Title of Post 08

Title of Post 08

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This is the text of Sample Post 08. While Reading category. This is the text of Sample Post 08. While Reading category. This is the text of Sample Post 08. The default text formatting options are rather limited. There is no justification. Underlining can only be achieved through keyboard shortcut: ctrl+u. Underlined. Bold and italic are natively available. Footnoting is easy. I can’t seem to change the color of a single word within this paragraph. I want this line to be blue.

This is a bit of commentary followed by an in-line footnote: “To be, or not to be?”1 And more commentary.

This is a classic block, which allows for more text formatting options.  It does allow for changing the color of a word or line of text.  This sentence is blue.  It does not allow for footnoting.  Justification and underlining are effectuated with keyboard shortcuts: ctrl+u for underline.  Underlined.  Can be toggled on or off. 

Justification alt+shift+j while in the classic editor.  It does toggle. I have formatted some color, some underline, then converted this classic editor box into a Gutenberg paragraph block. Notice that the red and blue text are still there. The justification is not.

This is the text of Sample Post 08. While Reading category.2

This is more important commentary by me, just to see how block quote paragraph and content paragraph appear side by side.

This is another paragraph written in the “paragraph block.” I need to be able to do two things with this block: 1. Indent it–or give it the appearance of an indented paragraph, 2. Add a footnote. I’ve managed to “indent” both left and right by adding “padding” on left and right. Now I will footnote the paragraph.3

This is come commentary, followed by a block quote:

Some longer chunk of text quoted from a primary source. Some longer chunk of text quoted from a primary source.Some longer chunk of text quoted from a primary source.Some longer chunk of text quoted from a primary source.Some longer chunk of text quoted from a primary source.Some longer chunk of text quoted from a primary source.Some longer chunk of text quoted from a primary source.Some longer chunk of text quoted from a primary source.4

The above method seems to be working. When viewed, the paragraph has “indents” on both left and right, and I am able to use the generic footnote command to add the footnote. Here is an “in-line” footnote: “Because of the absence of quantifiable data within the set itself, nothing can be concluded; no ‘ampliative’ knowledge is produced that is scientifically valid.”5 Now I am continuing my commentary after the in-line footnote. One small problem I’ve noticed is that the superscript footnote marker adds a tiny amount of space to the line spacing.


Footnotes

  1. Shakespeare. ↩︎
  2. Another source text referenced here ↩︎
  3. Khun, Thomas, The structure of Scientific Revolutions. ↩︎
  4. Questionable, John Q, “My Fat Head,” in Bogus Academic Journal, Univershity of Potato Farmers, 1978. ↩︎
  5. Hanna, Robert. “Article Title,” page, 18. ↩︎

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