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---
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stage: Create
group: Source Code
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info: To determine the technical writer assigned to the Stage/Group associated with this page, see https://about.gitlab.com/handbook/engineering/ux/technical-writing/#assignments
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---
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# GitLab Flavored Markdown **(FREE)**
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GitLab automatically renders Markdown content. For example, when you add a comment to an issue,
you type the text in the Markdown language. When you save the issue, the text is rendered
with a set of styles. These styles are described on this page.
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For example, in Markdown, an unordered list looks like this:
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```markdown
- Cat
- Dog
- Turtle
```
When this list is rendered, it looks like this:
- Cat
- Dog
- Turtle
These styles are **valid for GitLab only** . The [GitLab documentation website ](https://docs.gitlab.com )
and the [main GitLab website ](https://about.gitlab.com ) use [Kramdown ](https://kramdown.gettalong.org ) instead.
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You should not view this page in the documentation, but instead [view these styles as they appear on GitLab ](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab/-/blob/master/doc/user/markdown.md ).
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GitLab Flavored Markdown extends the [CommonMark specification ](https://spec.commonmark.org/current/ ).
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It was inspired by [GitHub Flavored Markdown ](https://docs.github.com/en/github/writing-on-github/getting-started-with-writing-and-formatting-on-github/basic-writing-and-formatting-syntax ).
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## Where you can use GitLab Flavored Markdown
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You can use GitLab Flavored Markdown in the following areas:
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- Comments
- Issues
- Merge requests
- Milestones
- Snippets (the snippet must be named with a `.md` extension)
- Wiki pages
- Markdown documents inside repositories
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- Epics
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You can also use other rich text files in GitLab. You might have to install a dependency
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to do so. For more information, see the [`gitlab-markup` gem project ](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab-markup ).
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### Differences between GitLab Flavored Markdown and standard Markdown
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GitLab uses standard CommonMark formatting. However, GitLab Flavored Markdown
extends standard Markdown with features made specifically for GitLab.
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Features not found in standard Markdown:
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- [Color chips written in `HEX`, `RGB` or `HSL` ](#colors )
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- [Diagrams and flowcharts ](#diagrams-and-flowcharts )
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- [Emoji ](#emojis )
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- [Front matter ](#front-matter )
- [Inline diffs ](#inline-diff )
- [Math equations and symbols written in LaTeX ](#math )
- [Task Lists ](#task-lists )
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- [Table of Contents ](#table-of-contents )
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- [Wiki specific Markdown ](#wiki-specific-markdown )
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Features [extended from standard Markdown ](#features-extended-from-standard-markdown ):
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| Standard Markdown | Extended Markdown in GitLab |
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| ------------------------------------- | ------------------------- |
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| [blockquotes ](#blockquotes ) | [multi-line blockquotes ](#multiline-blockquote ) |
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| [code blocks ](#code-spans-and-blocks ) | [colored code and syntax highlighting ](#colored-code-and-syntax-highlighting ) |
| [emphasis ](#emphasis ) | [multiple underscores in words ](#multiple-underscores-in-words-and-mid-word-emphasis )
| [headers ](#headers ) | [linkable Header IDs ](#header-ids-and-links ) |
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| [images ](#images ) | [embedded videos ](#videos ) and [audio ](#audio ) |
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| [line breaks ](#line-breaks ) | [more line break control ](#newlines ) |
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| [links ](#links ) | [automatically linking URLs ](#url-auto-linking ) |
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## Features not found in standard Markdown
The following features are not found in standard Markdown.
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### Colors
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[View this topic in GitLab ](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab/-/blob/master/doc/user/markdown.md#colors ).
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You can write a color in the formats: `HEX` , `RGB` , or `HSL` .
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- `HEX` : `` `#RGB[A]` `` or `` `#RRGGBB[AA]` ``
- `RGB` : `` `RGB[A](R, G, B[, A])` ``
- `HSL` : `` `HSL[A](H, S, L[, A])` ``
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Named colors are not supported.
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Colors in backticks are followed by a color indicator:
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```markdown
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- `#F00`
- `#F00A`
- `#FF0000`
- `#FF0000AA`
- `RGB(0,255,0)`
- `RGB(0%,100%,0%)`
- `RGBA(0,255,0,0.3)`
- `HSL(540,70%,50%)`
- `HSLA(540,70%,50%,0.3)`
```
- `#F00`
- `#F00A`
- `#FF0000`
- `#FF0000AA`
- `RGB(0,255,0)`
- `RGB(0%,100%,0%)`
- `RGBA(0,255,0,0.3)`
- `HSL(540,70%,50%)`
- `HSLA(540,70%,50%,0.3)`
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### Diagrams and flowcharts
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You can generate diagrams and flowcharts from text by using [Mermaid ](https://mermaidjs.github.io/ ) or [PlantUML ](https://plantuml.com ).
You can also use [Kroki ](https://kroki.io ) to create a wide variety of diagrams.
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#### Mermaid
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Visit the [official page ](https://mermaidjs.github.io/ ) for more details. The
[Mermaid Live Editor ](https://mermaid-js.github.io/mermaid-live-editor/ ) helps you
learn Mermaid and debug issues in your Mermaid code. Use it to identify and resolve
issues in your diagrams.
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To generate a diagram or flowchart, write your text inside the `mermaid` block:
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````markdown
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```mermaid
graph TD;
A-->B;
A-->C;
B-->D;
C-->D;
```
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````
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```mermaid
graph TD;
A-->B;
A-->C;
B-->D;
C-->D;
```
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You can also include subgraphs:
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````markdown
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```mermaid
graph TB
SubGraph1 --> SubGraph1Flow
subgraph "SubGraph 1 Flow"
SubGraph1Flow(SubNode 1)
SubGraph1Flow -- Choice1 --> DoChoice1
SubGraph1Flow -- Choice2 --> DoChoice2
end
subgraph "Main Graph"
Node1[Node 1] --> Node2[Node 2]
Node2 --> SubGraph1[Jump to SubGraph1]
SubGraph1 --> FinalThing[Final Thing]
end
```
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````
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```mermaid
graph TB
SubGraph1 --> SubGraph1Flow
subgraph "SubGraph 1 Flow"
SubGraph1Flow(SubNode 1)
SubGraph1Flow -- Choice1 --> DoChoice1
SubGraph1Flow -- Choice2 --> DoChoice2
end
subgraph "Main Graph"
Node1[Node 1] --> Node2[Node 2]
Node2 --> SubGraph1[Jump to SubGraph1]
SubGraph1 --> FinalThing[Final Thing]
end
```
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#### PlantUML
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To make PlantUML available in GitLab, a GitLab administrator must enable it. For more information, see the
[PlantUML & GitLab ](../administration/integration/plantuml.md ) page.
