An h1 header
Paragraphs are separated by a blank line.
2nd paragraph. Italic, bold, and monospace. Itemized lists look like:
- this one
- that one
- the other one
Note that --- not considering the asterisk --- the actual text content starts at 4-columns in.
Block quotes are written like so.
They can span multiple paragraphs, if you like.
Use 3 dashes for an em-dash. Use 2 dashes for ranges (ex., “it’s all in chapters 12—14”). Three dots … will be converted to an ellipsis. Unicode is supported. ☺
An h2 header
Here’s a numbered list:
- first item
- second item
- third item
Note again how the actual text starts at 4 columns in (4 characters from the left side). Here’s a code sample:
# Let me re-iterate ...
for i in 1 .. 10 { do-something(i) }As you probably guessed, indented 4 spaces. By the way, instead of indenting the block, you can use delimited blocks, if you like:
define foobar() {
    print "Welcome to flavor country!";
}(which makes copying & pasting easier). You can optionally mark the delimited block for Pandoc to syntax highlight it:
import time
# Quick, count to ten!
for i in range(10):
    # (but not *too* quick)
    time.sleep(0.5)
    print iAn h3 header
Now a nested list:
- First, get these ingredients: - carrots
- celery
- lentils
 
- Boil some water. 
- Dump everything in the pot and follow this algorithm: - find wooden spoon uncover pot stir cover pot balance wooden spoon precariously on pot handle wait 10 minutes goto first step (or shut off burner when done)- Do not bump wooden spoon or it will fall. 
Notice again how text always lines up on 4-space indents (including that last line which continues item 3 above).
Here’s a link to a website, to a local doc, and to a section heading in the current doc. Here’s a footnote 1.
Tables can look like this:
size material color
9 leather brown 10 hemp canvas natural 11 glass transparent
Table: Shoes, their sizes, and what they’re made of
(The above is the caption for the table.) Pandoc also supports multi-line tables:
keyword text
red Sunsets, apples, and other red or reddish things.
green Leaves, grass, frogs and other things it’s not easy being.
A horizontal rule follows.
Here’s a definition list:
apples : Good for making applesauce. oranges : Citrus! tomatoes : There’s no “e” in tomatoe.
Again, text is indented 4 spaces. (Put a blank line between each term/definition pair to spread things out more.)
Here’s a “line block”:
| Line one | Line too | Line tree
and images can be specified like so:
Inline math equations go in like so: . Display math should get its own line and be put in in double-dollarsigns:
And note that you can backslash-escape any punctuation characters which you wish to be displayed literally, ex.: `foo`, *bar*, etc.
Footnotes
- Footnote text goes here. ↩ 

