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Markdown 规范

Markdown 规范

作者: acc8226 | 来源:发表于2020-02-07 08:42 被阅读0次

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    Rules

    This document contains a description of all rules, what they are checking for,
    as well as an examples of documents that break the rule and corrected
    versions of the examples. Any rule whose heading is struck through is
    deprecated, but still provided for backward-compatibility.

    <a name="md001"></a>

    MD001 - Heading levels should only increment by one level at a time

    Tags: headings, headers

    Aliases: heading-increment, header-increment

    This rule is triggered when you skip heading levels in a markdown document, for
    example:

    # Heading 1
    
    ### Heading 3
    
    We skipped out a 2nd level heading in this document
    

    When using multiple heading levels, nested headings should increase by only one
    level at a time:

    # Heading 1
    
    ## Heading 2
    
    ### Heading 3
    
    #### Heading 4
    
    ## Another Heading 2
    
    ### Another Heading 3
    

    Rationale: Headings represent the structure of a document and can be confusing
    when skipped - especially for accessibility scenarios. More information:
    https://www.w3.org/WAI/tutorials/page-structure/headings/.

    <a name="md002"></a>

    MD002 - First heading should be a top level heading

    Tags: headings, headers

    Aliases: first-heading-h1, first-header-h1

    Parameters: level (number; default 1)

    Note: MD002 has been deprecated and is disabled by default.
    MD041/first-line-heading offers an improved implementation.

    This rule is intended to ensure document headings start at the top level and
    is triggered when the first heading in the document isn't an h1 heading:

    ## This isn't an H1 heading
    
    ### Another heading
    

    The first heading in the document should be an h1 heading:

    # Start with an H1 heading
    
    ## Then use an H2 for subsections
    

    Note: The level parameter can be used to change the top level (ex: to h2) in
    cases where an h1 is added externally.

    Rationale: The top level heading often acts as the title of a document. More
    information: https://cirosantilli.com/markdown-style-guide#top-level-header.

    <a name="md003"></a>

    MD003 - Heading style

    Tags: headings, headers

    Aliases: heading-style, header-style

    Parameters: style ("consistent", "atx", "atx_closed", "setext",
    "setext_with_atx", "setext_with_atx_closed"; default "consistent")

    This rule is triggered when different heading styles (atx, setext, and 'closed'
    atx) are used in the same document:

    # ATX style H1
    
    ## Closed ATX style H2 ##
    
    Setext style H1
    ===============
    

    Be consistent with the style of heading used in a document:

    # ATX style H1
    
    ## ATX style H2
    

    The setext_with_atx and setext_with_atx_closed doc styles allow atx-style
    headings of level 3 or more in documents with setext style headings:

    Setext style H1
    ===============
    
    Setext style H2
    ---------------
    
    ### ATX style H3
    

    Note: the configured heading style can be a specific style to use (atx,
    atx_closed, setext, setext_with_atx, setext_with_atx_closed), or simply require
    that the usage be consistent within the document.

    Rationale: Consistent formatting makes it easier to understand a document.

    <a name="md004"></a>

    MD004 - Unordered list style

    Tags: bullet, ul

    Aliases: ul-style

    Parameters: style ("consistent", "asterisk", "plus", "dash", "sublist"; default
    "consistent")

    This rule is triggered when the symbols used in the document for unordered
    list items do not match the configured unordered list style:

    * Item 1
    + Item 2
    - Item 3
    

    To fix this issue, use the configured style for list items throughout the
    document:

    * Item 1
    * Item 2
    * Item 3
    

    The configured list style can be a specific symbol to use (asterisk, plus, dash),
    can require that usage be consistent within the document, or can require that each
    sublist have a consistent symbol that is different from its parent list.

    For example, the following is valid for the sublist style because the outer-most
    indent uses asterisk, the middle indent uses plus, and the inner-most indent uses dash:

    * Item 1
      + Item 2
        - Item 3
      + Item 4
    * Item 4
      + Item 5
    

    Rationale: Consistent formatting makes it easier to understand a document.

    <a name="md005"></a>

    MD005 - Inconsistent indentation for list items at the same level

    Tags: bullet, ul, indentation

    Aliases: list-indent

    This rule is triggered when list items are parsed as being at the same level,
    but don't have the same indentation:

    * Item 1
      * Nested Item 1
      * Nested Item 2
       * A misaligned item
    

    Usually this rule will be triggered because of a typo. Correct the indentation
    for the list to fix it:

    * Item 1
      * Nested Item 1
      * Nested Item 2
      * Nested Item 3
    

    Sequentially-ordered list markers are usually left-aligned such that all items
    have the same starting column:

    ...
    8. Item
    9. Item
    10. Item
    11. Item
    ...
    

