I've used SMF for years, but this one in particular seems to be extremely selective about newlines.
This one will probably be a new paragraph.
This one should be as well, but probably won't be. At first I assumed it was some kind of "law of the land", though other people seem to have found a way around it. The first one seems to be ok, after that... let's see if this is three distinct paragraphs, or if it joins the 2nd and 3rd. EDIT: Aha! Why does it do this? And who is exempt?
I see 3 paragraphs there, but between the 1
st and the 2
nd is a double-newline. The double-newline between this and the next paragraph really shouldn't be there, but I'm using it as a typographical example. I'm padding this line out it out to give it a fuller paragraph form i.e. to have it wrap around probably at least once. It's just a matter of form, really. You can probably skip this completely. Don't worry, I'm not saying anything especially interesting.
This is the 2
nd paragraph. It's really about something similar enough the the last prior paragraph that it shouldn't be part of a new `super'-paragraph. Just pretend I'm talking about something else right now. Maybe I'm discussing a separate point mentioned somewhere else in the same response-context.
This would be a 3
rd paragraph, or the 2
nd paragraph in this `super'-paragraph. Anyway, I'm just padding it out again. It doesn't really mean anything
per se. The next graphic characters after the next newlines, I wouldn't even consider a paragraph, because it's just a line alone separated out from everything else. Maybe it's more like a punchline. I'm using a triple-newline between that or this paragraph, but a double-newline should suffice.
I like that rendering here preserves whitespace---even if it's annoying sometimes.