Links
Link Type | Description | Syntax | Output |
---|---|---|---|
Inline Link | Used to link users to another page, displayed as blue hyperlinked words. | [Link Text](https://www.w3wiki.org/) |
Link Text |
Reference Link | Used to link one information object to another, by providing some references to that new page. | [Link Text] [reference text][reference text]: https://www.w3wiki.org/ |
Link Text |
Relative Link | Shows the relationship between the current page’s URL and the linked page’s URL. | [A relative Link] (rl.md) |
A relative Link |
Auto Link | Automatically converts URLs into clickable links. | Visit https://www.w3wiki.org/ |
Visit https://www.w3wiki.org/ |
Markdown Cheat Sheet
Markdown is a simple way to write and format text using plain text symbols. It’s a lightweight language that lets you create nicely formatted text without the use of complex coding. The idea is to make it easy for people to read and understand the formatting, even if they’re looking at the raw text.
This cheat sheet will go over some of the key components of markdown, including code syntaxes and examples that the reader can use to create their own highly formatted text articles.
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