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Last active March 17, 2026 02:16
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[
{
"where": "Layer",
"if": {
"Datasource.type": "postgis"
},
"then": {
"Datasource.dbname": "hdmht",
"Datasource.user": "skors",
"Datasource.host": "localhost"
}
},
{
"where": "Layer",
"if": {
"id": "land-high"
},
"then": {
"Datasource.file": "/home/skors/Documents/MapBox/project/shared/land-polygons-split-3857-shapeindex/land_polygons.shp"
}
},
{
"where": "Layer",
"if": {
"id": "hillshade"
},
"then": {
"Datasource.file": "/home/skors/Documents/MapBox/project/HDM-CartoCSS/DEM/data/hillshade.vrt"
}
},
{
"where": "Layer",
"if": {
"id": "contour_line"
},
"then": {
"Datasource.file": "/home/skors/Documents/MapBox/project/HDM-CartoCSS/DEM/data/contour-25m.shp"
}
},
{
"where": "Layer",
"if": {
"id": "land-low"
},
"then": {
"Datasource.file": "/home/skors/Documents/MapBox/project/shared/simplified-land-polygons-complete-3857-shapeindex/simplified_land_polygons.shp"
}
}
]
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Basic writing and formatting syntax

Create sophisticated formatting for your prose and code on GitHub with simple syntax.

Headings

To create a heading, add one to six # symbols before your heading text. The number of # you use will determine the hierarchy level and typeface size of the heading.

# A first-level heading
## A second-level heading
### A third-level heading

Screenshot of rendered GitHub Markdown showing sample h1, h2, and h3 headers, which descend in type size and visual weight to show hierarchy level.

When you use two or more headings, GitHub automatically generates a table of contents that you can access by clicking the "Outline" menu icon within the file header. Each heading title is listed in the table of contents and you can click a title to navigate to the selected section.

Screenshot of a README file with the drop-down menu for the table of contents exposed. The table of contents icon is outlined in dark orange.

Styling text

You can indicate emphasis with bold, italic, strikethrough, subscript, or superscript text in comment fields and .md files.

Style Syntax Keyboard shortcut Example Output
Bold ** ** or __ __ Command+B (Mac) or Ctrl+B (Windows/Linux) **This is bold text** This is bold text
Italic * * or _ _      Command+I (Mac) or Ctrl+I (Windows/Linux) _This text is italicized_ This text is italicized
Strikethrough ~~ ~~ or ~ ~ None ~~This was mistaken text~~ This was mistaken text
Bold and nested italic ** ** and _ _ None **This text is _extremely_ important** This text is extremely important
All bold and italic *** *** None ***All this text is important*** All this text is important
Subscript <sub> </sub> None This is a <sub>subscript</sub> text This is a subscript text
Superscript <sup> </sup> None This is a <sup>superscript</sup> text This is a superscript text
Underline <ins> </ins> None This is an <ins>underlined</ins> text This is an underlined text

Quoting text

You can quote text with a >.

Text that is not a quote

> Text that is a quote

Quoted text is indented with a vertical line on the left and displayed using gray type.

Screenshot of rendered GitHub Markdown showing the difference between normal and quoted text.

Note

When viewing a conversation, you can automatically quote text in a comment by highlighting the text, then typing R. You can quote an entire comment by clicking , then Quote reply. For more information about keyboard shortcuts, see Keyboard shortcuts.

Quoting code

You can call out code or a command within a sentence with single backticks. The text within the backticks will not be formatted. You can also press the Command+E (Mac) or Ctrl+E (Windows/Linux) keyboard shortcut to insert the backticks for a code block within a line of Markdown.

Use `git status` to list all new or modified files that haven't yet been committed.

Screenshot of rendered GitHub Markdown showing that characters surrounded by backticks are shown in a fixed-width typeface, highlighted in light gray.

To format code or text into its own distinct block, use triple backticks.

Some basic Git commands are:
```
git status
git add
git commit
```

Screenshot of rendered GitHub Markdown showing a simple code block without syntax highlighting.

For more information, see Creating and highlighting code blocks.

If you are frequently editing code snippets and tables, you may benefit from enabling a fixed-width font in all comment fields on GitHub. For more information, see About writing and formatting on GitHub.

