Markdown Crash Course 2022 For Github
Published 6/2022
MP4 | Video: h264, 1280x720 | Audio: AAC, 44.1 KHz
Language: English | Size: 228.50 MB | Duration: 0h 33m
Published 6/2022
MP4 | Video: h264, 1280x720 | Audio: AAC, 44.1 KHz
Language: English | Size: 228.50 MB | Duration: 0h 33m
In this crash course, you will learn about Markdown, including some things you never knew were possible with Markdown.
What you'll learn
Write confidently using the Markdown format
Use Markdown in a variety of scenarios as a writing format
Use enhanced flavors of Markdown when appropriate
GitHub Flavored Markdown
Requirements
No programming experience needed. You will learn everything you need to know.
Description
Markdown is a lightweight markup language. It is a style of writing documents that makes it easy to define what the content should look like. It’s a set of rules that describes how text should show up on a page. It defines headers, text styles, links, lists, and so much more. Markdown is used all over the place. It is used in documentation, articles, notes, and can even be used to build static websites. I use it to write Code docs, blog articles, take notes. Markdown is easier to write than HTML, and it's easier for most humans to read Markdown source than HTML source. However, HTML is more expressive (particularly regarding semantic tagging) and can achieve some specific effects that might be difficult or impossible in Markdown. For example, you might have to switch to using the HTML <code> element for special characters in code such as nonbreaking spaces.If you use GitHub, you’ll be familiar with the README[dot]md files that show up in the root of a repository. The .md stands for Markdown. You can even create a README on your GitHub profile to really customize your profile page. In this course you will also be looking at some GitHub's README specific markdown syntax/rules.
Overview
Section 1: Introduction
Lecture 1 Introduction
Lecture 2 What is Markdown
Section 2: Markdown Syntax
Lecture 3 Headings
Lecture 4 Strong and Emphasis
Lecture 5 Escape sequence
Lecture 6 Strike Through and Horizontal Rule
Lecture 7 Lists and Blockquote
Lecture 8 Adding links and images
Lecture 9 Blocks of Code
Section 3: Github Specific Markdown
Lecture 10 Github Code Blocks
Lecture 11 Table and Task List
Lecture 12 Pushing the README.md file to Github
Section 4: Website using Markdown
Lecture 13 Markdown Website
Software Engineers working with GitHub or BitBucket,Android, IOS and Web Developers who write project documentations, including README files,Blog writers - Tech and Non-tech