almanac

Lists

Creating lists in Homebrewery, using Markdown, is quite intuitive, and styling it isn’t half bad either. Homebrewery doesn’t add any special syntax for regular lists, but it does for definition lists (article to come soon). Markup Lists should contain content that is actually a list of related items, and there are basically two types of Lists

Injectors

Injectors are the third and final type of “curly brace” syntax that is unique to the Homebrewery, and they are used to “inject” the preceding element with it’s own attribute contents. It is a custom extension of Markdown, and thus it can be difficult to find any information about how to use it when doing Injectors

Divs

A <div> element in HTML is a basic, generic container for content on a website, similar to a <span> element, except that rather than being “inline” it is a “block” element. In Homebrewery terms, things like the “note” or a “stat block” are pieces of content wrapped in a div. Like a span, a div Divs

Links

In your homebrew document you may want to add some links, either to external sites like your own website or to another brew, or some internal links to specific pages or headings so your audience can navigate via a Table of Contents. Adding links can be done with Markdown, saving a lot of effort over Links

Italic

Italicizing text in the Homebrewery is very easy via Markdown syntax, and works in much the same as “bolding” text, with the same caveat that there is a difference between “italicizing” and “emphasizing” text. Where “bold” is to “strong”, “italic” is to “emphasis”. But first, the markup: Markup Using Markdown in the Brew Editor, you Italic