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Syntax guide

Here’s an overview of Markdown syntax that you can use anywhere on GitHub.com or in your own text files.

Headers

This is an h1 tag

This is an h2 tag

This is an h6 tag

Emphasis

This text will be italic This will also be italic

This text will be bold This will also be bold

You can combine them

Lists

Unordered

  • Item 1
  • Item 2
    • Item 2a
    • Item 2b

Ordered

  1. Item 1
  2. Item 2
  3. Item 3
    1. Item 3a
    2. Item 3b

Images

GitHub Logo Format: Alt Text

Links

http://github.com - automatic! GitHub

Blockquotes

As Kanye West said:

We're living the future so the present is our past.

Inline code

I think you should use an <addr> element here instead.

GitHub Flavored Markdown GitHub.com uses its own version of the Markdown syntax that provides an additional set of useful features, many of which make it easier to work with content on GitHub.com.

Note that some features of GitHub Flavored Markdown are only available in the descriptions and comments of Issues and Pull Requests. These include @mentions as well as references to SHA-1 hashes, Issues, and Pull Requests. Task Lists are also available in Gist comments and in Gist Markdown files.

Syntax highlighting

Here’s an example of how you can use syntax highlighting with GitHub Flavored Markdown:

function fancyAlert(arg) {
  if(arg) {
    $.facebox({div:'#foo'})
  }
}

You can also simply indent your code by four spaces:

function fancyAlert(arg) {
  if(arg) {
    $.facebox({div:'#foo'})
  }
}

Here’s an example of Python code without syntax highlighting:

def foo(): if not bar: return True

Task Lists

  • @mentions, #refs, links, formatting, and tags supported
  • list syntax required (any unordered or ordered list supported)
  • this is a complete item
  • this is an incomplete item If you include a task list in the first comment of an Issue, you will get a handy progress indicator in your issue list. It also works in Pull Requests!

Tables

You can create tables by assembling a list of words and dividing them with hyphens - (for the first row), and then separating each column with a pipe |:

First Header - Second Header ------------ | ------------- Content from cell 1 | Content from cell 2 Content in the first column | Content in the second column

Would become:

First Header Second Header
Content from cell 1 Content from cell 2
Content in the first column Content in the second column

SHA references

Any reference to a commit’s SHA-1 hash will be automatically converted into a link to that commit on GitHub.

16c999e8c71134401a78d4d46435517b2271d6ac mojombo@16c999e8c71134401a78d4d46435517b2271d6ac mojombo/github-flavored-markdown@16c999e8c71134401a78d4d46435517b2271d6ac

Issue references within a repository

Any number that refers to an Issue or Pull Request will be automatically converted into a link.

#1 mojombo#1 mojombo/github-flavored-markdown#1

Username @mentions

Typing an @ symbol, followed by a username, will notify that person to come and view the comment. This is called an “@mention”, because you’re mentioning the individual. You can also @mention teams within an organization.

Automatic linking for URLs

Any URL (like http://www.github.com/) will be automatically converted into a clickable link.

Strikethrough

Any word wrapped with two tildes (like this) will appear crossed out.

Emoji

GitHub supports emoji! ✨ 🐫 💥

To see a list of every image we support, check out the Emoji Cheat Sheet.

First Header Second Header
Content from cell 1 Content from cell 2
Content in the first column Content in the second column