Intro video Research notes are kind of like a shared blog where you can show the things you'v...
Public Lab is an open community which collaboratively develops accessible, open source, Do-It-Yourself technologies for investigating local environmental health and justice issues.
58 | ananyo2012 |
August 17, 2016 00:19
| over 8 years ago
Intro videoFormattingPublicLab.org uses Markdown, a simple way to add formatting to web pages. You can read about Markdown here, but if you want to keep things simple, you can just write in plain text and things should "just work". A great list of available Markdown syntax can be found here: http://daringfireball.net/projects/markdown/syntax To preview the formatting of your content, click "Preview" at the bottom of the editing window. Advanced formattingHyperlinksTo embed a link in clickable text, type the text in square brackets directly followed by the url in parentheses (or use the link button above):
This is displayed as: You can also use relative links within the wiki. Beginning a link with a forward slash connotes that you want to start after publiclab.org. For example, suppose you were on the following wiki page:
and you wanted to link to someone's user profile. The following:
would be displayed as: username ImagesTo add an image:
Captions
ListsMake a bulleted list by starting with a blank line and then starting each line with
Will display as:
For numbered lists, after a blank line start each item with any number, a period, and a space:
Will display as:
To indent a line, indent it at least four spaces for each indent
CodeTo enter short (single line) examples of code (html, markdown, Javascript, etc) so that it will not be interpreted, begin and end the text with backtick quotes (on an American keyboard, that's on the key with the tilde ~; on a British keyboard it's usually in the top left-hand corner of the keyboard, with the |):
To enter larger blocks of code, indent each line 4 spaces. Buttons and other HTML...see many examples on http://publiclab.org/lists or stick an "edit this wiki page" button in line by simply adding TablesTo create this: ...use this type of markdown where cells are separated by pipes and rows are separated by carriage returns:
Power tagsPower tags are an advanced feature which can add extra functions and layout options to your wiki pages (and sometimes research notes). FoldawaysFoldaways allow authors to hide sections of text in a kind of "accordion fold" and provide a link to reveal the hidden content. To use them, enclose your text between
will display as: Hello world! [fold:Show more text] Hello, hidden world! [unfold] Alert FlagsLearn more about the new Spectral Workbench 2.
You can also say class="alert alert-info" for blue, "alert alert-success" for green, "alert alert-error" for red boxes: This tool has been thoroughly tested in the field.
...this is a wiki... help flesh this out! [edit] ... |
Revert | |
57 | ananyo2012 |
August 17, 2016 00:17
| over 8 years ago
Intro videoFormattingPublicLab.org uses Markdown, a simple way to add formatting to web pages. You can read about Markdown here, but if you want to keep things simple, you can just write in plain text and things should "just work". A great list of available Markdown syntax can be found here: http://daringfireball.net/projects/markdown/syntax To preview the formatting of your content, click "Preview" at the bottom of the editing window. Advanced formattingHyperlinksTo embed a link in clickable text, type the text in square brackets directly followed by the url in parentheses (or use the link button above):
This is displayed as: You can also use relative links within the wiki. Beginning a link with a forward slash connotes that you want to start after publiclab.org. For example, suppose you were on the following wiki page:
and you wanted to link to someone's user profile. The following:
would be displayed as: username ImagesTo add an image:
Captions
ListsMake a bulleted list by starting with a blank line and then starting each line with
Will display as:
For numbered lists, after a blank line start each item with any number, a period, and a space:
Will display as:
To indent a line, indent it at least four spaces for each indent
CodeTo enter short (single line) examples of code (html, markdown, Javascript, etc) so that it will not be interpreted, begin and end the text with backtick quotes (on an American keyboard, that's on the key with the tilde ~; on a British keyboard it's usually in the top left-hand corner of the keyboard, with the |):
To enter larger blocks of code, indent each line 4 spaces. Buttons and other HTML...see many examples on http://publiclab.org/lists or stick an "edit this wiki page" button in line by simply adding TablesTo create this: ...use this type of markdown where cells are separated by pipes and rows are separated by carriage returns:
Power tagsPower tags are an advanced feature which can add extra functions and layout options to your wiki pages (and sometimes research notes). FoldawaysFoldaways allow authors to hide sections of text in a kind of "accordion fold" and provide a link to reveal the hidden content. To use them, enclose your text between
will display as: Hello world! [fold:Show more text] Hello, hidden world! [unfold] Alert FlagsLearn more about the new Spectral Workbench 2.
You can also say class="alert alert-info" for blue, "alert alert-success" for green, "alert alert-error" for red boxes: This tool has been thoroughly tested in the field.
