You can use this article to experiment with markup.♦

Testing LaTeX
We can have inline maths, like
and
.

In other words again,
.
I'm trying to force this to look like a multline environment, with no luck 

Try \begin{align} and \end{align}.
test◊
I'm just adding something to see whether it works, and then to see whether I can manage an inline comment.
I'm doing the same. I'm adding this sentence, so that I can then comment on how deeply unimaginative this sentence is.◊
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This is to see whether I can do nested "add"s.
Article 1 refers to Article 2 which in turn refers to Article 3!
Hmm ... seems not to work. But it should work now!
Wow – that's fantastic. OK I'll see how many levels of nesting there might be.
Article 1 refers to Article 2 which refers to Article 3 which refers to Article 4!
Thanks Alex – I've actually got a use for this ...
What about hyperlinks inside "add"s?
I wonder whether I could add a how to use martingales link here
That's fine.
Another experiment.
In the middle of a list, I want Article A
, Article B, etc.◊
The next experiment is intended to demonstrate the lists/[add] bug. At least on my Mac, each time I expand and collapse again, I end up with a new set of arrows.
A link: techniques for obtaining Estimates.
How does a bound of exp(c(log n)^{1/2}) ever arise?
A link to a page on Wikipedia: History of algebra.
Counting
-cosets. A.
Proof. Let
.□
Proof. See next theorem.□
But can I?Example 1: Test
Example 1 illustrates a different kind of relativity.
Testing labels with hyphens in them:
Testing accents in links: Rényi
Heading 1
Heading 5
This is to see whether I can get an internal link to heading 5.
As far as I can tell, I'm copying the markup directly from what it says in the formatting page, but it isn't working.
First
Second
Third
Fourth◊
.
Tricki



Comments
Inline comments
The following comments were made inline in the article. You can click on 'view commented text' to see precisely where they were made.
You can use it to experiment
Thu, 05/03/2009 - 22:30 — avfYou can use it to experiment with comments, too.
You can indeed!
Thu, 05/03/2009 - 22:32 — avfYou can indeed!
Inline comments
The following comments were made inline in the article. You can click on 'view commented text' to see precisely where they were made.
It certainly is incomplete!
Thu, 05/03/2009 - 22:39 — avfIt certainly is incomplete!
Inline comments
The following comments were made inline in the article. You can click on 'view commented text' to see precisely where they were made.
Reusing the unimaginative
Sun, 05/04/2009 - 15:02 — olofReusing the unimaginative sentence.
I'm wondering whether you can use $\sim$ or $\simeq$
Tue, 21/04/2009 - 10:50 — ioannis.parississame with $\lesssim $ and $\gtrsim $
Tue, 21/04/2009 - 10:52 — ioannis.parissisInline comments
The following comments were made inline in the article. You can click on 'view commented text' to see precisely where they were made.
(No subject)
Mon, 27/04/2009 - 14:30 — olofInline comments
The following comments were made inline in the article. You can click on 'view commented text' to see precisely where they were made.
Test comment.
Wed, 06/05/2009 - 17:08 — olofTest comment.
Inline comments
The following comments were made inline in the article. You can click on 'view commented text' to see precisely where they were made.
Inline comments are cool
Fri, 05/06/2009 - 17:57 — Dave (not verified)I need this feature for my Drupal sites!
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