Wondering if your typical/average/normie person (millennials and younger) know it or know about it. It’s enabled on reddit and discord?
Wondering if your typical/average/normie person (millennials and younger) know it or know about it. It’s enabled on reddit and discord?
Elder Millennial here. All I know about markdown is:
To make a hard copy of a thought or conversation. “Mark that down in your notes, so we don’t forget.”
A discount or sale. “Did you see the 30% markdown on three legged jeans?”
Any Elder Millennial born after 1979 can’t Markdown, all they know is jot that down, 30% off on jeans, nostalgia for blockbuster, eat hot chip and buy avocado toast
30% markdown on three legged jeans? Damn, that’s almost one whole leg for free!
And yet you just used it! Some parts of markdown were made to be intuitive and natural like:
-
it’s an unordered listMarkdown is 100%[1] intuitive.
for certain definitions of 100%. ↩︎
And then other parts of it are just infuriating. Like how if you try to post song lyrics or something, the markdown just mashes every sentence together in one line for some reason. So you have to know the secret code just to make gdamn new lines. I actually pressed enter to go to a new line 5 times in this paragraph but it comes out all jumbled together after posting.
As far as I’m concerned, I shouldn’t need to know some special formatting just for return to work properly.
And then you’re on your phone, and typing two spaces at the end of each line is a mess because your keyboard insists you really want punctuation and a space. Because why would you end a sentence with two spaces. Gah.
Still don’t have any idea what you’re talking about.
Markdown is a markup language, which can be used by users to indicate formatting hints to the underlying system. For example, you want a text to be bold, a markup language lets you tell that to the website in a way it understands.
Older markup languages tended to be verbose and complicated. For example, this is a numbered list in BBCode, which is the classic forum markup language:
[ol][li]Item one[/li][li]Item two[/li][/ol]
.Markdown keeps it simple and intuitive, for the most part.
1. item 1 2. item 2
The above is a numbered list in Markdown. Much simpler than the BBCode version. Simple enough that people like you can do it without even being aware of Markdown at all.
*This is cursive text* **This is bold text** # this is a heading ## this is a smaller heading ###### usually up to six levels are supported, but this might differ based on the implementation (my instance seems to make all of these the same size) > this is a quote it can span multiple lines too this is a bullet point list: - item 1 - item 2 [Links are more complicated, but still as easy as they can be](https://example.org/)
The above doesn’t actually display formatted because I used a code block to show the Markdown as written. The below is how the above actually displays:
This is cursive text This is bold text
this is a heading
this is a smaller heading
usually up to six levels are supported, but this might differ based on the implementation (my instance seems to make all of these the same size)
this is a bullet point list:
Links are more complicated, but still as easy as they can be
edit: this is what the original creator of Markdown has to say on the matter:
You typed some text to make your first comment, and it looked something like this:
Elder Millennial here. All I know about markdown is: 1. To make a hard copy of a thought or conversation. "Mark that down in your notes, so we don't forget." 2. A discount or sale. "Did you see the 30% markdown on three legged jeans?"
The way your comment actually displays is different though, isn’t it? The numbered items are indented and come one after the other without any space inbetween, and the text within each numbered item is properly aligned.
What you entered is just text, and text by itself is inherently meaningless. “Markdown” is the name of a particular standard way of formatting text so that programs can reliably interpret parts of that text as representing the writers desire for their text to be displayed a particular way. You can kind of think of it like a programming language. As another basic example, consider this text:
This is a paragraph. This is still the same paragraph. Here is the second one. And here is the third one.
I’m going to paste this text right after this sentence; notice how the amount of space doesn’t matter, and how a new paragraph is denoted by at least two line breaks.
This is a paragraph. This is still the same paragraph.
Here is the second one.
And here is the third one.
I read all that and I must admit I am still not quite sure what part of all that is markdown, and why any of it is markdown.
I get that this sentence must be the key concept: ““Markdown” is the name of a particular standard way of formatting text so that programs can reliably interpret parts of that text as representing the writers desire for their text to be displayed a particular way.” But it reads like a tautology without really explaining either statement.
Everything I wrote “is Markdown”, because the program you’re using to view my text assumes that my text is formatted in Markdown. You too are writing in Markdown, which for example is how your comment got displayed in bold. You did not “type boldly” to do that, you typed some text like
**this is bold**
and that got displayed in bold.Maybe more examples would help. Here’s something I can do because the program you’re using to view my text assumes it’s Markdown:
this is a monospace font
and this is not. This desire for my text to be displayed in a monospace font is expressed in Markdown using grave quotes. It’s common to use this to denote literal, unprocessed text, so I would say that what I typed was`this is a monospace font`
. If you copy and paste that text into a comment, do nothing else to it, and post it, you will see it displayed asthis is a monospace font
without the quotes because a Markdown compatible program sees it and knows “this person wants the text between these grave quotes displayed monospace”.You can also see where I just wrote “without” italicized; in Markdown this is expressed as
*without*
or_without_
.If I type
* Thing 1 * Thing 2 * Thing 3
You’ll see this displayed with bullets, not asterisks, and proper indenting and vertical spacing for a list:
Thing 1
Thing 2
Thing 3
It also gets displayed in exactly the same way if I write it in these two different ways as well:
* Thing 1 * Thing 2 * Thing 3
* Thing 1 * Thing 2 * Thing 3
Thing 1
Thing 2
Thing 3
Maybe it would be helpful to just skim through a Markdown spec. (There are different flavors of Markdown; this one is called CommonMark, which is usually what people actually mean when they say Markdown. More information on their website.)