ok, thank you.

I am only wondering why there is a special tag '[[NEWLINE]] when there is 
already a one-to-one token for it - the single page break itself.
This can be parsed with
re.sub(r'([^\n])\n([^\n])', r'\1[[NEWLINE]]\n\2', s)
(full example here: http://pythonfiddle.com/replace-single-line-break )

Where would I put this regular expression best to avoid the newline tag for 
the editor?

Thanks again.

Am Donnerstag, 29. November 2012 13:13:54 UTC+1 schrieb villas:
>
> Use this:
>
> [[NEWLINE]]
>
> On Thursday, November 29, 2012 11:04:56 AM UTC, Dirk Krause wrote:
>>
>> Hi,
>>
>> sorry if this was answered elsewhere but I couldn't find it:
>> I found no consistent answer how to add single line breaks ('<br />') as 
>> opposed to paragraphs ('<p>') into MARKMIN.
>>
>> This is what I found so far:
>> (1) the 'purest' Markdown doesn't allow line breaks at all (found in 
>> stackoverflow)
>> (2) there is a common practice to add two or more spaces at the end of 
>> the line to inject a <br /> (see http://goo.gl/iEGU).
>> (3) then there is github flavored markdown (
>> http://github.github.com/github-flavored-markdown/ ) which simply adds 
>> this to the renderer.
>>
>> Obviously the MARKMIN renderer doesn't support (3). From some forum posts 
>> I thought it would support (2) but it doesn't (I checked on version 2.0.9).
>>
>> What is the best practice to achieve single line breaks?
>>
>> Thanks,
>>   Dirk
>>
>>
>>

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