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# Treatise on My Perfect Lightweight Markup Language
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## It would have...
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- org-mode style inline syntax.
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- with the ease of HTML hackery of textile.
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- with the compiled language support that Markdown offers.
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org-mode's inline attributes map nearly 1:1 with how I personally hack in formatting in plain text, you have `__underscores__` that look like *underlines*,
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`//italics//` that look like *italics*, and `**bold**` that actually looks like **bold**. I want a LML that has nearly all the same features that you'd find on
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your common or garden word-processor, and with how often I refer to D&D 5e books, I want actual, *implemented* description lists. org-mode is absolutely
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perfect for this, but it's nearly entirely confined to the single text editor it was created in. Markdown has amazing support, but as a general shorthand
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for HTML, it feels sorely lacking. Textile makes up for it's shortcomings, but it suffers from a lesser problem that also plagues org-mode's development,
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and it's syntax can feel woefully clunky at points, that being said, it has the absolute best numbered list syntax out of all of the above mentioned LMLs.
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