Titles
Also referred to as a setext heading, Titles are useful to communicate the central idea of a document. Titles are most useful as the leading content of a set of text material.
Syntax
Titles are created by writing a single line of content followed by a line containing at least 1 of either = or - characters. The second line shouldn't contain text other than these two characters.
Basics
The most basic example, a line of content with a following line with a = character.
My Document Title
=
Titles can be written in the same way using - characters.
My Document Title
-
Any Amount of Characters
The amount of = or - characters that are used is not important. Having a matching amount of characters on both lines can be a nice touch for readability, though.
My Document Title
=================
Markdown++
A custom Paragraph Style can be given to a Title using a Markdown++ style tag on the line directly above the Title.
<!--style:CustomTitle-->
My Document Title
=================
To learn more about Markdown++ tagging, see Learning Markdown++.
ePublisher Style Information
Style Behavior
The style name a Title will get is dependent on the characters used in the second line. Title 1 is given to Titles that use = characters, and Title 2 is given to Titles that use - characters.
Default Style Properties
Style Type: Paragraph
Style Name: Title 1, Title 2
Property
Value
font family
Arial
font size
24pt
font weight
bold
line height
1.2em
padding top
0pt
padding bottom
12pt
Default Style Options
Option
Value
Table of Contents level
1
If a custom style name is assigned to a Title, that style name will still inherit all of the listed default style information.
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