![]() MacDown is created as a simple-to-use editor for Markdown documents. ![]() The original Markdown syntax specification can be found here. Markdown is a plain text formatting syntax created by John Gruber, aiming to provide a easy-to-read and feasible markup. Hello there! I’m MacDown, the open source Markdown editor for OS X. I will continue to improve it in the future. You can see there are still issues, some of them require additional implementation at this side, and others are caused by bugs in MacDown and Hoedown. I’ve attached MacDown’s help.md file as a post so that you can get an idea how compatible this thing is currently. I am fairly satisfied with the current result, and might talk more about it in detail in the future, given the time. I also decided to build the functionality myself instead of using an existing service/library, hoping to provide some ideas if somebody wish to make his/her own blogging/CMS platform compatible with MacDown. This way I can talk about topics on MacDown and Markdown-related things in general, in English, at a dedicated space. So, I decided that MacDown should have a blog. I haven’t tried many other online services, but as far as I know there’s nothing that fits the asker’s requirement (which is not saying those platforms are bad-they are just incompatible). While the configuration does somehow resemble MacDown’s, they are still different, and at times incompatible with each other. I host my own personal site/blog, and it uses a custom renderer to process Markdown. One particular instance is when I got asked whether I can recommend a blogging platform that supports extensions MacDown has. Some of them have been added as FAQ, but there are more that don’t fit, and they need a good place to the public. ![]() For those I can answer (not a lot, really), many are common enough that I got asked multiple times. But I am by no means an expert on Markdown, let alone many other topics people ask me about, and I’m sorry I can’t answer many of your questions. I love them, and have tried (and will continue to try) answering them the best I could. I have also received a lot of emails/tweets/DMs recently for MacDown. So I figured that it’d be better to find somewhere else in the future. ![]() And the post doesn’t really fit well with other posts there either, as my personal blog targets more toward Chinese audience. But it seems a bit queer, to say at least, to use my personal blog for that purpose. Back when I released MacDown 0.2 I felt that we have too much to fit inside the release note, so I wrote a blog post for it. #MACDOWN COMMANDS CODE#You can review the Mermaid extension's source code on GitHub.This has been on my mind for some time. The Markdown Preview Mermaid Support extension demonstrates using scripts to add mermaid diagrams and flowchart support to the markdown preview. Stylesheets are registered using the markdown.previewStyles Contribution Point in the extension's package.json: "contributes" : Ĭontributed scripts are loaded asynchronously and reloaded on every content change. Changing the look of the Markdown preview with CSSĮxtensions can contribute CSS to change the look or layout of the Markdown preview. This includes changing the look of the preview or adding support for new Markdown syntax. Markdown extensions allow you to extend and enhance Visual Studio Code's built-in Markdown preview. ![]()
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