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NAME
    kwim - Know What I Mean?!

DESCRIPTION
    Kwim is a plain text markup language that converts to many formats:

    *   HTML

        *   Rich - Lots of classes and annotations

        *   Sparse - Just the tags and content

        *   Custom - HTML the way you want it

    *   MarkDown

        *   GitHub Flavored

    *   Pod

    *   DocBook

    *   Pod

    *   Manpage

    *   AsciiDoc

    *   MediaWiki

    The Kwim framework is easily extensible, so adding new outputs is easy.

  What Makes Kwim Different
    There are already a lot of text-to-html languages in the world. How is
    Kwim different?

    Here are a few points:

    *   Very rich capabilities:

        Kwim aims to be a feature superset of the other markups since it
        converts to all of them. Most of the other markups don't support
        things like multiple paragraphs in a bullet point (like you are
        reading right now!).

    *   Simple, consistent markup:

        Even though Kwim intends to be very rich, it will use a simple set
        of syntax idioms to accomplish its tasks. One of my favorite sayings
        comes from Larry Wall of Perl fame: "Make simple things simple and
        hard things possible". Kwim does just that (hopefully without
        looking too much like Perl ;).

    *   Extensible:

        Kwim is easy to extend at many levels. You can add new backend
        formats. You can also define your own markup syntaxes. You can even
        define sections that parse using a different syntax grammar. For
        instance, you could inline a markdown section like this: <<<
        markdown This is
        [Markdown](http://daringfireball.net/projects/markdown/) text. >>>

    *   Multiple Implementations:

        Kwim is written using the Pegex parser framework. This provides 2
        very powerful concepts. Firstly, that Kwim language is defined in a
        very simple PEG topdown grammar. That means it is easy to grok,
        maintain and extend. Second, Pegex parsers work in many languages.
        That means that you can use Pegex natively in languages like Ruby,
        JavaScript, Perl, Python and many others.

    *   Comments and blank lines:

        Most markups don't support comments and eat extra blank lines. These
        things are useful. Kwim not only supports comments, they are part of
        the data model. ie They get rendered as HTML (or comments in other
        target languages that support comments). Kwim also support throwaway
        comments, for times when you want to hide part of a document.

  Syntax Concepts
    Before diving into the actual markup syntax, let's discuss the concepts
    that drive the decisions that Kwim makes.

    Most documents are just plain language using letters and numbers and a
    few punctuation chars like comma, dash, apostrophe, parentheses and
    colon. Also endings: period, exclamation point and question mark. We
    leave those alone (at least in the normal prose context).

    This leaves a bunch of punctuation characters that we can do special
    things with. Namely: "@#$%^&*_=+|/~[]<>{}". Sometimes context matters.
    For instance it is very rare for a prose line to start with a period, so
    we can use that as a markup.

    The important thing in all this is that we be able to reverse the
    meaning for edge cases. ie We need a way to make markup characters be
    viewed as regular characters. Kwim uses a backslash before a character
    to make it not be seen as markup. For instance this text "*not bold*" is
    not bold because it was written like this: "\*not bold\*".

    Kwim has a document model that views things as blocks and phrases. This
    is very similar to HTML's DIV and SPAN concepts. Kwim views a document
    as a sequence of top level blocks. Blocks are further subdivided into
    either a sequence of blocks or a sequence of phrases. Phrases can only
    be subdivided into more phrases.

    Consider this example document:

        A paragraph *is* a block. It gets divided into phrases like 'pure text' and
        *bold text*. A bold phrase can be divided: *all bold /some italic/*.

        * Lists are blocks.
        * Each item is a block.
          * A sublist is a block.
          * The text within in contains *phrases*.

    Common blocks and phrases have an implicit (DWIM) syntax, that reads
    very natural. For instance a paragraph is just left justified text that
    is terminated by a blank line. There is also an explicit syntax for
    blocks and phrases. Every implicit syntax can be written explicitly. For
    instance, here is an implicit syntax example followed by its explicit
    equivalent:

        A paragraph with some *bold text* in it.

        <<< para
        A paragraph with some <bold bold text> in it.
        >>>

   Two Space Indent
    Kwim uses a 2 space indentation and it is very instrumental to its
    design. It allows for a very nice and natural embedding of blocks within
    blocks. Consider this list:

        * Point one has
          text on 2 lines
          * Subpoint a
        * Point two

          A paragraph for point 2 followed by some preformatted text:
            # Code example
        * Point three

    As you can see, 2 space indent is very natural here and allows for
    putting blocks inside blocks in a way that is not available in most
    markups.

  Kwim Syntax
    There are 4 sets of syntax to define: block / implicit, phrase /
    implicit, block / explicit and phrase / explicit. There are also
    escaping mechanisms.

   Block / Implicit Syntaxes
    A paragraph is a set of contiguous set of plain text lines. It is
    terminated by a blank line or by another block syntax at that level.

    *To be continued*