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Free Markdown to HTML Converter

Convert your markdown to HTML in one easy step - for free!

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Convert Markdown to HTML

Paste or type your markdown and see it rendered as HTML. Download or copy the resulting HTML.

Coming Soon! This page will also allow you to:

Markdown Syntax Cheatsheet

This is a quick reference for Markdown syntax. A more complete guide can be found on GitHub.

Basic Formatting

Headings

All heading levels (e.g. H1, H2, etc), are marked by # at the beginning of a line. For example, an H1 is # Heading 1 and an H2 is ## Heading 2. This continues to ###### Heading 6.

Links can be created using several methods:

[markdowntohtml]: https://markdowntohtml.com
[1]: https://markdowntohtml.com
[link text itself]: https://markdowntohtml.com

Images

Images can also be inline or use a reference style, similar to links. Simply prepend an exclamation point to turn the link into an image. For example:

Images with the full URL: ![alt text](https://placebear.com/300/300)

Or, a reference-style image: ![alt text][bears].

[bears]: https://placebear.com/300/300

Lists (Ordered Lists and Unordered Lists)

Lists are made by using indentation and a beginning-of-line marker to indicate a list item. For example, unordered lists are made like this:

* One item
* Another item
  * A sub-item
    * A deeper item
  * Back in sub-item land
* And back at the main level

Unordered lists can use an asterisk (*), plus (+), or minus (-) to indicate each list item.

Ordered lists use a number at the beginning of the line. The numbers do not need to be incremented - this will happen for you automatically by the HTML. That makes it easier to re-order your ordered lists (in markdown) as needed.

Also, ordered and unordered lists can be nested within each other. For example:

* One item
* Another item
  1. A nested ordered list
  1. This is the second item
    * And now an unordered list as its child
    * Another item in this list
  1. One more in the ordered list
* And back at the main level

Code and Syntax Highlighting

Inline code uses `backticks` around it. Code blocks are either fenced by three backticks (```) or indented four spaces. For example:

\`\`\`
var foo = 'bar';

function baz(s) {
   return foo + ':' + s;
}
\`\`\`

Blockquotes

Use > to offset text as a blockquote. For example:

> This is some part of a blockquote.
> Some more stuff.

Will produce:

This is some part of a blockquote. Some more stuff.