No special symbols / see picture 1
One number sign # one of these in front
Two number signs ## of these in the front
Three number signs ### of these in front
Four number signs #### of these in front
Five number signs ##### of these in front
Six number signs ###### of these in front
.
The Picture below shows the actual programming
Next we will look at * these symbols
See picture 2
This is what happens when you put 1 on each side of your words
Next 2 of these
Three of these but put them directly in front / in back of your words
The picture below shows the actual programming
How to post a picture use ! Then [ ] then ( ) All w NO spaces
I went to Wikipedia and opened this picture in a new window then I copied the address. Look at the picture of my programming to see how I did it.
The Picture below shows the actual programming
You can see my cursor at the end of the programming when I took the picture. It is not part of the actual programming
.
AMONG US
@WEEB no problem. That's why I made this.,lol, Z 😸
Thank you very much, this will help me a lot.
@MAPA what a nice thing for you to say. Thank you very much. I appreciate it. Z 😺
@Zaineman That's an exemplary attitude from you :D
@MAPA yeah so many new people ask how to do this stuff, and there was a post on forums about 7 years ago but I guess nobody can find it thus the number of questions regarding this. Lol I hope this helps new people, that's why I did it. Z 😺
Perfect! I'll put a shortcut on my official profile page to direct new users here
@EasternCopperhead that's awesome, cats are great ! Z 😸
@Zaineman mine hunts many house flys a day and she loves chasing around grasshoppers if they get inside
@EasternCopperhead that is so cool. Izzy is 5. She just hunted down a housefly for me literally a minute ago. My hero. She weighs about 18 pounds. And is a purebred Maine Coon. And boy is she spoiled. It's her house I just live here to serve her. Lol Z 😸
@Zaineman adorable I own a Maine coon calico looking cat who is sooooooo sweet and she is already 8 years old
@EasternCopperhead no this is not my cat but I do have a big Maine Coon click here pictures of my cat are further down my homepage. Z 😸
Thanks for the guide also is the maine coon yours?
uhh...
The comments section is a feature on most online blogs, news websites, and other websites in which the publishers invite the audience to comment on the published content. This is a continuation of the older practice of publishing letters to the editor. Despite this, comments sections can be used for more discussion between readers.[1]
History
Various methods have been used for written commentary on published works. In Germany during the 1500s it was common practice for academics to post copies of their ideas on public places, such as church doors (see for example Luther's Ninety-five Theses). Newspapers and magazines later came to publish letters to the editor. With the advent of computers, the bulletin board system allowed publication of information, and users to comment on or discuss posts.
The first online website to offer a comments section was Open Diary, which added reader comments shortly after its launch in October 1998.[2] Readers of blog posts on the site were able to post public or private comments to the authors directly on the page. The history of comment sections on news articles started in 1998 with The Rocky Mountain News, as they were one of the first newspapers to add online comments on the same page.[3]
While today comments sections are common, newspapers were hesitant to add them at first.[4] In the late 2000s, comments sections were rapidly added to news sites, between 2007 and 2008 there was a 42% growth in the number of top circulating news sites with comments sections.[3] In 2008, 75% of the top 100 most circulated newspapers had comments sections.[3] In 2010, The American Journalism Review stated that news sites should not have anonymous comments sections.[4] Following that statement Reuters, ESPN, The Huffington Post, Popular Science, Sporting News, and USA Today either made comments gated or removed them.[4]
Closing of comments sections
Vice Media closed its comment section in 2016.[5] On closing, they noted "we had to ban countless commenters over the years for threatening our writers and subjects, doxxing private citizens, and engaging in hate speech against pretty much every group imaginable."[6]
NPR closed its comment section in 2016.[5] One of the stated reasons for this was that "commenters were behaving inappropriately and harassing other commenters".[7]
IMDb closed its comment section (the discussion boards, not the user reviews section) in 2017. On closing, one journalist noted that the comments section on that websi