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								<!doctype html>
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								<title>CodeMirror: reStructuredText mode</title>
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								  <a href="http://codemirror.net"><h1>CodeMirror</h1><img id=logo src="../../doc/logo.png"></a>
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								  <ul>
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								    <li><a href="../../index.html">Home</a>
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								    <li><a href="../../doc/manual.html">Manual</a>
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								    <li><a href="https://github.com/codemirror/codemirror">Code</a>
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								  </ul>
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								  <ul>
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								    <li><a href="../index.html">Language modes</a>
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								    <li><a class=active href="#">reStructuredText</a>
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								<article>
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								<h2>reStructuredText mode</h2>
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								<form><textarea id="code" name="code">
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								.. This is an excerpt from Sphinx documentation: http://sphinx.pocoo.org/_sources/rest.txt
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								.. highlightlang:: rest
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								.. _rst-primer:
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								reStructuredText Primer
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								=======================
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								This section is a brief introduction to reStructuredText (reST) concepts and
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								syntax, intended to provide authors with enough information to author documents
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								productively.  Since reST was designed to be a simple, unobtrusive markup
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								language, this will not take too long.
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								.. seealso::
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								   The authoritative `reStructuredText User Documentation
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								   <http://docutils.sourceforge.net/rst.html>`_.  The "ref" links in this
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								   document link to the description of the individual constructs in the reST
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								   reference.
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								Paragraphs
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								----------
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								The paragraph (:duref:`ref <paragraphs>`) is the most basic block in a reST
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								document.  Paragraphs are simply chunks of text separated by one or more blank
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								lines.  As in Python, indentation is significant in reST, so all lines of the
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								same paragraph must be left-aligned to the same level of indentation.
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								.. _inlinemarkup:
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								Inline markup
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								-------------
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								The standard reST inline markup is quite simple: use
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								* one asterisk: ``*text*`` for emphasis (italics),
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								* two asterisks: ``**text**`` for strong emphasis (boldface), and
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								* backquotes: ````text```` for code samples.
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								If asterisks or backquotes appear in running text and could be confused with
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								inline markup delimiters, they have to be escaped with a backslash.
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								Be aware of some restrictions of this markup:
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								* it may not be nested,
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								* content may not start or end with whitespace: ``* text*`` is wrong,
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								* it must be separated from surrounding text by non-word characters.  Use a
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								  backslash escaped space to work around that: ``thisis\ *one*\ word``.
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								These restrictions may be lifted in future versions of the docutils.
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								reST also allows for custom "interpreted text roles"', which signify that the
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								enclosed text should be interpreted in a specific way.  Sphinx uses this to
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								provide semantic markup and cross-referencing of identifiers, as described in
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								the appropriate section.  The general syntax is ``:rolename:`content```.
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								Standard reST provides the following roles:
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								* :durole:`emphasis` -- alternate spelling for ``*emphasis*``
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								* :durole:`strong` -- alternate spelling for ``**strong**``
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								* :durole:`literal` -- alternate spelling for ````literal````
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								* :durole:`subscript` -- subscript text
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								* :durole:`superscript` -- superscript text
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								* :durole:`title-reference` -- for titles of books, periodicals, and other
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								  materials
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								See :ref:`inline-markup` for roles added by Sphinx.
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								Lists and Quote-like blocks
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								---------------------------
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								List markup (:duref:`ref <bullet-lists>`) is natural: just place an asterisk at
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								the start of a paragraph and indent properly.  The same goes for numbered lists;
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								they can also be autonumbered using a ``#`` sign::
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								   * This is a bulleted list.
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								   * It has two items, the second
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								     item uses two lines.
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								   1. This is a numbered list.
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								   2. It has two items too.
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								   #. This is a numbered list.
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								   #. It has two items too.
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								Nested lists are possible, but be aware that they must be separated from the
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								parent list items by blank lines::
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								   * this is
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								   * a list
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								     * with a nested list
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								     * and some subitems
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								   * and here the parent list continues
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								Definition lists (:duref:`ref <definition-lists>`) are created as follows::
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								   term (up to a line of text)
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								      Definition of the term, which must be indented
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								      and can even consist of multiple paragraphs
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								   next term
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								      Description.
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								Note that the term cannot have more than one line of text.
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								Quoted paragraphs (:duref:`ref <block-quotes>`) are created by just indenting
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								them more than the surrounding paragraphs.