    This rule also supports right-alignment of list markers such that all items have
    the same ending column:

    ...
     8. Item
     9. Item
    10. Item
    11. Item
    ...
    

    Rationale: Violations of this rule can lead to improperly rendered content.

    <a name="md006"></a>

    MD006 - Consider starting bulleted lists at the beginning of the line

    Tags: bullet, ul, indentation

    Aliases: ul-start-left

    This rule is triggered when top level lists don't start at the beginning of a
    line:

    Some text
    
      * List item
      * List item
    

    To fix, ensure that top level list items are not indented:

    Some test
    
    * List item
    * List item
    

    Note: This rule is triggered for the following scenario because the unordered
    sublist is not recognized as such by the parser. Not being nested 3 characters
    as required by the outer ordered list, it creates a top-level unordered list
    instead.

    1. List item
      - List item
      - List item
    1. List item
    

    Rationale: Starting lists at the beginning of the line means that nested list
    items can all be indented by the same amount when an editor's indent function
    or the tab key is used to indent. Starting a list 1 space in means that the
    indent of the first nested list is less than the indent of the second level (3
    characters if you use 4 space tabs, or 1 character if you use 2 space tabs).

    <a name="md007"></a>

    MD007 - Unordered list indentation

    Tags: bullet, ul, indentation

    Aliases: ul-indent

    Parameters: indent, start_indented (number; default 2, boolean; default false)

    This rule is triggered when list items are not indented by the configured
    number of spaces (default: 2).

    Example:

    * List item
       * Nested list item indented by 3 spaces
    

    Corrected Example:

    * List item
      * Nested list item indented by 2 spaces
    

    Note: This rule applies to a sublist only if its parent lists are all also
    unordered (otherwise, extra indentation of ordered lists interferes with the
    rule).

    The start_indented parameter allows the first level of lists to be indented by
    the configured number of spaces rather than starting at zero (the inverse of
    MD006).

    Rationale: Indenting by 2 spaces allows the content of a nested list to be in
    line with the start of the content of the parent list when a single space is
    used after the list marker. Indenting by 4 spaces is consistent with code blocks
    and simpler for editors to implement. Additionally, this can be a compatibility
    issue for multi-markdown parsers, which require a 4-space indents. More information:
    https://cirosantilli.com/markdown-style-guide#indentation-of-content-inside-lists
    and http://support.markedapp.com/discussions/problems/21-sub-lists-not-indenting.

    <a name="md009"></a>

    MD009 - Trailing spaces

    Tags: whitespace

    Aliases: no-trailing-spaces

    Parameters: br_spaces, list_item_empty_lines, strict (number; default 2, boolean; default false, boolean; default false)

    This rule is triggered on any lines that end with unexpected whitespace. To fix this,
    remove the trailing space from the end of the line.

    The br_spaces parameter allows an exception to this rule for a specific number
    of trailing spaces, typically used to insert an explicit line break. The default
    value allows 2 spaces to indicate a hard break (<br> element).

    Note: You must set br_spaces to a value >= 2 for this parameter to take effect.
    Setting br_spaces to 1 behaves the same as 0, disallowing any trailing spaces.

    By default, this rule will not trigger when the allowed number of spaces is used,
    even when it doesn't create a hard break (for example, at the end of a paragraph).
    To report such instances as well, set the strict parameter to true.

    Text text text
    text[2 spaces]
    

    Using spaces to indent blank lines inside a list item is usually not necessary,
    but some parsers require it. Set the list_item_empty_lines parameter to true
    to allow this (even when strict is true):

    - list item text
      [2 spaces]
      list item text
    

    Rationale: Except when being used to create a line break, trailing whitespace
    has no purpose and does not affect the rendering of content.

    <a name="md010"></a>

    MD010 - Hard tabs

    Tags: whitespace, hard_tab

    Aliases: no-hard-tabs

    Parameters: code_blocks (boolean; default true)

    This rule is triggered by any lines that contain hard tab characters instead
    of using spaces for indentation. To fix this, replace any hard tab characters
    with spaces instead.

    Example:

    Some text
    
        * hard tab character used to indent the list item
    

    Corrected example:

    Some text
    
        * Spaces used to indent the list item instead
    

    You have the option to exclude this rule for code blocks. To do so, set the
    code_blocks parameter to false. Code blocks are included by default since
    handling of tabs by tools is often inconsistent (ex: using 4 vs. 8 spaces).

    Rationale: Hard tabs are often rendered inconsistently by different editors and
    can be harder to work with than spaces.