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#### Kroki
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To make Kroki available in GitLab, a GitLab administrator must enable it.
For more information, see the [Kroki integration ](../administration/integration/kroki.md ) page.
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### Emojis
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[View this topic in GitLab ](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab/-/blob/master/doc/user/markdown.md#emojis ).
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```markdown
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Sometimes you want to :monkey: around a bit and add some :star2: to your :speech_balloon:. Well we have a gift for you:
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:zap: You can use emoji anywhere GitLab Flavored Markdown is supported. :v:
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You can use it to point out a :bug: or warn about :speak_no_evil: patches. And if someone improves your really :snail: code, send them some :birthday:. People :heart: you for that.
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If you're new to this, don't be :fearful:. You can join the emoji :family:. Just look up one of the supported codes.
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Consult the [Emoji Cheat Sheet ](https://www.emojicopy.com ) for a list of all supported emoji codes. :thumbsup:
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```
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Sometimes you want to < img src = "https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab-foss/raw/master/public/-/emojis/2/monkey.png" width = "20px" height = "20px" style = "display:inline;margin:0;border: 0" > around a bit and add some < img src = "https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab-foss/raw/master/public/-/emojis/2/star2.png" width = "20px" height = "20px" style = "display:inline;margin:0;border: 0" > to your < img src = "https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab-foss/raw/master/public/-/emojis/2/speech_balloon.png" width = "20px" height = "20px" style = "display:inline;margin:0;border: 0" > . Well we have a gift for you:
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< img src = "https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab-foss/raw/master/public/-/emojis/2/zap.png" width = "20px" height = "20px" style = "display:inline;margin:0;border: 0" > You can use emoji anywhere GitLab Flavored Markdown is supported. < img src = "https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab-foss/raw/master/public/-/emojis/2/v.png" width = "20px" height = "20px" style = "display:inline;margin:0;border: 0" >
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You can use it to point out a< img src = "https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab-foss/raw/master/public/-/emojis/2/bug.png" width = "20px" height = "20px" style = "display:inline;margin:0;border: 0" > or warn about < img src = "https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab-foss/raw/master/public/-/emojis/2/speak_no_evil.png" width = "20px" height = "20px" style = "display:inline;margin:0;border: 0" > patches. If someone improves your really < img src = "https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab-foss/raw/master/public/-/emojis/2/snail.png" width = "20px" height = "20px" style = "display:inline;margin:0;border: 0" > code, send them some < img src = "https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab-foss/raw/master/public/-/emojis/2/birthday.png" width = "20px" height = "20px" style = "display:inline;margin:0;border: 0" > . People < img src = "https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab-foss/raw/master/public/-/emojis/2/heart.png" width = "20px" height = "20px" style = "display:inline;margin:0;border: 0" > you for that.
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If you're new to this, don't be < img src = "https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab-foss/raw/master/public/-/emojis/2/fearful.png" width = "20px" height = "20px" style = "display:inline;margin:0;border: 0" > . You can join the emoji < img src = "https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab-foss/raw/master/public/-/emojis/2/family.png" width = "20px" height = "20px" style = "display:inline;margin:0;border: 0" > . Just look up one of the supported codes.
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Consult the [Emoji Cheat Sheet ](https://www.webfx.com/tools/emoji-cheat-sheet/ ) for a list of all supported emoji codes. < img src = "https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab-foss/raw/master/public/-/emojis/2/thumbsup.png" width = "20px" height = "20px" style = "display:inline;margin:0;border: 0" >
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#### Emojis and your operating system
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The previous emoji example uses hard-coded images. Rendered emojis
in GitLab may be different depending on the OS and browser used.
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Most emojis are natively supported on macOS, Windows, iOS, Android, and fall back on image-based
emojis where there is no support.
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<!-- vale gitlab.Spelling = NO -->
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On Linux, you can download [Noto Color Emoji ](https://github.com/googlefonts/noto-emoji )
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to get full native emoji support. Ubuntu 18.04 (like many modern Linux distributions) has
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this font installed by default.
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<!-- vale gitlab.Spelling = YES -->
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### Front matter
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Front matter is metadata included at the beginning of a Markdown document, preceding
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the content. This data can be used by static site generators like [Jekyll ](https://jekyllrb.com/docs/front-matter/ ),
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[Hugo ](https://gohugo.io/content-management/front-matter/ ), and many other applications.
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When you view a Markdown file rendered by GitLab, front matter is displayed as-is,
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in a box at the top of the document. The HTML content displays after the front matter. To view an example,
you can toggle between the source and rendered version of a
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[GitLab documentation file ](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab/-/blob/master/doc/index.md ).
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In GitLab, front matter is used only in Markdown files and wiki pages, not the other
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places where Markdown formatting is supported. It must be at the very top of the document
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and must be between delimiters.
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The following delimiters are supported:
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- YAML (`---`):
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```yaml
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---
title: About Front Matter
example:
language: yaml
---
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```
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- TOML (`+++`):
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```toml
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+++
title = "About Front Matter"
[example]
language = "toml"
+++
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```
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- JSON (`;;;`):
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```json
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;;;
{
"title": "About Front Matter"
"example": {
"language": "json"
}
}
;;;
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```
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Other languages are supported by adding a specifier to any of the existing
delimiters. For example:
```php
---php
$title = "About Front Matter";
$example = array(
'language' => "php",
);
---
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```
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### Inline diff
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[View this topic in GitLab ](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab/-/blob/master/doc/user/markdown.md#inline-diff ).
