Support for MathJax Version 3.0 is included in the template:
\[\displaylines{ \nabla \cdot E= \frac{\rho}{\epsilon_0} \\\ \nabla \cdot B=0 \\\ \nabla \times E= -\partial_tB \\\ \nabla \times B = \mu_0 \left(J + \varepsilon_0 \partial_t E \right) }\]The default delimiters of $$...$$
and \\[...\\]
are supported for displayed mathematics, while \\(...\\)
should be used for in-line mathematics (ex., \(a^2 + b^2 = c^2\))
Note that since Academic Pages uses Markdown which cases some interference with MathJax and LaTeX for escaping characters and new lines, although some workarounds exist.
Single line blockquote:
Quotes are cool.
Entry | Item | |
---|---|---|
John Doe | 2016 | Description of the item in the list |
Jane Doe | 2019 | Description of the item in the list |
Doe Doe | 2022 | Description of the item in the list |
Header1 | Header2 | Header3 |
---|---|---|
cell1 | cell2 | cell3 |
cell4 | ce | |
ll5 | cell6 | |
cell1 | cell2 | cell3 |
cell4 | cell5 | cell6 |
Foot1 | Foot2 | Foot3 |
Make any link standout more when applying the .btn
class.
Watch out! You can also add notices by appending {: .notice}
to a paragraph.
This is an example of a link.
The abbreviation CSS stands for “Cascading Style Sheets”.
“Code is poetry.” —Automattic
You will learn later on in these tests that word-wrap: break-word;
will be your best friend.
You can also write larger blocks of code with syntax highlighting supported for some languages, such as Python:
print('Hello World!')
or R:
print("Hello World!", quote = FALSE)
This tag will let you strikeout text.
The emphasize tag should italicize text.
This tag should denote inserted text.
This scarcely known tag emulates keyboard text, which is usually styled like the <code>
tag.
This tag styles large blocks of code.
.post-title { margin: 0 0 5px; font-weight: bold; font-size: 38px; line-height: 1.2; and here's a line of some really, really, really, really long text, just to see how the PRE tag handles it and to find out how it overflows; }
Developers, developers, developers…
–Steve Ballmer
This tag shows bold text.
Getting our science styling on with H2O, which should push the “2” down.
Still sticking with science and Isaac Newton’s E = MC2, which should lift the 2 up.
This allows you to denote variables.