    <a name="md011"></a>

    MD011 - Reversed link syntax

    Tags: links

    Aliases: no-reversed-links

    This rule is triggered when text that appears to be a link is encountered, but
    where the syntax appears to have been reversed (the [] and () are
    reversed):

    (Incorrect link syntax)[https://www.example.com/]
    

    To fix this, swap the [] and () around:

    [Correct link syntax](https://www.example.com/)
    

    Note: Markdown Extra-style footnotes do not trigger this rule:

    For (example)[^1]
    

    Rationale: Reversed links are not rendered as usable links.

    <a name="md012"></a>

    MD012 - Multiple consecutive blank lines

    Tags: whitespace, blank_lines

    Aliases: no-multiple-blanks

    Parameters: maximum (number; default 1)

    This rule is triggered when there are multiple consecutive blank lines in the
    document:

    Some text here
    
    
    Some more text here
    

    To fix this, delete the offending lines:

    Some text here
    
    Some more text here
    

    Note: this rule will not be triggered if there are multiple consecutive blank
    lines inside code blocks.

    Note: The maximum parameter can be used to configure the maximum number of
    consecutive blank lines.

    Rationale: Except in a code block, blank lines serve no purpose and do not
    affect the rendering of content.

    <a name="md013"></a>

    MD013 - Line length

    Tags: line_length

    Aliases: line-length

    Parameters: line_length, heading_line_length, code_block_line_length, code_blocks, tables, headings, headers, strict (number; default 80, boolean; default true)

    If headings is not provided, headers (deprecated) will be used.

    This rule is triggered when there are lines that are longer than the
    configured line_length (default: 80 characters). To fix this, split the line
    up into multiple lines. To set a different maximum length for headings, use
    heading_line_length. To set a different maximum length for code blocks, use
    code_block_line_length

    This rule has an exception where there is no whitespace beyond the configured
    line length. This allows you to still include items such as long URLs without
    being forced to break them in the middle. To disable this exception, set the
    strict parameter to true.

    You have the option to exclude this rule for code blocks, tables, or headings.
    To do so, set the code_blocks, tables, or headings parameter(s) to false.

    Code blocks are included in this rule by default since it is often a
    requirement for document readability, and tentatively compatible with code
    rules. Still, some languages do not lend themselves to short lines.

    Rationale: Extremely long lines can be difficult to work with in some editors.
    More information: https://cirosantilli.com/markdown-style-guide#line-wrapping.

    <a name="md014"></a>

    MD014 - Dollar signs used before commands without showing output

    Tags: code

    Aliases: commands-show-output

    This rule is triggered when there are code blocks showing shell commands to be
    typed, and all of the shell commands are preceded by dollar signs ($):

    $ ls
    $ cat foo
    $ less bar
    

    The dollar signs are unnecessary in this situation, and should not be
    included:

    ls
    cat foo
    less bar
    

    Showing output for commands preceded by dollar signs does not trigger this rule:

    $ ls
    foo bar
    $ cat foo
    Hello world
    $ cat bar
    baz
    

    Because some commands do not produce output, it is not a violation if some
    commands do not have output:

    $ mkdir test
    mkdir: created directory 'test'
    $ ls test
    

    Rationale: It is easier to copy/paste and less noisy if the dollar signs
    are omitted when they are not needed. See
    https://cirosantilli.com/markdown-style-guide#dollar-signs-in-shell-code
    for more information.

    <a name="md018"></a>

    MD018 - No space after hash on atx style heading

    Tags: headings, headers, atx, spaces

    Aliases: no-missing-space-atx

    This rule is triggered when spaces are missing after the hash characters
    in an atx style heading:

    #Heading 1
    
    ##Heading 2
    

    To fix this, separate the heading text from the hash character by a single
    space:

    # Heading 1
    
    ## Heading 2
    

    Rationale: Violations of this rule can lead to improperly rendered content.

    <a name="md019"></a>

    MD019 - Multiple spaces after hash on atx style heading

    Tags: headings, headers, atx, spaces

    Aliases: no-multiple-space-atx

    This rule is triggered when more than one space is used to separate the
    heading text from the hash characters in an atx style heading:

    #  Heading 1
    
    ##  Heading 2
    

    To fix this, separate the heading text from the hash character by a single
    space:

    # Heading 1
    
    ## Heading 2
    

    Rationale: Extra space has no purpose and does not affect the rendering of
    content.