...this is a wiki... help flesh this out! [edit] ... |
Revert | |
56 | liz |
July 13, 2016 19:22
| over 8 years ago
Intro videoFormattingPublicLab.org uses Markdown, a simple way to add formatting to web pages. You can read about Markdown here, but if you want to keep things simple, you can just write in plain text and things should "just work". A great list of available Markdown syntax can be found here: http://daringfireball.net/projects/markdown/syntax To preview the formatting of your content, click "Preview" at the bottom of the editing window. Advanced formattingHyperlinksTo embed a link in clickable text, type the text in square brackets directly followed by the url in parentheses (or use the link button above):
This is displayed as: You can also use relative links within the wiki. Beginning a link with a forward slash connotes that you want to start after publiclab.org. For example, suppose you were on the following wiki page:
and you wanted to link to someone's user profile. The following:
would be displayed as: username ImagesTo add an image:
Captions
ListsMake a bulleted list by starting with a blank line and then starting each line with
Will display as:
For numbered lists, after a blank line start each item with any number, a period, and a space:
Will display as:
To indent a line, indent it at least four spaces for each indent
CodeTo enter short (single line) examples of code (html, markdown, Javascript, etc) so that it will not be interpreted, begin and end the text with backtick quotes (on an American keyboard, that's on the key with the tilde ~; on a British keyboard it's usually in the top left-hand corner of the keyboard, with the |):
To enter larger blocks of code, indent each line 4 spaces. Buttons and other HTML...see many examples on http://publiclab.org/lists or stick an "edit this wiki page" button in line by simply adding TablesTo create this: ...use this type of markdown where cells are separated by pipes and rows are separated by carriage returns:
Power tagsPower tags are an advanced feature which can add extra functions and layout options to your wiki pages (and sometimes research notes). FoldawaysFoldaways allow authors to hide sections of text in a kind of "accordion fold" and provide a link to reveal the hidden content. To use them, enclose your text between
will display as: Hello world! [fold:Show more text] Hello, hidden world! [unfold] Alert FlagsLearn more about the new Spectral Workbench 2.
You can also say class="alert alert-info" for blue, "alert alert-success" for green, "alert alert-error" for red boxes: This tool has been thoroughly tested in the field.
...this is a wiki... help flesh this out! [edit] ... |
Revert | |
55 | liz |
July 13, 2016 19:20
| over 8 years ago
Intro videoFormattingPublicLab.org uses Markdown, a simple way to add formatting to web pages. You can read about Markdown here, but if you want to keep things simple, you can just write in plain text and things should "just work". A great list of available Markdown syntax can be found here: http://daringfireball.net/projects/markdown/syntax To preview the formatting of your content, click "Preview" at the bottom of the editing window. Advanced formattingHyperlinksTo embed a link in clickable text, type the text in square brackets directly followed by the url in parentheses (or use the link button above):
This is displayed as: You can also use relative links within the wiki. Beginning a link with a forward slash connotes that you want to start after publiclab.org. For example, suppose you were on the following wiki page:
and you wanted to link to someone's user profile. The following:
would be displayed as: username ImagesTo add an image:
Captions
ListsMake a bulleted list by starting with a blank line and then starting each line with
Will display as:
For numbered lists, after a blank line start each item with any number, a period, and a space:
Will display as:
To indent a line, indent it at least four spaces for each indent
CodeTo enter short (single line) examples of code (html, markdown, Javascript, etc) so that it will not be interpreted, begin and end the text with backtick quotes (on an American keyboard, that's on the key with the tilde ~; on a British keyboard it's usually in the top left-hand corner of the keyboard, with the |):
To enter larger blocks of code, indent each line 4 spaces. Buttons and other HTML...see many examples on http://publiclab.org/lists or stick an "edit this wiki page" button in line by simply adding TablesTo create this: ...use this type of markdown where cells are separated by pipes and rows are separated by carriage returns:
Power tagsPower tags are an advanced feature which can add extra functions and layout options to your wiki pages (and sometimes research notes). FoldawaysFoldaways allow authors to hide sections of text in a kind of "accordion fold" and provide a link to reveal the hidden content. To use them, enclose your text between
will display as: Hello world! [fold:Show more text] Hello, hidden world! [unfold] Alert FlagsLearn more about the new Spectral Workbench 2.
This page is under development by people like you.
