3.3 KiB
Markdown format
Crowbook uses pulldown-cmark, which is an implementation of CommonMark, so for more information on Markdown syntax, you can refer to this website.
However, pulldown-cmark also implements a handful of unofficial extensions, and Crowbook also adds its own variants, so there are a few syntax elements that are not covered by the CommonMark reference.
Tables
Tables can be included in your Markdown file. E.g.:
| Author | Book |
|--------------------|----------------------------|
| Anne Rice | Interview With the Vampire |
| Terry Pratchett | Hogfather |
| George Martin | A Dance with Dragons |
will render as
Author | Book |
---|---|
Anne Rice | Interview With the Vampire |
Terry Pratchett | Hogfather |
George Martin | A Dance with Dragons |
Crowbook doesn't currently support specifying column alignment.
Footnotes
Footnotes can be specified the following way:
Footnotes can be useful[^1] and make you look clever.
[^1]: But you shouldn't use them too much.
Will be rendered as:
Footnotes can be useful1 and make you look clever.
You can use multiple paragraphs in a footnote definition. This can sometimes be useful, but it can also be tricky, as if you only let an empty line before the next paragraph, it will also be included in the footnote. And probably the next one and the following one too:
This is a footnote usage[^1].
[^1]: This is obviously part of the footnote definition.
This is less obviously ALSO part of the footnote definition.
This is NOT part of the foonote.
Due to its own quirks, Crowbook will duplicate footnotes if you reference them multiple times:
This footnote is unique[^2] but referenced twice[^2].
[^2]: Or is it?
Superscript and subscript
Crowbook 0.12.0 added experimental support for superscript and
subscript, using respectively foo^up^
and bar~down~
syntax, which
will render as "foo^up^" and "bardown" ; this feature is quite a
hack above the Markdown parsing library, and as such might cause
issue if you mix it with other Markdown syntax elements (or, in the
previous example, for smart quote detection). This is why
you'll need to enable it with crowbook.mardown.superscript
.
"Standalone" images
This is not per se a new syntactic element, but Crowbook distinguish two kind of images, according to their position in the document:
- standalone images, which are the only elements of a paragraph;
- inline images, which are placed in a container containing other elements.
Standalone images will typically be resized to fill the width of the page, while inline images are not resized.
Interactive fiction
Crowbook also adds some syntax for interactive fiction, to make embedding Javascript code easier. It is only enabled for the interactive fiction renderer. For more information, see the chapter on this matter.