    <a name="md020"></a>

    MD020 - No space inside hashes on closed atx style heading

    Tags: headings, headers, atx_closed, spaces

    Aliases: no-missing-space-closed-atx

    This rule is triggered when spaces are missing inside the hash characters
    in a closed atx style heading:

    #Heading 1#
    
    ##Heading 2##
    

    To fix this, separate the heading text from the hash character by a single
    space:

    # Heading 1 #
    
    ## Heading 2 ##
    

    Note: this rule will fire if either side of the heading is missing spaces.

    Rationale: Violations of this rule can lead to improperly rendered content.

    <a name="md021"></a>

    MD021 - Multiple spaces inside hashes on closed atx style heading

    Tags: headings, headers, atx_closed, spaces

    Aliases: no-multiple-space-closed-atx

    This rule is triggered when more than one space is used to separate the
    heading text from the hash characters in a closed atx style heading:

    #  Heading 1  #
    
    ##  Heading 2  ##
    

    To fix this, separate the heading text from the hash character by a single
    space:

    # Heading 1 #
    
    ## Heading 2 ##
    

    Note: this rule will fire if either side of the heading contains multiple
    spaces.

    Rationale: Extra space has no purpose and does not affect the rendering of
    content.

    <a name="md022"></a>

    MD022 - Headings should be surrounded by blank lines

    Tags: headings, headers, blank_lines

    Aliases: blanks-around-headings, blanks-around-headers

    Parameters: lines_above, lines_below (number; default 1)

    This rule is triggered when headings (any style) are either not preceded or not
    followed by at least one blank line:

    # Heading 1
    Some text
    
    Some more text
    ## Heading 2
    

    To fix this, ensure that all headings have a blank line both before and after
    (except where the heading is at the beginning or end of the document):

    # Heading 1
    
    Some text
    
    Some more text
    
    ## Heading 2
    

    The lines_above and lines_below parameters can be used to specify a different
    number of blank lines (including 0) above or below each heading.

    Note: If lines_above or lines_below are configured to require more than one
    blank line, MD012/no-multiple-blanks should also be customized.

    Rationale: Aside from aesthetic reasons, some parsers, including kramdown, will
    not parse headings that don't have a blank line before, and will parse them as
    regular text.

    <a name="md023"></a>

    MD023 - Headings must start at the beginning of the line

    Tags: headings, headers, spaces

    Aliases: heading-start-left, header-start-left

    This rule is triggered when a heading is indented by one or more spaces:

    Some text
    
      # Indented heading
    

    To fix this, ensure that all headings start at the beginning of the line:

    Some text
    
    # Heading
    

    Rationale: Headings that don't start at the beginning of the line will not be
    parsed as headings, and will instead appear as regular text.

    <a name="md024"></a>

    MD024 - Multiple headings with the same content

    Tags: headings, headers

    Aliases: no-duplicate-heading, no-duplicate-header

    Parameters: siblings_only, allow_different_nesting (boolean; default false)

    This rule is triggered if there are multiple headings in the document that have
    the same text:

    # Some text
    
    ## Some text
    

    To fix this, ensure that the content of each heading is different:

    # Some text
    
    ## Some more text
    

    If the parameter siblings_only (alternatively allow_different_nesting) is
    set to true, heading duplication is allowed for non-sibling headings (common
    in change logs):

    # Change log
    
    ## 1.0.0
    
    ### Features
    
    ## 2.0.0
    
    ### Features
    

    Rationale: Some markdown parsers generate anchors for headings based on the
    heading name; headings with the same content can cause problems with that.

    <a name="md025"></a>

    MD025 - Multiple top level headings in the same document

    Tags: headings, headers

    Aliases: single-title, single-h1

    Parameters: level, front_matter_title (number; default 1, string; default "^\s*title:")

    This rule is triggered when a top level heading is in use (the first line of
    the file is an h1 heading), and more than one h1 heading is in use in the
    document:

    # Top level heading
    
    # Another top level heading
    

    To fix, structure your document so that there is a single h1 heading that is
    the title for the document, and all later headings are h2 or lower level
    headings:

    # Title
    
    ## Heading
    
    ## Another heading
    

    Note: The level parameter can be used to change the top level (ex: to h2) in
    cases where an h1 is added externally.

    If YAML front matter is present and contains
    a title property (commonly used with blog posts), this rule treats that as a top
    level heading and will report a violation for any subsequent top level headings.
    To use a different property name in front matter, specify the text of a regular
    expression via the front_matter_title parameter. To disable the use of front
    matter by this rule, specify "" for front_matter_title.

    Rationale: A top level heading is an h1 on the first line of the file, and
    serves as the title for the document. If this convention is in use, then there
    can not be more than one title for the document, and the entire document
    should be contained within this heading.

