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ฤ‡ƒญฤ‡ƒƒฤ‡‚ลปฤ‡ฎไธญฤ‡ลผไฝลผ็"จฤ‡ลผฤ‡ฤ‡ฤ‡พฤ‡›ฤ‡‚“ฤ‡€‚ ฤ‡ฤ…Ž็"จ็š"ฤ‡ชฤ‡‚ล„ฤ‡ƒล‚ฤ‡ƒฉฤ‡‚ล„ฤ‡ƒล‚ลลš็ด - ไพ‹ <span>ฤ‡€<cite>ฤ‡€<del> - ฤ‡ลปฤ‡€ Markdownฤ‡ฎตลฝฤ‡€ฤ‡ƒชฤ‡‚ฤ…ฤ‡ƒˆฤ‡€ฤ‡ƒลšฤ‡ƒƒฤ‡ƒ€ฤ‡ฎฤ‡ฉฤ‡“ฤ‡ลผฤ‡‚‚ไฝลผ็"จฤ‡™ฤ‡‚‹ฤ‡“ฤ‡จฤ‡ลšฤ‡ลผฤ‡ฤ‡ฤ‡พฤ‡™ฤ‡€‚ฤ‡‚ฤ‡ชฤ‡ลบฤ‡ลšๅธลšฤ‡ล››ฤ‡™ฤ‡‚‹ๅ ดๅˆฤ‡€Markdownฤ‡ƒ•ฤ‡‚ฉฤ‡ƒลบฤ‡ƒล›ฤ‡ƒƒฤ‡ƒˆฤ‡ฎ ไลฤ‡‚ลนฤ‡‚Šฤ‡ซHTMLฤ‡‚ลผฤ‡‚ฐฤ‡‚ล‚ไฝลผ็"จฤ‡™ฤ‡‚‹ฤ‡“ฤ‡จฤ‡‚‚ฤ‡ลผฤ‡ฤ‡ฤ‡พฤ‡™ฤ‡€‚ไพ‹ฤ‡ˆฤ‡ฐฤ‡€HTMLฤ‡ฎ<a>ฤ‡พฤ‡ลบฤ‡ลป<img>ฤ‡‚ลผฤ‡‚ฐฤ‡‚ล‚Markdown ฤ‡ฎฤ‡ƒชฤ‡ƒล‚ฤ‡‚ลปฤ‡‚"ฤ‡‚ล„ฤ‡ƒฤ„ฤ‡ƒลบฤ‡‚ธฤ‡ฎฤ‡‚ทฤ‡ƒล‚ฤ‡‚ลผฤ‡ƒƒฤ‡‚ลปฤ‡‚ฤ…ฤ‡ฎไลฤ‡‚ลนฤ‡‚Šฤ‡ซไฝลผ็"จฤ‡ลผฤ‡ฤ‡ฤ‡พฤ‡™ฤ‡€‚ HTMLฤ‡ฎฤ‡ƒ
ฤ‡ƒญฤ‡ƒƒฤ‡‚ลปลลš็ด ฤ‡จ็•ฐฤ‡ชฤ‡‚Šฤ‡€Markdownฤ‡‚ทฤ‡ƒล‚ฤ‡‚ลผฤ‡ƒƒฤ‡‚ลปฤ‡‚ฤ…ฤ‡ลปฤ‡ฤ…Ž็"จ็š"ฤ‡ชฤ‡‚ล„ฤ‡ƒล‚ฤ‡ƒฉฤ‡‚ล„ฤ‡ƒล‚ลลš็ด ฤ‡ฎไธญฤ‡ลผฤ‡‚‚ๅ‡ลš็ฤ…ฤ‡•ฤ‡‚ลšฤ‡พฤ‡™ฤ‡€‚ ฤ‡‚ฤ…ฤ‡ƒšฤ‡‚ทฤ‡ƒลฤ‡ƒซฤ‡‚ญฤ‡ƒลฤ‡ƒฉฤ‡‚ลปฤ‡‚ลผฤ‡ฎล‡ชๅ‹•ฤ‡‚จฤ‡‚ฤ…ฤ‡‚ฤ…ฤ‡ƒลบฤ‡ƒ HTMLฤ‡ซฤ‡ลป็‰ฤ…ๅˆฤ„ฤ‡ซฤ‡‰ฤ…ฤ‡ฤ…ๅลผลลšฤ‡ฎฤ‡‚ฤ‡‚‹2ฤ‡ล„ฤ‡ฎฤ‡
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‡ๅญฤ‡‚ล‚ไฝลผ็"จฤ‡™ฤ‡‚‹ๅ ดๅˆฤ‡ลปฤ‡€ฤ‡‚จฤ‡ƒล‚ฤ‡ƒฤ…ฤ‡‚ลฤ‡ƒฤ…ฤ‡‚ลฤ‡ƒลบฤ‡จฤ‡ฤ‡ลšฤ‡‚จฤ‡‚ฤ…ฤ‡‚ฤ…ฤ‡ƒลบฤ‡ƒฤ‡™ฤ‡‚‹ๅลผลลšฤ‡ลšฤ‡‚ฤ‡‚Šฤ‡พฤ‡™ฤ‡€‚ไพ‹ฤ‡€&lt; ฤ‡จ &amp;ฤ‡ลผฤ‡™ฤ‡€‚ ็‰ฤ…ฤ‡ซฤ‡‚รณฤ‡ƒล‚ฤ‡ƒฤ™ฤ‡‚ตฤ‡ƒล‚ฤ‡ƒ‰ฤ‡ลปฤ‡€ฤ‡ƒ›ฤ‡ƒลบฤ‡ƒ ฤ‡ƒšฤ‡ƒลบฤ‡‚ธลลฝไฝล›ล€ฤ‡ล‚ลฤ‡‹ฤ‡›ฤ‡ฎๅญลšๅล›จฤ‡ลผฤ‡™ฤ‡€‚‘AT&T’ฤ‡จฤ‡›ธฤ‡ฤ‡ฤ‡ลบฤ‡"ๅ ดๅˆฤ‡€‘AT&amp;T’ฤ‡จฤ‡›ธฤ‡ลนๅลผลลšฤ‡ลšฤ‡‚ฤ‡‚Šฤ‡พฤ‡™ฤ‡€‚ ฤ‡•ฤ‡‚‰ฤ‡ซฤ‡€URLฤ‡ฎไธญฤ‡ลผฤ‡‚‚ฤ‡‚รณฤ‡ƒล‚ฤ‡ƒฤ™ฤ‡‚ตฤ‡ƒล‚ฤ‡ƒ‰ฤ‡‚ล‚ฤ‡‚จฤ‡‚ฤ…ฤ‡‚ฤ…ฤ‡ƒลบฤ‡ƒฤ‡™ฤ‡‚‹ๅลผลลšฤ‡ลšฤ‡‚ฤ‡‚Šฤ‡พฤ‡™ฤ‡€‚ๅพ“ฤ‡ลฤ‡ลšฤ‡€ฤ‡ลนฤ„ฤ‡ฎฤ‡‚ˆฤ‡ฤ…ฤ‡ซฤ‡ƒชฤ‡ƒล‚ฤ‡‚ลปฤ‡ฤ‡ลบฤ‡"ๅ ดๅˆ: http://images.google.com/images?num=30&q=larry+bird ฤ‡‚รณฤ‡ƒล‚ฤ‡‚ซฤ‡ƒลบฤ‡‚ลผฤ‡‚ฐhrefฤ‡ฎๅฤ…ล›ฤ‡€ลผฤ‡ซฤ‡Šฤ‡"ฤ‡ลšฤ‡€URLฤ‡‚ล‚ฤ‡ลนฤ„ฤ‡ฎฤ‡‚ˆฤ‡ฤ…ฤ‡ซฤ‡‚จฤ‡ƒล‚ฤ‡‚ล‚ฤ‡ƒลบฤ‡ƒ‰ฤ‡™ฤ‡‚‹ๅลผลลšฤ‡ลšฤ‡‚ฤ‡‚Šฤ‡พฤ‡™: http://images.google.com/images?num=30&amp;q=larry+bird ลจ€ฤ‡ฤ…ฤ‡พฤ‡ลผฤ‡‚‚ฤ‡ชฤ‡ลนฤ‡€ฤ‡“ฤ‡ฎฤ‡“ฤ‡จฤ‡ลปๅลผลšฤ‡‚ลšฤ‡‚"ฤ‡™ฤ‡ลนฤ‡€ฤ‡ฤ‡‚‰ฤ‡ลน้ฉๅˆ‡ฤ‡ซฤ‡ƒล›ฤ‡ƒลบฤ‡‚ลปฤ‡‚รณฤ‡ƒƒฤ‡ƒฤ‡•ฤ‡‚ลšฤ‡ลบฤ‡‚ลšฤ‡‚ลผฤ‡ƒ
ฤ‡‚ตฤ‡‚ล„ฤ‡ƒˆฤ‡ลผHTMLๅลšฤ„ๅฝ“ฤ‡€ลผฤ‡‚จฤ‡ƒฉฤ‡ƒลบฤ‡ลš็™บ็"ลบฤ‡™ฤ‡‚‹ฤ‡ล›€ฤ‡‚‚ไธ€ลˆลน็š"ฤ‡ชๅŽลบๅ› ฤ‡จฤ‡ชฤ‡ลฤ‡ลšฤ‡"ฤ‡พฤ‡™ฤ‡€‚ Markdownฤ‡ลปๅลผลลšฤ‡ซๅลผล›ฤ‡ลšฤ‡ลšฤ‡‚จฤ‡‚ฤ…ฤ‡‚ฤ…ฤ‡ƒลบฤ‡ƒๅ‡ลš็ฤ…ฤ‡‚ล‚ลฤ„ลšฤ‡"ฤ‡พฤ‡™ฤ‡ฎฤ‡ลผฤ‡€ฤ‡‚ฤ‡ชฤ‡ลบฤ‡ลปฤ‡“ฤ‡‚ลšฤ‡‚‰ฤ‡ฎฤ‡
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‡ๅญฤ‡จฤ‡ฤ‡ลšไฝลผ็"จฤ‡™ฤ‡‚‹ๅ ดๅˆฤ‡€Markdownฤ‡ลป้ฤ‡ตฤ‡‹ลนๅลบลผฤ‡‚ล‚ฤ‡ฤ‡ฎฤ‡พฤ‡พฤ‡ซฤ‡ฤ‡พฤ‡™ฤ‡€‚ฤ‡ฤ‡‹ฤ‡ฤ‡€ฤ‡ลนฤ„ฤ‡ฎฤ‡‚ˆฤ‡ฤ…ฤ‡ซลจลšลลผฐฤ‡™ฤ‡‚‹ฤ‡จ: 4 < 5 Markdownฤ‡ลปฤ‡ลนฤ„ฤ‡ฎฤ‡‚ˆฤ‡ฤ…ฤ‡ซฤ‡‚จฤ‡ƒล‚ฤ‡‚ล‚ฤ‡ƒลบฤ‡ƒ‰ฤ‡ฤ‡พฤ‡™: 4 &lt; 5 ฤ‡ฤ‡‹ฤ‡ฤ‡€Markdownฤ‡‚ล‚ฤ‡ƒลบฤ‡ƒ‰spansฤ‡จblocksฤ‡ฎไธญฤ‡ลผฤ‡ลปฤ‡€้ฤ‡ตฤ‡‹ลนๅลบลผฤ‡€ฤ‡‚รณฤ‡ƒล‚ฤ‡ƒฤ™ฤ‡‚ตฤ‡ƒล‚ฤ‡ƒ‰ฤ‡ลปๅธธฤ‡ซล‡ชๅ‹•็š"ฤ‡ซฤ‡‚จฤ‡ƒล‚ฤ‡‚ล‚ฤ‡ƒลบฤ‡ƒ‰ฤ‡•ฤ‡‚ลšฤ‡พฤ‡™ฤ‡€‚ฤ‡“ฤ‡ฎฤ‡“ฤ‡จฤ‡ซฤ‡‚ˆฤ‡‚Šฤ‡€Markdownฤ‡‚ล‚ไฝลผ็"จฤ‡™ฤ‡‚‹ฤ‡จ็ฐฤ„ๅฤ‡ลšฤ‡ซHTMLฤ‡‚ล‚ฤ‡ƒลบฤ‡ƒ‰ฤ‡‚ล‚ลจลšลลผฐฤ‡™ฤ‡‚‹ฤ‡“ฤ‡จฤ‡ลšฤ‡ลผฤ‡ฤ‡ฤ‡พฤ‡™ฤ‡€‚ (้€ฤ…ฤ‡ซฤ‡€็"ลบฤ‡ฎHTMLฤ‡ลผHTMLฤ‡‚ทฤ‡ƒล‚ฤ‡‚ลผฤ‡ƒƒฤ‡‚ลปฤ‡‚ฤ…ฤ‡‚ล‚ลจลšลลผฐฤ‡™ฤ‡‚‹ฤ‡จ้ทฤ‡"ฤ‡“ฤ‡จฤ‡ซฤ‡ชฤ‡‚Šฤ‡พฤ‡™ฤ‡€‚ฤ‡‚ฤ‡ชฤ‡ลบฤ‡ฎฤ‡‚ตฤ‡ƒล‚ฤ‡ƒฤ‡ƒซฤ‡‚ล‚ฤ‡ƒลบฤ‡ƒ‰ๅฤ…ฤ‡ฎๅจฤ‡ลšฤ‡ฎ < ฤ‡จ & ฤ‡‚ล‚ฤ‡‚จฤ‡‚ฤ…ฤ‡‚ฤ…ฤ‡ƒลบฤ‡ƒฤ‡™ฤ‡‚‹ๅลผลลšฤ‡ลšฤ‡‚ฤ‡‚‹ฤ‡‹ฤ‡‚‰ฤ‡ลผฤ‡™ฤ‡€‚) ฤ‡ƒ
