____ _ _ / ___| ___ _ __ ___ | | ___ __ _( )___ | | _ / _ \ '_ ` _ \| | / _ \ / _` |// __| | |_| | __/ | | | | | |__| (_) | (_| | \__ \ \____|\___|_| |_| |_|_____\___/ \__, | |___/ |___/ _ __ _ ___ _ __ ___ | | ___ __ _ / _` |/ _ \ '_ ` _ \| |/ _ \ / _` | | (_| | __/ | | | | | | (_) | (_| | \__, |\___|_| |_| |_|_|\___/ \__, | |___/ |___/
This is my first .gmi, so I want to use every bit of syntax I'm aware of.
I wonder if blank lines are needed for things to render decently for ease of reading?
Write paragraphs on long lines (don't hard-break them). New lines are displayed as new lines. Links start with =>, and are followed by a url then a description. Just a space between those things.
You can use #, ##, and ### for headings, and * for lists (no nested lists).
Re: Bronzie's 5Q Question Set for August 2020
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Finally, anything you want to be fixed width and preserve white space will go between lines that are just ``` (three back-ticks), kind of like in markdown. The first trip starts fixed formatting mode. The second one end it. The starting back-ticks can optionally have a bit of text after them that acts like alt text describing the block to screen readers.