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Martijn Pieters
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After a bullet point, any following indentedindented text is always still part of that bullet point. The only way you can 'break' that association is by inserting text without indentation.

That text does not have to be visible however. Insert a <!-- --> empty comment, for example:

* Bullet point

<!-- bullet, be-gone -->

    Code block

which is rendered as:

  • Bullet point
Code block

After a bullet point, any following indented text is always still part of that bullet point. The only way you can 'break' that association is by inserting text without indentation.

That text does not have to be visible however. Insert a <!-- --> empty comment, for example:

* Bullet point

<!-- bullet, be-gone -->

    Code block

which is rendered as:

  • Bullet point
Code block

After a bullet point, any following indented text is always still part of that bullet point. The only way you can 'break' that association is by inserting text without indentation.

That text does not have to be visible however. Insert a <!-- --> empty comment, for example:

* Bullet point

<!-- bullet, be-gone -->

    Code block

which is rendered as:

  • Bullet point
Code block
Source Link
Martijn Pieters
  • 1.1m
  • 96
  • 930
  • 755

After a bullet point, any following indented text is always still part of that bullet point. The only way you can 'break' that association is by inserting text without indentation.

That text does not have to be visible however. Insert a <!-- --> empty comment, for example:

* Bullet point

<!-- bullet, be-gone -->

    Code block

which is rendered as:

  • Bullet point
Code block