Markdown Video Mp4



Videos are responsively displayed at 100% of their container’s width (with height automatically determined based on a 16x9 aspect ratio). You can change this behavior by adding attributes to the Markdown code where you reference the video. You can specify an alternate percentage for the video’s width or an alternate fixed width and height. Step by step how to video showing you how to use the Bonanzle markdown feature, and how to clear the markdown. Presented by BonanzleBoardroom.com.

Markdown is a lightweight and easy-to-use syntax for styling all forms of writing on the GitHub platform.

What you will learn:

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  • How the Markdown format makes styled collaborative editing easy
  • How Markdown differs from traditional formatting approaches
  • How to use Markdown to format text
  • How to leverage GitHub’s automatic Markdown rendering
  • How to apply GitHub’s unique Markdown extensions

What is Markdown?

Markdown is a way to style text on the web. You control the display of the document; formatting words as bold or italic, adding images, and creating lists are just a few of the things we can do with Markdown. Mostly, Markdown is just regular text with a few non-alphabetic characters thrown in, like # or *.

You can use Markdown most places around GitHub:

  • Comments in Issues and Pull Requests
  • Files with the .md or .markdown extension

For more information, see “Writing on GitHub” in the GitHub Help.

Examples

It's very easy to make some words bold and other words italic with Markdown. You can even link to Google!
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Syntax guide

Markdown Video Mp4 Downloader

Here’s an overview of Markdown syntax that you can use anywhere on GitHub.com or in your own text files.

Headers

Emphasis

Lists

Unordered

Ordered

Images

Links

Blockquotes

Inline code

GitHub Flavored Markdown

GitHub.com uses its own version of the Markdown syntax that provides an additional set of useful features, many of which make it easier to work with content on GitHub.com.

Note that some features of GitHub Flavored Markdown are only available in the descriptions and comments of Issues and Pull Requests. These include @mentions as well as references to SHA-1 hashes, Issues, and Pull Requests. Task Lists are also available in Gist comments and in Gist Markdown files.

Markdown Video Mp4

Syntax highlighting

Here’s an example of how you can use syntax highlighting with GitHub Flavored Markdown:

You can also simply indent your code by four spaces:

Here’s an example of Python code without syntax highlighting:

Task Lists

If you include a task list in the first comment of an Issue, you will get a handy progress indicator in your issue list. It also works in Pull Requests!

Markdown Video Mp4

Tables

You can create tables by assembling a list of words and dividing them with hyphens - (for the first row), and then separating each column with a pipe |:

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Would become:

First HeaderSecond Header
Content from cell 1Content from cell 2
Content in the first columnContent in the second column

SHA references

Any reference to a commit’s SHA-1 hash will be automatically converted into a link to that commit on GitHub.

Issue references within a repository

Any number that refers to an Issue or Pull Request will be automatically converted into a link.

Username @mentions

Typing an @ symbol, followed by a username, will notify that person to come and view the comment. This is called an “@mention”, because you’re mentioning the individual. You can also @mention teams within an organization.

Automatic linking for URLs

Markdown Video Mp4 Editor

Any URL (like http://www.github.com/) will be automatically converted into a clickable link.

Strikethrough

Any word wrapped with two tildes (like ~~this~~) will appear crossed out.

Emoji

GitHub supports emoji!

Markdown Video Mp4 Converter

To see a list of every image we support, check out the Emoji Cheat Sheet.

Last updated Jan 15, 2014

It's not really possible to properly embed a video in a Github comment, pull request or issue like it's possible for images for instance. So if you want to put a video in a Github pull request (I do that quite often), you have to upload it to a video hosting service like Youtube and then you can put the link in the description. This is not what I would call embedding a video but at least it's simple and effective.

Markdown Video Mp4 Download

Lately, I discovered on Stackoverflow a much better solution where the simple text link to the video hosting service is replaced by a thumbnail generated by the video platform. In markdown, for Youtube this gives:

Of course, VID should be replaced by the actual Youtube video id. This is still not embedding a video but that's a bit nicer and a much better incentive to click to watch the video :-) The only problem is that it's a tad long to type and to remember. That's why I decided to write a Greasemonkey script to simplify that. Actually, at first I wanted to write a super simple bookmarklet but Firefox has a very annoying issue where bookmarklets are broken on Content Security Policy enabled website like on Github :-(

Anyway, the Greasemonkey script is available on Github in dpobel/github-add-youtube-video. To use it, you first need to install Greasemonkey and then just load the addvideo.user.js in your browser, it should ask if you want to install that script. After doing that, the Github markdown editor should get a shiny new button that is able to transform any Youtube URL to the previous code snippet, here is the script in action:

Markdown Mp4 Video

If nothing is selected in the textarea, hitting button will just prompt the user for a Youtube URL to embed. This script should also work in Greasemonkey clones for Chrome, though I did not test it.