Stash is now known as Bitbucket Server.
See the

Unknown macro: {spacejump}

of this page, or visit the Bitbucket Server documentation home page.

By default, Stash uses Markdown as its markup language. You can use markdown in the following places:

  • any pull request's descriptions or comments, or
  • in README files (if they have the .md file extension).

Use Control-Shift-P or Command-Shift-P to preview your markdown.

Markdown syntax

The table below contains examples of Markdown syntax. For a full list of all the Markdown syntax, consult the official documentation on John Gruber's Daring Fireball site.

Headings

# This is an H1
## This is an H2
...
###### This is an H6

Paragraphs

Each paragraph begins on a new line. Simply press <return> for a new line.

For example,  
like this.

You'll need an empty line between a paragraph and any following markdown construct, such as an ordered or unordered list, for that to be rendered. Like this:

* Item 1
* Item 2

Character styles

*Italic characters* 
_Italic characters_
**bold characters**
__bold characters__

Unordered list

* Item 1
* Item 2
* Item 3
    * Item 3a
    * Item 3b
    * Item 3c

Ordered list

1. Step 1
2. Step 2
3. Step 3
    a. Step 3a
    b. Step 3b
    c. Step 3c

List in list

1. Step 1
2. Step 2
3. Step 3
    * Item 3a
    * Item 3b
    * Item 3c

Quotes or citations

Introducing my quote:
 
> Neque porro quisquam est qui 
> dolorem ipsum quia dolor sit amet, 
> consectetur, adipisci velit...

Inline code characters

Use the backtick to refer to a `function()`.
 
There is a literal ``backtick (`)`` here.

Code blocks

Indent every line of the block by at least 4 spaces or 1 tab. Alternatively, you can also use 3 backtick quote marks before and after the block, like this:

``` 
Text to appear as a code block.
``` 

Within a code block, ampersands (&) and angle brackets (< and >)are automatically converted into HTML entities.

This is a normal paragraph:
    This is a code block.
    With multiple lines.

Links to external websites

This is [an example](http://www.slate.com/ "Title") inline link.

[This link](http://example.net/) has no title attribute.

Images

Inline image syntax looks like this:

![Alt text](/path/to/image.jpg) 
![Alt text](/path/to/image.png "Optional title attribute") 
![Alt text](/url/to/image.jpg) 

For example:

...
![Mockup for feature A](http://monosnap.com/image/bOcxxxxLGF.png)
...

Reference image links look like this:

![Alt text][id]

where 'id' is the name of a previously defined image reference, using syntax similar to link references:

[id]: url/to/image.jpg "Optional title attribute" 

For example:

...
<--Collected image definitions-->
[MockupA]: http://monosnap.com/image/bOcxxxxLGF.png "Screenshot of Feature A mockup" 
...
<!--Using an image reference-->
![Mockup for feature A][MockupA]
...

Inline HTML

An example, to add a table:

This is a regular paragraph.

<table>
    <tr>
        <td>Foo</td>
    </tr>
</table>

This is another regular paragraph.

Note that Markdown formatting syntax is not processed within block-level HTML tags. That is, you can’t use Markdown-style *emphasis* inside an HTML block.

See http://daringfireball.net/projects/markdown/syntax#html for more details.

On this page:

README files

From Stash 1.3, you can document a project right in the repository by creating .md or .txt files. If the ReadMe has the .md extension, any Markdown it contains gets rendered straight to the screen when viewed from the file list of the repository.


  • No labels