General
- Use one or more blank lines to separate paragraphs.
- Use [[BR]] to insert linebreaks into paragraphs.
Typeface
| Name/Sample | Markup | Notes |
| italic | ''italic'' | Double single quotes. |
| bold | '''bold''' | Triple single quotes. |
| monospace | `monospace` | Single backticks. Wiki markup is ignored. |
| code | {{{code}}} | Example. Wiki markup is ignored. |
| underline | __underline__ | |
| superscript | ^superscript^ | |
| subscript | ,,subscript,, | |
| smaller | ~-smaller-~ | |
| larger | ~+larger+~ | |
| struck | --(struck)-- | MoinMoin Version 1.5+ |
Colorized Code
There are several ways to display colorized code formatting:- Start a special code block containing the parser's name: {{{#!parsername
- Embed a file attachment bearing a supported extension (such as ".py") with inline:
- Begin a page with the format processing instruction: #format parsername
Examples
Mixing ''italic'' and '''bold'''
| Markup | Result |
| '''''Mix''' at the beginning'' | Mix at the beginning |
| '''''Mix'' at the beginning''' | Mix at the beginning |
| '''Mix at the ''end''''' | Mix at the end |
| ''Mix at the '''end''''' | Mix at the end |
Code
{{{10 PRINT "Hello, world!"
20 GOTO 10
}}}
Result:
10 PRINT "Hello, world!" 20 GOTO 10
Superscript & Subscript
You might recall ''a''^2^ + ''b''^2^ = ''c''^2^ from your math lessons, unless your head is filled with H,,2,,O. Result: You might recall a2 + b2 = c2 from your math lessons, unless your head is filled with H2O.Colorized Code, Method #1
{{{#!pythonfrom colors import palette
palette.colorize('python')
}}}
Result:
1 from colors import palette
2 palette.colorize('python')