You can also say class="alert alert-info" for blue, "alert alert-success" for green, "alert alert-error" for red boxes. ...this is a wiki... help flesh this out! [edit] ... |
Revert | |
54 | liz |
March 01, 2016 18:42
| almost 9 years ago
Intro videoFormattingPublicLab.org uses Markdown, a simple way to add formatting to web pages. You can read about Markdown here, but if you want to keep things simple, you can just write in plain text and things should "just work". A great list of available Markdown syntax can be found here: http://daringfireball.net/projects/markdown/syntax To preview the formatting of your content, click "Preview" at the bottom of the editing window. Advanced formattingHyperlinksTo embed a link in clickable text, type the text in square brackets directly followed by the url in parentheses (or use the link button above):
This is displayed as: You can also use relative links within the wiki. Beginning a link with a forward slash connotes that you want to start after publiclab.org. For example, suppose you were on the following wiki page:
and you wanted to link to someone's user profile. The following:
would be displayed as: username ImagesTo add an image:
Captions
ListsMake a bulleted list by starting with a blank line and then starting each line with
Will display as:
For numbered lists, after a blank line start each item with any number, a period, and a space:
Will display as:
To indent a line, indent it at least four spaces for each indent
CodeTo enter short (single line) examples of code (html, markdown, Javascript, etc) so that it will not be interpreted, begin and end the text with backtick quotes (on an American keyboard, that's on the key with the tilde ~; on a British keyboard it's usually in the top left-hand corner of the keyboard, with the |):
To enter larger blocks of code, indent each line 4 spaces. Buttons and other HTML...see many examples on http://publiclab.org/lists or stick an "edit this wiki page" button in line by simply adding TablesTo create this: ...use this type of markdown where cells are separated by pipes and rows are separated by carriage returns:
Power tagsPower tags are an advanced feature which can add extra functions and layout options to your wiki pages (and sometimes research notes). FoldawaysFoldaways allow authors to hide sections of text in a kind of "accordion fold" and provide a link to reveal the hidden content. To use them, enclose your text between
will display as: Hello world! [fold:Show more text] Hello, hidden world! [unfold] Alert FlagsLearn more about the new Spectral Workbench 2.
You can also say class="alert alert-info" for blue, "alert alert-success" for green, "alert alert-error" for red boxes. ...this is a wiki... help flesh this out! [edit] ... |
Revert | |
53 | warren |
July 01, 2015 15:27
| over 9 years ago
Intro videoFormattingPublicLab.org uses Markdown, a simple way to add formatting to web pages. You can read about Markdown here, but if you want to keep things simple, you can just write in plain text and things should "just work". A great list of available Markdown syntax can be found here: http://daringfireball.net/projects/markdown/syntax To preview the formatting of your content, click "Preview" at the bottom of the editing window. Advanced formattingHyperlinksTo embed a link in clickable text, type the text in square brackets directly followed by the url in parentheses (or use the link button above):
This is displayed as: You can also use relative links within the wiki. Beginning a link with a forward slash connotes that you want to start after publiclab.org. For example, suppose you were on the following wiki page:
and you wanted to link to someone's user profile. The following:
would be displayed as: username ImagesTo add an image:
Captions
ListsMake a bulleted list by starting with a blank line and then starting each line with
Will display as:
For numbered lists, after a blank line start each item with any number, a period, and a space:
Will display as:
To indent a line, indent it at least four spaces for each indent
CodeTo enter short (single line) examples of code (html, markdown, Javascript, etc) so that it will not be interpreted, begin and end the text with backtick quotes (on an American keyboard, that's on the key with the tilde ~; on a British keyboard it's usually in the top left-hand corner of the keyboard, with the |):
To enter larger blocks of code, indent each line 4 spaces. Buttons and other HTML...see many examples on http://publiclab.org/lists or stick an "edit this wiki page" button in line by simply adding TablesTo create this: ...use this type of markdown where cells are separated by pipes and rows are separated by carriage returns:
Power tagsPower tags are an advanced feature which can add extra functions and layout options to your wiki pages (and sometimes research notes). FoldawaysFoldaways allow authors to hide sections of text in a kind of "accordion fold" and provide a link to reveal the hidden content. To use them, enclose your text between
will display as: Hello world! [fold:Show more text] Hello, hidden world! [unfold] ...this is a wiki... help flesh this out! [edit] ... |
Revert | |
52 | warren |
July 01, 2015 15:26
| over 9 years ago
Intro videoFormattingPublicLab.org uses Markdown, a simple way to add formatting to web pages. You can read about Markdown here, but if you want to keep things simple, you can just write in plain text and things should "just work". A great list of available Markdown syntax can be found here: http://daringfireball.net/projects/markdown/syntax To preview the formatting of your content, click "Preview" at the bottom of the editing window. Advanced formattingHyperlinksTo embed a link in clickable text, type the text in square brackets directly followed by the url in parentheses (or use the link button above):
This is displayed as: You can also use relative links within the wiki. Beginning a link with a forward slash connotes that you want to start after publiclab.org. For example, suppose you were on the following wiki page:
