👋 Hey there, I am Waylon Walker
I am a Husband, Father of two beautiful children, Senior Python Developer currently working in the Data Engineering platform space. I am a continuous learner, and sha
I have switched completely to markdown unless I need to work with someone else who cannot use markdown for the reason of such inconsistent and impossible to manage styles.
The worst is image anchoring and content getting tossed all over the page with the smallest of change.
Also it's been years since I have wrote anything for print. I don't like how it constrains you to pages most commonly 8.5X11.
👋 Hey there, I am Waylon Walker
I am a Husband, Father of two beautiful children, Senior Python Developer currently working in the Data Engineering platform space. I am a continuous learner, and sha
Some places like gitlab allow you to drag and drop in. I understand each has their place and there are times that word makes more sense. I just don't have that use case post-university as much as I would have during my education.
Lorem ipsum ![congration you done it] (https://dev-to-uploads.s3.amazonaws.com/i/cf8tc0ao0ljg6i2gzza4.jpg) dolor sit amet.
Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet.
You'll need to supply the correct size image or use pandoc with either markdown strict mode or disabling markdown in HTML blocks in conjunction with HTML tags with width and/or height and and/or align attributes (instead of standard markdown image syntax shown above) to truly inline images with proper size.
👋 Hey there, I am Waylon Walker
I am a Husband, Father of two beautiful children, Senior Python Developer currently working in the Data Engineering platform space. I am a continuous learner, and sha
I see what your asking, markdown renders out to HTML. so your images have to be available to the client somehow. hosting them online is the easiest (doesn't have to be public, but has to be accessible by the client)
So yes if you reference local files like that, just like with a static website the orientation to your images must always be the same.
You can use relative paths. To be honest, the only Word documents I've made in probably the last 2-3 years were resumes, cover letters, proposals, and agreements/contacts, so no images involved.
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I have switched completely to markdown unless I need to work with someone else who cannot use markdown for the reason of such inconsistent and impossible to manage styles.
The worst is image anchoring and content getting tossed all over the page with the smallest of change.
Also it's been years since I have wrote anything for print. I don't like how it constrains you to pages most commonly 8.5X11.
I don't think Markdown allows you to embed images directly. So, any kind of management software?
Some places like gitlab allow you to drag and drop in. I understand each has their place and there are times that word makes more sense. I just don't have that use case post-university as much as I would have during my education.
I have also used forestry for my personal blog.
waylonwalker.com/blog/forestry-io/
You can use markdown image tags inline e.g.
Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet.
You'll need to supply the correct size image or use pandoc with either markdown strict mode or disabling markdown in HTML blocks in conjunction with HTML tags with width and/or height and and/or align attributes (instead of standard markdown image syntax shown above) to truly inline images with proper size.
So, I have to put my image online?
I know I can put image files alongside Markdown files, all locally, but folder structure might be quite... fixed.
I see what your asking, markdown renders out to HTML. so your images have to be available to the client somehow. hosting them online is the easiest (doesn't have to be public, but has to be accessible by the client)
So yes if you reference local files like that, just like with a static website the orientation to your images must always be the same.
You can use relative paths. To be honest, the only Word documents I've made in probably the last 2-3 years were resumes, cover letters, proposals, and agreements/contacts, so no images involved.