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views:

486

answers:

2

And if so, how?

Thanks!

+5  A: 

You can actually use regular HTML markup in markdown. For instance:

<p class="myclass">This paragraph has a class "myclass"</p>

Just make sure the HTML is not inside a code block.

Matt Bridges
+3  A: 

Dupe: How do I set an HTML class attribute in Markdown?


Natively? No. But...

No, Markdown's syntax can't. You can set ID values with Markdown Extra through.

You can use regular HTML if you like, and add the attribute markdown="1" to continue markdown-conversion within the HTML element. This requires Markdown Extra though.

<p class='specialParagraph' markdown='1'>
**Another paragraph** which allows *Markdown* within it.
</p>

Possible Solution: (Untested and intended for <blockquote>)

I found the following online:

Function

function _DoBlockQuotes_callback($matches) {

    ...cut...

    //add id and class details...
    $id = $class = '';
    if(preg_match_all('/\{(?:([#.][-_:a-zA-Z0-9 ]+)+)\}/',$bq,$matches)) {
        foreach ($matches[1] as $match) {
            if($match[0]=='#') $type = 'id';
            else $type = 'class';
            ${$type} = ' '.$type.'="'.trim($match,'.# ').'"';
        }
        foreach ($matches[0] as $match) {
            $bq = str_replace($match,'',$bq);
        }
    }

    return _HashBlock(
        "<blockquote{$id}{$class}>\n$bq\n</blockquote>"
    ) . "\n\n";
}

Markdown

>{.className}{#id}This is the blockquote

Result

<blockquote id="id" class="className">
    <p>This is the blockquote</p>
</blockquote>
Jonathan Sampson
Random downvoting?
Jonathan Sampson
Your answer was more thorough than mine, odd downvote. Upvoted for justice :)
Matt Bridges
I get confused at some of the votes around here :)
Jonathan Sampson