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ฤ‡ลผๅลšบๅˆ‡ฤ‡‚‰ฤ‡‚ลšฤ‡‚‹ฤ‡“ฤ‡จฤ‡ลปฤ‡‚ฤ‡‚Šฤ‡พฤ‡›ฤ‡‚“ฤ‡€‚ ฤ‡€ลš1ฤ‡ล„ฤ‡พฤ‡ลบฤ‡ลปฤ‡ฤ‡‚ลšไฤ„ไธŠฤ‡ฎ้€ล็ล›šฤ‡ฤ‡ลบฤ‡ƒฤ…ฤ‡‚ญฤ‡‚ฤ…ฤ‡ƒˆฤ‡ฎลฤ„ลšฤ‡€ฤ‡ฤ‡ƒซฤ‡ƒลบฤ‡ƒซฤ‡ลปฤ‡€Markdownฤ‡ลšฤ‡€ลšฤ‡ƒลนฤ‡ƒลบฤ‡ƒ‰ฤ‡ƒฉฤ‡ƒƒฤ‡ƒฤ‡€ฤ‡ฤ‡ƒฤ…ฤ‡‚ญฤ‡‚ฤ…ฤ‡ƒˆฤ‡ฎฤ‡ฎตลฝฤ‡‚ล‚ฤ‡‚ตฤ‡ƒฤ‡ƒลบฤ‡ƒˆฤ‡™ฤ‡‚‹ฤ‡“ฤ‡จฤ‡‚ล‚ฤ‡"ลนๅฤ™ล‚ฤ‡ฤ‡พฤ‡™ฤ‡€‚ ฤ‡“ฤ‡‚ลšฤ‡ลปไ
ฤ‡ฎฤ‡ฎฤ…ฤ‡ฉฤ‡ฎtext-toHTMLฤ‡ƒ•ฤ‡‚ฉฤ‡ƒลบฤ‡ƒล›ฤ‡ƒƒฤ‡‚ลผ(Movable Typeฤ‡ฎฤ‡€ลšฤ‡"ฤ…ลฤ„ลšฤ‡ฎๅล„‰ฤ‡ลน›ฤ‡€ฤ‡ฤ‡‚ชฤ‡ƒฤ‡‚ทฤ‡ƒลผฤ‡ƒล‚ฤ‡‚‚ๅซฤ‡‚€)ฤ‡ลšฤ‡ฎตลฝๅฤ…ฤ‡ฎๅจฤ‡ลšฤ‡ฎฤ‡"ฤ…ลฤ„ลšฤ‡‚ล‚ <br />ฤ‡‚ลผฤ‡‚ฐฤ‡ซๅล„‰ฤ‡ลน›ฤ‡™ฤ‡‚‹ ฤ‡ฎฤ‡จฤ‡ฤ„ตฤ‡‚ฤ‡ลš็•ฐฤ‡ชฤ‡‚‹้ƒจๅˆฤ…ฤ‡ลผฤ‡™ฤ‡€‚ ฤ‡‚ฤ‡ชฤ‡ลบฤ‡ลšMarkdownฤ‡‚ล‚ไฝลผฤ‡ลฤ‡ลš<br />ฤ‡‚ลผฤ‡‚ฐฤ‡‚ล‚ฤ‡ลšลผๅฤ„ฤ‡ฤ‡ลบฤ‡"ๅ ดๅˆฤ‡ลปฤ‡€ลฤ„ลšฤ‡‚ล‚1ฤ‡ล„ฤ‡พฤ‡ลบฤ‡ลปฤ‡ฤ‡‚ลšไฤ„ไธŠฤ‡ฎฤ‡‚ฤ…ฤ‡ƒšฤ‡ƒลบฤ‡‚ฤ…ฤ‡ลผ็ต‚ฤ‡‚ลนฤ‡ลฤ‡ลšฤ‡€ ฤ‡"ฤ…ลฤ„ลšฤ‡ฤ‡ลšฤ‡ลนฤ‡ ฤ‡•ฤ‡"ฤ‡€‚ ฤ‡ฤ‡ฤ…ฤ‡ลผฤ‡™ฤ‡€<br />ฤ‡‚ล‚ไฝล›ฤ‡ˆฤ‡™ฤ‡‚‹ฤ‡ซฤ‡ลปๅฐฤ™ฤ‡ฤ‡ฐฤ‡‹ฤ‡‚ŠๅŠชๅŠ›ฤ‡ลšๅลผลลšฤ‡ลผฤ‡™ฤ‡ลšฤ‡€ๅฤ‡ลš็ด"ฤ‡ซฤ‡€ลšๅจฤ‡ลšฤ‡ฎฤ‡"ฤ…ลฤ„ลšฤ‡ลป<br />ฤ‡ซๅล„‰ฤ‡ลน›ฤ‡€ฤ‡ ฤ‡จฤ‡"ฤ‡ฤ…ฤ‡ƒซฤ‡ƒลบฤ‡ƒซฤ‡ลปMarkdownฤ‡ลผฤ‡ลปๅƒฤ‡ฤ‡ฤ‡ฤ‡พฤ‡›ฤ‡‚“ฤ‡€‚Markdownฤ‡ฎemailฤ‡‚ฤ…ฤ‡‚ลผฤ‡‚ล„ฤ‡ƒซๅลบ•็"จฤ‡จลล„‡ฤ‡•ฐฤ‡ฎตลฝฤ‡ฎฤ‡ƒชฤ‡‚ฤ…ฤ‡ƒˆ้ ็›ฎฤ‡ลปฤ‡€ ฤ‡ƒลนฤ‡ƒลบฤ‡ƒ‰ฤ‡ƒ
ฤ‡ƒลนฤ‡ƒลบฤ‡‚ลปฤ‡ฎฤ‡ƒ•ฤ‡‚ฉฤ‡ƒลบฤ‡ƒล›ฤ‡ƒƒฤ‡ƒˆฤ‡‚ล‚ลฤ„ลšฤ‡ฤ…ฤ‡™‚ฤ‡ซฤ‡€ฤ‡ล›€ฤ‡‚‚ล‰ลปฤ‡ลนๅ‹•ไฝล›ฤ‡ฤ‡€ลลš‹ฤ‡ "ฤ‡ˆฤ‡ลšล‰ลปฤ‡ลนฤ‡ชฤ‡‚Šฤ‡พฤ‡™ฤ‡€‚ ฤ‡ƒลšฤ‡ƒƒฤ‡ƒ€ Markdownฤ‡ลปฤ‡€Setext ฤ‡จ atx ฤ‡ฎ2ฤ‡ล„ฤ‡ฎฤ‡ƒลšฤ‡ƒƒฤ‡ƒ€ฤ‡‚ฤ…ฤ‡‚ลผฤ‡‚ล„ฤ‡ƒซฤ‡‚ล‚ฤ‡‚ตฤ‡ƒฤ‡ƒลบฤ‡ƒˆฤ‡ฤ‡พฤ‡™ฤ‡€‚ Setextฤ‡‚ฤ…ฤ‡‚ลผฤ‡‚ล„ฤ‡ƒซฤ‡ƒลšฤ‡ƒƒฤ‡ƒ€ฤ‡ลปฤ‡€ ฤ‡‚ล„ฤ‡‚ล‚ฤ‡ƒลบฤ‡ƒซฤ‡‚ตฤ‡‚ล„ฤ‡ƒล‚ (็ลนลนไธ€ฤ‡ƒลนฤ‡ƒ™ฤ‡ƒซฤ‡ƒลšฤ‡ƒƒฤ‡ƒ€) ฤ‡จฤ‡ƒ€ฤ‡ƒƒฤ‡‚ทฤ‡ƒฤ„ (็ลนลนไบลšฤ‡ƒลนฤ‡ƒ™ฤ‡ƒซฤ‡ƒลšฤ‡ƒƒฤ‡ƒ€) ฤ‡‚ล‚ไฝลผ็"จฤ‡ฤ‡ลšฤ‡€ลšไธ‹็ทšฤ‡€ฤ‡ฤ‡‚ล‚ๅลบ•ฤ‡ฤ‡ฤ‡พฤ‡™ฤ‡€‚ไพ‹ฤ‡ˆฤ‡ฐ: ฤ‡“ฤ‡‚ลšฤ‡ลป H1 ฤ‡ลผฤ‡™ฤ‡€‚ ============= ฤ‡“ฤ‡‚ลšฤ‡ลป H2 ฤ‡ลผฤ‡™ฤ‡€‚ ------------- ไธ‹็ทšฤ‡ลป = ฤ‡ฎฤ‡•ฐฤ‡ซ้
รณฤ‡‚ลนฤ‡‚‰ฤ‡šลฤ„จ็ล„บฤ‡•ฤ‡‚ลšฤ‡พฤ‡™ฤ‡€‚ Atxฤ‡‚ฤ…ฤ‡‚ลผฤ‡‚ล„ฤ‡ƒซฤ‡ฎฤ‡ƒลšฤ‡ƒƒฤ‡ƒ€ฤ‡ลปฤ‡€ฤ‡ƒลšฤ‡ƒƒฤ‡ƒ€ฤ‡ƒลนฤ‡ƒ™ฤ‡ƒซ1๏ฝล›6ฤ‡ซๅลผล›ฤ‡ลšฤ‡ลš1๏ฝล›6ฤ‡ฎฤ‡ƒลนฤ‡ƒƒฤ‡‚ทฤ‡ƒฤ„ฤ‡‚ญฤ‡ƒลฤ‡ƒฉฤ‡‚ลปฤ‡‚ลผฤ‡‚ล‚ลฤ„ลš้ ญฤ‡ลผไฝลผ็"จฤ‡ฤ‡พฤ‡™ฤ‡€‚ไพ‹ฤ‡ˆฤ‡ฐ: # ฤ‡“ฤ‡‚ลšฤ‡ลป H1 ฤ‡ลผฤ‡™ฤ‡€‚ ## ฤ‡“ฤ‡‚ลšฤ‡ลป H2 ฤ‡ลผฤ‡™ฤ‡€‚ ###### ฤ‡“ฤ‡‚ลšฤ‡ลป H6 ฤ‡ลผฤ‡™ฤ‡€‚ Atxฤ‡‚ฤ…ฤ‡‚ลผฤ‡‚ล„ฤ‡ƒซฤ‡ƒลšฤ‡ƒƒฤ‡ƒ€ฤ‡‚ล‚ฤ‡€ลš้
‰ฤ‡ลšฤ‡‚‹ฤ‡€ฤ‡ฤ‡“ฤ‡จฤ‡‚‚ฤ‡ลผฤ‡ฤ‡ฤ‡พฤ‡™ฤ‡€‚ฤ‡“ฤ‡‚ลšฤ‡ลป็ด"็ฒ‹ฤ‡ซลล้ลพ็š"ฤ‡ชฤ‡‚‚ฤ‡ฎฤ‡ลผฤ‡™ - ลลš‹ฤ‡ลบ็›ฎฤ‡ลšล‰ลปฤ‡ลนฤ‡ชฤ‡‚‹ๅ ดๅˆฤ‡ลปไฝลผฤ‡ลฤ‡ลšฤ‡ลนฤ‡ ฤ‡•ฤ‡"ฤ‡€‚ฤ‡ƒลนฤ‡ƒƒฤ‡‚ทฤ‡ƒฤ„ฤ‡ฎฤ‡•ฐฤ‡ลปฤ‡ƒลšฤ‡ƒƒฤ‡ƒ€ฤ‡‚ล‚้
‹ๅลผ‹ฤ‡™ฤ‡‚‹ฤ‡™‚ฤ‡ซไฝลผ็"จฤ‡™ฤ‡‚‹ฤ‡ƒลนฤ‡ƒƒฤ‡‚ทฤ‡ƒฤ„ฤ‡ฎฤ‡•ฐฤ‡ซๅˆล‡ดฤ‡™ฤ‡‚‹ๅลผลลšฤ‡ลปฤ‡‚ฤ‡‚Šฤ‡พฤ‡›ฤ‡‚“ฤ‡€‚( ฤ‡ƒลšฤ‡ƒƒฤ‡ƒ€ฤ‡‚ล‚้
‹ๅลผ‹ฤ‡™ฤ‡‚‹ฤ‡™‚ฤ‡ฎฤ‡ƒลนฤ‡ƒƒฤ‡‚ทฤ‡ƒฤ„ฤ‡•ฐฤ‡ลปฤ‡€ฤ‡ƒลšฤ‡ƒƒฤ‡ƒ€ฤ‡ƒลนฤ‡ƒ™ฤ‡ƒซฤ‡‚ล‚ฤ‡ฤ…บๅฎšฤ‡ฤ‡พฤ‡™ฤ‡€‚): # ฤ‡“ฤ‡‚ลšฤ‡ลป H1 ฤ‡ลผฤ‡™ฤ‡€‚ # ## ฤ‡“ฤ‡‚ลšฤ‡ลป H2 ฤ‡ลผฤ‡™ฤ‡€‚ ## ### ฤ‡“ฤ‡‚ลšฤ‡ลป H3 ฤ‡ลผฤ‡™ฤ‡€‚ ###### ๅลบ•็"จ Markdownฤ‡ลผฤ‡ลปฤ‡€E-ฤ‡ƒฤ„ฤ‡ƒลบฤ‡ƒซฤ‡จๅลšฤ‡ลšฤ‡‚ˆฤ‡ฤ…ฤ‡ซ > ฤ‡‚ล‚ๅลบ•็"จฤ‡ซไฝลผ็"จฤ‡ฤ‡พฤ‡™ฤ‡€‚ ฤ‡‚‚ฤ‡ฤ‡€ฤ‡‚ฤ‡ชฤ‡ลบฤ‡ลšฤ‡ƒฤ„ฤ‡ƒลบฤ‡ƒซฤ‡ƒฤ„ฤ‡ƒƒฤ‡‚ฤ‡ƒลบฤ‡‚ธฤ‡ฎๅลบ•็"จฤ‡ซฤ‡ลฤ‡‚ลšฤ‡ลšฤ‡"ฤ‡‚‹ฤ‡ฎฤ‡ลผฤ‡ฤ‡ลบฤ‡‚‰ฤ‡€Markdownฤ‡ลผฤ‡ฉฤ‡ฎฤ‡‚ˆฤ‡ฤ…ฤ‡ซๅลบ•็"จฤ‡‚ล‚ไฝล›ฤ‡ˆฤ‡™ฤ‡‚ลšฤ‡ฐฤ‡‚ˆฤ‡"ฤ‡‹ๅˆฤ…ฤ‡‹ฤ‡‚‹ฤ‡ลผฤ‡ฤ‡‚‡ฤ‡ฤ…ฤ‡€‚ ฤ‡ƒลนฤ‡ƒลบฤ‡ƒ‰ฤ‡ƒฉฤ‡ƒƒฤ‡ƒฤ‡ซฤ‡ฤ‡ลšฤ‡€ๅ"ลฤ„ลšฤ‡ฎๅ‰ฤ‡ฤ‡ซ > ฤ‡‚ล‚ไลšฤ‡ฤ™ฤ‡‚‹ฤ‡“ฤ‡จฤ‡ลผลลš‹ฤ‡ "ฤ‡ˆฤ‡ลšฤ‡ล›€ล‰ลปฤ‡ซฤ‡ชฤ‡‚Šฤ‡พฤ‡™: > This is a blockquote with two paragraphs. Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, > consectetuer adipiscing elit. Aliquam hendrerit mi posuere lectus. > Vestibulum enim wisi, viverra nec, fringilla in, laoreet vitae, risus. > > Donec sit amet nisl. Aliquam semper ipsum sit amet velit. Suspendisse > id sem consectetuer libero luctus adipiscing. Markdownฤ‡ลผฤ‡ลปฤ‡€ฤ‡ƒลนฤ‡ƒลบฤ‡ƒ‰ฤ‡ƒฉฤ‡ƒƒฤ‡ƒฤ‡ฤ‡ลบฤ‡ฎตลฝฤ‡ฎฤ‡ล›€ๅˆฤ‡ฎลฤ„ลšฤ‡ฎฤ‡ลผฤ‡ซ > ฤ‡‚ล‚ฤ‡ƒลบฤ‡ƒ‰ฤ‡‚ล‚ไลšฤ‡ฤ™ฤ‡‚‹ฤ‡“ฤ‡จฤ‡‚‚ฤ‡ลผฤ‡ฤ‡ฤ‡พฤ‡™: > This is a blockquote with two paragraphs. Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetuer adipiscing elit. Aliquam hendrerit mi posuere lectus. Vestibulum enim wisi, viverra nec, fringilla in, laoreet vitae, risus. > Donec sit amet nisl. Aliquam semper ipsum sit amet velit. Suspendisse id sem consectetuer libero luctus adipiscing. ฤ‡›ดฤ‡ซ > ฤ‡‚ล‚ฤ‡ƒลบฤ‡ƒ‰ฤ‡‚ล‚ไลšฤ‡ฤ™ฤ‡‚‹ฤ‡“ฤ‡จฤ‡ลผฤ‡€ๅลบ•็"จฤ‡‚ล‚ฤ‡ƒฤ‡ฤ‡‚ฤ…ฤ‡ƒˆ ( ไพ‹ ๅลบ•็"จฤ‡ฎไธญฤ‡ฎๅลบ•็"จ ) ฤ‡™ฤ‡‚‹ฤ‡“ฤ‡จฤ‡ลšฤ‡ลผฤ‡ฤ‡ฤ‡พฤ‡™: > ฤ‡“ฤ‡‚ลšฤ‡ลปฤ‡ล›€ๅˆฤ‡ฎ้šŽๅฤ…ล„ฤ‡ฎๅลบ•็"จฤ‡ลผฤ‡™ฤ‡€‚ > > > ฤ‡“ฤ‡‚ลšฤ‡ลปฤ‡ƒฤ‡ฤ‡‚ฤ…ฤ‡ƒˆฤ‡ฤ‡ลบๅลบ•็"จฤ‡ลผฤ‡™ฤ‡€‚ > > ฤ‡ล›€ๅˆฤ‡ฎ้šŽๅฤ…ล„ฤ‡ซฤ‡ˆฤ‡‚Šฤ‡พฤ‡™ฤ‡€‚ ๅลบ•็"จฤ‡ลปฤ‡€ฤ‡ƒลšฤ‡ƒƒฤ‡ƒ€ฤ‡ƒลบฤ‡€ฤ‡ƒชฤ‡‚ฤ…ฤ‡ƒˆฤ‡€ฤ‡‚ล‚ฤ‡ƒลบฤ‡ƒ‰ฤ‡ƒ
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ฤ‡ฎMarkdownลลš็ด ฤ‡‚ล‚ๅซฤ‡‚€ฤ‡“ฤ‡จฤ‡ลšฤ‡ลผฤ‡ฤ‡ฤ‡พฤ‡™: > ## ฤ‡“ฤ‡‚ลšฤ‡ลปฤ‡ƒลšฤ‡ƒƒฤ‡ƒ€ฤ‡ƒลบฤ‡ลผฤ‡™ฤ‡€‚ > > 1. ฤ‡“ฤ‡‚ลšฤ‡ลปฤ‡ล›€ๅˆฤ‡ฎฤ‡ƒชฤ‡‚ฤ…ฤ‡ƒˆ้ ็›ฎฤ‡ลผฤ‡™ฤ‡€‚ > 2. ฤ‡“ฤ‡‚ลšฤ‡ลป2็•ช็›ฎฤ‡ฎฤ‡ƒชฤ‡‚ฤ…ฤ‡ƒˆ้ ็›ฎฤ‡ลผฤ‡™ฤ‡€‚ > > ฤ‡‚ตฤ‡ƒล‚ฤ‡ƒฤ‡ƒซฤ‡‚ล‚ฤ‡ƒลบฤ‡ƒ‰ฤ‡ลผฤ‡™: > > return shell_exec("echo $input | $markdown_script"); ๅ"ชฤ‡‚ลšฤ‡ลบฤ‡ƒฤ…ฤ‡‚ญฤ‡‚ฤ…ฤ‡ƒˆฤ‡‚จฤ‡ƒ‡ฤ‡‚ลฤ‡‚ลผฤ‡ลผฤ‡ลปฤ‡€ฤ‡ฉฤ‡‚ลšฤ‡ลผฤ‡‚‚E-ฤ‡ƒฤ„ฤ‡ƒลบฤ‡ƒซฤ‡‚ฤ…ฤ‡‚ลผฤ‡‚ล„ฤ‡ƒซฤ‡ฎๅลบ•็"จฤ‡‚ล‚็ฐฤ„ๅฤ‡ลšฤ‡ซไลšฤ‡ฤ™ฤ‡‚‹ฤ‡“ฤ‡จฤ‡ลšฤ‡ลผฤ‡ฤ‡ฤ‡พฤ‡™ฤ‡€‚ ไพ‹ฤ‡ˆฤ‡ฐฤ‡€BBEditฤ‡ลผฤ‡ลปฤ‡ƒฤ…ฤ‡‚ญฤ‡‚ฤ…ฤ‡ƒˆฤ‡‚ล‚้ธฤ‡Šล›ฤ‡ฤ‡ลšฤ‡€ฤ‡ƒฤ…ฤ‡‚ญฤ‡‚ฤ…ฤ‡ƒˆฤ‡ƒฤ„ฤ‡ƒ‹ฤ‡ƒฤ„ฤ‡ƒลบฤ‡‚ˆฤ‡‚Šๅลบ•็"จฤ‡ฎ้šŽๅฤ…ล„ฤ‡ƒลนฤ‡ƒ™ฤ‡ƒซฤ‡‚ล‚ๅรณฤ‡‚"ฤ‡™ฤ‡“ฤ‡จฤ‡ลšฤ‡ลผฤ‡ฤ‡ฤ‡พฤ‡™ฤ‡€‚ ฤ‡ƒชฤ‡‚ฤ…ฤ‡ƒˆ Markdownฤ‡ลปฤ‡€็•ชๅลนทไลšฤ‡ฤ‡ฤ‡ƒชฤ‡‚ฤ…ฤ‡ƒˆ(็•ชๅลนท) ฤ‡จ ็•ชๅลนท็"ฤ„ฤ‡ฤ‡ƒชฤ‡‚ฤ…ฤ‡ƒˆ(้ล‚ไธธ) ฤ‡‚ล‚ฤ‡‚ตฤ‡ƒฤ‡ƒลบฤ‡ƒˆฤ‡ฤ‡พฤ‡™ฤ‡€‚ ็•ชๅลนท็"ฤ„ฤ‡ฤ‡ƒชฤ‡‚ฤ…ฤ‡ƒˆฤ‡ลปฤ‡€ฤ‡‚รณฤ‡‚ฤ…ฤ‡‚ลผฤ‡ƒชฤ‡‚ฤ…ฤ‡‚ลปฤ‡€ฤ‡ƒฤ‡ƒฉฤ‡‚ฤ…ฤ‡€ฤ‡ƒลนฤ‡‚ล„ฤ‡ƒ•ฤ‡ƒล‚ฤ‡ฎฤ‡ฉฤ‡‚ลšฤ‡‹ฤ‡ลผลจลšลลผฐฤ‡ฤ‡พฤ‡™: * ลตล„ * ็ทฤ™ * ้ล‚ ฤ‡ลปไธ‹ลจลšฤ‡จๅลšฤ‡ลšฤ‡ลผฤ‡™: + ลตล„ + ็ทฤ™ + ้ล‚ ฤ‡ฤ‡ฤ‡ลšไธ‹ลจลšฤ‡จฤ‡‚‚ๅลšฤ‡ลšฤ‡ลผฤ‡™: - ลตล„ - ็ทฤ™ - ้ล‚ Ordered lists use numbers followed by periods: 1. Bird 2. McHale 3. Parish It’s important to note that the actual numbers you use to mark the list have no effect on the HTML output Markdown produces. The HTML Markdown produces from the above list is: <ol> <li>Bird</li> <li>McHale</li> <li>Parish</li> </ol> If you instead wrote the list in Markdown like this: 1. Bird 1. McHale 1. Parish or even: 3. Bird 1. McHale 8. Parish