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It Markdown markup for a spoiler:

You cannot see this until you mouse-over!

Move your mouse over the 'blank' block text to see what happens.

Not all sites really need this, but it is supported everywhere. Only sites that make regular use of it (such as SciFi and Movies) actually include the tag in their documentation.

###Spoilers

Spoilers

To hide a certain piece of text and have it only be visible when a user moves the mouse over it, use the blockquote syntax with an additional exclamation point:

At the end of episode five, it turns out that

>! he's actually his father.

It Markdown markup for a spoiler:

You cannot see this until you mouse-over!

Move your mouse over the 'blank' block text to see what happens.

Not all sites really need this, but it is supported everywhere. Only sites that make regular use of it (such as SciFi and Movies) actually include the tag in their documentation.

###Spoilers

To hide a certain piece of text and have it only be visible when a user moves the mouse over it, use the blockquote syntax with an additional exclamation point:

At the end of episode five, it turns out that

>! he's actually his father.

It Markdown markup for a spoiler:

You cannot see this until you mouse-over!

Move your mouse over the 'blank' block text to see what happens.

Not all sites really need this, but it is supported everywhere. Only sites that make regular use of it (such as SciFi and Movies) actually include the tag in their documentation.

Spoilers

To hide a certain piece of text and have it only be visible when a user moves the mouse over it, use the blockquote syntax with an additional exclamation point:

At the end of episode five, it turns out that

>! he's actually his father.
replaced http://scifi.stackexchange.com/ with https://scifi.stackexchange.com/
Source Link

It Markdown markup for a spoiler:

You cannot see this until you mouse-over!

Move your mouse over the 'blank' block text to see what happens.

Not all sites really need this, but it is supported everywhere. Only sites that make regular use of it (such as SciFi and Movies) actually include the tag in their documentationtheir documentation.

###Spoilers

To hide a certain piece of text and have it only be visible when a user moves the mouse over it, use the blockquote syntax with an additional exclamation point:

At the end of episode five, it turns out that

>! he's actually his father.

It Markdown markup for a spoiler:

You cannot see this until you mouse-over!

Move your mouse over the 'blank' block text to see what happens.

Not all sites really need this, but it is supported everywhere. Only sites that make regular use of it (such as SciFi and Movies) actually include the tag in their documentation.

###Spoilers

To hide a certain piece of text and have it only be visible when a user moves the mouse over it, use the blockquote syntax with an additional exclamation point:

At the end of episode five, it turns out that

>! he's actually his father.

It Markdown markup for a spoiler:

You cannot see this until you mouse-over!

Move your mouse over the 'blank' block text to see what happens.

Not all sites really need this, but it is supported everywhere. Only sites that make regular use of it (such as SciFi and Movies) actually include the tag in their documentation.

###Spoilers

To hide a certain piece of text and have it only be visible when a user moves the mouse over it, use the blockquote syntax with an additional exclamation point:

At the end of episode five, it turns out that

>! he's actually his father.
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Martijn Pieters
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It Markdown markup for a spoiler:

You cannot see this until you mouse-over!

Move your mouse over the 'blank' block text to see what happens.

Not all sites really need this, but it is supported everywhere. Only sites that make regular use of it (such as SciFi and Movies) actually include the tag in their documentation.

###Spoilers

To hide a certain piece of text and have it only be visible when a user moves the mouse over it, use the blockquote syntax with an additional exclamation point:

At the end of episode five, it turns out that

>! he's actually his father.