and you wanted to link to someone's user profile. The following:
would be displayed as: username ImagesTo add an image:
Captions
ListsMake a bulleted list by starting with a blank line and then starting each line with
Will display as:
For numbered lists, after a blank line start each item with any number, a period, and a space:
Will display as:
To indent a line, indent it at least four spaces for each indent
CodeTo enter short (single line) examples of code (html, markdown, Javascript, etc) so that it will not be interpreted, begin and end the text with backtick quotes (on an American keyboard, that's on the key with the tilde ~; on a British keyboard it's usually in the top left-hand corner of the keyboard, with the |):
To enter larger blocks of code, indent each line 4 spaces. Buttons and other HTML...see many examples on http://publiclab.org/lists or stick an "edit this wiki page" button in line by simply adding TablesTo create this: ...use this type of markdown where cells are separated by pipes and rows are separated by carriage returns:
Power tagsPower tags are an advanced feature which can add extra functions and layout options to your wiki pages (and sometimes research notes). FoldawaysFoldaways allow authors to hide sections of text in a kind of "accordion fold" and provide a link to reveal the hidden content. To use them, enclose your text between
Will display as: Hello world! [fold:Show more text] Hello, hidden world! [unfold] ...this is a wiki... help flesh this out! [edit] ... |
Revert | |
51 | warren |
July 01, 2015 15:06
| over 9 years ago
Intro videoFormattingPublicLab.org uses Markdown, a simple way to add formatting to web pages. You can read about Markdown here, but if you want to keep things simple, you can just write in plain text and things should "just work". A great list of available Markdown syntax can be found here: http://daringfireball.net/projects/markdown/syntax To preview the formatting of your content, click "Preview" at the bottom of the editing window. Advanced formattingHyperlinksTo embed a link in clickable text, type the text in square brackets directly followed by the url in parentheses (or use the link button above):
This is displayed as: You can also use relative links within the wiki. Beginning a link with a forward slash connotes that you want to start after publiclab.org. For example, suppose you were on the following wiki page:
and you wanted to link to someone's user profile. The following:
would be displayed as: username ImagesTo add an image:
Captions
ListsMake a bulleted list by starting with a blank line and then starting each line with
Will display as:
For numbered lists, after a blank line start each item with any number, a period, and a space:
Will display as:
To indent a line, indent it at least four spaces for each indent
CodeTo enter short (single line) examples of code (html, markdown, Javascript, etc) so that it will not be interpreted, begin and end the text with backtick quotes (on an American keyboard, that's on the key with the tilde ~; on a British keyboard it's usually in the top left-hand corner of the keyboard, with the |):
To enter larger blocks of code, indent each line 4 spaces. Buttons and other HTML...see many examples on http://publiclab.org/lists or stick an "edit this wiki page" button in line by simply adding TablesTo create this: ...use this type of markdown where cells are separated by pipes and rows are separated by carriage returns:
Power tagsPower tags are an advanced feature which can add extra functions and layout options to your wiki pages (and sometimes research notes). FoldawaysFoldaways allow authors to hide sections of text in a kind of "accordion fold" and provide a link to reveal the hidden content. To use them, enclose your text between
Will display as: Hello world! [fold:Show more text] Hello, hidden world! [unfold] ...this is a wiki... help flesh this out! [edit] ... |
Revert | |
50 | warren |
July 01, 2015 15:06
| over 9 years ago
Intro videoFormattingPublicLab.org uses Markdown, a simple way to add formatting to web pages. You can read about Markdown here, but if you want to keep things simple, you can just write in plain text and things should "just work". A great list of available Markdown syntax can be found here: http://daringfireball.net/projects/markdown/syntax To preview the formatting of your content, click "Preview" at the bottom of the editing window. Advanced formattingHyperlinksTo embed a link in clickable text, type the text in square brackets directly followed by the url in parentheses (or use the link button above):
This is displayed as: You can also use relative links within the wiki. Beginning a link with a forward slash connotes that you want to start after publiclab.org. For example, suppose you were on the following wiki page:
and you wanted to link to someone's user profile. The following:
would be displayed as: username ImagesTo add an image:
Captions
ListsMake a bulleted list by starting with a blank line and then starting each line with
Will display as:
For numbered lists, after a blank line start each item with any number, a period, and a space:
Will display as:
To indent a line, indent it at least four spaces for each indent
CodeTo enter short (single line) examples of code (html, markdown, Javascript, etc) so that it will not be interpreted, begin and end the text with backtick quotes (on an American keyboard, that's on the key with the tilde ~; on a British keyboard it's usually in the top left-hand corner of the keyboard, with the |):
To enter larger blocks of code, indent each line 4 spaces. Buttons and other HTML...see many examples on http://publiclab.org/lists or stick an "edit this wiki page" button in line by simply adding TablesTo create this: ...use this type of markdown where cells are separated by pipes and rows are separated by carriage returns:
