I tried to insert b>
in comments, but I could not do this, it rendered as a standard text with backticks. Why? How to insert this code:
` text`
in comments so it renders as text
with three visible spaces?
A solution/workaround was pointed out in the comments (use a unicode char).
However, this question also asked "why?"
It is all explained in the official?/original Markdown Syntax Rules:
The backtick delimiters surrounding a code span may include spaces — one after the opening, one before the closing. This allows you to place literal backtick characters at the beginning or end of a code span:
A single backtick in a code span: `` ` `` A backtick-delimited string in a code span: `` `foo` ``
will produce:
<p>A single backtick in a code span: <code>`</code></p> <p>A backtick-delimited string in a code span: <code>`foo`</code></p>
To enforce that rule, Markdown parsers generally will strip any white-space at the beginning and end of the code span. As the rules specifically state "one after the opening, one before the closing" it could be argued that only one space should be removed rather than all of them. However, it can be difficult for a document author to tell the difference between one and two spaces, so the parser (correctly IMO) assumes that the extra spaces were a typo and removes them all. This was the behavior implemented in the original reference implementation (markdown.pl), and all (most?) other implementations have copied that behavior.
` text`
, ` text` text