    <a name="md026"></a>

    MD026 - Trailing punctuation in heading

    Tags: headings, headers

    Aliases: no-trailing-punctuation

    Parameters: punctuation (string; default ".,;:!?。,;:!?")

    This rule is triggered on any heading that has one of the specified normal or
    full-width punctuation characters as the last character in the line:

    # This is a heading.
    

    To fix this, remove the trailing punctuation:

    # This is a heading
    

    Note: The punctuation parameter can be used to specify what characters count
    as punctuation at the end of a heading. For example, you can change it to
    ".,;:!" to allow headings that end with a question mark, such as in an FAQ.
    Setting the punctuation parameter to "" allows all characters - and is
    equivalent to disabling the rule.

    Rationale: Headings are not meant to be full sentences. More information:
    https://cirosantilli.com/markdown-style-guide#punctuation-at-the-end-of-headers

    <a name="md027"></a>

    MD027 - Multiple spaces after blockquote symbol

    Tags: blockquote, whitespace, indentation

    Aliases: no-multiple-space-blockquote

    This rule is triggered when blockquotes have more than one space after the
    blockquote (>) symbol:

    >  This is a block quote with bad indentation
    >  there should only be one.
    

    To fix, remove any extraneous space:

    > This is a blockquote with correct
    > indentation.
    

    Rationale: Consistent formatting makes it easier to understand a document.

    <a name="md028"></a>

    MD028 - Blank line inside blockquote

    Tags: blockquote, whitespace

    Aliases: no-blanks-blockquote

    This rule is triggered when two blockquote blocks are separated by nothing
    except for a blank line:

    > This is a blockquote
    > which is immediately followed by
    
    > this blockquote. Unfortunately
    > In some parsers, these are treated as the same blockquote.
    

    To fix this, ensure that any blockquotes that are right next to each other
    have some text in between:

    > This is a blockquote.
    
    And Jimmy also said:
    
    > This too is a blockquote.
    

    Alternatively, if they are supposed to be the same quote, then add the
    blockquote symbol at the beginning of the blank line:

    > This is a blockquote.
    >
    > This is the same blockquote.
    

    Rationale: Some markdown parsers will treat two blockquotes separated by one
    or more blank lines as the same blockquote, while others will treat them as
    separate blockquotes.

    <a name="md029"></a>

    MD029 - Ordered list item prefix

    Tags: ol

    Aliases: ol-prefix

    Parameters: style ("one", "ordered", "one_or_ordered", "zero"; default "one_or_ordered")

    This rule is triggered for ordered lists that do not either start with '1.' or
    do not have a prefix that increases in numerical order (depending on the
    configured style). The less-common pattern of using '0.' for all prefixes is
    also supported.

    Example valid list if the style is configured as 'one':

    1. Do this.
    1. Do that.
    1. Done.
    

    Example valid list if the style is configured as 'ordered':

    1. Do this.
    2. Do that.
    3. Done.
    

    Both examples are valid when the style is configured as 'one_or_ordered'.

    Example valid list if the style is configured as 'zero':

    0. Do this.
    0. Do that.
    0. Done.
    

    Example invalid list for all styles:

    1. Do this.
    3. Done.
    

    This rule supports 0-prefixing ordered list items for uniform indentation:

    ...
    08. Item
    09. Item
    10. Item
    11. Item
    ...
    

    Rationale: Consistent formatting makes it easier to understand a document.

    <a name="md030"></a>

    MD030 - Spaces after list markers

    Tags: ol, ul, whitespace

    Aliases: list-marker-space

    Parameters: ul_single, ol_single, ul_multi, ol_multi (number; default 1)

    This rule checks for the number of spaces between a list marker (e.g. '-',
    '*', '+' or '1.') and the text of the list item.

    The number of spaces checked for depends on the document style in use, but the
    default is 1 space after any list marker:

    * Foo
    * Bar
    * Baz
    
    1. Foo
    1. Bar
    1. Baz
    
    1. Foo
       * Bar
    1. Baz
    

    A document style may change the number of spaces after unordered list items
    and ordered list items independently, as well as based on whether the content
    of every item in the list consists of a single paragraph, or multiple
    paragraphs (including sub-lists and code blocks).

    For example, the style guide at
    https://cirosantilli.com/markdown-style-guide#spaces-after-list-marker
    specifies that 1 space after the list marker should be used if every item in
    the list fits within a single paragraph, but to use 2 or 3 spaces (for ordered
    and unordered lists respectively) if there are multiple paragraphs of content
    inside the list:

    * Foo
    * Bar
    * Baz
    

    vs.