Power tagsPower tags are an advanced feature which can add extra functions and layout options to your wiki pages (and sometimes research notes). FoldawaysFoldaways allow authors to hide sections of text in a kind of "accordion fold" and provide a link to reveal the hidden content. To use them, enclose your text between
Will display as: Hello world! [fold:Show more text] Hello, hidden world! [unfold] ...this is a wiki... help flesh this out! [edit] ... |
Revert | |
49 | warren |
June 30, 2015 19:49
| over 9 years ago
Intro videoFormattingPublicLab.org uses Markdown, a simple way to add formatting to web pages. You can read about Markdown here, but if you want to keep things simple, you can just write in plain text and things should "just work". A great list of available Markdown syntax can be found here: http://daringfireball.net/projects/markdown/syntax To preview the formatting of your content, click "Preview" at the bottom of the editing window. Advanced formattingHyperlinks To embed a link in clickable text, type the text in square brackets directly followed by the url in parentheses (or use the link button above): You can also use relative links within the wiki. Beginning a link with a forward slash connotes that you want to start after publiclab.org. For example, suppose you were on the following wiki page:
and you wanted to link to someone's user profile. The following:
would be displayed as: username Images
Captions
Lists Make a bulleted list by starting with a blank line and then starting each line with
Will display as:
For numbered lists, after a blank line start each item with any number, a period, and a space:
Will display as:
To indent a line, indent it at least four spaces for each indent
Code To enter short (single line) examples of code (html, markdown, Javascript, etc) so that it will not be interpreted, begin and end the text with backtick quotes (on an American keyboard, that's on the key with the tilde ~; on a British keyboard it's usually in the top left-hand corner of the keyboard, with the |):
To enter larger blocks of code, indent each line 4 spaces. Buttons and other HTML ...see many examples on http://publiclab.org/lists or stick an "edit this wiki page" button in line by simply adding Tables To create this: ...use this type of markdown where cells are separated by pipes and rows are separated by carriage returns:
Power tags Power tags are an advanced feature which can add extra functions and layout options to your wiki pages (and sometimes research notes). ...this is a wiki... help flesh this out! [edit] ... |
Revert | |
48 | warren |
June 30, 2015 19:48
| over 9 years ago
Intro videoFormattingPublicLab.org uses Markdown, a simple way to add formatting to web pages. You can read about Markdown here, but if you want to keep things simple, you can just write in plain text and things should "just work". A great list of available Markdown syntax can be found here: http://daringfireball.net/projects/markdown/syntax To preview the formatting of your content, click "Preview" at the bottom of the editing window. Advanced formattingHyperlinks To embed a link in clickable text, type the text in square brackets directly followed by the url in parentheses (or use the link button above): You can also use relative links within the wiki. Beginning a link with a forward slash connotes that you want to start after publiclab.org. For example, suppose you were on the following wiki page:
and you wanted to link to someone's user profile. The following:
would be displayed as: username Images
Captions
Lists Make a bulleted list by starting with a blank line and then starting each line with
Will display as:
For numbered lists, after a blank line start each item with any number, a period, and a space:
Will display as:
To indent a line, indent it at least four spaces for each indent
Code To enter short (single line) examples of code (html, markdown, Javascript, etc) so that it will not be interpreted, begin and end the text with backtick quotes (on an American keyboard, that's on the key with the tilde ~; on a British keyboard it's usually in the top left-hand corner of the keyboard, with the |).
To enter larger blocks of code, indent each line 4 spaces. Buttons and other HTML ...see many examples on http://publiclab.org/lists or stick an "edit this wiki page" button in line by simply adding Tables To create this: ...use this type of markdown where cells are separated by pipes and rows are separated by carriage returns:
Power tags Power tags are an advanced feature which can add extra functions and layout options to your wiki pages (and sometimes research notes). ...this is a wiki... help flesh this out! [edit] ... |
Revert | |
47 | natalie |
March 11, 2015 01:10
| over 9 years ago
Intro videoFormattingPublicLab.org uses Markdown, a simple way to add formatting to web pages. You can read about Markdown here, but if you want to keep things simple, you can just write in plain text and things should "just work". A great list of available Markdown syntax can be found here: http://daringfireball.net/projects/markdown/syntax To preview the formatting of your content, click "Preview" at the bottom of the editing window. Advanced formattingHyperlinks To embed a link in clickable text, type the text in square brackets directly followed by the url in parentheses (or use the link button above): You can also use relative links within the wiki. Beginning a link with a forward slash connotes that you want to start after publiclab.org. For example, suppose you were on the following wiki page:
and you wanted to link to someone's user profile. The following:
would be displayed as: username Images
Captions
Lists Make a bulleted list by starting with a blank line and then starting each line with
Will display as:
For numbered lists, after a blank line start each item with any number, a period, and a space:
Will display as:
To indent a line, indent it at least four spaces for each indent (sometimes fewer works):
