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Reason: None provided.

*italics text* = italics text

**bold text** = bold text

***bold and italics text*** = bold and italics text

Putting between one to four # signs at the start of a new line will cause:

#This is the largest header (used for titles)

##This is a little smaller (used for main headers)

###smaller still (used for sections)

####smallest (used for subsections)

> At the start of this line, > makes it a quote, e.g.

At the start of this line, > makes it a quote, e.g.

Possibly the most unintuitive but simultaneously useful one, a backslash (\) is an escape code. Whenever you want to type a special character like * without changing how the line looks (e.g., normally if I put another * here, the layout would assume everything from "without" to "another" should be italicized per the rules, but it doesn't because I escaped both of them), use \ before the character in question (and as a special character itself, that means to type a backslash unambiguously you should type backslash twice, \\. The first one to tell the parser to escape the next character, and the second one as the character being escaped from its normal rules, e.g. a backslash being told not to be an escape character because the character before it, a backslash, was an escape character. It gets crazy quick.)

TD.win doesn't use the full Markup suite, but there's enough there to be concise if you wanna or meme if you gonna.

73 days ago
1 score
Reason: Original

*italics text* = italics text

**bold text** = bold text

***bold and italics text*** = bold and italics text

Putting between one to four # signs at the start of a new line will cause:

#This is the largest header (used for titles)

##This is a little smaller (used for main headers)

###smaller still (used for sections)

####smallest (used for subsections)

> At the start of this line, > makes it a quote, e.g.

At the start of this line, > makes it a quote, e.g.

Possibly the most unintuitive but simultaneously useful one, a backslash (\) is an escape code. Whenever you want to type a special character like * without changing how the line looks (e.g., normally if I put another * here, the layout would assume everything from "without" to "another" should be italicized per the rules, but it doesn't because I escaped both of them), use \ before the character in question (and as a special character itself, that means to type a backslash unambiguously you should type backslash twice, \\. The first one to tell the parser to escape the next character, and the second one as the character being escaped from its normal rules, a backslash being told not to be an escape character. It gets crazy quick.)

TD.win doesn't use the full Markup suite, but there's enough there to be concise if you wanna or meme if you gonna.

73 days ago
1 score