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In further praise of Markdown
Merlin Mann | Feb 11 2005
Well, friends, I now find I’m writing—in longhand, mind you—using Markdown. For those who haven’t tried it yet, Markdown is John Gruber’s insanely great syntax and transformation tool for turning structured text into valid XHTML. I’m discovering that, when I’m jotting quickly, headings become “ As ever, I really recommend you take a spin with Markdown, particularly in the context of gu.st’s wonderful HumaneText No.4. It’s a terrific OS X Service that combines Markdown with Smartypants and html2text (Aaron Swartz’s elegant reverse-MD Python script). HumaneText is a breeze to install, and I promise it will shave minutes of brainless markup from your day, every day—even if you do start noticing the disturbing side effect of occasionally replacing a perfectly useful straight line with “ (For you Wintel/Cygwin kids, be sure to check out Sippey’s smart little hack: markdown for windows.) 41 Comments
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![]() Nick, Yes, yes, and yes. The...Submitted by Trent (not verified) on February 11, 2005 - 10:29am.
Nick, Yes, yes, and yes. The Markdown.pl script from Gruber's site is a perl script that acts like a filter. If you use BBEdit, you simply install Markdown as a Unix filter. Textedit does not have such functionality built in, but I believe that subethaedit now does, as well as a host of other unix-aware text editors. And you can always use Markdown.pl from the command line -- echo "Some Markdown text" | Markdown.pl » POSTED IN:
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