a post with code
This theme implements a built-in Jekyll feature, the use of Rouge, for syntax highlighting. It supports more than 100 languages. This example is in C++. All you have to do is wrap your code in markdown code tags:
```c++
code code code
```
int main(int argc, char const \*argv[])
{
    string myString;
    cout << "input a string: ";
    getline(cin, myString);
    int length = myString.length();
    char charArray = new char * [length];
    charArray = myString;
    for(int i = 0; i < length; ++i){
        cout << charArray[i] << " ";
    }
    return 0;
}
For displaying code in a list item, you have to be aware of the indentation, as stated in this Stackoverflow answer. You must indent your code by (3 * bullet_indent_level) spaces. This is because kramdown (the markdown engine used by Jekyll) indentation for the code block in lists is determined by the column number of the first non-space character after the list item marker. For example:
1. We can put fenced code blocks inside nested bullets, too.
   1. Like this:
      ```c
      printf("Hello, World!");
      ```
   2. The key is to indent your fenced block in the same line as the first character of the line.
Which displays:
-  We can put fenced code blocks inside nested bullets, too. -  Like this: printf("Hello, World!");
-  The key is to indent your fenced block in the same line as the first character of the line. 
 
-  
By default, it does not display line numbers. If you want to display line numbers for every code block, you can set kramdown.syntax_highlighter_opts.block.line_numbers to true in your _config.yml file.
If you want to display line numbers for a specific code block, all you have to do is wrap your code in a liquid tag:
{% highlight c++ linenos %} 
 code code code 
 {% endhighlight %}
The keyword linenos triggers display of line numbers. Produces something like this:
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int main(int argc, char const \*argv[])
{
string myString;
    cout << "input a string: ";
    getline(cin, myString);
    int length = myString.length();
    char charArray = new char * [length];
    charArray = myString;
    for(int i = 0; i < length; ++i){
        cout << charArray[i] << " ";
    }
    return 0;
}