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DEMO: trial of a blockquote w/in a list ⬩ untrammeled-penny

While attempting routine documentation in Markdown, several edge cases presented themselves. In essence, this “README.md” file is faux or trial README, using some of the encountered edge-cases, namely: Nesting a blockquote w/in list element; Nesting a list w/in blockquote element; Deploying footnotes (understanding footnotes, while simply starting to make use of them!); Strikethrough; Old style title line (?).

Contained in This Document

  • Title
  • Introduction
  • Samples
    • Nested blockquote w/in list element (Example-1)
    • Nested list w/in a blockquote element (Example-2)
    • Nested list w/in blockquote (poor Markdown) (Example-3)
  • Troubleshooting
    • Bugs, Tips & Quirks
    • Notes:
    • Notes: further research
  • Resources
    • Tools used
    • Endnotes

Samples

Example 1: Nested Blockquote w/in list element

  • Top Level
    • Integration
      1. YAML (in conjunction with Markdown)

        YAML—often used for configuration files—stands for yet another markup language, or YAML ain’t markup language, emphasizing YAML is for data, not documents. It’s designed to be easy to read and understand and can be used in conjunction with other programming languages due to its flexibility and accessibility.1

      2. Jekyll

Example 2: Nested list w/in a blockquote element2

“You write it like this— ”

For example:

  • Trust Level
  • Confidence in advice given
  • Formal vs. informal relationship
  • Things you talk about

Example 3: Nested list w/in blockquote (poor markdown)3

“I’m guessing what you did was start the bullets after the ‘For example,’ with a single line break rather than a double break—”

For example:

  • Trust Level
  • Confidence in advice given
  • Formal vs. informal relationship
  • Things you talk about

Troubleshooting

Bugs, Tips & Quirks

MacDown shows odd, non-conforming, and unexpected output compared to Marked2, for example.

  • Footnotes are broken down into text, followed by a numbered list. However, nubmbered holds no content. [EDIT: 🧰 Fixed!! Add space between colon and text (at the extended footnote.)]
  • SEE: Notes section (following) for breakdown of today’s problematic encounters (almost entirely resolved.)
    • MacDown continues to render nested blockquotes unpredictably (post woohoo.) However, after employing GitHub edit/preview feature, I feel confident with the final sample’s syntax.

Notes: WILT Summary

The tremendous and varied Markdown implementations in the field should be made clear. This led to confusion and frustration as I started, particularly in testing new ideas. The inconsistent rendering left me feeling helpless and stopped my ability to absorb even the basics of what otherwise should be a streamlined, get-to-work language.

After research and due diligence, I see CommonMark and GitHub flavored4 as essential and widely used implementations. CommonMark seemed intent on a consortium to determine standards, led by a top-flight corps of volunteer engineers, ranging from the cream of Stack Overflow/Exchange to GitHub, Pandoc, Reddit, et al. However, their last “Spec” seems to have been developed two years ago, in 2021, and none has been formally published afaik.5 ‼️ MultiMark is yet another seemingly important Markdown branch I should document.

I enjoy using MacDown Editor with Marked2 parser/renderer/previewer (oy!), plus Zettlr for organizing attribuion. However, each new Markdwon concept, particularly newer elements, was generating confusion—not understanding if inconsistencies or unexpected behavior was due to user error (me) or differences in parsing engine or settings, on and on. The helpful (and excellent) tool, Babelmark 36 by Alexandre Mutel 7, renders a comparison of over 250+ (‼️ cite?) Markdown “converts servers,” along with relevant information attached to each run. It is a fantastic tool. Nonetheless, the “noise” of many instances and a very reasonable 1000-line limit limit the tool for day-to-day production use.

After much trial and error, I’ve settled on my stash of GitHub repos to demo and test run final .md files—especially READMEs. I am confident that what renders well on GitHub will conform and render well in most spaces where I want these files to be hosted. In fact, after cleaning up my “tests” here on GitHub and pasting them back into my local directories, both MacDown and Marked2 behave beautifully in EVERY SINGLE edge case! 🎉 (err, well, most.. woohoo!)

GitHub (for now) is not the ideal space to build a starter developer house. It’s powerful while streamlined.. and yet daunting (to me, rn). On the other hand, as a repository of .md files, GitHub is perfect! I can’t get into too much trouble posting READMEs 😳. I’m excited to start my coding journey, knowing I have a safe place to test and host documentation–the lifeblood of the student.

NOTES: Further research

  • Document history of Markdown.
  • Note Markdown’s current status.
  • Chronicle VIPs in the field.

Resources

Tools used

  • Markdown (GitHub Flavored; CommonMark)
  • MacDown
  • Marked2
  • Zettlr
  • Babelmark 3
  • GitHub.com (specifically Markdown Edit/Preview function)
  • untrammeled-penny repo8
  • Vivaldi
  • MacOS Ventura, 13.5.1; MacBookPro 2023, M2 Max

Endnotes

Footnotes

  1. NOTE: The syntax sample for nesting a blockquote w/in a list does not render well in MacDown’s parsed preview. The best I can achieve is to add two spaces after parent bullet item, which will indent the child blockquote correctly (but with the > appearing and lacking blockquote-like style.) I was/am okay with this “workaround” as MacDown is simply the editor and not a final host for any doc—Marked2 mirrors GitHub’s output correctly. However, the two extra spaces will fail after a copy/paste from GitHub’s editor, as extra white space gets stripped out after a commit. (I am wrong about GitHub stripping white space—GH utilizes double spaces at the end of sentences as a syntax element. But MacDown rendering still is a bug, IMO) I want to report this as a bug to MacDown and see the response. --This too may be an error as many parsers render similarly, per Babel 3, Aug 2023. GitHub's site renders currently scripted syntax as correct for the purpose—I don't understand why Markdown's preview is't matching it.

  2. Answered by Catija (2020); Staff/moderator at Meta.stackexchange.com.

  3. Catija (2020) (example of poor Markdown).

  4. GitHub Flavored Markdown Spec.

  5. CommonMark Spec / CommMark main site.

  6. Babelmark 3: Compare Markdown Implementations.
    ‼️ Note: Babelmark 1 & 2 were developed and maintained by previous VIPs.

  7. Alexandre Mutel’s personal website.

  8. untrammeled-penny at GitHub.

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