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add slack button to readme
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<p align="center"><a href="#why"><strong>Why?</strong></a> · <a href="#principles"><strong>Principles</strong></a> · <a href="#examples"><strong>Examples</strong></a> · <a href="#plugins"><strong>Plugins</strong></a> · <a href="#documentation"><strong>Documentation</strong></a> · <a href="./Contributing.md"><strong>Contributing!</strong></a></p>
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<br/>
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<p align="center"><a href="https://slate-slack.herokuapp.com"><img src="https://slate-slack.herokuapp.com/badge.svg"><a/></p>
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Slate lets you build rich, intuitive editors like those in [Medium](https://medium.com/), [Dropbox Paper](https://www.dropbox.com/paper) or [Canvas](https://usecanvas.com/)—which are becoming table stakes for applications on the web—without your codebase getting mired in complexity.
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It can do this because all of its logic is implemented with a series of plugins, so you aren't ever constrained by what _is_ or _isn't_ in "core". You can think of it like a pluggable implementation of `contenteditable`, built on top of [React](https://facebook.github.io/react/) and [Immutable](https://facebook.github.io/immutable-js/). It was inspired by libraries like [Draft.js](https://facebook.github.io/draft-js/), [Prosemirror](http://prosemirror.net/) and [Quill](http://quilljs.com/).
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