Supported color models

In issues, pull requests, and discussions, you can call out colors within a sentence by using backticks. A supported color model within backticks will display a visualization of the color.

The background color is `#ffffff` for light mode and `#000000` for dark mode.

Screenshot of rendered GitHub Markdown showing how HEX values within backticks create small circles of color, here white and then black.

Here are the currently supported color models.

Color Syntax Example Output
HEX `#RRGGBB` `#0969DA` Screenshot of rendered GitHub Markdown showing how HEX value #0969DA appears with a blue circle.
RGB `rgb(R,G,B)` `rgb(9, 105, 218)` Screenshot of rendered GitHub Markdown showing how RGB value 9, 105, 218 appears with a blue circle.
HSL `hsl(H,S,L)` `hsl(212, 92%, 45%)` Screenshot of rendered GitHub Markdown showing how HSL value 212, 92%, 45% appears with a blue circle.

Note

  • A supported color model cannot have any leading or trailing spaces within the backticks.
  • The visualization of the color is only supported in issues, pull requests, and discussions.

Links

You can create an inline link by wrapping link text in brackets [ ], and then wrapping the URL in parentheses ( ). You can also use the keyboard shortcut Command+K to create a link. When you have text selected, you can paste a URL from your clipboard to automatically create a link from the selection.

You can also create a Markdown hyperlink by highlighting the text and using the keyboard shortcut Command+V. If you'd like to replace the text with the link, use the keyboard shortcut Command+Shift+V.

This site was built using [GitHub Pages](https://pages.github.com/).

Screenshot of rendered GitHub Markdown showing how text within brackets, "GitHub Pages," appears as a blue hyperlink.

Note

GitHub automatically creates links when valid URLs are written in a comment. For more information, see Autolinked references and URLs.

Section links

You can link directly to any section that has a heading. To view the automatically generated anchor in a rendered file, hover over the section heading to expose the icon and click the icon to display the anchor in your browser.

Screenshot of a README for a repository. To the left of a section heading, a link icon is outlined in dark orange.

If you need to determine the anchor for a heading in a file you are editing, you can use the following basic rules:

  • Letters are converted to lower-case.
  • Spaces are replaced by hyphens (-). Any other whitespace or punctuation characters are removed.
  • Leading and trailing whitespace are removed.
  • Markup formatting is removed, leaving only the contents (for example, _italics_ becomes italics).
  • If the automatically generated anchor for a heading is identical to an earlier anchor in the same document, a unique identifier is generated by appending a hyphen and an auto-incrementing integer.

For more detailed information on the requirements of URI fragments, see RFC 3986: Uniform Resource Identifier (URI): Generic Syntax, Section 3.5.

The code block below demonstrates the basic rules used to generate anchors from headings in rendered content.

# Example headings

## Sample Section

## This'll be a _Helpful_ Section About the Greek Letter Θ!
A heading containing characters not allowed in fragments, UTF-8 characters, two consecutive spaces between the first and second words, and formatting.

## This heading is not unique in the file

TEXT 1

## This heading is not unique in the file

TEXT 2

# Links to the example headings above

Link to the sample section: [Link Text](#sample-section).

Link to the helpful section: [Link Text](#thisll-be-a-helpful-section-about-the-greek-letter-Θ).

Link to the first non-unique section: [Link Text](#this-heading-is-not-unique-in-the-file).

Link to the second non-unique section: [Link Text](#this-heading-is-not-unique-in-the-file-1).

Note

If you edit a heading, or if you change the order of headings with "identical" anchors, you will also need to update any links to those headings as the anchors will change.

Relative links

You can define relative links and image paths in your rendered files to help readers navigate to other files in your repository.

A relative link is a link that is relative to the current file. For example, if you have a README file in root of your repository, and you have another file in docs/CONTRIBUTING.md, the relative link to CONTRIBUTING.md in your README might look like this:

[Contribution guidelines for this project](docs/CONTRIBUTING.md)

GitHub will automatically transform your relative link or image path based on whatever branch you're currently on, so that the link or path always works. The path of the link will be relative to the current file. Links starting with / will be relative to the repository root. You can use all relative link operands, such as ./ and ../.