    *   Foo
    
        Second paragraph
    
    *   Bar
    

    or

    1.  Foo
    
        Second paragraph
    
    1.  Bar
    

    To fix this, ensure the correct number of spaces are used after list marker
    for your selected document style.

    Rationale: Violations of this rule can lead to improperly rendered content.

    <a name="md031"></a>

    MD031 - Fenced code blocks should be surrounded by blank lines

    Tags: code, blank_lines

    Aliases: blanks-around-fences

    Parameters: list_items (boolean; default true)

    This rule is triggered when fenced code blocks are either not preceded or not
    followed by a blank line:

    Some text
    ```
    Code block
    ```
    
    ```
    Another code block
    ```
    Some more text
    

    To fix this, ensure that all fenced code blocks have a blank line both before
    and after (except where the block is at the beginning or end of the document):

    Some text
    
    ```
    Code block
    ```
    
    ```
    Another code block
    ```
    
    Some more text
    

    Set the list_items parameter to false to disable this rule for list items.
    Disabling this behavior for lists can be useful if it is necessary to create a
    tight list containing a code fence.

    Rationale: Aside from aesthetic reasons, some parsers, including kramdown, will
    not parse fenced code blocks that don't have blank lines before and after them.

    <a name="md032"></a>

    MD032 - Lists should be surrounded by blank lines

    Tags: bullet, ul, ol, blank_lines

    Aliases: blanks-around-lists

    This rule is triggered when lists (of any kind) are either not preceded or not
    followed by a blank line:

    Some text
    * Some
    * List
    
    1. Some
    2. List
    Some text
    

    To fix this, ensure that all lists have a blank line both before and after
    (except where the block is at the beginning or end of the document):

    Some text
    
    * Some
    * List
    
    1. Some
    2. List
    
    Some text
    

    Rationale: Aside from aesthetic reasons, some parsers, including kramdown, will
    not parse lists that don't have blank lines before and after them.

    <a name="md033"></a>

    MD033 - Inline HTML

    Tags: html

    Aliases: no-inline-html

    Parameters: allowed_elements (array of string; default empty)

    This rule is triggered whenever raw HTML is used in a markdown document:

    <h1>Inline HTML heading</h1>
    

    To fix this, use 'pure' markdown instead of including raw HTML:

    # Markdown heading
    

    Note: To allow specific HTML elements, use the 'allowed_elements' parameter.

    Rationale: Raw HTML is allowed in markdown, but this rule is included for
    those who want their documents to only include "pure" markdown, or for those
    who are rendering markdown documents in something other than HTML.

    <a name="md034"></a>

    MD034 - Bare URL used

    Tags: links, url

    Aliases: no-bare-urls

    This rule is triggered whenever a URL is given that isn't surrounded by angle
    brackets:

    For more information, see https://www.example.com/.
    

    To fix this, add angle brackets around the URL:

    For more information, see <https://www.example.com/>.
    

    Note: if you do want a bare URL without it being converted into a link,
    enclose it in a code block, otherwise in some markdown parsers it will be
    converted:

    `https://www.example.com`
    

    Rationale: Without angle brackets, the URL isn't converted into a link in many
    markdown parsers.

    <a name="md035"></a>

    MD035 - Horizontal rule style

    Tags: hr

    Aliases: hr-style

    Parameters: style ("consistent", "---", "***", or other string specifying the
    horizontal rule; default "consistent")

    This rule is triggered when inconsistent styles of horizontal rules are used
    in the document:

    ---
    
    - - -
    
    ***
    
    * * *
    
    ****
    

    To fix this, ensure any horizontal rules used in the document are consistent,
    or match the given style if the rule is so configured:

    ---
    
    ---
    

    Note: by default, this rule is configured to just require that all horizontal
    rules in the document are the same, and will trigger if any of the horizontal
    rules are different than the first one encountered in the document. If you
    want to configure the rule to match a specific style, the parameter given to
    the 'style' option is a string containing the exact horizontal rule text that
    is allowed.

    Rationale: Consistent formatting makes it easier to understand a document.

    <a name="md036"></a>

    MD036 - Emphasis used instead of a heading

    Tags: headings, headers, emphasis

    Aliases: no-emphasis-as-heading, no-emphasis-as-header

    Parameters: punctuation (string; default ".,;:!?。,;:!?")

    This check looks for instances where emphasized (i.e. bold or italic) text is
    used to separate sections, where a heading should be used instead:

    **My document**
    
    Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet...
    
    _Another section_
    
    Consectetur adipiscing elit, sed do eiusmod.
    

    To fix this, use markdown headings instead of emphasized text to denote
    sections:

    # My document
    
    Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet...
    
