![]() If it’s multiple lines, it will create a code block. Here’s the cool part, though: if your selection is within a paragraph, it will turn it into inline code. I really came up with creative names for these, didn’t I? This will, as you guessed, turn selected text into Markdown code. It reads the indentation of the text and determines the level of block quoting to apply. This one turns indented text into a nested Markdown block quote. If that’s natural for you, don’t install the extra extension. It does exactly the same thing as Option-clicking the BulletList extension. I made it before I decided to add the option-key feature to BulletList. This is only here if you want a separate button for numbered lists. If it’s run on an already-numbered list, it will update (“fix”) the ordering in the list. Holding option while clicking the extension in the PopClip popover will create/update a numbered list instead. ![]() It’s also handy when copying lists from websites and pasting to plain text as they lose their formatting in the process.īulletList isn’t just for bullet lists, though. I frequently type quick notes on single lines and then later add formatting, so this is already being used quite a bit on my system. Indentation is handled as nested lists and existing markers are overwritten (so a numbered list converts to a bullet list). ![]() The first one is an extension to turn lines of text into Markdown bullet items. There were several features from the Markdown Service Tools that I thought would be really handy to have right after making a mouse selection. I wrote a few new PopClip extensions over the weekend. ![]()
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