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Emmet (formerly Zen Coding [1]) is a set of plug-ins for text editors that allows for high-speed coding and editing in HTML, XML, XSLT, and other structured code formats via content assist. The project was started by Vadim Makeev in 2008 [2] and continues to be actively developed by Sergey Chikuyonok and Emmet users.
Editors can normalize the font of characters trailing a wikilink, which would otherwise appear in the wikilink font. And newlines added to wikitext for readability can be ignored. Note to template editors: tag <nowiki> works only on its source page, not the target.
HTML editors that support What You See Is What You Get paradigm provide a user interface similar to a word processor for creating HTML documents, as an alternative to manual coding. [1] Achieving true WYSIWYG however is not always possible.
HTML syntax highlighting. Syntax highlighting is a feature of text editors that are used for programming, scripting, or markup languages, such as HTML.The feature displays text, especially source code, in different colours and fonts according to the category of terms. [1]
From January 2000 until HTML 5 was released, all W3C Recommendations for HTML have been based on XML, using the abbreviation XHTML (Extensible HyperText Markup Language). The language specification requires that XHTML Web documents be well-formed XML documents.
The visual editor shows a button that allows to choose one of three offered modes to display a formula. There are three methods for displaying formulas in Wikipedia: raw HTML, HTML with math templates (abbreviated here as {}), and a subset of LaTeX implemented with the HTML markup < math ></ math > (referred to as LaTeX in this article
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Miscellaneous Technical is a Unicode block ranging from U+2300 to U+23FF. It contains various common symbols which are related to and used in the various technical, programming language, and academic professions.