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								Line blocks (:duref:`ref <line-blocks>`) are a way of preserving line breaks::
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								   | These lines are
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								   | broken exactly like in
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								   | the source file.
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								There are also several more special blocks available:
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								* field lists (:duref:`ref <field-lists>`)
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								* option lists (:duref:`ref <option-lists>`)
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								* quoted literal blocks (:duref:`ref <quoted-literal-blocks>`)
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								* doctest blocks (:duref:`ref <doctest-blocks>`)
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								Source Code
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								-----------
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								Literal code blocks (:duref:`ref <literal-blocks>`) are introduced by ending a
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								paragraph with the special marker ``::``.  The literal block must be indented
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								(and, like all paragraphs, separated from the surrounding ones by blank lines)::
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								   This is a normal text paragraph. The next paragraph is a code sample::
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								      It is not processed in any way, except
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								      that the indentation is removed.
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								      It can span multiple lines.
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								   This is a normal text paragraph again.
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								The handling of the ``::`` marker is smart:
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								* If it occurs as a paragraph of its own, that paragraph is completely left
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								  out of the document.
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								* If it is preceded by whitespace, the marker is removed.
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								* If it is preceded by non-whitespace, the marker is replaced by a single
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								  colon.
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								That way, the second sentence in the above example's first paragraph would be
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								rendered as "The next paragraph is a code sample:".
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								.. _rst-tables:
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								Tables
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								------
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								Two forms of tables are supported.  For *grid tables* (:duref:`ref
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								<grid-tables>`), you have to "paint" the cell grid yourself.  They look like
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								this::
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								   +------------------------+------------+----------+----------+
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								   | Header row, column 1   | Header 2   | Header 3 | Header 4 |
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								   | (header rows optional) |            |          |          |
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								   +========================+============+==========+==========+
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								   | body row 1, column 1   | column 2   | column 3 | column 4 |
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								   +------------------------+------------+----------+----------+
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								   | body row 2             | ...        | ...      |          |
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								   +------------------------+------------+----------+----------+
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								*Simple tables* (:duref:`ref <simple-tables>`) are easier to write, but
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								limited: they must contain more than one row, and the first column cannot
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								contain multiple lines.  They look like this::
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								   =====  =====  =======
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								   A      B      A and B
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								   =====  =====  =======
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								   False  False  False
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								   True   False  False
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								   False  True   False
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								   True   True   True
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								   =====  =====  =======
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								Hyperlinks
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								----------
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								External links
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								^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
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								Use ```Link text <http://example.com/>`_`` for inline web links.  If the link
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								text should be the web address, you don't need special markup at all, the parser
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								finds links and mail addresses in ordinary text.
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								You can also separate the link and the target definition (:duref:`ref
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								<hyperlink-targets>`), like this::
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								   This is a paragraph that contains `a link`_.
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								   .. _a link: http://example.com/
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								Internal links
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								^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
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								Internal linking is done via a special reST role provided by Sphinx, see the
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								section on specific markup, :ref:`ref-role`.
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								Sections
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								--------
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								Section headers (:duref:`ref <sections>`) are created by underlining (and
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								optionally overlining) the section title with a punctuation character, at least
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								as long as the text::
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								   =================
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								   This is a heading
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								   =================
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								Normally, there are no heading levels assigned to certain characters as the
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								structure is determined from the succession of headings.  However, for the
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								Python documentation, this convention is used which you may follow:
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								* ``#`` with overline, for parts
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								* ``*`` with overline, for chapters
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								* ``=``, for sections
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								* ``-``, for subsections
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								* ``^``, for subsubsections
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								* ``"``, for paragraphs
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								Of course, you are free to use your own marker characters (see the reST
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								documentation), and use a deeper nesting level, but keep in mind that most
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								target formats (HTML, LaTeX) have a limited supported nesting depth.
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								Explicit Markup
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								---------------
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								"Explicit markup" (:duref:`ref <explicit-markup-blocks>`) is used in reST for
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								most constructs that need special handling, such as footnotes,
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								specially-highlighted paragraphs, comments, and generic directives.
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								An explicit markup block begins with a line starting with ``..`` followed by
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								whitespace and is terminated by the next paragraph at the same level of
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								indentation.  (There needs to be a blank line between explicit markup and normal
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								paragraphs.  This may all sound a bit complicated, but it is intuitive enough
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								when you write it.)
