In YAML front matter, if you need a comment, use space-#.IF I decide I need this, MacDown looks best.(markdown-preview-kramdown plugin just doesn’t work right!) I already use Atom for Clojure development. MacDown can be configured to support GFM per, and MacDown supports MathJax. I’ve seen some non-Haroopad sites say that Haroopad supports GFM and MathJax.Haroopad and MacDown look feasible on the Mac, except see Haroopad YAML problem.none - side-by-side editor: I think there may be cases where I really want side-by-side editing (although I haven’t encountered them yet).Texts and Typora are both available for Windows and Mac. I prefer the “full GUI” approach of Texts, but the you-type-Markdown-you-get-WYSIWYG approach of Typora isn’t so bad, and it still leaves me viewing a single-pane rendered document. Texts rewrites perfectly good hand-edited Markdown. Typora clearly states that it supports GFM. The primary candidates are Texts.io and Typora. I prefer one that works on Windows and Mac. Typora - WYSIWYG Editor: I really want a single-pane GUI editor.Someday, I’ll get around to configuring it to use kramdown plus options to make it totally GHP-compatible. It supports the use of custom Markdown parsers. Marked 2 - Document viewer (Mac only): A first-rate Markdown renderer.Jekyll - Local blog preview: Since I publish with GHP (which uses Jekyll), I preview locally with Jekyll.GitHub Pages - Blog publishing: I moved to GHP after my dynamic web site was compromised, and I decided I wanted simple, secure blog hosting.Github Flavored Markdown: Rationalle explained above.Either ignore it, or give me some way to view/edit it. Tables (with some kind of table editor - not just source editing of pipes and spaces).For documents with lots of embedded images or documents where I need precise page layout, I don’t use Markdown. I mostly want WYSIWYG editing – a simple WordPad-like (or TextEdit-like) experience for rich text documents. Consequently, I’m less interested in side-by-side (source + rendered) tools than many Markdown fans. Other than my blogs, I am the chief consumer of my Markdown documents. So the question of which Markdown flavor to use is either:įor now, unless I encounter a compelling reason to use native kramdown, I’m using GFM because it is the default on GHP and on GitHub issues. Per GitHub: “GitHub Pages only supports kramdown as a Markdown processor” and “we’ve enabled kramdown’s GitHub-flavored Markdown support by default.” I’m using Jekyll and GitHub pages (GHP) for my blogs. I’d like to try and make sense of what I’m using and why. I’ve been using a hodgepodge of Markdown tools. Summary: GitHub Flavored Markdown, kramdown, Marked 2, Typora
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