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With inline diff tags, you can display `{+ additions +}` or `[- deletions -]` .
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The wrapping tags can be either curly braces or square brackets:
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```markdown
- {+ addition 1 +}
- [+ addition 2 +]
- {- deletion 3 -}
- [- deletion 4 -]
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```
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![Inline diff as rendered by the GitLab interface ](img/inline_diff_01_v13_3.png )
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---
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However, you cannot mix the wrapping tags:
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```markdown
- {+ addition +]
- [+ addition +}
- {- deletion -]
- [- deletion -}
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```
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If your diff includes words in `` `code` `` font, make sure to escape each backtick `` ` ` ` with a
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backslash `\` . Otherwise the diff highlight does not render correctly:
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```markdown
- {+ Just regular text +}
- {+ Text with `backticks` inside +}
- {+ Text with escaped \`backticks\` inside +}
```
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![Inline diff with mixed formatting, as rendered by the GitLab interface ](img/inline_diff_02_v13_3.png )
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### Math
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[View this topic in GitLab ](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab/-/blob/master/doc/user/markdown.md#math ).
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Math written in LaTeX syntax is rendered with [KaTeX ](https://github.com/KaTeX/KaTeX ).
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Math written between dollar signs `$` is rendered inline with the text. Math written
in a [code block ](#code-spans-and-blocks ) with the language declared as `math` is rendered
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on a separate line:
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````markdown
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This math is inline: $`a^2+b^2=c^2`$.
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This math is on a separate line:
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```math
a^2+b^2=c^2
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```
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````
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This math is inline: $`a^2+b^2=c^2`$.
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This math is on a separate line:
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```math
a^2+b^2=c^2
```
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_KaTeX only supports a [subset ](https://katex.org/docs/supported.html ) of LaTeX._
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This syntax also works for the Asciidoctor `:stem: latexmath` . For details, see
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the [Asciidoctor user manual ](https://asciidoctor.org/docs/user-manual/#activating-stem-support ).
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### Task lists
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[View this topic in GitLab ](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab/-/blob/master/doc/user/markdown.md#task-lists ).
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You can add task lists anywhere Markdown is supported.
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- In issues, merge requests, and comments, you can click to select the boxes.
- In all other places, you cannot click to select the boxes. You must edit the Markdown manually
by adding or removing an `x` in the brackets.
To create a task list, follow the format of an ordered or unordered list:
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```markdown
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- [x] Completed task
- [ ] Incomplete task
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- [ ] Sub-task 1
- [x] Sub-task 2
- [ ] Sub-task 3
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1. [x] Completed task
1. [ ] Incomplete task
1. [ ] Sub-task 1
1. [x] Sub-task 2
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```
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![Task list as rendered by GitLab ](img/completed_tasks_v13_3.png )
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### Table of contents
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A table of contents is an unordered list that links to subheadings in the document.
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You can add a table of contents to issues and merge requests, but you can't add one
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to notes or comments. Add either the `[[_TOC_]]` or `[TOC]` tag on its own line
to the **Description** field of any of the supported content types:
- Markdown files.
- Wiki pages.
- Issues.
- Merge requests.
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```markdown
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This sentence introduces my wiki page.
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[[_TOC_]]
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## My first heading
First section content.
## My second heading
Second section content.
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```
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![Preview of an auto-generated table of contents in a Wiki ](img/markdown_toc_preview_v12_9.png )
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### Wiki-specific Markdown
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The following topics show how links inside wikis behave.
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#### Wiki - direct page link
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A direct page link includes the slug for a page that points to that page,
at the base level of the wiki.
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This example links to a `documentation` page at the root of your wiki:
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```markdown
[Link to Documentation ](documentation )
```
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#### Wiki - direct file link
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A direct file link points to a file extension for a file, relative to the current page.
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If the following example is on a page at `<your_wiki>/documentation/related` ,
it links to `<your_wiki>/documentation/file.md` :
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```markdown
[Link to File ](file.md )
```
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#### Wiki - hierarchical link
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A hierarchical link can be constructed relative to the current wiki page by using `./<page>` ,
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`../<page>` , and so on.
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If this example is on a page at `<your_wiki>/documentation/main` ,
it links to `<your_wiki>/documentation/related` :
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```markdown
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[Link to Related Page ](related )
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```
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If this example is on a page at `<your_wiki>/documentation/related/content` ,
it links to `<your_wiki>/documentation/main` :
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```markdown
[Link to Related Page ](../main )
```
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If this example is on a page at `<your_wiki>/documentation/main` ,
it links to `<your_wiki>/documentation/related.md` :
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```markdown
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[Link to Related Page ](related.md )
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```
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If this example is on a page at `<your_wiki>/documentation/related/content` ,
it links to `<your_wiki>/documentation/main.md` :
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```markdown
[Link to Related Page ](../main.md )
```
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#### Wiki - root link
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A root link starts with a `/` and is relative to the wiki root.
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This example links to `<wiki_root>/documentation` :
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```markdown
[Link to Related Page ](/documentation )
```
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This example links to `<wiki_root>/miscellaneous.md` :
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```markdown
[Link to Related Page ](/miscellaneous.md )
```
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## GitLab-specific references
GitLab Flavored Markdown renders GitLab-specific references. For example, you can reference
an issue, a commit, a team member, or even an entire project team. GitLab Flavored Markdown turns
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that reference into a link so you can navigate between them. All references to projects should use the
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**project slug** rather than the project name.
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Additionally, GitLab Flavored Markdown recognizes certain cross-project references and also has a shorthand
version to reference other projects from the same namespace.