you’d get the exact same HTML output. The point is, if you want to, you can use ordinal numbers in your ordered Markdown lists, so that the numbers in your source match the numbers in your published HTML. But if you want to be lazy, you don’t have to. If you do use lazy list numbering, however, you should still start the list with the number 1. At some point in the future, Markdown may support starting ordered lists at an arbitrary number. List markers typically start at the left margin, but may be indented by up to three spaces. List markers must be followed by one or more spaces or a tab. To make lists look nice, you can wrap items with hanging indents: * Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetuer adipiscing elit. Aliquam hendrerit mi posuere lectus. Vestibulum enim wisi, viverra nec, fringilla in, laoreet vitae, risus. * Donec sit amet nisl. Aliquam semper ipsum sit amet velit. Suspendisse id sem consectetuer libero luctus adipiscing. But if you want to be lazy, you don’t have to: * Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetuer adipiscing elit. Aliquam hendrerit mi posuere lectus. Vestibulum enim wisi, viverra nec, fringilla in, laoreet vitae, risus. * Donec sit amet nisl. Aliquam semper ipsum sit amet velit. Suspendisse id sem consectetuer libero luctus adipiscing. If list items are separated by blank lines, Markdown will wrap the items in <p> tags in the HTML output. For example, this input: * Bird * Magic will turn into: <ul> <li>Bird</li> <li>Magic</li> </ul> But this: * Bird * Magic will turn into: <ul> <li><p>Bird</p></li> <li><p>Magic</p></li> </ul> List items may consist of multiple paragraphs. Each subsequent paragraph in a list item must be intended by either 4 spaces or one tab: 1. This is a list item with two paragraphs. Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetuer adipiscing elit. Aliquam hendrerit mi posuere lectus. Vestibulum enim wisi, viverra nec, fringilla in, laoreet vitae, risus. Donec sit amet nisl. Aliquam semper ipsum sit amet velit. 2. Suspendisse id sem consectetuer libero luctus adipiscing. It looks nice if you indent every line of the subsequent paragraphs, but here again, Markdown will allow you to be lazy: * This is a list item with two paragraphs. This is the second paragraph in the list item. You're only required to indent the first line. Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetuer adipiscing elit. * Another item in the same list. To put a blockquote within a list item, the blockquote’s > delimiters need to be indented: * A list item with a blockquote: > This is a blockquote > inside a list item. To put a code block within a list item, the code block needs to be indented twice — 8 spaces or two tabs: * A list item with a code block: <code goes here> It’s worth noting that it’s possible to trigger an ordered list by accident, by writing something like this: 1986. What a great season. In other words, a number-period-space