcome to the txt2tags sample file.
Here you have examples and a brief explanation of all marks.
The first 3 lines of this file are used as headers, on the following format:
line1: document title line2: author name, email line3: date, version
Lines with balanced equal signs = around are titles.
Fonts and Beautifiers
We have two sets of fonts:
The NORMAL type that can be improved with beautifiers.
The TYPEWRITER type that uses monospaced font for pre-formatted text.
We will now enter on a subtitle...
Beautifiers
The text marks for beautifiers are simple, just as you type on a plain text email message.
We use double *, /, - and _ to represent bold,
italic, strike and underline.
The bold italic style is also supported as a combination.
Pre-Formatted Text
We can put a code sample or other pre-formatted text:
here is pre-formatted //marks// are **not** ``interpreted``
And also, it's easy to put a one line pre-formatted text:
prompt$ ls /etc
Or use pre-formatted
inside sentences.
More Cosmetics
Special entities like email (duh@somewhere.com) and URL (http://www.duh.com) are detected automagically, as long as the horizontal line:
^ thin or large v
You can also specify an explicit link or an explicit email with label.
And remember,
A TAB in front of the line does a quotation.More TABs, more depth (if allowed).
Nice.
Lists
A list of items is natural, just putting a dash or a plus at the beginning of the line.
Plain List
The dash is the default list identifier. For sublists, just add spaces at the beginning of the line. More spaces, more sublists.
- Earth
- America
- South America
- Brazil
- How deep can I go?
- Brazil
- South America
- Europe
- Lots of countries
- America
- Mars
- Who knows?
The list ends with two consecutive blank lines.
Numbered List
The same rules as the plain list, just a different identifier (plus).
- one
- two
- three
- mixed lists!
- what a mess
- counting again
- ...
- four
Definition List
The definition list identifier is a colon, followed by the term. The term contents is placed on the next line.
- orange
- a yellow fruit
- apple
- a green or red fruit
- other fruits
-
- wee!
- mixing lists
- again!
- and again!
Tables
Use pipes to compose table rows and cells. Double pipe at the line beginning starts a heading row. Natural spaces specify each cell alignment.
cell 1.1 | cell 1.2 | cell 1.3 |
cell 2.1 | cell 2.2 | cell 2.3 |
cell 3.1 | cell 3.2 | cell 3.3 |
heading 1 | heading 2 | heading 3 |
---|---|---|
cell 1.1 | cell 1.2 | cell 1.3 |
cell 2.1 | cell 2.2 | cell 2.3 |
heading 1 | cell 1.1 | cell 1.2 |
heading 2 | cell 2.1 | cell 2.2 |
heading 3 | cell 3.1 | cell 3.2 |
heading | heading 1 | heading 2 |
---|---|---|
heading 1 | cell 1.1 | cell 1.2 |
heading 2 | cell 2.1 | cell 2.2 |
Without the last pipe, no border:
cell 1.1 | cell 1.2 | cell 1.3 |
cell 2.1 | cell 2.2 | cell 2.3 |
cell 3.1 | cell 3.2 | cell 3.3 |
heading 1 | heading 2 | heading 3 |
---|---|---|
cell 1.1 | cell 1.2 | cell 1.3 |
cell 2.1 | cell 2.2 | cell 2.3 |
heading 1 | cell 1.1 | cell 1.2 |
heading 2 | cell 2.1 | cell 2.2 |
heading 3 | cell 3.1 | cell 3.2 |
heading | heading 1 | heading 2 |
---|---|---|
heading 1 | cell 1.1 | cell 1.2 |
heading 2 | cell 2.1 | cell 2.2 |
Special Entities
Because things were too simple.
Images
The image mark is as simple as it can be: filename
.
And with some targets the image is linkable :
- The filename must end in PNG, JPG, GIF, or similar.
- No spaces inside the brackets!
Other
When the target needs, special chars like <, > and & are escaped.
The handy %%date
macro expands to the current date.
So today is 2024-11-21 on the ISO YYYYMMDD
format.
You can also specify the date format with the %? flags,
as %%date(%m-%d-%Y)
which gives: %11-%21-%2024.
That's all for now.
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