GitLab Flavored Markdown recognizes the following:
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| references | input | cross-project reference | shortcut inside same namespace |
| :--------------------------------------------------- | :---------------------------- | :----------------------------------------- | :------------------------------- |
| specific user | `@user_name` | | |
| specific group | `@group_name` | | |
| entire team | `@all` | | |
| project | `namespace/project>` | | |
| issue | ``#123`` | `namespace/project#123` | `project#123` |
| merge request | `!123` | `namespace/project!123` | `project!123` |
| snippet | `$123` | `namespace/project$123` | `project$123` |
| [epic ](group/epics/index.md ) | `&123` | `group1/subgroup&123` | |
| vulnerability ** (ULTIMATE)** < sup > 1</ sup > | `[vulnerability:123]` | `[vulnerability:namespace/project/123]` | `[vulnerability:project/123]` |
| feature flag | `[feature_flag:123]` | `[feature_flag:namespace/project/123]` | `[feature_flag:project/123]` |
| label by ID | `~123` | `namespace/project~123` | `project~123` |
| one-word label by name | `~bug` | `namespace/project~bug` | `project~bug` |
| multi-word label by name | `~"feature request"` | `namespace/project~"feature request"` | `project~"feature request"` |
| scoped label by name | `~"priority::high"` | `namespace/project~"priority::high"` | `project~"priority::high"` |
| project milestone by ID | `%123` | `namespace/project%123` | `project%123` |
| one-word milestone by name | `%v1.23` | `namespace/project%v1.23` | `project%v1.23` |
| multi-word milestone by name | `%"release candidate"` | `namespace/project%"release candidate"` | `project%"release candidate"` |
| specific commit | `9ba12248` | `namespace/project@9ba12248` | `project@9ba12248` |
| commit range comparison | `9ba12248...b19a04f5` | `namespace/project@9ba12248...b19a04f5` | `project@9ba12248...b19a04f5` |
| repository file references | `[README](doc/README.md)` | | |
| repository file line references | `[README](doc/README.md#L13)` | | |
| [alert ](../operations/incident_management/alerts.md ) | `^alert#123` | `namespace/project^alert#123` | `project^alert#123` |
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| contact | `[contact:test@example.com]` | | |
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1. [Introduced ](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab/-/issues/222483 ) in GitLab 13.7.
For example, referencing an issue by using `#123` formats the output as a link
to issue number 123 with text `#123` . Likewise, a link to issue number 123 is
recognized and formatted with text `#123` . If you don't want `#123` to link to an issue,
add a leading backslash `\#123` .
In addition to this, links to some objects are also recognized and formatted. Some examples of these are:
- Comments on issues: `"https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab/-/issues/1234#note_101075757"` , which are rendered as `#1234 (comment 101075757)`
- The issues designs tab: `"https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab/-/issues/1234/designs"` , which are rendered as `#1234 (designs)` .
- Links to individual designs: `"https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab/-/issues/1234/designs/layout.png"` , which are rendered as `#1234[layout.png]` .
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### Show the issue, merge request, or epic title in the reference
> [Introduced](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab/-/issues/15694) in GitLab 14.6.
To include the title in the rendered link of an issue, merge request, or epic, add a plus (`+`)
at the end of the reference. For example, a reference like `#123+` is rendered as
`The issue title (#123)` .
URL references like `https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab/-/issues/1234+` are also expanded.
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### Embedding metrics in GitLab Flavored Markdown
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Metric charts can be embedded in GitLab Flavored Markdown. Read
[Embedding Metrics in GitLab flavored Markdown ](../operations/metrics/embed.md ) for more details.
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## Features extended from standard Markdown
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All standard Markdown formatting should work as expected in GitLab. Some standard
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functionality is extended with additional features, without affecting the standard usage.
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If a functionality is extended, the new option is listed as a sub-section.
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### Blockquotes
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Use a blockquote to highlight information, such as a side note. It's generated
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by starting the lines of the blockquote with `>` :
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```markdown
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> Blockquotes help you emulate reply text.
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> This line is part of the same quote.
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Quote break.
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> This very long line is still quoted properly when it wraps. Keep writing to make sure this line is long enough to actually wrap for everyone. You can also *add* **Markdown** into a blockquote.
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```
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> Blockquotes help you emulate reply text.
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> This line is part of the same quote.
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Quote break.
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> This very long line is still quoted properly when it wraps. Keep writing to make sure this line is long enough to actually wrap for everyone. You can also *add* **Markdown** into a blockquote.
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#### Multiline blockquote
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If this section isn't rendered correctly, [view it in GitLab ](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab/-/blob/master/doc/user/markdown.md#multiline-blockquote ).
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GitLab Flavored Markdown extends the standard Markdown by also supporting multi-line blockquotes
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fenced by `>>>` :
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```markdown
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>>>
If you paste a message from somewhere else
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that spans multiple lines,
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you can quote that without having to manually prepend `>` to every line!
>>>
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```
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>>>
If you paste a message from somewhere else
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that spans multiple lines,
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you can quote that without having to manually prepend `>` to every line!
>>>
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### Code spans and blocks
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You can highlight anything that should be viewed as code and not standard text.
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Inline code is highlighted with single backticks `` ` ` `:
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```markdown
Inline `code` has `back-ticks around` it.
```
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Inline `code` has `back-ticks around` it.
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---
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To achieve a similar effect for a larger code example, you can:
- Fence an entire block of code with triple backticks (```` ``` ````).
- Fence an entire block of code with triple tildes (`~~~`).
- Indent it four or more spaces.
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````markdown
```python
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def function():
#indenting works just fine in the fenced code block
s = "Python code"
print s
```
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Using 4 spaces
is like using
3-backtick fences.
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````
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```plaintext
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~~~
Tildes are OK too.
~~~
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```
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The three examples above render as:
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```python
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def function():
#indenting works just fine in the fenced code block
s = "Python code"
print s
```
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```plaintext
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Using 4 spaces
is like using
3-backtick fences.
```
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```plaintext
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Tildes are OK too.
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```
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#### Colored code and syntax highlighting
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If this section isn't rendered correctly,
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[view it in GitLab ](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab/-/blob/master/doc/user/markdown.md#colored-code-and-syntax-highlighting ).
