Markup: HTML Tags and Formatting

Headings

Header one

Header two

Header three

Header four

Header five
Header six

Blockquotes

Sin­gle line blockquote:

Stay hun­gry. Stay foolish.

Mul­ti line block­quote with a cite reference:

Peo­ple think focus means say­ing yes to the thing you’ve got to focus on. But that’s not what it means at all. It means say­ing no to the hun­dred oth­er good ideas that there are. You have to pick care­ful­ly. I’m actu­al­ly as proud of the things we haven’t done as the things I have done. Inno­va­tion is say­ing no to 1,000 things.

Steve Jobs — Apple World­wide Devel­op­ers’ Con­fer­ence, 1997

Tables

Employ­ee Salary
John Doe $1 Because that’s all Steve Jobs need­ed for a salary.
Jane Doe $100K For all the blog­ging she does.
Fred Blog­gs $100M Pic­tures are worth a thou­sand words, right? So Jane x 1,000.
Jane Blog­gs $100B With hair like that?! Enough said…

Definition Lists

Def­i­n­i­tion List Title
Def­i­n­i­tion list division.
Start­up
A start­up com­pa­ny or start­up is a com­pa­ny or tem­po­rary orga­ni­za­tion designed to search for a repeat­able and scal­able busi­ness model.
#dowork
Coined by Rob Dyrdek and his per­son­al body guard Christo­pher “Big Black” Boykins, “Do Work” works as a self moti­va­tor, to moti­vat­ing your friends.
Do It Live
I’ll let Bill O’Reil­ly will explain this one.

Unordered Lists (Nested)

  • List item one 
    • List item one 
      • List item one
      • List item two
      • List item three
      • List item four
    • List item two
    • List item three
    • List item four
  • List item two
  • List item three
  • List item four

Ordered List (Nested)

  1. List item one 
    1. List item one 
      1. List item one
      2. List item two
      3. List item three
      4. List item four
    2. List item two
    3. List item three
    4. List item four
  2. List item two
  3. List item three
  4. List item four

HTML Tags

These sup­port­ed tags come from the WordPress.com code FAQ.

Address Tag

1 Infi­nite Loop
Cuper­ti­no, CA 95014
Unit­ed States

Anchor Tag (aka. Link)

This is an exam­ple of a link.

Abbre­vi­a­tion Tag

The abbre­vi­a­tion srsly stands for “seri­ous­ly”.

Acronym Tag (dep­re­cat­ed in HTML5)

The acronym ftw stands for “for the win”.

Big Tag (dep­re­cat­ed in HTML5)

These tests are a big deal, but this tag is no longer sup­port­ed in HTML5.

Cite Tag

“Code is poet­ry.” –Automat­tic

Code Tag

You will learn lat­er on in these tests that word-wrap: break-word; will be your best friend.

Delete Tag

This tag will let you strike­out text, but this tag is no longer sup­port­ed in HTML5 (use the <strike> instead).

Empha­size Tag

The empha­size tag should ital­i­cize text.

Insert Tag

This tag should denote insert­ed text.

Key­board Tag

This scarce­ly known tag emu­lates keyboard text, which is usu­al­ly styled like the <code> tag.

Pre­for­mat­ted Tag

This tag styles large blocks of code.

.post-title {
	margin: 0 0 5px;
	font-weight: bold;
	font-size: 38px;
	line-height: 1.2;
	and here's a line of some really, really, really, really long text, just to see how the PRE tag handles it and to find out how it overflows;
}

Quote Tag

Devel­op­ers, devel­op­ers, devel­op­ers… –Steve Ballmer

Strike Tag (dep­re­cat­ed in HTML5)

This tag shows strike-through text

Strong Tag

This tag shows bold text.

Sub­script Tag

Get­ting our sci­ence styling on with H2O, which should push the “2” down.

Super­script Tag

Still stick­ing with sci­ence and Isaac New­ton’s E = MC2, which should lift the 2 up.

Tele­type Tag (dep­re­cat­ed in HTML5)

This rarely used tag emu­lates tele­type text, which is usu­al­ly styled like the <code> tag.

Vari­able Tag

This allows you to denote variables.

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