Mikkel Bang | 16 Jun 2012 17:28
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A better guide to Markdown

Hello!


Is there a simpler, better designed guide to Markdown than http://daringfireball.net/projects/markdown/ that I can refer my forum users to? Something Googleish-looking. Or do forum owners usually end up having to write their own guides?

Thank you!

Mikkel
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Mikkel Bang | 16 Jun 2012 17:40
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Re: A better guide to Markdown

I just assumed that Markdown, being as big as it is, would have some proper looking docs that's all. Not necessarily proper to you and me, but to the entire world population. A document, or a design rather, that tries to find a common ground. Something universal, of which I believe Google's design is a perfect example.

I'll pray for a Markdown tutorial that doesn't look like some chick's tattoo. That doesn't write pages up and pages down about Markdown's history - but something straight to the point that ordinary people (non-geeks or whatever) can easily understand.

Mikkel

2012/6/16 Mikkel Bang <facebookmannen <at> gmail.com>
Hello!

Is there a simpler, better designed guide to Markdown than http://daringfireball.net/projects/markdown/ that I can refer my forum users to? Something Googleish-looking. Or do forum owners usually end up having to write their own guides?

Thank you!

Mikkel

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Andy Lee | 16 Jun 2012 18:04
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Re: A better guide to Markdown

By "guide to Markdown", do you mean a syntax reference? You could link directly to the syntax page rather than the overall general Markdown page:


What do you mean by "Google's design"? Can you post one or more links illustrating what you mean? Are you talking about aesthetics? Usability?

If you expect a particular kind of target audience you may want to write your own guide. For example, if you know 90% of them will just use the very basic features, then you could explain those briefly and point them to Gruber's page for the rest.

--Andy

On Jun 16, 2012, at 8:40 AM, Mikkel Bang wrote:

I just assumed that Markdown, being as big as it is, would have some proper looking docs that's all. Not necessarily proper to you and me, but to the entire world population. A document, or a design rather, that tries to find a common ground. Something universal, of which I believe Google's design is a perfect example.

I'll pray for a Markdown tutorial that doesn't look like some chick's tattoo. That doesn't write pages up and pages down about Markdown's history - but something straight to the point that ordinary people (non-geeks or whatever) can easily understand.

Mikkel

2012/6/16 Mikkel Bang <facebookmannen <at> gmail.com>
Hello!

Is there a simpler, better designed guide to Markdown than http://daringfireball.net/projects/markdown/ that I can refer my forum users to? Something Googleish-looking. Or do forum owners usually end up having to write their own guides?

Thank you!

Mikkel


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Jason Lombard | 16 Jun 2012 19:13

Re: A better guide to Markdown

A simple search on (the very "Googleish"-designed) Google found many syntax references that may or may-not look "like a chick's tattoo" including...





I hope this helps and saves you time from praying. 


Jason Lombard



On Jun 16, 2012, at 12:04 PM, Andy Lee <aglee <at> mac.com> wrote:

By "guide to Markdown", do you mean a syntax reference? You could link directly to the syntax page rather than the overall general Markdown page:


What do you mean by "Google's design"? Can you post one or more links illustrating what you mean? Are you talking about aesthetics? Usability?

If you expect a particular kind of target audience you may want to write your own guide. For example, if you know 90% of them will just use the very basic features, then you could explain those briefly and point them to Gruber's page for the rest.

--Andy

On Jun 16, 2012, at 8:40 AM, Mikkel Bang wrote:

I just assumed that Markdown, being as big as it is, would have some proper looking docs that's all. Not necessarily proper to you and me, but to the entire world population. A document, or a design rather, that tries to find a common ground. Something universal, of which I believe Google's design is a perfect example.

I'll pray for a Markdown tutorial that doesn't look like some chick's tattoo. That doesn't write pages up and pages down about Markdown's history - but something straight to the point that ordinary people (non-geeks or whatever) can easily understand.

Mikkel

2012/6/16 Mikkel Bang <facebookmannen <at> gmail.com>
Hello!

Is there a simpler, better designed guide to Markdown than http://daringfireball.net/projects/markdown/ that I can refer my forum users to? Something Googleish-looking. Or do forum owners usually end up having to write their own guides?

Thank you!

Mikkel


_______________________________________________
Markdown-Discuss mailing list
Markdown-Discuss <at> six.pairlist.net
http://six.pairlist.net/mailman/listinfo/markdown-discuss
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Bowerbird | 19 Jun 2012 11:36
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re: A better guide to Markdown

mikkel bang said:
>   Is there a simpler, better designed guide to Markdown

so, are you the snowboarder?

for what purpose are you using markdown?

-bowerbird
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Gmane