This page provides a more complete list of some of the markup sequences available in PmWiki. Note that it's easy to create and edit pages without using any of the markups below, but if you ever need them, they're here.
To experiment with the rules, please try editing the WikiSandbox.
--> Indentation by using "-->" - ok, if you want the entire paragraph indented, as with a block quote. |
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Indentation by using a blank space at the margin - not so good.
You get the monospaced font, and it won't line-wrap. Instead, it will force the page to be as wide as the line is long. In some skins, the text is placed inside of a box with dashed-line border.
\ (single backslash) at the end of a line to join the current line to the next one.
\\ (two backslashes) at the end of a line to force a line break, but keep the current environment (e.g. stay inside the current list item).
\\\ (three backslashes) to force a line break and skip a line, keeping the current environment. (Every additional backslash skips another line)
Arrows (->) at the beginning of a paragraph can be used to produce an indented paragraph. More hyphens at the beginning (--->) produce larger indents.
->Four score and seven years ago our fathers placed upon this continent a new nation, conceived in liberty and dedicated to the proposition that all men are created equal. |
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Four score and seven years ago our fathers placed upon this continent a new nation, conceived in liberty and dedicated to the proposition that all men are created equal.
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Inverted Arrows (-<)at the beginning of a paragraph can be used to produce a paragraph with a hanging indent. Adding hyphens at the beginning (---<) causes all the text to indent.
-<Four score and seven years ago our fathers placed upon this continent a new nation, conceived in liberty and dedicated to the proposition that all men are created equal. |
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Four score and seven years ago our fathers placed upon this continent a new nation, conceived in liberty and dedicated to the proposition that all men are created equal.
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--<Four score and seven years ago our fathers placed upon this continent a new nation, conceived in liberty and dedicated to the proposition that all men are created equal. |
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Bullet lists are made by placing asterisks at the left margin. More asterisks increases the level of bullet:
* First-level list item ** Second-level list item ** Another second-level item * A first-level item |
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Four or more dashes (----) at the beginning of a line produce a horizontal line.
monospace text
Other styling
'+big+', '-small-', '^super^', '_sub_',
{+insert or underscore+},
{-delete or strikethrough or strikeout-}
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big, small, super, sub,
insert or underscore,
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`WikiWord WikiWord neutralisation
See also Wiki Styles for advanced text formatting options.
http:", "ftp:", "gopher:", "mailto:", or "news:" to create links automatically, as in http://www.pmichaud.com/toast.
.gif, .jpg, or .png are displayed as images in the page
[[#target]].
Headings are made by placing an exclamation mark (!) at the left margin. More exclamation marks increase the level of heading. For example,
! Level 1 Heading !! Level 2 Heading !!! Level 3 Heading !!!! Level 4 Heading |
Level 1 HeadingLevel 2 HeadingLevel 3 HeadingLevel 4 Heading |
Anything placed between [= and =] is not interpreted by PmWiki. This makes it possible to easily do WikiWords that are not links and turn off other special formatting interpretation. The [= and =] can span multiple input lines, allowing effects to be applied to multiple input lines. For example, space[= at the beginning of a line will cause the text up to the next =] to be monospace and uninterpreted by PmWiki (useful for program listings).
Numbered lists are made by placing number-signs (#) at the left margin.
# Prepare the experiment ## Unwrap the pop-tart ## Insert the pop-tart into the toaster # Begin cooking the pop tart # Stand back |
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Definition lists are made by placing colons at the left margin:
:term:definition of term ::second-level item: definition of 2nd-level item |
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Table are defined by enclosing cells with '||'. A cell with leading and trailing spaces is centered; a cell with leading spaces is right-aligned; all other cells are left-aligned. An empty cell will cause the previous cell to span multiple columns. (There is currently no mechanism for spanning multiple rows.) A line beginning with '||' specifies the table attributes for subsequent tables. A '!' as the first character in a cell provides emphasis that can be used to provide headings. This is interesting stuff.
||border=1 width=50% ||!Table||!Heading||!Example|| ||!Left || Center || Right|| ||A ||! a B || C|| || || single || || || || multi span |||| | |||||||||||||||
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See MarkupMasterIndex, SimpleTables, SimpleTables2, AdvancedTables, or Links.
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