Because I don't want to clutter my (new) LJ...

Jul 15, 2004 09:10

I will use the recently discovered and extremely useful LJ cut to post this survey! So, if you would like, read on and enjoy my answers to this lovely survey. ( The survey )

Leave a comment

Comments 5

?? casperroxmysox July 15 2004, 16:29:40 UTC
How do you do that cut thingy?? i've wondered that like forever and never figured it out....

Reply

Re: ?? capn_crunch101 July 15 2004, 19:23:28 UTC
OK do it like this (except replace the [brackets] with )
[lj-cut text="what the label should say"]Then here you type the cut text[/lj-cut]
If you just say: [lj-cut]cut text[/lj-cut] then the label will say "Read more..."
I'm pretty sure this is how I did it, if you try it and it doesn't work tell me..

Reply


capn_crunch101 July 15 2004, 19:24:41 UTC
Oops ha that first sentence didn't work... I meant to say replace the brackets that look like this in my demonstration: ]and[ with arrows that look like this: >and

Reply

magundai July 16 2004, 12:08:56 UTC
Am i the only one who is totally confused by your "demonstration"?

Reply

capn_crunch101 July 16 2004, 16:08:21 UTC
no... reading through it again, I'm confused by my own demonstration. OK, I'll try it again using mine as an example. Where I wrote The Survey (the hyperlinked part that you could click on), that's considered the title. The actual survey is considered the Cut Text.
[lj-cut text="The Survey"]Cut text (you don't actually see this part until you click on the title[/lj-cut]
OK, now this is the part that was the most confusing, for me at least. In this demo thing I used brackets in the beginning and end of the intstructions. You can't really use brackets! They won't work. I used them to demonstrate without making an actual LJ-cut. Instead, replace this bracket: [ with this arrow < and this bracket: ] with this arrow: > ... I hope that made a little more sense.

Reply


Leave a comment

Up