/wp-fieldmarshal

Army List plugin for WordPress

Primary LanguagePHPGNU General Public License v2.0GPL-2.0

=== WordPress Army List ===
Contributors: khooks@gmail.com
Donate link: http://example.com/
Tags: comments, spam
Requires at least: 3.5.1
Tested up to: 3.6
Stable tag: 1.0.0
License: GPLv2 or later
License URI: http://www.gnu.org/licenses/gpl-2.0.html

== Description ==

This is a WordPress plugin for adding Warmachine/Hordes Army Lists to your blog.  Armies are entered in an XML format, enclosed in a shortcode, and then rendered nicely on the blog.  The armies are added to a new table in the wp database and can be referenced by id only using shortcodes.

In addition, we've developed an XML schema for describing the army lists.

It's located here:  www.geeklythings.net/army.xsd

== Installation ==


== Screenshots ==

1. This screen shot description corresponds to screenshot-1.(png|jpg|jpeg|gif). Note that the screenshot is taken from
the /assets directory or the directory that contains the stable readme.txt (tags or trunk). Screenshots in the /assets
directory take precedence. For example, `/assets/screenshot-1.png` would win over `/tags/4.3/screenshot-1.png`
(or jpg, jpeg, gif).
2. This is the second screen shot

== Changelog ==

= 0.1 =

Initial release

== Arbitrary section ==

You may provide arbitrary sections, in the same format as the ones above.  This may be of use for extremely complicated
plugins where more information needs to be conveyed that doesn't fit into the categories of "description" or
"installation."  Arbitrary sections will be shown below the built-in sections outlined above.

== A brief Markdown Example ==

Ordered list:

1. Some feature
1. Another feature
1. Something else about the plugin

Unordered list:

* something
* something else
* third thing

Here's a link to [WordPress](http://wordpress.org/ "Your favorite software") and one to [Markdown's Syntax Documentation][markdown syntax].
Titles are optional, naturally.

[markdown syntax]: http://daringfireball.net/projects/markdown/syntax
            "Markdown is what the parser uses to process much of the readme file"

Markdown uses email style notation for blockquotes and I've been told:
> Asterisks for *emphasis*. Double it up  for **strong**.

`<?php code(); // goes in backticks ?>`