![]() ![]() ![]() This then allows for ordinary markdown tables. That is, you’re able to hide the headers of any table in that note. Through this, you’re able to create your header-less tables. Obsidian supports custom classes for any given note, through the use of cssClass in the frontmatter. Also, I’d like to stick to standard Markdown/HTML as much as possible.Ĭlassic markdown tables don’t work - they don’t allow header-less tables, and don’t support multiline text, as far as I know. However, then I would have to create a whole new multi-column section for every row - it is important that the text and the corresponding images line up. One solution would be to use the Multi-column Markdown plugin. They would be rendered using an tag, however Obsidian doesn’t seem to support relative paths within img-tags? However, in this table, my images won’t be rendered. So, in the past I have done this using HTML tables. It’s a table without headers, with multiline text in the left column and one image (plus some optional text) in the right column.Ĭlassic markdown tables don’t work - they don’t allow header-less tables, and don’t support multiline text, as far as I know. What I don’t get to work, and what is a common use-case in my notes: I have some sort of tutorial. I’m migrating from a self-coded VS Code plugin I wrote before Obsidian came along, so I already have a bunch of notes I’m in the process of converting.
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