sequence at the beginning of a line. To avoid this, you can backslash-escape the period: 1986\. What a great season. Code Blocks Pre-formatted code blocks are used for writing about programming or markup source code. Rather than forming normal paragraphs, the lines of a code block are interpreted literally. Markdown wraps a code block in both <pre> and <code> tags. To produce a code block in Markdown, simply indent every line of the block by at least 4 spaces or 1 tab. For example, given this input: This is a normal paragraph: This is a code block. Markdown will generate: <p>This is a normal paragraph:</p> <pre><code>This is a code block. </code></pre> One level of indentation — 4 spaces or 1 tab — is removed from each line of the code block. For example, this: Here is an example of AppleScript: tell application "Foo" beep end tell will turn into: <p>Here is an example of AppleScript:</p> <pre><code>tell application "Foo" beep end tell </code></pre> A code block continues until it reaches a line that is not indented (or the end of the article). Within a code block, ampersands (&) and angle brackets (< and >) are automatically converted into HTML entities. This makes it very easy to include example HTML source code using Markdown — just paste it and indent it, and Markdown will handle the hassle of encoding the ampersands and angle brackets. For example, this: <div class="footer"> &copy; 2004 Foo Corporation </div> will turn into: <pre><code>&lt;div class="footer"&gt; &amp;copy; 2004 Foo Corporation &lt;/div&gt; </code></pre> Regular Markdown syntax is not processed within code blocks. E.g., asterisks are just literal asterisks within a code block. This means it’s also easy to use Markdown to write about Markdown’s own syntax. Horizontal Rules You can produce a horizontal rule tag (<hr />) by placing three or more hyphens or asterisks on a line by themselves. If you wish, you may use spaces between the hyphens or asterisks. Each of the following lines will produce a horizontal rule: * * * *** ***** - - - --------------------------------------- Span Elements Links Markdown supports two style of links: inline and reference. In both styles, the link text is delimited by [square brackets]. To create an inline link, use a set of regular parentheses immediately after the link text’s closing square bracket. Inside the parentheses, put the URL where you want the link to point, along with an optional title for the link, surrounded in quotes. For example: This is [an example](http://example.com/ "Title") inline link. [This link](http://example.net/) has no title attribute. Will produce: <p>This is <a href="http://example.com/" title="Title"> an example</a> inline link.</p> <p><a href="http://example.net/">This link</a> has no title attribute.