There's something so powerful about turning simple Markdown into a full-fledged presentation tool. It feels like you're bridging the gap between simplicity and functionality. I love this challenge John. Thanks.
Markdown is great and has a very interesting history, starting with John Gruber’s first version in 2004, the CommonMark version of a decade later, and the StackOverflow contribution.
One under appreciated aspect of Markdown, especially in contrast to the alternatives (e.g. reStructuredText), is the design philosophy. I highly recommend checking out John’s original post from 2004: https://daringfireball.net/projects/markdown/
There's something so powerful about turning simple Markdown into a full-fledged presentation tool. It feels like you're bridging the gap between simplicity and functionality. I love this challenge John. Thanks.
Thanks, glad to hear you like it.
Markdown is great and has a very interesting history, starting with John Gruber’s first version in 2004, the CommonMark version of a decade later, and the StackOverflow contribution.
One under appreciated aspect of Markdown, especially in contrast to the alternatives (e.g. reStructuredText), is the design philosophy. I highly recommend checking out John’s original post from 2004: https://daringfireball.net/projects/markdown/