Your link text should be on a single line. The example below will not work.

[Contribution
guidelines for this project](docs/CONTRIBUTING.md)

Relative links are easier for users who clone your repository. Absolute links may not work in clones of your repository - we recommend using relative links to refer to other files within your repository.

Custom anchors

You can use standard HTML anchor tags (<a name="unique-anchor-name"></a>) to create navigation anchor points for any location in the document. To avoid ambiguous references, use a unique naming scheme for anchor tags, such as adding a prefix to the name attribute value.

Note

Custom anchors will not be included in the document outline/Table of Contents.

You can link to a custom anchor using the value of the name attribute you gave the anchor. The syntax is exactly the same as when you link to an anchor that is automatically generated for a heading.

For example:

# Section Heading

Some body text of this section.

<a name="my-custom-anchor-point"></a>
Some text I want to provide a direct link to, but which doesn't have its own heading.

(… more content…)

[A link to that custom anchor](#my-custom-anchor-point)

Tip

Custom anchors are not considered by the automatic naming and numbering behavior of automatic heading links.

Line breaks

If you're writing in issues, pull requests, or discussions in a repository, GitHub will render a line break automatically:

This example
Will span two lines

However, if you are writing in an .md file, the example above would render on one line without a line break. To create a line break in an .md file, you will need to include one of the following:

  • Include two spaces at the end of the first line.

    This example  
    Will span two lines
    
  • Include a backslash at the end of the first line.

    This example\
    Will span two lines
  • Include an HTML single line break tag at the end of the first line.

    This example<br/>
    Will span two lines

If you leave a blank line between two lines, both .md files and Markdown in issues, pull requests, and discussions will render the two lines separated by the blank line:

This example

Will have a blank line separating both lines

Images

You can display an image by adding ! and wrapping the alt text in [ ]. Alt text is a short text equivalent of the information in the image. Then, wrap the link for the image in parentheses ().

![Screenshot of a comment on a GitHub issue showing an image, added in the Markdown, of an Octocat smiling and raising a tentacle.](https://myoctocat.com/assets/images/base-octocat.svg)

Screenshot of a comment on a GitHub issue showing an image, added in the Markdown, of an Octocat smiling and raising a tentacle.

GitHub supports embedding images into your issues, pull requests, discussions, comments and .md files. You can display an image from your repository, add a link to an online image, or upload an image. For more information, see Uploading assets.

Note

When you want to display an image that is in your repository, use relative links instead of absolute links.

Here are some examples for using relative links to display an image.

Context Relative Link
In a .md file on the same branch /assets/images/electrocat.png
In a .md file on another branch /../main/assets/images/electrocat.png
In issues, pull requests and comments of the repository ../blob/main/assets/images/electrocat.png?raw=true
In a .md file in another repository /../../../../github/docs/blob/main/assets/images/electrocat.png
In issues, pull requests and comments of another repository ../../../github/docs/blob/main/assets/images/electrocat.png?raw=true

Note

The last two relative links in the table above will work for images in a private repository only if the viewer has at least read access to the private repository that contains these images.

For more information, see Relative Links.

The Picture element

The <picture> HTML element is supported.

Lists

You can make an unordered list by preceding one or more lines of text with -, *, or +.

- George Washington
* John Adams
+ Thomas Jefferson

Screenshot of rendered GitHub Markdown showing a bulleted list of the names of the first three American presidents.

To order your list, precede each line with a number.

1. James Madison
2. James Monroe
3. John Quincy Adams

Screenshot of rendered GitHub Markdown showing a numbered list of the names of the fourth, fifth, and sixth American presidents.

Nested Lists

You can create a nested list by indenting one or more list items below another item.

To create a nested list using the web editor on GitHub or a text editor that uses a monospaced font, like Visual Studio Code, you can align your list visually. Type space characters in front of your nested list item until the list marker character (- or *) lies directly below the first character of the text in the item above it.

1. First list item
   - First nested list item
     - Second nested list item

Note

In the web-based editor, you can indent or dedent one or more lines of text by first highlighting the desired lines and then using Tab or Shift+Tab</

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