Markdown Guide
This is a very short reference guide for those trying to write Markdown. For more comprehensive guides, we recommend looking at:
Header
# First-Tier Header
## Second-Tier Header
### Third-Tier Header
#### Fourth-Tier Header
Paragraph
Hello There, this is a paragraph that is split over multiple lines in the source, but displays as a single formatted paragraph.
To start a new paragraph, we separate it with a blank line from the previous paragraph.
Hello There, this is a paragraph that is split over
multiple lines in the source, but displays as a single
formatted paragraph.
To start a new paragraph, we separate it with a blank line
from the previous paragraph.
List - Bullet Points
- this is a bullet point list
- this is another item in the list
- this is a bullet point list
- this is another item in the list
List - Numbered
- this is a numbered list
- this is another item in the list
1. this is a numbered list
2. this is another item in the list
To prevent reordering and keeping count, Markdown allows you to use non-sequential numbers:
1. Item one
1. Item two
- Item one
- Item two
Text Format - Italic
this will be italic
*this will be italic*
Text Format - Italic
this will be bold
**this will be bold**
Links
[this will be a link](http://example.com/)
Images
A picture speaks a thousand words, to include an image in your content it's like a link
but with an ! in front of it.

Quoting
this will quote some text
> this will quote some text
Code Example
For inline quoting, use single backticks:
For `inline` quoting, use single backticks.
For block quotes, use triple backticks:
this will write the content as if it is code
```
this will write the content as if it is code
```
Add syntax highlighting by defining the language, for example:
console.log("Hello, world!")
```js
console.log("Hello, world!")
```