Code To enter short (single line) examples of code (html, markdown, Javascript, etc) so that it will not be interpreted, begin and end the text with backtick quotes (on an American keyboard, that's on the key with the tilde ~; on a British keyboard it's usually in the top left-hand corner of the keyboard, with the |). To enter larger blocks of code, indent each line 4 spaces. Buttons and other HTML ...see many examples on http://publiclab.org/lists or stick an "edit this wiki page" button in line by simply adding Tables To create this: ...use this type of markdown where cells are separated by pipes and rows are separated by carriage returns:
Power tags Power tags are an advanced feature which can add extra functions and layout options to your wiki pages (and sometimes research notes). ...this is a wiki... help flesh this out! [edit] ... |
Revert | |
46 | mollydanielsson |
February 14, 2015 23:46
| almost 10 years ago
Intro videoFormattingPublicLab.org uses Markdown, a simple way to add formatting to web pages. You can read about Markdown here, but if you want to keep things simple, you can just write in plain text and things should "just work". A great list of available Markdown syntax can be found here: http://daringfireball.net/projects/markdown/syntax To preview the formatting of your content, click "Preview" at the bottom of the editing window. Advanced formattingHyperlinks To embed a link in clickable text, type the text in square brackets directly followed by the url in parentheses (or use the link button above): You can also use relative links within the wiki. Beginning a link with a forward slash connotes that you want to start after publiclab.org. For example, suppose you were on the following wiki page:
and you wanted to link to someone's user profile. The following:
would be displayed as: username Images
Captions
Lists Make a bulleted list by starting with a blank line and then starting each line with
Will display as:
For numbered lists, after a blank line start each item with any number, a period, and a space:
Will display as:
To indent a line, indent it at least four spaces for each indent (sometimes fewer works):
Code To enter short (single line) examples of code (html, markdown, Javascript, etc) so that it will not be interpreted, begin and end the text with backtick quotes (on an American keyboard, that's on the key with the tilde ~; on a British keyboard it's usually in the top left-hand corner of the keyboard, with the |). To enter larger blocks of code, indent each line 4 spaces. Buttons and other HTML ...see many examples on http://publiclab.org/lists or stick an "edit this wiki page" button in line by simply adding Tables To create this: ...use this type of markdown where cells are separated by pipes and rows are separated by carriage returns:
Power tags Power tags are an advanced feature which can add extra functions and layout options to your wiki pages (and sometimes research notes). ...this is a wiki... help flesh this out! [edit] ... |
Revert | |
45 | mollydanielsson |
February 14, 2015 23:46
| almost 10 years ago
Intro videoFormattingPublicLab.org uses Markdown, a simple way to add formatting to web pages. You can read about Markdown here, but if you want to keep things simple, you can just write in plain text and things should "just work". A great list of available Markdown syntax can be found here: http://daringfireball.net/projects/markdown/syntax To preview the formatting of your content, click "Preview" at the bottom of the editing window. Advanced formattingHyperlinks To embed a link in clickable text, type the text in square brackets directly followed by the url in parentheses (or use the link button above): You can also use relative links within the wiki. Beginning a link with a forward slash connotes that you want to start after publiclab.org. For example, suppose you were on the following wiki page:
and you wanted to link to someone's user profile. The following:
would be displayed as: username Images
Captions
Example Caption: space space ON THIS NEW LINE ADD A CAPTION and Replace the two underscores with spaces. Lists Make a bulleted list by starting with a blank line and then starting each line with
Will display as:
For numbered lists, after a blank line start each item with any number, a period, and a space:
Will display as:
To indent a line, indent it at least four spaces for each indent (sometimes fewer works):
Code To enter short (single line) examples of code (html, markdown, Javascript, etc) so that it will not be interpreted, begin and end the text with backtick quotes (on an American keyboard, that's on the key with the tilde ~; on a British keyboard it's usually in the top left-hand corner of the keyboard, with the |). To enter larger blocks of code, indent each line 4 spaces. Buttons and other HTML ...see many examples on http://publiclab.org/lists or stick an "edit this wiki page" button in line by simply adding Tables To create this: ...use this type of markdown where cells are separated by pipes and rows are separated by carriage returns:
Power tags Power tags are an advanced feature which can add extra functions and layout options to your wiki pages (and sometimes research notes). ...this is a wiki... help flesh this out! [edit] ... |
Revert | |
44 | mollydanielsson |
February 14, 2015 23:44
| almost 10 years ago
Intro videoFormattingPublicLab.org uses Markdown, a simple way to add formatting to web pages. You can read about Markdown here, but if you want to keep things simple, you can just write in plain text and things should "just work". A great list of available Markdown syntax can be found here: http://daringfireball.net/projects/markdown/syntax To preview the formatting of your content, click "Preview" at the bottom of the editing window. Advanced formattingHyperlinks To embed a link in clickable text, type the text in square brackets directly followed by the url in parentheses (or use the link button above): You can also use relative links within the wiki. Beginning a link with a forward slash connotes that you want to start after publiclab.org. For example, suppose you were on the following wiki page:
