code in markdown code example

Example 1: how to create link in readme.md

[a link] (https://github.com/user/repo/blob/branch/other_file.md)

Example 2: markdown link

[I'm an inline-style link](https://www.google.com)

[I'm an inline-style link with title](https://www.google.com "Google's Homepage")

[I'm a reference-style link][Arbitrary case-insensitive reference text]

[I'm a relative reference to a repository file](../blob/master/LICENSE)

[You can use numbers for reference-style link definitions][1]

Or leave it empty and use the [link text itself].

URLs and URLs in angle brackets will automatically get turned into links. 
http://www.example.com or <http://www.example.com> and sometimes 
example.com (but not on Github, for example).

Some text to show that the reference links can follow later.

[arbitrary case-insensitive reference text]: https://www.mozilla.org
[1]: http://slashdot.org
[link text itself]: http://www.reddit.com

Example 3: code in markdown

```<name of the language>
<code>
```

EXAMPLE

```python
print("Hello World")
```

Example 4: Markdown image

![Text here](URL)

Example 5: markdown

# tier 1 header
##### tier 5 header
**bold**  or  __bold__
*italic*  or  _italic_

[link to markdown guide](https://www.markdownguide.org/basic-syntax/)

> This is a quote. Quotes are indented and a different colour.

show small bits of code with backticks: `print("hello world")` 

- [x] This is a complete item
- [ ] This is an incomplete item

you can also include html code if you want to be more specific.
For example, this would make a picture with a width of 200:
<img src="drawing.jpg" alt="drawing" width="200"/>

Example 6: markdown add image

Here's our logo (hover to see the title text):

Inline-style: 
![alt text](https://github.com/adam-p/markdown-here/raw/master/src/common/images/icon48.png "Logo Title Text 1")

Reference-style: 
![alt text][logo]

[logo]: https://github.com/adam-p/markdown-here/raw/master/src/common/images/icon48.png "Logo Title Text 2"