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  2. Markdown - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Markdown

    In 2017, GitHub released a formal specification of its GitHub Flavored Markdown (GFM) that is based on CommonMark. [32] It is a strict superset of CommonMark, following its specification exactly except for tables, strikethrough , autolinks and task lists, which GFM adds as extensions.

  3. MkDocs - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/MkDocs

    MkDocs converts Markdown files into HTML pages, effectively creating a static website containing documentation.. Markdown is extensible, and the MkDocs ecosystem exploits its extensible nature through a number of extensions [2] [3] that help with for autogenerating documentation from source code, adding admonitions, writing mathematical notation, inserting footnotes, highlighting source code etc.

  4. Textile (markup language) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Textile_(markup_language)

    Textile was developed by Dean Allen in 2002, which he billed as "a humane web text generator" that enabled you to "simply write". [1] Dean created Textile for use in Textpattern, the CMS he also developed about the same time.

  5. Lightweight markup language - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lightweight_markup_language

    Lightweight markup languages can be categorized by their tag types. Like HTML (<b>bold</b>), some languages use named elements that share a common format for start and end tags (e.g. BBCode [b]bold[/b]), whereas proper lightweight markup languages are restricted to ASCII-only punctuation marks and other non-letter symbols for tags, but some also mix both styles (e.g. Textile bq.

  6. TLDR Pages - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/TLDR_Pages

    The default formatting usage of tldr-pages is Markdown, a popular markup language used in many other free software and documentation projects. [13] While the project has its own custom {{token_syntax}} extension, it adheres to CommonMark specification. In fact the project specifications require that clients are fully compatible with CommonMark.

  7. README - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/README

    The expression "readme file" is also sometimes used generically, for other files with a similar purpose. [citation needed] For example, the source-code distributions of many free software packages (especially those following the Gnits Standards or those produced with GNU Autotools) include a standard set of readme files:

  8. Pandoc - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pandoc

    Markdown: Strict, CommonMark, GitHub Flavored Markdown (GFM), MultiMarkdown (MMD) and Markdown Extra (PHP Extra) variants; OpenDocument (ODT/ODF) OPML; Office Open XML: Microsoft Word and Microsoft PowerPoint variants; Org-mode; PDF (needs a third-party add-on like ConTeXt, pdfroff, wkhtmltopdf, weasyprint or prince) [12] Plain text ...

  9. Obsidian (software) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Obsidian_(software)

    Obsidian is a personal knowledge base and note-taking application that operates on Markdown files. [3] [4] [5] It allows users to make internal links for notes and then to visualize the connections as a graph. [6] [7] It is designed to help users organize and structure their thoughts and knowledge in a flexible, non-linear way. [8]