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GitLab uses the [Rouge Ruby library ](http://rouge.jneen.net/ ) for more colorful syntax
highlighting in code blocks. For a list of supported languages visit the
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[Rouge project wiki ](https://github.com/rouge-ruby/rouge/wiki/List-of-supported-languages-and-lexers ).
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Syntax highlighting is supported only in code blocks, so you can't highlight inline code.
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To fence and apply syntax highlighting to a block of code, append the code language
to the opening code declaration, three back-ticks (```` ``` ````) or three tildes (`~~~`):
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````markdown
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```javascript
var s = "JavaScript syntax highlighting";
alert(s);
```
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```python
def function():
#indenting works just fine in the fenced code block
s = "Python syntax highlighting"
print s
```
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```ruby
require 'redcarpet'
markdown = Redcarpet.new("Hello World!")
puts markdown.to_html
```
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```
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No language indicated, so no syntax highlighting.
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s = "No highlighting is shown for this line."
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But let's throw in a < b > tag< / b > .
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```
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````
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The four examples above render as:
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```javascript
var s = "JavaScript syntax highlighting";
alert(s);
```
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```python
def function():
#indenting works just fine in the fenced code block
s = "Python syntax highlighting"
print s
```
```ruby
require 'redcarpet'
markdown = Redcarpet.new("Hello World!")
puts markdown.to_html
```
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```plaintext
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No language indicated, so no syntax highlighting.
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s = "No highlighting is shown for this line."
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But let's throw in a < b > tag< / b > .
```
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### Emphasis
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In Markdown, you can emphasize text in multiple ways. You can italicize, bold, strikethrough,
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and combine these emphasis styles together.
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Strikethrough is not part of the core Markdown standard, but is part of GitLab Flavored Markdown.
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Examples:
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```markdown
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Emphasis, aka italics, with *asterisks* or _underscores_ .
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Strong emphasis, aka bold, with double **asterisks** or __underscores__ .
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Combined emphasis with **asterisks and _underscores_** .
Strikethrough uses two tildes. ~~Scratch this.~~
```
Emphasis, aka italics, with *asterisks* or _underscores_ .
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Strong emphasis, aka bold, with double **asterisks** or __underscores__ .
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Combined emphasis with **asterisks and _underscores_** .
Strikethrough uses two tildes. ~~Scratch this.~~
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#### Multiple underscores in words and mid-word emphasis
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If this section isn't rendered correctly,
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[view it in GitLab ](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab/-/blob/master/doc/user/markdown.md#multiple-underscores-in-words ).
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Avoid italicizing a portion of a word, especially when you're
dealing with code and names that often appear with multiple underscores.
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GitLab Flavored Markdown extends the standard Markdown standard by ignoring multiple underlines in words,
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to allow better rendering of Markdown documents discussing code:
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```markdown
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perform_complicated_task
do_this_and_do_that_and_another_thing
but_emphasis is_desired _here_
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```
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perform_complicated_task
do_this_and_do_that_and_another_thing
but_emphasis is_desired _here_
---
If you wish to emphasize only a part of a word, it can still be done with asterisks:
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```markdown
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perform*complicated*task
do*this*and*do*that*and*another thing
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```
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perform*complicated*task
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do*this*and*do*that*and*another thing
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### Footnotes
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Footnotes add a link to a note that are rendered at the end of a Markdown file.
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To make a footnote, you need both a reference tag and a separate line (anywhere in the file) with
the note content.
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Regardless of the tag names, the relative order of the reference tags determines the rendered
numbering.
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<!--
Do not edit the following codeblock. It uses HTML to skip the Vale ReferenceLinks test.
-->
< pre class = "highlight" > < code > A footnote reference tag looks like this: [^1]
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This reference tag is a mix of letters and numbers. [^footnote-42]
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[ ^1]: This text is inside a footnote.
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[ ^footnote-42]: This text is another footnote.
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< / code > < / pre >
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A footnote reference tag looks like this:[^1]
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This reference tag is a mix of letters and numbers.[^footnote-42]
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<!--
Do not delete the single space before the [^1] and [^footnotes] references below.
These are used to force the Vale ReferenceLinks check to skip these examples.
-->
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[^1]: This text is inside a footnote.
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[^footnote-42]: This text is another footnote.
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### Headers
```markdown
# H1
## H2
### H3
#### H4
##### H5
###### H6
Alternatively, for H1 and H2, an underline-ish style:
Alt-H1
======
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Alt-H2
------
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```
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#### Header IDs and links
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GitLab Flavored Markdown extends the standard Markdown standard so that all Markdown-rendered headers automatically
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get IDs, which can be linked to, except in comments.
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On hover, a link to those IDs becomes visible to make it easier to copy the link to
the header to use it somewhere else.
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The IDs are generated from the content of the header according to the following rules:
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1. All text is converted to lowercase.
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1. All non-word text (such as punctuation or HTML) is removed.
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1. All spaces are converted to hyphens.
1. Two or more hyphens in a row are converted to one.
1. If a header with the same ID has already been generated, a unique
incrementing number is appended, starting at 1.
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Example:
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```markdown
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# This header has spaces in it
## This header has a :thumbsup: in it
# This header has Unicode in it: 한글
## This header has spaces in it
### This header has spaces in it
## This header has 3.5 in it (and parentheses)
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```
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Would generate the following link IDs:
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1. `this-header-has-spaces-in-it`
1. `this-header-has-a-in-it`
1. `this-header-has-unicode-in-it-한글`
1. `this-header-has-spaces-in-it-1`
1. `this-header-has-spaces-in-it-2`
1. `this-header-has-3-5-in-it-and-parentheses`
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Emoji processing happens before the header IDs are generated. The
emoji is converted to an image, which is then removed from the ID.
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### Horizontal Rule
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Create a horizontal rule by using three or more hyphens, asterisks, or underscores:
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```markdown
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Three or more hyphens,
---
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asterisks,
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***
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or underscores
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___
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```
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### Images
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Examples:
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<!--
Do not edit the following codeblock. It uses HTML to skip the Vale ReferenceLinks test.
