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The following are some of the most common types of formatting used in HTML documents.
#Rmarkdown italics code#
If you wish to use Velocity code within your document, you can not specify your document format as Markdown. Important: You can not use Velocity code anywhere within your Markdown-formatted document. This allows you to use Markdown for the majority of your formatting, but also use HTML tags for more advanced formatting which Markdown and Velocity When you create a document in dotCMS that uses Markdown, the document will also recognize all HTML tags. Please see Mixing Markdown with HTML, below. However you can still use HTML formatting with specific styling within a Markdown document. Other than the formatting characters supplied by Markdown, can't apply specific styles to individual text elements within a markdown-formatted block of text. When you use Markdown in dotCMS, dotCMS automatically applies standard styling to your Markdown-formatted text based on a pre-defined style sheet that ships with dotCMS. Note that most markdown formatting does not require a closing tag or character. Markdown tags use simple characters and text conventions to allow the most common types of HTML formatting, without using HTML tags. This list of examples was taken from, which has popularized markdown to the point that it has become a defacto web standard. Markdown allows you to write using an easy-to-read, easy-to-write plain text format, which then converts to valid HTML for viewing on dotCMS. This document describes the most commonly used markdown features using this syntax. I suspect I could use explicit html or LaTeX tags for italics, but this Rmd will be rendered to both output formats.The dotCMS Markdown Viewtool uses Github-flavored Markdown syntax. Returns: "italic, Peromyscus maniculatus" as the second line of the title. inline.hook -> format_sci -> vapplyĮxecution halted | `r bquote(italic(.(params$TargetTaxon)))` () wrapping.Įrror in vapply(x, format_sci_one, character(1L). | `r expression(italic(params$TargetTaxon))` | `r bquote(~italic(.(params$TargetTaxon)))` I can get the parameter into the title, but I've tried every combination of pasting "*", bquote(italics()), expression(italics()), and substitute(italics()) I can think of.ĭate: "\r format(Sys.time(), '%d %B, %Y')`" One parameter is a species name, which I would like to have italicized in the report title. I'm attempting to set up a boilerplate report using parameters.
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