The Shape of the Problem
A placeholder article used to exercise the simplified layout: a title, a byline, this short abstract, and a body with section headers and the occasional pull quote.
This is a dummy article. Its only job is to show what the new, simplified article layout looks like with real-feeling prose flowing past the header, the byline, and the abstract above. Replace this text with a real piece when one is ready.
The paragraphs here are deliberately ordinary. They exist so we can see line length, spacing, and rhythm on the page. A good article template should get out of the way and let the writing carry the reader from one idea to the next without friction.
The first heading
Section headers break a long piece into legible movements. Under this one we might lay out the problem, define a term or two, and set up the argument that the rest of the article will develop. Notice that the heading sits close to the paragraph it introduces, and that the body text keeps a comfortable measure.
A second paragraph under the same heading lets us check how consecutive blocks of text relate to one another. The spacing should feel even — enough to separate ideas, not so much that the page feels sparse.
Every so often a single sentence deserves to be pulled out and made loud.
That pull quote is just a Markdown blockquote, restyled to "blow up" on the page. Use it sparingly — once or twice in a piece — to mark a turn in the argument or a line worth remembering.
The second heading
Here we might resolve the tension set up earlier. The template supports the usual building blocks an essay needs:
- ordinary lists, for enumerating points;
- emphasis and strong emphasis for inline stress; and
- links that inherit the site's accent color.
A closing paragraph brings the piece to rest. When this file is replaced with real writing, everything above — heading sizes, quote styling, list spacing — should carry over without any further work.