-->
< pre class = "highlight" > < code > Inline-style (hover to see title text):
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![alt text ](img/markdown_logo.png "Title Text" )
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Reference-style (hover to see title text):
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![alt text1][logo]
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[ logo]: img/markdown_logo.png "Title Text"
< / code > < / pre >
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<!--
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DO NOT change the name of markdown_logo.png. This file is used for a test in
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spec/controllers/help_controller_spec.rb.
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-->
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Inline-style (hover to see title text):
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![alt text ](img/markdown_logo.png "Title Text" )
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Reference-style (hover to see title text):
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<!--
The example below uses an in-line link to pass the Vale ReferenceLinks test.
Do not change to a reference style link.
-->
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![alt text ](img/markdown_logo.png "Title Text" )
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In the rare case where you must set a specific height or width for an image,
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you can use the `img` HTML tag instead of Markdown and set its `height` and
`width` parameters.
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#### Videos
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If this section isn't rendered correctly, [view it in GitLab ](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab/-/blob/master/doc/user/markdown.md#videos ).
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Image tags that link to files with a video extension are automatically converted to
a video player. The valid video extensions are `.mp4` , `.m4v` , `.mov` , `.webm` , and `.ogv` :
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```markdown
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Here's a sample video:
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![Sample Video ](img/markdown_video.mp4 )
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```
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Here's a sample video:
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![Sample Video ](img/markdown_video.mp4 )
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#### Audio
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If this section isn't rendered correctly, [view it in GitLab ](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab/-/blob/master/doc/user/markdown.md#audio ).
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Similar to videos, link tags for files with an audio extension are automatically converted to
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an audio player. The valid audio extensions are `.mp3` , `.oga` , `.ogg` , `.spx` , and `.wav` :
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```markdown
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Here's a sample audio clip:
![Sample Audio ](img/markdown_audio.mp3 )
```
Here's a sample audio clip:
![Sample Audio ](img/markdown_audio.mp3 )
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### Inline HTML
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> Allowing `rel="license"` [introduced](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab/-/issues/20857) in GitLab 14.6.
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To see the second example of Markdown rendered in HTML,
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[view it in GitLab ](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab/-/blob/master/doc/user/markdown.md#inline-html ).
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You can also use raw HTML in your Markdown, and it usually works pretty well.
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See the documentation for HTML::Pipeline's [SanitizationFilter ](https://github.com/jch/html-pipeline/blob/v2.12.3/lib/html/pipeline/sanitization_filter.rb#L42 )
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class for the list of allowed HTML tags and attributes. In addition to the default
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`SanitizationFilter` allowlist, GitLab allows `span` , `abbr` , `details` and `summary` elements.
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`rel="license"` is allowed on links to support the [Rel-License microformat ](https://microformats.org/wiki/rel-license ) and license attribution.
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```html
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< dl >
< dt > Definition list< / dt >
< dd > Is something people use sometimes.< / dd >
< dt > Markdown in HTML< / dt >
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< dd > Does *not* work **very** well. HTML < em > tags</ em > do < b > work</ b > , in most cases.</ dd >
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< / dl >
```
< dl >
< dt > Definition list< / dt >
< dd > Is something people use sometimes.< / dd >
< dt > Markdown in HTML< / dt >
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< dd > Does *not* work **very** well. HTML < em > tags</ em > do < b > work</ b > , in most cases.</ dd >
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< / dl >
---
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It's still possible to use Markdown inside HTML tags, but only if the lines containing Markdown
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are separated into their own lines:
```html
< dl >
< dt > Markdown in HTML< / dt >
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< dd > Does *not* work **very** well. HTML tags work, in most cases.</ dd >
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< dt > Markdown in HTML< / dt >
< dd >
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Does *not* work **very** well. HTML tags work, in most cases.
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< / dd >
< / dl >
```
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<!--
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The example below uses HTML to force correct rendering on docs.gitlab.com,
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Markdown is fine in GitLab.
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-->
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< dl >
< dt > Markdown in HTML< / dt >
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< dd > Does *not* work **very** well. HTML tags work, in most cases.</ dd >
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< dt > Markdown in HTML< / dt >
< dd >
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Does < em > not< / em > work < b > very< / b > well. HTML tags work, in most cases.
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< / dd >
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< / dl >
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#### Collapsible section
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To see the second Markdown example rendered in HTML,
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[view it in GitLab ](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab/-/blob/master/doc/user/markdown.md#details-and-summary ).
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Content can be collapsed using HTML's [`<details>` ](https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/HTML/Element/details )
and [`<summary>` ](https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/HTML/Element/summary )
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tags. For example, collapse a long log file so it takes up less screen space.
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```html
< p >
< details >
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< summary > Click this to collapse/fold.< / summary >
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These details < em > remain< / em > < strong > hidden< / strong > until expanded.
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< pre > < code > PASTE LOGS HERE< / code > < / pre >
< / details >
< / p >
```
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< p >
< details >
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< summary > Click this to collapse/fold.< / summary >
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These details < em > remain< / em > < strong > hidden< / strong > until expanded.
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< pre > < code > PASTE LOGS HERE< / code > < / pre >
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< / details >
< / p >
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---
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Markdown inside these tags is also supported.
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NOTE:
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If your Markdown isn't rendering correctly, try adding
`{::options parse_block_html="true" /}` to the top of the page, and add
`markdown="span"` to the opening summary tag like this: `<summary markdown="span">` .
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Remember to leave a blank line after the `</summary>` tag and before the `</details>` tag,
as shown in the example:
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````html
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< details >
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< summary > Click this to collapse/fold.< / summary >
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These details _remain_ **hidden** until expanded.
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```
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PASTE LOGS HERE
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```
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< / details >
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````
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<!--
The example below uses HTML to force correct rendering on docs.gitlab.com, Markdown
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works correctly in GitLab.
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-->
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< details >
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< summary > Click this to collapse/fold.< / summary >
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These details < em > remain< / em > < b > hidden< / b > until expanded.
