I was able to put it all in the title:
How can I mark (why doesn't *italic***bold***italic*
work)?
It produces: *italic***bold***italic*
Is that a bug or just poor design?
I was able to put it all in the title:
How can I mark (why doesn't *italic***bold***italic*
work)?
It produces: *italic***bold***italic*
Is that a bug or just poor design?
You can nest emphasis and bold just fine, but without intervening spaces, the outermost style applies throughout and so you only need to add bold in the middle.
In other words, you have too many stars:
*italic**bold**italic*
renders as
italicbolditalic
This is Rule 9 of the CommonMark specification on emphasis and strong markup:
Emphasis begins with a delimiter that can open emphasis and ends with a delimiter that can close emphasis, and that uses the same character (
_
or*
) as the opening delimiter. The opening and closing delimiters must belong to separate delimiter runs. If one of the delimiters can both open and close emphasis, then the sum of the lengths of the delimiter runs containing the opening and closing delimiters must not be a multiple of 3.
***
is a multiple of 3.
If you don't want to nest styles, but wanted to change style altogether, then you need to switch delimiters. Switching between *
and _
tells the parser that one style ended, and the other started, and avoids creating a delimiter run that's a multiple of 3.
So use one of these two forms:
*italic*__bold__*italic*
_italic_**bold**_italic_
which both render the same:
italicbolditalic
italicbolditalic
You can alternate _
with *
(either use _
for italic and **
for bold, or *
for italic and __
for bold).
some text
which is defined as
_s_**o**_m_**e** *t*__e__*x*__t__