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As someone who writes about code a lot, I often reference function names with a link to their documentation like so: htmlspecialchars()
GitHub, just like the Gitbook editor, shows a blue text color and underline to show the link is clickable. The rendered version of Gitbook, however, shows it no different than inline code without a link: htmlspecialchars()
This makes the site much less accessible as there is no visual difference for a clickable link on inline code. It should receive highlighting just like regular text with a link (like htmlspecialchars())
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As someone who writes about code a lot, I often reference function names with a link to their documentation like so:
htmlspecialchars()
GitHub, just like the Gitbook editor, shows a blue text color and underline to show the link is clickable. The rendered version of Gitbook, however, shows it no different than inline code without a link:
htmlspecialchars()
This makes the site much less accessible as there is no visual difference for a clickable link on inline code. It should receive highlighting just like regular text with a link (like htmlspecialchars())
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