This is Markdown Cheatsheet Demo for Thinkspace, this Jekyll theme. Please check the raw content of this file for the markdown usage.

Typography Elements in One

Let’s start with a informative paragraph. This text is bolded. But not this one! How about italic text? Cool right? Ok, let’s combine them together. Yeah, that’s right! I have code to highlight, so ThisIsMyCode(). What a nice! Good people will hyperlink away, so here we go or http://www.example.com.

Headings H1 to H6

H1 Heading

H2 Heading

H3 Heading

H4 Heading

H5 Heading
H6 Heading

Footnote

Let’s say you have text that you want to refer with a footnote, you can do that too! This is an example for the footnote number one [1]. You can even add more footnotes, with link! [2]

Blockquote

Start by doing what’s necessary; then do what’s possible; and suddenly you are doing the impossible. –Francis of Assisi

NOTE: This theme does NOT support nested blockquotes.

List Items

  1. First order list item
  2. Second item
  • Unordered list can use asterisks
  • Or minuses
  • Or pluses

Code Blocks

var s = "JavaScript syntax highlighting";
alert(s);
s = "Python syntax highlighting"
print s
No language indicated, so no syntax highlighting.
But let's throw in a <b>tag</b>.

Table

Table 1: With Alignment

Tables Are Cool
col 3 is right-aligned $1600
col 2 is centered $12
zebra stripes are neat $1

Table 2: With Typography Elements

Markdown Less Pretty
Still renders nicely
1 2 3

Horizontal Line

The HTML <hr> element is for creating a “thematic break” between paragraph-level elements. In markdown, you can create a <hr> with any of the following:

  • ___: three consecutive underscores
  • ---: three consecutive dashes
  • ***: three consecutive asterisks

renders to:




Media

YouTube Embedded Iframe

Image

Minion


Footnote:

  1. 1: Footnote number one yeah baby! 

  2. 2: A footnote you can link to - click here!