Excerpts are optional hand-crafted summaries
Stay hungry. Stay foolish.Multi line blockquote with a cite reference:
People think focus means saying yes to the thing you've got to focus on. But that's not what it means at all. It means saying no to the hundred other good ideas that there are. You have to pick carefully. I'm actually as proud of the things we haven't done as the things I have done. Innovation is saying no to 1,000 things.Steve Jobs - Apple Worldwide Developers' Conference, 1997
| Employee | Salary | |
|---|---|---|
| John Doe | $1 | Because that's all Steve Jobs needed for a salary. |
| Jane Doe | $100K | For all the blogging she does. |
| Fred Bloggs | $100M | Pictures are worth a thousand words, right? So Jane x 1,000. |
| Jane Bloggs | $100B | With hair like that?! Enough said... |
word-wrap: break-word; will be your best friend.
Delete Tag
This tag will let you <strike> instead).
Emphasize Tag
The emphasize tag should italicize text.
Insert Tag
This tag should denote inserted text.
Keyboard Tag
This scarcely known tag emulates keyboard text, which is usually styled like the <code> tag.
Preformatted Tag
This tag styles large blocks of code.
.post-title {
margin: 0 0 5px;
font-weight: bold;
font-size: 38px;
line-height: 1.2;
and here's a line of some really, really, really, really long text, just to see how the PRE tag handles it and to find out how it overflows;
}
Quote Tag
Developers, developers, developers...--Steve Ballmer Strike Tag (deprecated in HTML5) This tag shows strike-through text Strong Tag This tag shows bold text. Subscript Tag Getting our science styling on with H2O, which should push the "2" down. Superscript Tag Still sticking with science and Isaac Newton's E = MC2, which should lift the 2 up. Teletype Tag (deprecated in HTML5) This rarely used tag emulates teletype text, which is usually styled like the
<code> tag.
Variable Tag
This allows you to denote variables.

The rest of this paragraph is filler for the sake of seeing the text wrap around the 150x150 image, which is left aligned.
As you can see the should be some space above, below, and to the right of the image. The text should not be creeping on the image. Creeping is just not right. Images need breathing room too. Let them speak like you words. Let them do their jobs without any hassle from the text. In about one more sentence here, we'll see that the text moves from the right of the image down below the image in seamless transition. Again, letting the do it's thang. Mission accomplished!
And now for a massively large image. It also has no alignment.
The image above, though 1200px wide, should not overflow the content area. It should remain contained with no visible disruption to the flow of content.
And now we're going to shift things to the right align. Again, there should be plenty of room above, below, and to the left of the image. Just look at him there... Hey guy! Way to rock that right side. I don't care what the left aligned image says, you look great. Don't let anyone else tell you differently.
In just a bit here, you should see the text start to wrap below the right aligned image and settle in nicely. There should still be plenty of room and everything should be sitting pretty. Yeah... Just like that. It never felt so good to be right.
And just when you thought we were done, we're going to do them all over again with captions!