and you wanted to link to someone's user profile. The following:
would be displayed as: username Images
Captions
Example Caption: __ ON THIS NEW LINE ADD A CAPTION and Replace the two underscores with spaces. Lists Make a bulleted list by starting with a blank line and then starting each line with
Will display as:
For numbered lists, after a blank line start each item with any number, a period, and a space:
Will display as:
To indent a line, indent it at least four spaces for each indent (sometimes fewer works):
Code To enter short (single line) examples of code (html, markdown, Javascript, etc) so that it will not be interpreted, begin and end the text with backtick quotes (on an American keyboard, that's on the key with the tilde ~; on a British keyboard it's usually in the top left-hand corner of the keyboard, with the |). To enter larger blocks of code, indent each line 4 spaces. Buttons and other HTML ...see many examples on http://publiclab.org/lists or stick an "edit this wiki page" button in line by simply adding Tables To create this: ...use this type of markdown where cells are separated by pipes and rows are separated by carriage returns:
Power tags Power tags are an advanced feature which can add extra functions and layout options to your wiki pages (and sometimes research notes). ...this is a wiki... help flesh this out! [edit] ... |
Revert | |
43 | liz |
January 04, 2015 20:58
| almost 10 years ago
Intro videoFormattingPublicLab.org uses Markdown, a simple way to add formatting to web pages. You can read about Markdown here, but if you want to keep things simple, you can just write in plain text and things should "just work". A great list of available Markdown syntax can be found here: http://daringfireball.net/projects/markdown/syntax To preview the formatting of your content, click "Preview" at the bottom of the editing window. Advanced formattingHyperlinks To embed a link in clickable text, type the text in square brackets directly followed by the url in parentheses (or use the link button above): You can also use relative links within the wiki. Beginning a link with a forward slash connotes that you want to start after publiclab.org. For example, suppose you were on the following wiki page:
and you wanted to link to someone's user profile. The following:
would be displayed as: username Images
Captions
Lists Make a bulleted list by starting with a blank line and then starting each line with
Will display as:
For numbered lists, after a blank line start each item with any number, a period, and a space:
Will display as:
To indent a line, indent it at least four spaces for each indent (sometimes fewer works):
Code To enter short (single line) examples of code (html, markdown, Javascript, etc) so that it will not be interpreted, begin and end the text with backtick quotes (on an American keyboard, that's on the key with the tilde ~; on a British keyboard it's usually in the top left-hand corner of the keyboard, with the |). To enter larger blocks of code, indent each line 4 spaces. Buttons and other HTML ...see many examples on http://publiclab.org/lists or stick an "edit this wiki page" button in line by simply adding Tables To create this: ...use this type of markdown where cells are separated by pipes and rows are separated by carriage returns:
Power tags Power tags are an advanced feature which can add extra functions and layout options to your wiki pages (and sometimes research notes). ...this is a wiki... help flesh this out! [edit] ... |
Revert | |
42 | liz |
January 04, 2015 20:57
| almost 10 years ago
Intro videoFormattingPublicLab.org uses Markdown, a simple way to add formatting to web pages. You can read about Markdown here, but if you want to keep things simple, you can just write in plain text and things should "just work". A great list of available Markdown syntax can be found here: http://daringfireball.net/projects/markdown/syntax To preview the formatting of your content, click "Preview" at the bottom of the editing window. Advanced formattingHyperlinks To embed a link in clickable text, type the text in square brackets directly followed by the url in parentheses (or use the link button above): You can also use relative links within the wiki. Beginning a link with a forward slash connotes that you want to start after publiclab.org. For example, suppose you were on the following wiki page:
and you wanted to link to someone's user profile. The following:
would be displayed as: username Images
Captions
Lists Make a bulleted list by starting with a blank line and then starting each line with
Will display as:
For numbered lists, after a blank line start each item with any number, a period, and a space:
Will display as:
To indent a line, indent it at least four spaces for each indent (sometimes fewer works):
Code To enter short (single line) examples of code (html, markdown, Javascript, etc) so that it will not be interpreted, begin and end the text with backtick quotes (on an American keyboard, that's on the key with the tilde ~; on a British keyboard it's usually in the top left-hand corner of the keyboard, with the |). To enter larger blocks of code, indent each line 4 spaces. Buttons and other HTML ...see many examples on http://publiclab.org/lists or stick an "edit this wiki page" button in line by simply adding Tables To create this: ...use this type of markdown where cells are separated by pipes and rows are separated by carriage returns:
Power tags Power tags are an advanced feature which can add extra functions and layout options to your wiki pages (and sometimes research notes). ...this is a wiki... help flesh this out! [edit] ... |
Revert | |
41 | liz |
January 04, 2015 20:57
| almost 10 years ago