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< pre > < code > PASTE LOGS HERE< / code > < / pre >
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< / details >
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### Line breaks
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A line break is inserted (a new paragraph starts) if the previous text is
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ended with two newlines, like when you press < kbd > Enter< / kbd > twice in a row. If you only
use one newline (select < kbd > Enter< / kbd > once), the next sentence remains part of the
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same paragraph. Use this approach if you want to keep long lines from wrapping, and keep
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them editable:
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```markdown
Here's a line for us to start with.
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This longer line is separated from the one above by two newlines, so it is a *separate paragraph* .
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This line is also a separate paragraph, but...
These lines are only separated by single newlines,
so they *do not break* and just follow the previous lines
in the *same paragraph* .
```
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Here's a line for us to start with.
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This longer line is separated from the one above by two newlines, so it is a *separate paragraph* .
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This line is also a separate paragraph, but...
These lines are only separated by single newlines,
so they *do not break* and just follow the previous lines
in the *same paragraph* .
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#### Newlines
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GitLab Flavored Markdown adheres to the Markdown specification for handling
[paragraphs and line breaks ](https://spec.commonmark.org/current/ ).
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A paragraph is one or more consecutive lines of text, separated by one or
more blank lines (two newlines at the end of the first paragraph), as [explained above ](#line-breaks ).
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Need more control over line breaks or soft returns? Add a single line break
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by ending a line with a backslash, or two or more spaces. Two newlines in a row create a new
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paragraph, with a blank line in between:
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```markdown
First paragraph.
Another line in the same paragraph.
A third line in the same paragraph, but this time ending with two spaces.{space}{space}
A new line directly under the first paragraph.
Second paragraph.
Another line, this time ending with a backslash.\
A new line due to the previous backslash.
```
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### Links
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You can create links two ways: inline-style and reference-style. For example:
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<!--
Do not edit the following codeblock. It uses HTML to skip the Vale ReferenceLinks test.
-->
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< pre class = "highlight" >< code > - This line shows an [inline-style link ](https://www.google.com )
- This line shows a [link to a repository file in the same directory ](index.md )
- This line shows a [relative link to a readme one directory higher ](../index.md )
- This line shows a [link that also has title text ](https://www.google.com "This link takes you to Google!" )
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Using header ID anchors:
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- This line links to [a section on a different Markdown page, using a "#" and the header ID ](index.md#overview )
- This line links to [a different section on the same page, using a "#" and the header ID ](#header-ids-and-links )
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Using references:
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- This line shows a [reference-style link, see below][Arbitrary case-insensitive reference text]
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- You can [use numbers for reference-style link definitions, see below][1]
- Or leave it empty and use the [link text itself][], see below.
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Some text to show that the reference links can follow later.
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[ arbitrary case-insensitive reference text]: https://www.mozilla.org/en-US/
[ 1]: https://slashdot.org
[ link text itself]: https://www.reddit.com
< / code > < / pre >
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- This line shows an [inline-style link ](https://www.google.com )
- This line shows a [link to a repository file in the same directory ](index.md )
- This line shows a [relative link to a README one directory higher ](../index.md )
- This line shows a [link that also has title text ](https://www.google.com "This link takes you to Google!" )
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Using header ID anchors:
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- This line links to [a section on a different Markdown page, using a "#" and the header ID ](index.md#overview )
- This line links to [a different section on the same page, using a "#" and the header ID ](#header-ids-and-links )
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Using references:
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<!--
The example below uses in-line links to pass the Vale ReferenceLinks test.
Do not change to reference style links.
-->
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- This line is a [reference-style link, see below ](https://www.mozilla.org/en-US/ )
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- You can [use numbers for reference-style link definitions, see below ](https://slashdot.org )
- Or leave it empty and use the [link text itself ](https://www.reddit.com ), see below.
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Some text to show that the reference links can follow later.
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NOTE:
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Relative links do not allow the referencing of project files in a wiki
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page, or a wiki page in a project file. The reason: a wiki is always
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in a separate Git repository in GitLab. For example, `[I'm a reference-style link](style)`
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points the link to `wikis/style` only when the link is inside of a wiki Markdown file.
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#### URL auto-linking
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GitLab Flavored Markdown auto-links almost any URL you put into your text:
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```markdown
- https://www.google.com
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- https://www.google.com
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- ftp://ftp.us.debian.org/debian/
- smb://foo/bar/baz
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- irc://irc.freenode.net/
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- http://localhost:3000
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```
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<!-- vale gitlab.Spelling = NO -->
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- < https: // www . google . com >
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- < https: // www . google . com >
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- < ftp: // ftp . us . debian . org / debian />
- < smb: // foo / bar / baz >
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- < irc: // irc . freenode . net />
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- < http: // localhost:3000 >
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<!-- vale gitlab.Spelling = YES -->
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### Lists
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You can create ordered and unordered lists.
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For an ordered list, add the number you want the list
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to start with, like `1.` , followed by a space, at the start of each line for ordered lists.
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After the first number, it does not matter what number you use. Ordered lists are
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numbered automatically by vertical order, so repeating `1.` for all items in the
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same list is common. If you start with a number other than `1.` , it uses that as the first
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number, and counts up from there.
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Examples:
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```markdown
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1. First ordered list item
2. Another item
- Unordered sub-list.
1. Actual numbers don't matter, just that it's a number
1. Ordered sub-list
1. Next ordered sub-list item
4. And another item.
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```
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<!--
The "2." and "4." in the example above are changed to "1." below, to match the style
standards on docs.gitlab.com.
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See https://docs.gitlab.com/ee/development/documentation/styleguide/index.html#lists
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-->
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1. First ordered list item
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1. Another item
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- Unordered sub-list.
1. Actual numbers don't matter, just that it's a number
1. Ordered sub-list
1. Next ordered sub-list item
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1. And another item.
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For an unordered list, add a `-` , `*` or `+` , followed by a space, at the start of
each line for unordered lists, but you should not use a mix of them.
