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Code

Table of contents

  1. Inline code
  2. Syntax highlighted code blocks
  3. Code blocks with rendered examples

Inline code

Code can be rendered inline by wrapping it in single back ticks.

Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, <inline code snippet> adipisicing elit, sed do eiusmod tempor incididunt ut labore et dolore magna aliqua.

Heading with <inline code snippet> in it.

Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, `<inline code snippet>` adipisicing elit, sed do eiusmod tempor incididunt ut labore et dolore magna aliqua.

## Heading with `<inline code snippet>` in it.

Syntax highlighted code blocks

Use Jekyll’s built-in syntax highlighting with Rouge for code blocks by using three backticks, followed by the language name:

// Javascript code with syntax highlighting.
var fun = function lang(l) {
  dateformat.i18n = require('./lang/' + l)
  return true;
}
```js
// Javascript code with syntax highlighting.
var fun = function lang(l) {
  dateformat.i18n = require('./lang/' + l)
  return true;
}
```

Code blocks with rendered examples

To demonstrate front end code, sometimes it’s useful to show a rendered example of that code. After including the styles from your project that you’ll need to show the rendering, you can use a <div> with the code-example class, followed by the code block syntax. If you want to render your output with Markdown instead of HTML, use the markdown="1" attribute to tell Jekyll that the code you are rendering will be in Markdown format… This is about to get meta…

[Link button](http://example.com/){: .btn }
<div class="code-example" markdown="1">

[Link button](http://example.com/){: .btn }

</div>
```markdown
[Link button](http://example.com/){: .btn }
```

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