</p> If you’re referring to a local resource on the same server, you can use relative paths: See my [About](/about/) page for details. Reference-style links use a second set of square brackets, inside which you place a label of your choosing to identify the link: This is [an example][id] reference-style link. You can optionally use a space to separate the sets of brackets: This is [an example] [id] reference-style link. Then, anywhere in the document, you define your link label like this, on a line by itself: [id]: http://example.com/ "Optional Title Here" That is: Square brackets containing the link identifier (optionally indented from the left margin using spaces or tabs); followed by a colon; followed by one or more spaces (or tabs); followed by the URL for the link; optionally followed by a title attribute for the link, enclosed in double or single quotes. The link URL may, optionally, be surrounded by angle brackets: [id]: <http://example.com/> "Optional Title Here" You can put the title attribute on the next line and use extra spaces or tabs for padding, which tends to look better with longer URLs: [id]: http://example.com/longish/path/to/resource/here "Optional Title Here" Link definitions are only used for creating links during Markdown processing, and are stripped from your document in the HTML output. Link definition names may constist of letters, numbers, spaces, and punctuation — but they are not case sensitive. E.g. these two links: [link text][a] [link text][A] are equivalent. The implicit link name shortcut allows you to omit the name of the link, in which case the link text itself is used as the name. Just use an empty set of square brackets — e.g., to link the word “Google” to the google.com web site, you could simply write: [Google][] And then define the link: [Google]: http://google.com/ Because link names may contain spaces, this shortcut even works for multiple words in the link text: Visit [Daring Fireball][] for more information. And then define the link: [Daring Fireball]: http://daringfireball.net/ Link definitions can be placed anywhere in your Markdown document. I tend to put them immediately after each paragraph in which they’re used, but if you want, you can put them all at the end of your document, sort of like footnotes. Here’s an example of reference links in action: I get 10 times more traffic from [Google] [1] than from [Yahoo] [2] or [MSN] [3]. [1]: http://google.com/ "Google" [2]: http://search.yahoo.com/ "Yahoo Search" [3]: http://search.msn.com/ "MSN Search" Using the implicit link name shortcut, you could instead write: I get 10 times more traffic from [Google][] than from [Yahoo][] or [MSN][]. [google]: http://google.com/ "Google" [yahoo]: http://search.yahoo.com/ "Yahoo Search" [msn]: http://search.msn.com/ "MSN Search" Both of the above examples will produce the following HTML output: <p>I get 10 times more traffic from <a href="http://google.com/" title="Google">Google</a> than from <a href="http://search.yahoo.com/" title="Yahoo Search">Yahoo</a> or <a href="http://search.msn.com/" title="MSN Search">MSN</a>.