The Open Guide to London: the free London guide - Differences between Version 8 and Version 7 of Text Formatting Examples

Contents are identical

How to style your text

Plain Text

This is a simple sample paragraph. Paragraphs can have line breaks internally. To separate paragraphs, use a blank line.

Here is another paragraph.

To create a horizontal line, type 4 or more minus/dash/hyphen (-) characters, like this: ----


Page, URL and Inter-Wiki Links

You can link to a page by putting two square brackets around one or more words [[Like This]] or [[this]].

Non-existing pages, like Demo Link Please Don't Actually Create This, will be displayed with a question-mark for a link. The question mark link indicates the page doesn't exist yet - follow the link to create and edit the page. When the page exists, a link to it will be displayed like this: Text Formatting Examples. You can also give the link a title, [[Text Formatting Examples | like this]], which is displayed like this. Note the | symbol between the page name and link text.

Note

The old-fashioned way of naming wiki pages was to SmushCapitalisedWordsTogetherLikeThis. This method is strongly discouraged on the Guide; in fact, we've turned it off since it's UgLy.

You can make a link to another page by just typing the URL, e.g. http://openguides.org/london/ . If you want, you can give the link some title text in this fashion.

[http://openguides.org/london/ this fashion]

Inter-Wiki links: not yet implemented.


Bold and Italic Text

To mark text as bold or italic, you can use the HTML <b> and <i> tags if you wish (e.g. <b>bold</b>, <i>italic</i>, and <b><i>bold+italic</i></b>), or the traditional wiki method of text formatting:

  • ''Two single quotes'' for italics
  • '''Three single quotes''' for bold
  • '''''Five single quotes''''' for bold and italic.

Headings

Much as apostrophes are used to denote bold and italic, equals signs are used to denote headings. Thus:

= Heading 1 =
== Heading 2 ==
=== Heading 3 ===
==== Heading 4 ====
===== Heading 5 =====
====== Heading 6 ======

This is what's produced by the above:

Heading 1

Heading 2

Heading 3

Heading 4

Heading 5
Heading 6

Note those spaces between the equals signs and the text of the heading! It won't work otherwise. It also won't work if your numbers of equals signs are unbalanced:

not a heading


Images

To display an image, use HTML IMG tags.

Please think carefully before displaying huge images on a page.


Lists

Unordered Lists

* First-level unordered list item
** Second-level unordered list item
*** Third-level unordered list item - etc.

This produces:

  • First-level unordered list item
    • Second-level unordered list item
    • * Third-level unordered list item

As you can see this is not yet fully implemented.

Ordered Lists

Not yet implemented.

Definition Lists

Not yet implemented.


Indented Text

: Text to be indented (quote-block)
:: Text indented more
::: Text indented to third level

This produces:

 Text to be indented (quote-block)
 : Text indented more
 :: Text indented to third level

(Incompletely implemented.)


Preformatted Text

You can use the HTML <pre> tag to present preformatted text, as in the following.

This is a chunk of

preformatted text. Lovely,

isn't it. Wiki links like this still work.


Miscellaneous rules

See also: Using Images.


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