And, just so no one can say I didn't try...
The BBCode tag 'Quote', which has the following syntax:
Merely puts a box around some text, like so:
The 'Reply' and 'Quote' buttons help automate it. 'Reply' simply quotes the entire post the button was attached to, and adds that person's name and a link to the original post. 'Quote' puts that post's text in a buffer. You can click 'Quote' on multiple posts. At the bottom of the Quick Reply window at the bottom of each page, you'll see a thing saying 'you can quote them now or discard them'. Those are actually textual buttons... clicking on 'quote them now' will put all of the things you quoted in the message you want to write. Clicking on 'discard them' will, well, discard all of them. In both cases the buffer will be empty.
Of course, these are things anyone can figure out on their own after three weeks of trial and error....
The BBCode tag 'Quote', which has the following syntax:
Code:
[quote]This is some text you want to quote[/quote]
Merely puts a box around some text, like so:
Quote:This is some text you want to quote
The 'Reply' and 'Quote' buttons help automate it. 'Reply' simply quotes the entire post the button was attached to, and adds that person's name and a link to the original post. 'Quote' puts that post's text in a buffer. You can click 'Quote' on multiple posts. At the bottom of the Quick Reply window at the bottom of each page, you'll see a thing saying 'you can quote them now or discard them'. Those are actually textual buttons... clicking on 'quote them now' will put all of the things you quoted in the message you want to write. Clicking on 'discard them' will, well, discard all of them. In both cases the buffer will be empty.
Of course, these are things anyone can figure out on their own after three weeks of trial and error....
"I was thirsty for everything, but blood wasn't my style" - Live, "Voodoo Lady"