</p> For comparison, here is the same paragraph written using Markdown’s inline link style: I get 10 times more traffic from [Google](http://google.com/ "Google") than from [Yahoo](http://search.yahoo.com/ "Yahoo Search") or [MSN](http://search.msn.com/ "MSN Search"). The point of reference-style links is not that they’re easier to write. The point is that with reference-style links, your document source is vastly more readable. Compare the above examples: using reference-style links, the paragraph itself is only 81 characters long; with inline-style links, it’s 176 characters; and as raw HTML, it’s 234 characters. In the raw HTML, there’s more markup than there is text. With Markdown’s reference-style links, a source document much more closely resembles the final output, as rendered in a browser. By allowing you to move the markup-related metadata out of the paragraph, you can add links without interrupting the narrative flow of your prose. Emphasis Markdown treats asterisks (*) and underscores (_) as indicators of emphasis. Text wrapped with one * or _ will be wrapped with an HTML <em> tag; double *’s or _’s will be wrapped with an HTML <strong> tag. E.g., this input: *single asterisks* _single underscores_ **double asterisks** __double underscores__ will produce: <em>single asterisks</em> <em>single underscores</em> <strong>double asterisks</strong> <strong>double underscores</strong> You can use whichever style you prefer; the lone restriction is that the same character must be used to open and close an emphasis span. Emphasis can be used in the middle of a word: un*fucking*believable But if you surround an * or _ with spaces, it’ll be treated as a literal asterisk or underscore. To produce a literal asterisk or underscore at a position where it would otherwise be used as an emphasis delimiter, you can backslash escape it: \*this text is surrounded by literal asterisks\* Code To indicate a span of code, wrap it with backtick quotes (`). Unlike a pre-formatted code block, a code span indicates code within a normal paragraph. For example: Use the `printf()` function. will produce: <p>Use the <code>printf()</code> function.</p> To include a literal backtick character within a code span, you can backslash escape it: `There is a literal backtick (\`) here.` Or, if you prefer, you can use multiple backticks as the opening and closing delimiters: ``There is a literal backtick (`) here.`` Both of the previous two examples will produce this: <p><code>There is a literal backtick (`) here.</code></p> With a code span, ampersands and angle brackets are encoded as HTML entities automatically, which makes it easy to include example HTML tags. Markdown will turn this: Please don't use any `<blink>` tags. into: <p>Please don't use any <code>&lt;blink&gt;</code> tags.</p> You can write this: `&#8212;` is the decimal-encoded equivalent of `&mdash;`. to produce: <p><code>&amp;#8212;</code> is the decimal-encoded equivalent of <code>&amp;mdash;</code>.