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If I want to mark as italic a paragraph within an unordered list then I can do so only once. Any subsequent paragraphs marked the same way show visible asterisks instead

For example, I wanted the fourth bullet point of this post to have the first paragraph in roman type and the second and third in italic. I marked the second as italic successfully, but I could find no way of also italicising the third

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  • Instead of asterisks, try underscores to see if that works. (As a workaround.)
    – Kendra
    Jan 7, 2016 at 20:10
  • 3
    You have *larger* in your third part so remove the asterisks and then move them around the entire part, then everything is italic (Pro-tip: Use an IDE for writing text :)
    – Rizier123
    Jan 7, 2016 at 20:14
  • @Rizier123: Can you suggest a WIndows IDE for writing markdown?
    – Borodin
    Jan 8, 2016 at 18:37
  • @Borodin It was just meant to be a joke ;) Since many times on SO when dealing with syntax errors an IDE helps the most. (I don't think there is an IDE for markdown)
    – Rizier123
    Jan 8, 2016 at 18:39
  • @Rizier123: Ah, sorry! It seems like a useful thing to have though as the site itself is far from ideal
    – Borodin
    Jan 8, 2016 at 18:40
  • Actually it even seems that there exists an editor for it (after a quick google search): markdownpad.com
    – Rizier123
    Jan 8, 2016 at 18:42
  • @Rizier123: I'll take a look. Thanks
    – Borodin
    Jan 8, 2016 at 18:42

1 Answer 1

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I could. Just escape the * around "larger" with a backslash \.


  • Since the paths to the files to be archived are stored in an array anyway there no reason not to use the create_archive class method to build and save your files all in one go

    The second parameter to create_archive is a compression method. I have set it to zero to request no compression and maximum speed, but you can enable gzip or bzip compression by passing COMPRESS_GZIP or COMPRESS_BZIP

    Although the module's documentation discourages it, you can also set this parameter to 1 through 9 to indicate a level of gzip compression. If you are archiving text files then I highly recommend that you use 1 or 2 here. Passing COMPRESS_GZIP results in a gzip compression level of 9, which is by far the slowest and can often result in a *larger* file than lower compressions. A value of 1 will often give you a file one third of the size of the uncompressed archive, while 2 may give you another five percent reduction. After that there is usually very little gain


Or, if you want more emphasis, just bold it.

  • Since the paths to the files to be archived are stored in an array anyway there no reason not to use the create_archive class method to build and save your files all in one go

    The second parameter to create_archive is a compression method. I have set it to zero to request no compression and maximum speed, but you can enable gzip or bzip compression by passing COMPRESS_GZIP or COMPRESS_BZIP

    Although the module's documentation discourages it, you can also set this parameter to 1 through 9 to indicate a level of gzip compression. If you are archiving text files then I highly recommend that you use 1 or 2 here. Passing COMPRESS_GZIP results in a gzip compression level of 9, which is by far the slowest and can often result in a larger file than lower compressions. A value of 1 will often give you a file one third of the size of the uncompressed archive, while 2 may give you another five percent reduction. After that there is usually very little gain


You could remove the italics if instead of a *larger* file you used a* larger *file:

  • Since the paths to the files to be archived are stored in an array anyway there no reason not to use the create_archive class method to build and save your files all in one go

    The second parameter to create_archive is a compression method. I have set it to zero to request no compression and maximum speed, but you can enable gzip or bzip compression by passing COMPRESS_GZIP or COMPRESS_BZIP

    Although the module's documentation discourages it, you can also set this parameter to 1 through 9 to indicate a level of gzip compression. If you are archiving text files then I highly recommend that you use 1 or 2 here. Passing COMPRESS_GZIP results in a gzip compression level of 9, which is by far the slowest and can often result in a larger file than lower compressions. A value of 1 will often give you a file one third of the size of the uncompressed archive, while 2 may give you another five percent reduction. After that there is usually very little gain

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