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Hm, Nishimura has a special way of writing. In various articles he proceeds from conjectures. Not sure yet what to make of all this.
The link to the articles got mangled somehow and didn’t make it through the parser. Could you repost it, please? If you’re cut-and-pasting from somewhere, use the MarkdownItex formatter as it handles urls better (you appear to have used the Html formatter in the above). The native Markdown link syntax is [text](url)
.
use the MarkdownItex formatter as it handles urls better (you appear to have used the Html formatter in the above).
I switched to HTML after Mardown didn’t work! But HTML didn’t work either.
This is from a general experience I have on the nLab: if I link to long page names with extra symbols and anchors, then the Markdown syntax gets mixed up, while HTML still works.
Anyway, the link was simply to the list of articles that one gets when going to arXiv and searching for author name “Nishimura”.
Do you paste the links in literally, as <a href="link">text</a>
? If so, all the filters are going to complain. The absolute best way is to use the native Markdown syntax that I outlined above: [text](link)
since then Markdown intelligently replaces the ampersands and stuff. For example, this discussion has an ampersand in it.
Back on track, thanks for reminding me of those papers - I’ve been bookmarking them to read later but haven’t gotten round to it. I’ll bump them up the list!
Andrew,
when I put links into nLab pages to subsections of other pages, very frequently the method that you recommend fails, while the method that you say will fail works fine for me! :-)
It’s interesting that you suggest the opposite. Now I am wondering what’s going on.
Here’s the link:
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