Hello!
Recently, I found out that using #
in front of a word makes it work as a link. AFAIK, what it did was to make the word / sentence a header. If that’s intentional, is there any way to make a header similar to the following one without making it a link?
Hello!
Hey again.
1 like
ondrej
25 maart 2021 om 20:55
2
2 likes
I see. Is there any way though to make a header without having it work as a link?
pfaffman
(Jay Pfaffman)
25 maart 2021 om 21:03
4
What is it hurting? It seems pretty subtle to me (and I’m excited to see it’s working this way!)
2 likes
Just for something I am working on. I don’t really like the anchor icon to appear every so often.
2 likes
Does anyone have any ideas on how to achieve that? It’s frustrating to see an anchor icon when you don’t need it.
Trying hard to get around to it but no luck. Ideas anyone?
I think you can use HTML heading tags (h1, h2, h3
), like this:
<h3>Unlinked header</h3>
Unlinked header
3 likes
Of course, how did I miss that? Thank you so much!
By the way, is it possible to use a heading tag while having a word work as a link?
<h2> <a href="https://meta.discourse.org">Yes</a> it is</h2>
but if you’re using HTML to create your headings, you’ll also need to use HTML to create the link
2 likes
Jagster
(Jakke Lehtonen)
1 april 2021 om 08:54
13
Somehow using html-tags breaks idea of markdown, IMO.
Is there a CSS-trick or something else to hide anchor icon? Link itself isn’t a problem, but that icon.
1 like
There’s always a CSS trick , this should do it:
.cooked, .d-editor-preview {
h1, h2, h3, h4, h5, h6 {
&:hover {
a.anchor {
&::before {
display: none;
}
}
}
}
}
2 likes
system
(system)
gesloten
3 mei 2021 om 01:17
15
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