Markdown is based on a really old nerd convention of stylising plain text. Things like /italics/ and *bold* predate MD by great many years. I was using some of markdown’s semantics even in the 90s.
This is what Aaron meant when he said:
> as easy as writing an email, by allowing you to use much the same syntax
…in that link you’ve posted.
Heck, even that quote token I used above (the greater than prefix) is a really old convention used in emails since probably before Aaron was even born.
It’s also worth noting that when markdown was released there were plenty of other plain text mark ups around (there’s some not even mentioned in that blog post too) but both Greg and Aaron point out that markdown is more readable in plain text and that’s a key decision behind it.
This is what Aaron meant when he said:
> as easy as writing an email, by allowing you to use much the same syntax
…in that link you’ve posted.
Heck, even that quote token I used above (the greater than prefix) is a really old convention used in emails since probably before Aaron was even born.
It’s also worth noting that when markdown was released there were plenty of other plain text mark ups around (there’s some not even mentioned in that blog post too) but both Greg and Aaron point out that markdown is more readable in plain text and that’s a key decision behind it.