markjaquith / WordPress-Plugin-Readme-Parser

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Plugin Name

Contributors: markjaquith, mdawaffe
Donate link: http://example.com/
Tags: comments, spam
Requires at least: 2.0.2
Tested up to: 2.1
Stable tag: 4.3

Here is a short description of the plugin. This should be no more than 150 characters. No markup here.

Description

This is the long description. No limit, and you can use Markdown (as well as in the following sections).

For backwards compatibility, if this section is missing, the full length of the short description will be used, and Markdown parsed.

A few notes about the sections above:

This section describes how to install the plugin and get it working.

e.g.

  1. Upload plugin-name.php to the /wp-content/plugins/ directory
  2. Activate the plugin through the 'Plugins' menu in WordPress
  3. Place <?php do_action('plugin_name_hook'); ?> in your templates

Frequently Asked Questions

A question that someone might have

An answer to that question.

What about foo bar?

Answer to foo bar dilemma.

Screenshots

  1. This screen shot description corresponds to screenshot-1.(png|jpg|jpeg|gif). Note that the screenshot is taken from the directory of the stable readme.txt, so in this case, /tags/4.3/screenshot-1.png (or jpg, jpeg, gif)
  2. This is the second screen shot

Changelog

1.0

0.5

Upgrade Notice

1.0

Upgrade notices describe the reason a user should upgrade. No more than 300 characters.

0.5

This version fixes a security related bug. Upgrade immediately.

Arbitrary section

You may provide arbitrary sections, in the same format as the ones above. This may be of use for extremely complicated plugins where more information needs to be conveyed that doesn't fit into the categories of "description" or "installation." Arbitrary sections will be shown below the built-in sections outlined above.

A brief Markdown Example

Ordered list:

  1. Some feature
  2. Another feature
  3. Something else about the plugin

Unordered list:

Here's a link to WordPress and one to Markdown's Syntax Documentation. Titles are optional, naturally.

        "Markdown is what the parser uses to process much of the readme file"

Markdown uses email style notation for blockquotes and I've been told:

Asterisks for emphasis. Double it up for strong.

<?php code(); // goes in backticks ?>