• Web page addresses and e-mail addresses turn into links automatically.
  • Allowed HTML tags: <a> <b> <em> <cite> <code> <ul> <ol> <li> <dl> <dt> <dd> <strong> <a#> <p> <address> <pre> <h1><h2> <h3> <h4> <h5> <h6> <img> <tbody> <tr> <td> <table> <fn> <bib> <br> <iframe> <blockquote> <i>

  • Content in [[double square brackets]] will be linked to existing content with that title, or a page to create that content. Links can contain an optional bar, "|". Content on the left of the bar is the target; to the right, the link shown. Links to pages outside this site are allowed. They must start with one of the following: "http", "https", "ftp", or "mailto", and can exist either by themselves, or on the left of the bar. Examples:
  • [[simple link]] - will go to the content titled "simple link" or a page to create that content.
  • [[this is the target|this is the source]] - will present "this is the source" as a link to "this is the target", or a page to create that content.
  • [[http://www.example.com|this is the source]] - will present "this is the source" as a link to http://www.example.com.
  • [[http://www.example.com]] - will present "http://www.example.com" as a link to http://www.example.com.
  • You can insert footnotes directly into texts with <fn>This text becomes a footnote.</fn>. This will be replaced with a running number (the footnote reference) and the text within the <fn> tags will be moved to the bottom of the page (the footnote).
  • You can insert footnotes directly into texts with [# ...]. This will be replaced with a running number (the footnote reference) and the text within the [# ...] tags will be moved to the bottom of the page (the footnote). This filter outputs footnotes in Textile format. You should use it together and before the Textile filter.
  • Insert Google Map macro.
  • Images can be added to this post.
  • This filter creates a table of contents (TOC) on the top of your nodes by using the <h*> tags present in it.