# ```python
# print "Hello World"
# ```
#
# ```javascript
# console.log("Hello World")
# ```
#
#
# Gives
# ```python
# print "Hello World"
# ```
#
# ```javascript
# console.log("Hello World")
# ```
#
# And a table like this :
#
#
# | This | is |
# |------|------|
# | a | table|
#
#
# A nice Html Table
#
# | This | is |
# |------|------|
# | a | table|
# ## General HTML
# Because Markdown is a superset of HTML you can even add things like HTML tables:
#
#
#
# Header 1 |
# Header 2 |
#
#
# row 1, cell 1 |
# row 1, cell 2 |
#
#
# row 2, cell 1 |
# row 2, cell 2 |
#
#
# ## Local files
# If you have local files in your Notebook directory, you can refer to these files in Markdown cells directly:
#
# [subdirectory/]
#
# For example, in the images folder, we have the Python logo:
#
#
#
#
#
# and a video with the HTML5 video tag:
#
#
#
#
#
# These do not embed the data into the notebook file, and require that the files exist when you are viewing the notebook.
# ### Security of local files
# Note that this means that the IPython notebook server also acts as a generic file server
# for files inside the same tree as your notebooks. Access is not granted outside the
# notebook folder so you have strict control over what files are visible, but for this
# reason it is highly recommended that you do not run the notebook server with a notebook
# directory at a high level in your filesystem (e.g. your home directory).
#
# When you run the notebook in a password-protected manner, local file access is restricted
# to authenticated users unless read-only views are active.