3 Chapters can contain sub-sections nested up to three deep.
4 footnote:[An example footnote.]
5 indexterm:[Example index entry]
7 Chapters can have their own bibliography, glossary and index.
9 And now for something completely different: ((monkeys)), lions and
10 tigers (Bengal and Siberian) using the alternative syntax index
13 (((Big cats,Tigers,Bengal Tiger)))
14 (((Big cats,Tigers,Siberian Tiger)))
15 Note that multi-entry terms generate separate index entries.
17 Here are a couple of image examples: an image:smallnew.png[]
18 example inline image followed by an example block image:
21 image::tiger.png[Tiger image]
23 Followed by an example table:
26 [width="60%",options="header"]
27 |==============================================
28 | Option | Description
29 | -a 'USER GROUP' | Add 'USER' to 'GROUP'.
30 | -R 'GROUP' | Disables access to 'GROUP'.
31 |==============================================
34 ===============================================
36 ===============================================
39 === Sub-section with Anchor
41 Sub-section at level 2.
43 ==== Chapter Sub-section
45 Sub-section at level 3.
47 ===== Chapter Sub-section
49 Sub-section at level 4.
51 This is the maximum sub-section depth supported by the distributed
52 AsciiDoc configuration.
53 footnote:[A second example footnote.]
58 An example link to anchor at start of the <<X1,first sub-section>>.
59 indexterm:[Second example index entry]
65 Book chapters are at level 1 and can contain sub-sections.