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diff --git a/include/create-region-fades-and-crossfades.html b/include/create-region-fades-and-crossfades.html
index 4492768..fae552c 100644
--- a/include/create-region-fades-and-crossfades.html
+++ b/include/create-region-fades-and-crossfades.html
@@ -67,20 +67,20 @@ shapes differ, and which are most suitable for various editing tasks.
The different types of fades are:
- - : A simple linear coefficient decrease, and its
+
- : A simple linear coefficient decrease, and its
mathematical inverse. A Linear fade starts attentuating quickly
and then cuts off even more abruptly at lower levels. When used
as a crossfade, the signals are each -6dB attenuated at the midpoint.
This is the correct crossfade to use with highly-correlated signals for
a smooth transition.
- - : The constant power curve starts fading
+
- : The constant power curve starts fading
slowly and then cuts off abruptly. When used as a crossfade
between 2 audio regions, the signals are symetrically attenuated, and
they each reach -3dB at the midpoint. This is the correct crossfade to
use when you want to splice audio in the general ( uncorrelated ) case.
- - : The Symmetric fade starts slowly, then
+
- : The Symmetric fade starts slowly, then
attenuates significantly before transitioning to a slower fade-out near
the end of the fade. When used as a crossfade, the Symmetric
curve is not mathematically correct like the Equal Power or Linear
@@ -88,13 +88,13 @@ curves, but it provides a slower fade-out at low volumes. This is
sometimes useful when editing 2 entire music works together so that the
transition is more gradual.
- - : The Fast curve is a linear decibel fade; It sounds
+
- : The Fast curve is a linear decibel fade; It sounds
like a perfectly smooth fader or knob moved to silence. This shape is
excellent as a general-purpose fade-in. When used as a
crossfade, the inverse fade curve maintains constant power but is
therefore non-symmetric; so its use is limited to those cases where the
user finds it appropriate.
- - : The Slow curve is a modified linear decibel fade.
+
- : The Slow curve is a modified linear decibel fade.
The initial curve starts more gradually so that it has a less
abrupt transition near unity. After that, it sounds like a
perfectly smooth fader or knob moved to silence. This shape is excellent as