• Suck_on_my_Presence@lemmy.world
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    3 months ago

    I’m uncertain of what the ratings are in general, but there’s probably some horror movie I love that’s been dragged.

    Maybe Insidious? Paranormal Activity 2? As Above, So Below? The Cleansing Hour?

    One of those probably has a shit score somewhere lol.

    EDIT because I realized how lazy I was being:

    Insidious has a 66% on rotten tomatoes Paranormal Activity 2 has a 57% As Above, So Below has a 29% The Cleansing Hour has a shocking 73%

    So my answer is As Above, So Below. Lol But I’m startled about The Cleansing Hour having such a high rating

    • Suck_on_my_Presence@lemmy.world
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      3 months ago

      Okay. Unrelated and it’s driving me insane.

      How do I do line breaks for lists like that? If I do two hits of Enter, it acts like a new paragraph in total. But I can’t get it to just jump down to the next line, it just follows after the one above it as if it were continuing a sentence. Bwah!

      • Cruxifux@feddit.nl
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        3 months ago

        I just press enter

        Leave a space in the blank line here then press enter

        There you go, break in the paragraph.

      • tal@lemmy.today
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        3 months ago

        In Markdown, if you want a paragraph break, then whack Enter twice. That is, this:

        foo
        
        bar
        

        Gives this:

        foo

        bar

        If you want a line break, then add a backslash or two spaces at the end of the line, and then hit Enter. That is, this (you can’t see it, but two spaces after “foo”):

        foo  
        bar\
        baz
        

        Gives this:

        foo
        bar
        baz

        When I’m doing an actual list, I generally prefer to do either an unnumbered or numbered list, though.

        * foo
        * bar
        

        Gives this:

        • foo
        • bar

        And for numbered lists:

        1. foo
        2. bar
        

        Gives this:

        1. foo
        2. bar

        It doesn’t look from that like Markdown is buying you much with the numbered lists (traditionally in Markdown, numbered lists were auto-renumbered, which is IMHO a bad idea and is one feature of Markdown that is not implemented here), but this gets useful if you want to do lists with multiple lines, which is done with a four-space prefix on successive lines:

        1. foo\
            My dog adores foo.
        2. bar\
            Some cats fancy bar.
        

        Gives this:

        1. foo
          My dog adores foo.
        2. bar
          Some cats fancy bar.
      • jordanlund@lemmy.world
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        3 months ago

        It’s after 3 AM and I need to shut down, but for a second there I thought you were talking about “Faraway, So Close”, which is the sequel to “Wings of Desire”, one of my favorite films ever.

        54% on the tomatometer, could stand to go lower. :(