<p>Redmine allows hyperlinking between issues, changesets and wiki pages from anywhere wiki formatting is used.</p>
<ul>
<li>Link to an issue: <strong>#124</strong> (displays <del><ahref="/issues/show/124"class="issue"title="bulk edit doesn't change the category or fixed version properties (Closed)">#124</a></del>, link is striked-through if the issue is closed)</li>
<li>Link to a changeset: <strong>r758</strong> (displays <ahref="/repositories/revision/1?rev=758"class="changeset"title="Search engine now only searches objects the user is allowed to view.">r758</a>)</li>
<li>Link to a changeset with a non-numeric hash: <strong>commit:"c6f4d0fd"</strong> (displays c6f4d0fd). Added in <ahref="/repositories/revision/1?rev=1236"class="changeset"title="Merged Git support branch (r1200 to r1226).">r1236</a>.</li>
<li><strong>[[Guide]]</strong> displays a link to the page named 'Guide': <ahref="Guide.html"class="wiki-page">Guide</a></li>
<li><strong>[[Guide|User manual]]</strong> displays a link to the same page but with a different text: <ahref="Guide.html"class="wiki-page">User manual</a></li>
</ul>
<p>You can also link to pages of an other project wiki:</p>
<ul>
<li><strong>[[sandbox:some page]]</strong> displays a link to the page named 'Some page' of the Sandbox wiki</li>
<li><strong>[[sandbox:]]</strong> displays a link to the Sandbox wiki main page</li>
</ul>
<p>Wiki links are displayed in red if the page doesn't exist yet, eg: <ahref="Nonexistent_page.html"class="wiki-page new">Nonexistent page</a>.</p>
<li><strong>document#17</strong> (link to document with id 17)</li>
<li><strong>document:Greetings</strong> (link to the document with title "Greetings")</li>
<li><strong>document:"Some document"</strong> (double quotes can be used when document title contains spaces)</li>
</ul></li>
</ul>
<ul>
<li>Versions:
<ul>
<li><strong>version#3</strong> (link to version with id 3)</li>
<li><strong>version:1.0.0</strong> (link to version named "1.0.0")</li>
<li><strong>version:"1.0 beta 2"</strong></li>
</ul></li>
</ul>
<ul>
<li>Attachments:
<ul>
<li><strong>attachment:file.zip</strong> (link to the attachment of the current object named file.zip)</li>
<li>For now, attachments of the current object can be referenced only (if you're on an issue, it's possible to reference attachments of this issue only)</li>
<p>For things such as headlines, bold, tables, lists, Redmine supports Textile syntax. See <aclass="external"href="http://hobix.com/textile/">http://hobix.com/textile/</a> for information on using any of these features. A few samples are included below, but the engine is capable of much more of that.</p>
<p>Rails is a full-stack framework for developing database-backed web applications according to the Model-View-Control pattern.<br/>To go live, all you need to add is a database and a web server.</p>
</blockquote>
<h3><aname="11"class="wiki-page"></a>Table of content</h3>
<p><dl><dt><code>hello_world</code></dt><dd><p>Sample macro.</p></dd><dt><code>include</code></dt><dd><p>Include a wiki page. Example:</p>
<pre><code>{{include(Foo)}}</code></pre></dd><dt><code>macro_list</code></dt><dd><p>Displays a list of all available macros, including description if available.</p></dd></dl></p>
<p>Code highlightment relies on <ahref="http://coderay.rubychan.de/"class="external">CodeRay</a>, a fast syntax highlighting library written completely in Ruby. It currently supports c, html, javascript, rhtml, ruby, scheme, xml languages.</p>
<p>You can highlight code in your wiki page using this syntax:</p>