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								.. _directives:
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								Directives
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								----------
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								A directive (:duref:`ref <directives>`) is a generic block of explicit markup.
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								Besides roles, it is one of the extension mechanisms of reST, and Sphinx makes
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								heavy use of it.
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								Docutils supports the following directives:
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								* Admonitions: :dudir:`attention`, :dudir:`caution`, :dudir:`danger`,
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								  :dudir:`error`, :dudir:`hint`, :dudir:`important`, :dudir:`note`,
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								  :dudir:`tip`, :dudir:`warning` and the generic :dudir:`admonition`.
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								  (Most themes style only "note" and "warning" specially.)
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								* Images:
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								  - :dudir:`image` (see also Images_ below)
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								  - :dudir:`figure` (an image with caption and optional legend)
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								* Additional body elements:
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								  - :dudir:`contents` (a local, i.e. for the current file only, table of
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								    contents)
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								  - :dudir:`container` (a container with a custom class, useful to generate an
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								    outer ``<div>`` in HTML)
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								  - :dudir:`rubric` (a heading without relation to the document sectioning)
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								  - :dudir:`topic`, :dudir:`sidebar` (special highlighted body elements)
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								  - :dudir:`parsed-literal` (literal block that supports inline markup)
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								  - :dudir:`epigraph` (a block quote with optional attribution line)
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								  - :dudir:`highlights`, :dudir:`pull-quote` (block quotes with their own
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								    class attribute)
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								  - :dudir:`compound` (a compound paragraph)
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								* Special tables:
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								  - :dudir:`table` (a table with title)
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								  - :dudir:`csv-table` (a table generated from comma-separated values)
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								  - :dudir:`list-table` (a table generated from a list of lists)
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								* Special directives:
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								  - :dudir:`raw` (include raw target-format markup)
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								  - :dudir:`include` (include reStructuredText from another file)
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								    -- in Sphinx, when given an absolute include file path, this directive takes
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								    it as relative to the source directory
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								  - :dudir:`class` (assign a class attribute to the next element) [1]_
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								* HTML specifics:
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								  - :dudir:`meta` (generation of HTML ``<meta>`` tags)
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								  - :dudir:`title` (override document title)
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								* Influencing markup:
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								  - :dudir:`default-role` (set a new default role)
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								  - :dudir:`role` (create a new role)
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								  Since these are only per-file, better use Sphinx' facilities for setting the
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								  :confval:`default_role`.
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								Do *not* use the directives :dudir:`sectnum`, :dudir:`header` and
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								:dudir:`footer`.
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						|
								
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								Directives added by Sphinx are described in :ref:`sphinxmarkup`.
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								Basically, a directive consists of a name, arguments, options and content. (Keep
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								this terminology in mind, it is used in the next chapter describing custom
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								directives.)  Looking at this example, ::
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								   .. function:: foo(x)
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								                 foo(y, z)
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								      :module: some.module.name
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								      Return a line of text input from the user.
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								``function`` is the directive name.  It is given two arguments here, the
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								remainder of the first line and the second line, as well as one option
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								``module`` (as you can see, options are given in the lines immediately following
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								the arguments and indicated by the colons).  Options must be indented to the
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								same level as the directive content.
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								The directive content follows after a blank line and is indented relative to the
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								directive start.
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								Images
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								------
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								reST supports an image directive (:dudir:`ref <image>`), used like so::
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								   .. image:: gnu.png
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								      (options)
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								When used within Sphinx, the file name given (here ``gnu.png``) must either be
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								relative to the source file, or absolute which means that they are relative to
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								the top source directory.  For example, the file ``sketch/spam.rst`` could refer
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								to the image ``images/spam.png`` as ``../images/spam.png`` or
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								``/images/spam.png``.
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								Sphinx will automatically copy image files over to a subdirectory of the output
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								directory on building (e.g. the ``_static`` directory for HTML output.)
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								Interpretation of image size options (``width`` and ``height``) is as follows:
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								if the size has no unit or the unit is pixels, the given size will only be
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								respected for output channels that support pixels (i.e. not in LaTeX output).
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								Other units (like ``pt`` for points) will be used for HTML and LaTeX output.
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								Sphinx extends the standard docutils behavior by allowing an asterisk for the
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								extension::
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								   .. image:: gnu.*
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								Sphinx then searches for all images matching the provided pattern and determines
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								their type.  Each builder then chooses the best image out of these candidates.
