class="mod1">N</kbd>. It will render as "Ctrl N" for you, and as "Cmd N" for
your Mac-using friend. Nice, huh?
-N.B.: If you want to have just the name of the modifier key by itself, use
-<kbd class="mod1>‌</kbd> (zero-width non-joiner).
+Multiple modifier keys are supported as "modNM" as well, so for Ctrl-Shift-N on Linux, you would use "mod13".
+
+N.B.: If you want to have just the name of the modifier key by itself, use the
+ modN name followed by a lower case "n", like so: <kbd class="mod1n></kbd>
For anything you want the user to type, use <kbd> as a block-level element.
See above for other <kbd> classes to denote menu items, selections, mouse
CSS Classes used with <kbd> are:
-.modN
+.modN, .modNM, .modNn, .modNMn
.mouse: mouse buttons
.cmd: a command line
.lin, .win, .mac: add nice prompts to that command line
Images are usually placed as block-level elements, i.e. outside of a paragraph,
unless they are no higher than one row and make sense in the text flow.
+Images should also be wrapped (unless they are embedded inside a paragraph) in
+a <figure></figure> block, and should contain a <figcaption></figcaption> block
+inside as well to describe to the reader what the image is.
+
5. Other conventions
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