</p> Images Admittedly, it’s fairly difficult to devise a “natural” syntax for placing images into a plain text document format. Markdown uses an image syntax that is intended to resemble the syntax for links, allowing for two styles: inline and reference. Inline image syntax looks like this: ![Alt text](/path/to/img.jpg) ![Alt text](/path/to/img.jpg "Optional title") That is: An exclamation mark: !; followed by a set of square brackets, containing the alt attribute text for the image; followed by a set of parentheses, containing the URL or path to the image, and an optional title attribute enclosed in double or single quotes. Reference-style image syntax looks like this: ![Alt text][id] Where “id” is the name of a defined image reference. Image references are defined using syntax identical to link references: [id]: url/to/image "Optional title attribute" As of this writing, Markdown has no syntax for specifying the dimensions of an image; if this is important to you, you can simply use regular HTML <img> tags. Miscellaneous Automatic Links Markdown supports a shortcut style for creating “automatic” links for URLs and email addresses: simply surround the URL or email address with angle brackets. What this means is that if you want to show the actual text of a URL or email address, and also have it be a clickable link, you can do this: <http://example.com/> Markdown will turn this into: <a href="http://example.com/">http://example.com/</a> Automatic links for email addresses work similarly, except that Markdown will also perform a bit of randomized decimal and hex entity-encoding to help obscure your address from address-harvesting spambots. For example, Markdown will turn this: <address@example.com> into something like this: <a href="&#x6D;&#x61;i&#x6C;&#x74;&#x6F;:&#x61;&#x64;&#x64;&#x72;&#x65; &#115;&#115;&#64;&#101;&#120;&#x61;&#109;&#x70;&#x6C;e&#x2E;&#99;&#111; &#109;">&#x61;&#x64;&#x64;&#x72;&#x65;&#115;&#115;&#64;&#101;&#120;&#x61; &#109;&#x70;&#x6C;e&#x2E;&#99;&#111;&#109;</a> which will render in a browser as a clickable link to “address@example.com”. (This sort of entity-encoding trick will indeed fool many, if not most, address-harvesting bots, but it definitely won’t fool all of them. It’s better than nothing, but an address published in this way will probably eventually start receiving spam.) Backslash Escapes Markdown allows you to use backslash escapes to generate literal characters which would otherwise have special meaning in Markdown’s formatting syntax. For example, if you wanted to surround a word with literal asterisks (instead of an HTML <em> tag), you can backslashes before the asterisks, like this: \*literal asterisks\* Markdown provides backslash escapes for the following characters: \ backslash ` backtick * asterisk _ underscore {} curly braces [] square brackets () parentheses # hash mark . dot ! exclamation mark

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