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								For instance, if the file name ``gnu.*`` was given and two files :file:`gnu.pdf`
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								and :file:`gnu.png` existed in the source tree, the LaTeX builder would choose
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								the former, while the HTML builder would prefer the latter.
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								.. versionchanged:: 0.4
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								   Added the support for file names ending in an asterisk.
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								.. versionchanged:: 0.6
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								   Image paths can now be absolute.
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								Footnotes
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								---------
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								For footnotes (:duref:`ref <footnotes>`), use ``[#name]_`` to mark the footnote
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								location, and add the footnote body at the bottom of the document after a
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								"Footnotes" rubric heading, like so::
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								   Lorem ipsum [#f1]_ dolor sit amet ... [#f2]_
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								   .. rubric:: Footnotes
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								   .. [#f1] Text of the first footnote.
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								   .. [#f2] Text of the second footnote.
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								You can also explicitly number the footnotes (``[1]_``) or use auto-numbered
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								footnotes without names (``[#]_``).
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								Citations
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								---------
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								Standard reST citations (:duref:`ref <citations>`) are supported, with the
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								additional feature that they are "global", i.e. all citations can be referenced
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								from all files.  Use them like so::
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								   Lorem ipsum [Ref]_ dolor sit amet.
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								   .. [Ref] Book or article reference, URL or whatever.
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								Citation usage is similar to footnote usage, but with a label that is not
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								numeric or begins with ``#``.
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								Substitutions
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								-------------
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								reST supports "substitutions" (:duref:`ref <substitution-definitions>`), which
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								are pieces of text and/or markup referred to in the text by ``|name|``.  They
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								are defined like footnotes with explicit markup blocks, like this::
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								   .. |name| replace:: replacement *text*
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								or this::
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								   .. |caution| image:: warning.png
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								                :alt: Warning!
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								See the :duref:`reST reference for substitutions <substitution-definitions>`
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								for details.
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								If you want to use some substitutions for all documents, put them into
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								:confval:`rst_prolog` or put them into a separate file and include it into all
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								documents you want to use them in, using the :rst:dir:`include` directive.  (Be
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								sure to give the include file a file name extension differing from that of other
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								source files, to avoid Sphinx finding it as a standalone document.)
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								Sphinx defines some default substitutions, see :ref:`default-substitutions`.
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								Comments
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						|
								--------
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								Every explicit markup block which isn't a valid markup construct (like the
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								footnotes above) is regarded as a comment (:duref:`ref <comments>`).  For
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								example::
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								   .. This is a comment.
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								You can indent text after a comment start to form multiline comments::
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								   ..
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								      This whole indented block
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								      is a comment.
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								      Still in the comment.
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								Source encoding
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						|
								---------------
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								Since the easiest way to include special characters like em dashes or copyright
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								signs in reST is to directly write them as Unicode characters, one has to
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								specify an encoding.  Sphinx assumes source files to be encoded in UTF-8 by
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								default; you can change this with the :confval:`source_encoding` config value.
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								Gotchas
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						|
								-------
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								There are some problems one commonly runs into while authoring reST documents:
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								* **Separation of inline markup:** As said above, inline markup spans must be
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								  separated from the surrounding text by non-word characters, you have to use a
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								  backslash-escaped space to get around that.  See `the reference
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								  <http://docutils.sf.net/docs/ref/rst/restructuredtext.html#inline-markup>`_
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								  for the details.
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								* **No nested inline markup:** Something like ``*see :func:`foo`*`` is not
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								  possible.
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								.. rubric:: Footnotes
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								.. [1] When the default domain contains a :rst:dir:`class` directive, this directive
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								       will be shadowed.  Therefore, Sphinx re-exports it as :rst:dir:`rst-class`.
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								</textarea></form>
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								    <script>
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								      var editor = CodeMirror.fromTextArea(document.getElementById("code"), {
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								        lineNumbers: true,
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								      });
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								    </script>
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								    <p>
							 | 
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								        The <code>python</code> mode will be used for highlighting blocks
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								        containing Python/IPython terminal sessions: blocks starting with
							 | 
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								        <code>>>></code> (for Python) or <code>In [num]:</code> (for
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								        IPython).
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								        Further, the <code>stex</code> mode will be used for highlighting
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								        blocks containing LaTex code.
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								    </p>
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								    <p><strong>MIME types defined:</strong> <code>text/x-rst</code>.</p>
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								  </article>
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