    ## Another section
    
    Consectetur adipiscing elit, sed do eiusmod.
    

    Note: This rule looks for single line paragraphs that consist entirely
    of emphasized text. It won't fire on emphasis used within regular text,
    multi-line emphasized paragraphs, or paragraphs ending in punctuation
    (normal or full-width). Similarly to rule MD026, you can configure what
    characters are recognized as punctuation.

    Rationale: Using emphasis instead of a heading prevents tools from inferring
    the structure of a document. More information:
    https://cirosantilli.com/markdown-style-guide#emphasis-vs-headers.

    <a name="md037"></a>

    MD037 - Spaces inside emphasis markers

    Tags: whitespace, emphasis

    Aliases: no-space-in-emphasis

    This rule is triggered when emphasis markers (bold, italic) are used, but they
    have spaces between the markers and the text:

    Here is some ** bold ** text.
    
    Here is some * italic * text.
    
    Here is some more __ bold __ text.
    
    Here is some more _ italic _ text.
    

    To fix this, remove the spaces around the emphasis markers:

    Here is some **bold** text.
    
    Here is some *italic* text.
    
    Here is some more __bold__ text.
    
    Here is some more _italic_ text.
    

    Rationale: Emphasis is only parsed as such when the asterisks/underscores
    aren't completely surrounded by spaces. This rule attempts to detect where
    they were surrounded by spaces, but it appears that emphasized text was
    intended by the author.

    <a name="md038"></a>

    MD038 - Spaces inside code span elements

    Tags: whitespace, code

    Aliases: no-space-in-code

    This rule is triggered on code span elements that have spaces right inside the
    backticks:

    ` some text `
    
    `some text `
    
    ` some text`
    

    To fix this, remove the spaces inside the codespan markers:

    `some text`
    

    Note: A single leading or trailing space is allowed if used to separate codespan
    markers from an embedded backtick:

    `` ` embedded backtick``
    

    Rationale: Violations of this rule can lead to improperly rendered content.

    <a name="md039"></a>

    MD039 - Spaces inside link text

    Tags: whitespace, links

    Aliases: no-space-in-links

    This rule is triggered on links that have spaces surrounding the link text:

    [ a link ](https://www.example.com/)
    

    To fix this, remove the spaces surrounding the link text:

    [a link](https://www.example.com/)
    

    Rationale: Consistent formatting makes it easier to understand a document.

    <a name="md040"></a>

    MD040 - Fenced code blocks should have a language specified

    Tags: code, language

    Aliases: fenced-code-language

    This rule is triggered when fenced code blocks are used, but a language isn't
    specified:

    ```
    #!/bin/bash
    echo Hello world
    ```
    

    To fix this, add a language specifier to the code block:

    ```bash
    #!/bin/bash
    echo Hello world
    ```
    

    Rationale: Specifying a language improves content rendering by using the
    correct syntax highlighting for code. More information:
    https://cirosantilli.com/markdown-style-guide#option-code-fenced.

    <a name="md041"></a>

    MD041 - First line in file should be a top level heading

    Tags: headings, headers

    Aliases: first-line-heading, first-line-h1

    Parameters: level, front_matter_title (number; default 1, string; default "^\s*title:")

    This rule is intended to ensure documents have a title and is triggered when
    the first line in the file isn't a top level (h1) heading:

    This is a file without a heading
    

    To fix this, add a top level heading to the beginning of the file:

    # File with heading
    
    This is a file with a top level heading
    

    Note: The level parameter can be used to change the top level (ex: to h2) in cases
    where an h1 is added externally.

    If YAML front matter is present and contains a
    title property (commonly used with blog posts), this rule will not report a
    violation. To use a different property name in front matter, specify the text
    of a regular expression via the front_matter_title parameter. To disable the
    use of front matter by this rule, specify "" for front_matter_title.

    Rationale: The top level heading often acts as the title of a document. More
    information: https://cirosantilli.com/markdown-style-guide#top-level-header.

    <a name="md042"></a>

    MD042 - No empty links

    Tags: links

    Aliases: no-empty-links

    This rule is triggered when an empty link is encountered:

    [an empty link]()
    

    To fix the violation, provide a destination for the link:

    [a valid link](https://example.com/)
    

    Empty fragments will trigger this rule:

    [an empty fragment](#)
    

    But non-empty fragments will not:

    [a valid fragment](#fragment)
    

    Rationale: Empty links do not lead anywhere and therefore don't function as links.

    <a name="md043"></a>

    MD043 - Required heading structure

    Tags: headings, headers

    Aliases: required-headings, required-headers

    Parameters: headings, headers (array of string; default null for disabled)

    If headings is not provided, headers (deprecated) will be used.

