ffi ff fi ‘hello’ hello a-b a–b a—b ⋮ ⋮ Ω Γ
with continuing text.
Enumerated list
With another paragraph following on.
Second item, labelled
With another paragraph following on.
Third item
That was 2 we labelled.
Itemised list
With another paragraph following on.
Second item
With another paragraph following on.
Third item
This is a paragraph.
This is the next paragraph. Hopefully with a space between.
This is some fenced code (since we're simulating MarkdownExtra).
This is a theorem.
And this is its proof.
This is a lemma.
This is a definition.
This is a quotation.
It continues on several lines.
Here is some text with emphasised and bold and italic text. We can also do normal text. Let us put in some verbatim text with <@*!%$#@> and a hyperlink to, say, the nlab. What happens to “quoted” material and ‘quoted’ material? How about dashes? An en dash–or an em dash—separates material.
Let us refer to a reference via [[Street(1981)](#citecitea)].
Numbered bibliography (more generally, different bibliography styles: how far do we go?).
Let’s check indentations (for pdftotext):
Let’s link to the first and the second.
Here’s some inline: and .
Here are some accents: é ü;