Intro videoFormattingPublicLab.org uses Markdown, a simple way to add formatting to web pages. You can read about Markdown here, but if you want to keep things simple, you can just write in plain text and things should "just work". A great list of available Markdown syntax can be found here: http://daringfireball.net/projects/markdown/syntax To preview the formatting of your content, click "Preview" at the bottom of the editing window. Advanced formattingHyperlinks To embed a link in clickable text, type the text in square brackets directly followed by the url in parentheses (or use the link button above): You can also use relative links within the wiki. Beginning a link with a forward slash connotes that you want to start after publiclab.org. For example, suppose you were on the following wiki page:
and you wanted to link to someone's user profile. The following:
would be displayed as: username Images
Captions
Lists Make a bulleted list by starting with a blank line and then starting each line with
Will display as:
For numbered lists, after a blank line start each item with any number, a period, and a space:
Will display as:
To indent a line, indent it at least four spaces for each indent (sometimes fewer works):
Code To enter short (single line) examples of code (html, markdown, Javascript, etc) so that it will not be interpreted, begin and end the text with backtick quotes (on an American keyboard, that's on the key with the tilde ~; on a British keyboard it's usually in the top left-hand corner of the keyboard, with the |). To enter larger blocks of code, indent each line 4 spaces. Buttons and other HTML ...see many examples on http://publiclab.org/lists or stick an "edit this wiki page" button in line by simply adding Tables To create this: ...use this type of markdown where cells are separated by pipes and rows are separated by carriage returns:
Power tags Power tags are an advanced feature which can add extra functions and layout options to your wiki pages (and sometimes research notes). ...this is a wiki... help flesh this out! [edit] ... |
Revert | |
40 | liz |
January 04, 2015 20:47
| almost 10 years ago
Intro videoFormattingPublicLab.org uses Markdown, a simple way to add formatting to web pages. You can read about Markdown here, but if you want to keep things simple, you can just write in plain text and things should "just work". A great list of available Markdown syntax can be found here: http://daringfireball.net/projects/markdown/syntax To preview the formatting of your content, click "Preview" at the bottom of the editing window. Advanced formattingHyperlinks To embed a link in clickable text, type the text in square brackets directly followed by the url in parentheses (or use the link button above): You can also use relative links within the wiki. Beginning a link with a forward slash connotes that you want to start after publiclab.org. For example, suppose you were on the following wiki page:
and you wanted to link to someone's user profile. The following:
would be displayed as: username Images
Captions
Lists Make a bulleted list by starting with a blank line and then starting each line with
Will display as:
For numbered lists, after a blank line start each item with any number, a period, and a space:
Will display as:
To indent a line, indent it at least four spaces for each indent (sometimes fewer works):
Code To enter short (single line) examples of code (html, markdown, Javascript, etc) so that it will not be interpreted, begin and end the text with backtick quotes (on an American keyboard, that's on the key with the tilde ~; on a British keyboard it's usually in the top left-hand corner of the keyboard, with the |). To enter larger blocks of code, indent each line 4 spaces. Buttons and other HTML ...see many examples on http://publiclab.org/lists or stick an "edit this wiki page" button in line by simply adding Tables To create this: ...use this type of markdown where cells are separated by pipes and rows are separated by carriage returns:
Power tags Power tags are an advanced feature which can add extra functions and layout options to your wiki pages (and sometimes research notes). ...this is a wiki... help flesh this out! [edit] ... |
Revert | |
39 | liz |
January 04, 2015 20:45
| almost 10 years ago
Intro videoFormattingPublicLab.org uses Markdown, a simple way to add formatting to web pages. You can read about Markdown here, but if you want to keep things simple, you can just write in plain text and things should "just work". A great list of available Markdown syntax can be found here: http://daringfireball.net/projects/markdown/syntax To preview the formatting of your content, click "Preview" at the bottom of the editing window. Advanced formattingHyperlinks To embed a link in clickable text, type the text in square brackets directly followed by the url in parentheses (or use the link button above): You can also use relative links within the wiki. Beginning a link with a forward slash connotes that you want to start after publiclab.org. For example, suppose you were on the following wiki page:
and you wanted to link to someone's user profile. The following:
would be displayed as: username Images
Captions
Lists Make a bulleted list by starting with a blank line and then starting each line with
Will display as:
For numbered lists, after a blank line start each item with any number, a period, and a space:
Will display as:
To indent a line, indent it at least four spaces for each indent (sometimes fewer works):
Code To enter short (single line) examples of code (html, markdown, Javascript, etc) so that it will not be interpreted, begin and end the text with backtick quotes (on an American keyboard, that's on the key with the tilde ~; on a British keyboard it's usually in the top left-hand corner of the keyboard, with the |). To enter larger blocks of code, indent each line 4 spaces. Buttons and other HTML ...see many examples on http://publiclab.org/lists or stick an "edit this wiki page" button in line by simply adding Tables ...use this type of markdown:
Power tags Power tags are an advanced feature which can add extra functions and layout options to your wiki pages (and sometimes research notes). ...this is a wiki... help flesh this out! [edit] ... |
Revert |