Alldocs

Convert Textile
to Markdown (MultiMarkdown)

Looking for a free text converter? Look no more, upload your Textile files and convert them to MultiMarkdown files. Yes, it’s that easy.

Converting from Textile

Textile is a lightweight markup language to convert text to HTML. 2002, Dean Allen developed the format to use it in his own content management system called Textpattern. It was originally written in PHP, like Textpattern was, but has been translated to Perl, Python, Ruby, JavaScript, and C#. There is no standard nor a working specification. Though, there are a handful of tools that use or used Textile. JIRA, Jekyll, Qt, Redmine, Salesforce too only name a few. Not sure why someone would want to work with it, but I bet there are reasons. Dean Allen called it “a humane web text generator”, sounds nice, doesn’t it?

The files end with .textile by default.

More about Textile files

Converting to MultiMarkdown

Markdown is amazing, and MultiMarkdown is a multitude of amazing. It’s like the original Markdown but enriched with more features (tables, footnotes, citations …). It helps to keep your text structured with minimally marked-up plain text, like other Markdown flavors too. It’s great to convert it to PDF, HTML and LaTeX or other formats. People even use it to write books and stuff. I have no idea what’s different to other formats, but if you’re here you probably have some MultiMarkdown files and want to convert them. Or you really need those MultiMarkdown files but have other source files, both ways work here. Upload your file and convert it. To be honest, I prefer the GitHub flavor, but that’s just me. (Don’t trust me, I’m the lonely soul writing those texts here.)

The files end with .mmd by default. More about MultiMarkdown files