Currently, the following BBCode mark-up is supported:



Underline [U]text[/U]
Bold [B]text[/B]
Italics [I]text[/I]
E-mail Link [EMAIL=joe@example.com]Joe Example[/EMAIL]
E-mail Link (alternate) [EMAIL]joe@example.com[/EMAIL]
Code Block [CODE]string[/CODE]
Link [URL=http://www.google.com]Google[/URL]
Link (alternate) [URL]http://www.google.com[/URL]
Block Quote [QUOTE]That is the question[/QUOTE]
Image, No Layout [IMG]http://www.images.com/myimage.jpg[/IMG]
Image, Left In Paragraph [LIMG]http://www.images.com/myimage.jpg[/LIMG]
Image, Right In Paragraph [RIMG]http://www.images.com/myimage.jpg[/RIMG]
Image, Centered [CIMG]http://www.images.com/myimage.jpg[/CIMG]

When creating images with the IMG tag, be sure that your image host allows linking.

The following paragraphs show how the different Image tags work:


Click to viewThis example shows what the IMG tag does. The image is placed in a sentence exactly where it is typed in the entry. This is some text that you should not bother reading because this is just filling space. The text will wrap around some images, and not others, depending on the image tag used. When using these tags, it is best to use the 'preview entry' function so that you can see what it will look like. If you don't like it, move the text around until you get something you like.


Click to viewThis example shows what the LIMG tag does. The image is placed in the paragraph on the left. This is some text that you should not bother reading because this is just filling space. The text will wrap around some images, and not others, depending on the image tag used. When using these tags, it is best to use the 'preview entry' function so that you can see what it will look like. If you don't like it, move the text around until you get something you like.


Click to viewThis example shows what the RIMG tag does. The image is placed in the paragraph on the right. This is some text that you should not bother reading because this is just filling space. The text will wrap around some images, and not others, depending on the image tag used. When using these tags, it is best to use the 'preview entry' function so that you can see what it will look like. If you don't like it, move the text around until you get something you like.


Click to view
This example shows what the CIMG tag does. The image is centered on its own line. This is some text that you should not bother reading because this is just filling space. The text will wrap around some images, and not others, depending on the image tag used. When using these tags, it is best to use the 'preview entry' function so that you can see what it will look like. If you don't like it, move the text around until you get something you like.