Some of you already know this information but to some of us it is new. When discussing something that could spoil the plot of the book you're talking about for someone who hasn't read it, you can hide it. Say we are discussing a book and the main character is shot.
You'd want to say "Oh my gosh wasn't it awful when Penny was shot?!" but others might not want to see that yet.
So instead you'd type < spoiler > Oh my gosh wasn't it awful when Penny was shot? < /spoiler > but you'd take out the spaces between the brackets and the word.
Or you can hide part like this: "Oh my gosh wasn't it awful when (view spoiler)[Penny was shot? (hide spoiler)]" by putting those codes in the middle of the sentence. Does this make any sense? If you have questions contact me or post them here. If anyone else can explain it more clearly please do! Thank you!
TLDR; use html code < spoiler> < /spoiler> to hide key plot points.
This week I've read Clammed Up by Barbara Ross and started the New York trilogy. Which is very very weird. I am not choosing my books very wisely lately.
I didn't know that. Thank you so much, is very helpful for me! I'm wont on forums when html is with [] so I was trying to make it that way and edited it few times.
You'd want to say "Oh my gosh wasn't it awful when Penny was shot?!" but others might not want to see that yet.
So instead you'd type < spoiler > Oh my gosh wasn't it awful when Penny was shot? < /spoiler > but you'd take out the spaces between the brackets and the word.
Then it will look like this: "(view spoiler)[Oh my gosh wasn't it awful when Penny was shot? (hide spoiler)]".
Or you can hide part like this: "Oh my gosh wasn't it awful when (view spoiler)[Penny was shot? (hide spoiler)]" by putting those codes in the middle of the sentence. Does this make any sense? If you have questions contact me or post them here. If anyone else can explain it more clearly please do! Thank you!
TLDR; use html code < spoiler> < /spoiler> to hide key plot points.