image::resources/picture.jpg[This is the image alt text.]
== Footnotes
This is another paragraph.footnote:[This is footnote text and will be displayed at the bottom of the article.]
== Headings
=== Second level heading
==== Third level heading
===== Fourth level heading
====== Fifth level heading
== Lists
=== Unordered lists
.Unordered list title
* list item 1
** nested list item
*** nested nested list item 1
*** nested nested list item 2
* list item 2
=== Ordered lists
.Ordered list title
. ordered list item
.. nested ordered list item
. ordered list item
.. second level list item
... third level list item
... another third level list item
... a final third level list item
.. another second level list item
You can override the number scheme for any level by setting its style (the first positional entry in a block attribute list). You can also set the starting number using the start attribute:
["lowerroman", start=5]
. Five
. Six
[loweralpha]
.. a
.. b
.. c
. Seven
=== Labelled lists
Here's an example of a labeled list that identifies parts of a computer:
CPU:: The brain of the computer.
Hard drive:: Permanent storage for operating system and/or user files.
RAM:: Temporarily stores information the CPU uses during operation.
Keyboard:: Used to enter text or control items on the screen.
Mouse:: Used to point to and select items on your computer screen.
Monitor:: Displays information in visual form using text and graphics.
.A horizontal labelled list
[horizontal]
CPU:: The brain of the computer.
Hard drive:: Permanent storage for operating system and/or user files.
RAM:: Temporarily stores information the CPU uses during operation.
.Labelled list with bullets
Diary::
* Milk
* Eggs
Bakery::
* Bread
Produce::
* Bananas
=== Mixed lists
.Mixed unordered and ordered lists
. Linux
* Fedora
* Ubuntu
* Slackware
. BSD
* FreeBSD
* NetBSD
Here’s a list that mixes all three types of lists:
Operating Systems::
. Linux
* Fedora
* Ubuntu
* Slackware
. BSD
* FreeBSD
* NetBSD
Cloud Providers::
. PaaS
* OpenShift
* CloudBees
. IaaS
* Amazon EC2
* Rackspace
== Blocks
.Example block title
====
Content in an example block is subject to normal substitutions.
====
.Sidebar title
****
Sidebars contain aside text and are subject to normal substitutions.
****
[#id-for-listing-block]
.Listing block title
----
Content in a listing block is subject to verbatim substitutions.
Listing block content is commonly used to preserve code input.
Indents and endlines are preserved in verse blocks.
____
== Admonitions
TIP: This is a tip. There are five admonition labels: Tip, Note, Important, Caution and Warning.
NOTE: This is a note.
IMPORTANT: This is important.
CAUTION: Caution -- be careful!
WARNING: This is a warning.
=== Admonition blocks
[NOTE]
.A "NOTE" type admonition
====
This is an example of an admonition block.
Unlike an admonition paragraph, it may contain any AsciiDoc content.
The style can be any one of the admonition labels:
* NOTE
* TIP
* WARNING
* CAUTION
* IMPORTANT
====
// This is a comment and won't be rendered.
// Based on https://github.com/asciidoctor/asciidoctor.org/blob/master/docs/_includes/asciidoc-article-template.adoc[Asciidoctor article template] and the https://asciidoctor.org/docs/asciidoc-writers-guide/[AsaciiDoc Writer's Guide]