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```markdown
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Unordered lists can:
- use
- minuses
They can also:
* use
* asterisks
They can even:
+ use
+ pluses
```
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<!--
The "*" and "+" in the example above are changed to "-" below, to match the style
standards on docs.gitlab.com.
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See https://docs.gitlab.com/ee/development/documentation/styleguide/index.html#lists
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-->
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Unordered lists can:
- use
- minuses
They can also:
- use
- asterisks
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They can even:
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- use
- pluses
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---
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If a list item contains multiple paragraphs, each subsequent paragraph should be indented
to the same level as the start of the list item text.
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Example:
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```markdown
1. First ordered list item
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Second paragraph of first item.
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1. Another item
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```
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1. First ordered list item
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Second paragraph of first item.
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1. Another item
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---
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If the first item's paragraph isn't indented with the proper number of spaces,
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the paragraph appears outside the list, instead of properly indented under the list item.
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For example:
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```markdown
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1. First ordered list item
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Paragraph of first item.
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1. Another item
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```
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1. First ordered list item
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Paragraph of first item.
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1. Another item
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### Superscripts / Subscripts
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CommonMark and GitLab Flavored Markdown don't support the Redcarpet superscript syntax ( `x^2` ).
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Use the standard HTML syntax for superscripts and subscripts:
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```html
The formula for water is H< sub > 2< / sub > O
while the equation for the theory of relativity is E = mc< sup > 2< / sup > .
```
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<!-- vale gitlab.Spelling = NO -->
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The formula for water is H< sub > 2< / sub > O
while the equation for the theory of relativity is E = mc< sup > 2< / sup > .
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<!-- vale gitlab.Spelling = YES -->
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### Tables
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Tables are not part of the core Markdown spec, but they are part of GitLab Flavored Markdown.
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1. The first line contains the headers, separated by "pipes" (`|`).
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1. The second line separates the headers from the cells.
- The cells can contain only empty spaces, hyphens, and
(optionally) colons for horizontal alignment.
- Each cell must contain at least one hyphen, but adding more hyphens to a
cell does not change the cell's rendering.
- Any content other than hyphens, whitespace, or colons is not allowed
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1. The third, and any following lines, contain the cell values.
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- You **can't** have cells separated over many lines in the Markdown, they must be kept to single lines,
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but they can be very long. You can also include HTML `<br>` tags to force newlines if needed.
- The cell sizes **don't** have to match each other. They are flexible, but must be separated
by pipes (`|`).
- You **can** have blank cells.
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1. Column widths are calculated dynamically based on the content of the cells.
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Example:
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```markdown
| header 1 | header 2 | header 3 |
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| --- | --- | --- |
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| cell 1 | cell 2 | cell 3 |
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| cell 4 | cell 5 is longer | cell 6 is much longer than the others, but that's ok. It eventually wraps the text when the cell is too large for the display size. |
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| cell 7 | | cell 9 |
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```
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| header 1 | header 2 | header 3 |
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| --- | --- | --- |
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| cell 1 | cell 2 | cell 3 |
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| cell 4 | cell 5 is longer | cell 6 is much longer than the others, but that's ok. It eventually wraps the text when the cell is too large for the display size. |
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| cell 7 | | cell 9 |
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Additionally, you can choose the alignment of text in columns by adding colons (`:`)
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to the sides of the "dash" lines in the second row. This affects every cell in the column:
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```markdown
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| Left Aligned | Centered | Right Aligned |
| :--- | :---: | ---: |
| Cell 1 | Cell 2 | Cell 3 |
| Cell 4 | Cell 5 | Cell 6 |
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```
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| Left Aligned | Centered | Right Aligned |
| :--- | :---: | ---: |
| Cell 1 | Cell 2 | Cell 3 |
| Cell 4 | Cell 5 | Cell 6 |
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[In GitLab itself ](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab/-/blob/master/doc/user/markdown.md#tables ),
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the headers are always left-aligned in Chrome and Firefox, and centered in Safari.
You can use HTML formatting to adjust the rendering of tables. For example, you can
use `<br>` tags to force a cell to have multiple lines:
```markdown
| Name | Details |
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| --- | --- |
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| Item1 | This text is on one line |
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| Item2 | This item has:< br > - Multiple items< br > - That we want listed separately |
```
| Name | Details |
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| --- | --- |
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| Item1 | This text is on one line |
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| Item2 | This item has:< br > - Multiple items< br > - That we want listed separately |
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You can use HTML formatting in GitLab itself to add [task lists ](#task-lists ) with checkboxes,
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but they do not render properly on `docs.gitlab.com` :
```markdown
| header 1 | header 2 |
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| --- | --- |
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| cell 1 | cell 2 |
| cell 3 | < ul > < li > - [ ] Task one < / li > < li > - [ ] Task two < / li > < / ul > |
```
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#### Copy from spreadsheet and paste in Markdown
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[Introduced ](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab/-/issues/27205 ) in GitLab 12.7.
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If you're working in spreadsheet software (for example, Microsoft Excel, Google
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Sheets, or Apple Numbers), GitLab creates a Markdown table when you copy-and-paste
from a spreadsheet. For example, suppose you have the
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following spreadsheet:
![Copy from spreadsheet ](img/markdown_copy_from_spreadsheet_v12_7.png )
Select the cells and copy them to your clipboard. Open a GitLab Markdown
entry and paste the spreadsheet:
![Paste to Markdown table ](img/markdown_paste_table_v12_7.png )
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## References
- This document leveraged heavily from the [Markdown-Cheatsheet ](https://github.com/adam-p/markdown-here/wiki/Markdown-Cheatsheet ).
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- The original [Markdown Syntax Guide ](https://daringfireball.net/projects/markdown/syntax )
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at Daring Fireball is an excellent resource for a detailed explanation of standard Markdown.
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- You can find the detailed specification for CommonMark in the [CommonMark Spec ](https://spec.commonmark.org/current/ ).
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- The [CommonMark Dingus ](https://spec.commonmark.org/dingus/ ) helps you test CommonMark syntax.