Markdown is a markup language with plain text formatting syntax designed so that it can be converted to HTML and many other formats using a tool by the same name. Markdown is often used to format readme files, for writing messages in online discussion forums, and to create rich text using a plain text editor.
== History ==
John Gruber, with substantial contributions from Aaron Swartz, created the Markdown language in 2004 with the goal of enabling people "to write using an easy-to-read, easy-to-write plain text format, and optionally convert it to structurally valid XHTML (or HTML)”.
Taking cues...
is there an article that all Web developers should read like THE article! the Article with knowledge spewing from it. More on a generic level rather than language or whatever.
Does anybody know of a javascript library to create fancy tiled links like this? It looks simple enough to create, but there's got to be some sort of JQuery Library out there to do the work for me
well - I have the question in the title - "Is it possible to apply style on an element based on the state of another element?", but you know the SO policy
In firefox 3.6 you could use ::-moz-focus-inner {border:0;padding:0;margin:0;} to remove those default margins and paddings forms.css added.
How can I reset this in Firefox 4? I've been searching for any .css files inside the install directory that could add styles to my button but can't find an...
For a custom stylesheet (via Stylish) I want to apply a style to element A only if another element B has a certain attribute set:
<section>
<div id="some-element" class="optional-class">...</div>
</section>
...
<section>
<div id="concrete-element">...</div>
</section>
#concrete-element...