    This rule is triggered when the headings in a file do not match the array of
    headings passed to the rule. It can be used to enforce a standard heading
    structure for a set of files.

    To require exactly the following structure:

    # Head
    ## Item
    ### Detail
    

    Set the headings parameter to:

    [
        "# Head",
        "## Item",
        "### Detail"
    ]
    

    To allow optional headings as with the following structure:

    # Head
    ## Item
    ### Detail (optional)
    ## Foot
    ### Notes (optional)
    

    Use the special value "*" meaning "one or more unspecified headings" and set
    the headings parameter to:

    [
        "# Head",
        "## Item",
        "*",
        "## Foot",
        "*"
    ]
    

    When an error is detected, this rule outputs the line number of the first
    problematic heading (otherwise, it outputs the last line number of the file).

    Note that while the headings parameter uses the "## Text" ATX heading style for
    simplicity, a file may use any supported heading style.

    Rationale: Projects may wish to enforce a consistent document structure across
    a set of similar content.

    <a name="md044"></a>

    MD044 - Proper names should have the correct capitalization

    Tags: spelling

    Aliases: proper-names

    Parameters: names, code_blocks (string array; default null, boolean; default true)

    This rule is triggered when any of the strings in the names array do not have
    the specified capitalization. It can be used to enforce a standard letter case
    for the names of projects and products.

    For example, the language "JavaScript" is usually written with both the 'J' and
    'S' capitalized - though sometimes the 's' or 'j' appear in lower-case. To enforce
    the proper capitalization, specify the desired letter case in the names array:

    [
        "JavaScript"
    ]
    

    Set the code_blocks parameter to false to disable this rule for code blocks.

    Rationale: Incorrect capitalization of proper names is usually a mistake.

    <a name="md045"></a>

    MD045 - Images should have alternate text (alt text)

    Tags: accessibility, images

    Aliases: no-alt-text

    This rule is triggered when an image is missing alternate text (alt text) information.

    Alternate text is commonly specified inline as:

    ![Alternate text](image.jpg)
    

    Or with reference syntax as:

    ![Alternate text][ref]
    
    ...
    
    [ref]: image.jpg "Optional title"
    

    Guidance for writing alternate text is available from the W3C,
    Wikipedia, and
    other locations.

    Rationale: Alternate text is important for accessibility and describes the
    content of an image for people who may not be able to see it.

    <a name="md046"></a>

    MD046 - Code block style

    Tags: code

    Aliases: code-block-style

    Parameters: style ("consistent", "fenced", "indented"; default "consistent")

    This rule is triggered when unwanted or different code block styles are used in
    the same document.

    In the default configuration this rule reports a violation for the following document:

    Some text.
    
        # Indented code
    
    More text.
    
    ```ruby
    # Fenced code
    ```
    
    More text.
    

    To fix violations of this rule, use a consistent style (either indenting or code fences).

    The specified style can be specific (fenced, indented) or simply require that usage
    be consistent within the document (consistent).

    Rationale: Consistent formatting makes it easier to understand a document.

    <a name="md047"></a>

    MD047 - Files should end with a single newline character

    Tags: blank_lines

    Aliases: single-trailing-newline

    This rule is triggered when there is not a single newline character at the end of a file.

    Example that triggers the rule:

    # Heading
    
    This file ends without a newline.[EOF]
    

    To fix the violation, add a newline character to the end of the file:

    # Heading
    
    This file ends with a newline.
    [EOF]
    

    Rationale: Some programs have trouble with files that do not end with a newline.
    More information: https://unix.stackexchange.com/questions/18743/whats-the-point-in-adding-a-new-line-to-the-end-of-a-file.

    <a name="md048"></a>

    MD048 - Code fence style

    Tags: code

    Aliases: code-fence-style

    Parameters: style ("consistent", "tilde", "backtick"; default "consistent")

    This rule is triggered when the symbols used in the document for fenced code blocks do not match the configured code fence style:

    ```ruby
    # Fenced code
    ```
    
    ~~~ruby
    # Fenced code
    ~~~
    

    To fix this issue, use the configured code fence style throughout the
    document:

    ```ruby
    # Fenced code
    ```
    
    ```ruby
    # Fenced code
    ```
    

    The configured list style can be a specific symbol to use (backtick, tilde), or
    can require that usage be consistent within the document.

    Rationale: Consistent formatting makes it easier to understand a document.

    快照 end

    原文出处

    https://github.com/DavidAnson/markdownlint/blob/master/doc/Rules.md

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