MDX Pretty Code
A Remark plugin to make the code in your MDX docs simply beautiful. Powered by
Shiki.
- ✅ Perfect VS Code highlighting (use any theme)
- ✅ Line and word highlighting
- ✅ Context-adjustable inline code highlighting
- ✅ Line numbers
- ✅ No runtime or bundle size cost
Installation
npm install @atomiks/mdx-pretty-code shiki
Usage
import {createRemarkPlugin} from '@atomiks/mdx-pretty-code';
import fs from 'fs';
const prettyCode = createRemarkPlugin({
shikiOptions: {
theme: JSON.parse(
fs.readFileSync(require.resolve('./themes/my-theme.json'), 'utf-8')
),
},
onVisitLine(node) {
Object.assign(node.style, {
margin: '0 -1.5rem',
padding: '0 1.5rem',
});
},
onVisitHighlightedLine(node) {
Object.assign(node.style, {
backgroundColor: 'rgba(0,0,0,0.1)',
});
},
onVisitHighlightedWord(node) {
Object.assign(node.style, {
backgroundColor: 'rgba(0,0,0,0.5)',
padding: '0.25rem',
borderRadius: '0.25rem',
});
},
});
Then pass the plugin to your MDX remarkPlugins
option. For example, in
next.config.js
using MDX v2:
module.exports = {
experimental: {esmExternals: true},
webpack(config, options) {
config.module.rules.push({
test: /\.mdx?$/,
use: [
options.defaultLoaders.babel,
{
loader: '@mdx-js/loader',
options: {
remarkPlugins: [prettyCode],
},
},
],
});
return config;
},
};
Multiple themes (dark/light mode)
Because Shiki generates themes at build time, client-side theme switching
support is not built in. There are two popular options for supporting something
like Dark Mode with Shiki. See the
Shiki docs
for more info.
1. Load multiple themes
This will render duplicate code blocks for each theme. You can then hide the
other blocks with CSS.
Pass your themes to shikiOptions.theme
, where the keys represent the color
mode:
shikiOptions: {
theme: {
dark: JSON.parse(
fs.readFileSync(require.resolve('./themes/dark.json'), "utf-8")
),
light: JSON.parse(
fs.readFileSync(require.resolve('./themes/light.json'), "utf-8")
),
},
}
The code
elements and the inline code <span data-mdx-pretty-code>
wrappers
will have a data attribute data-theme="[key]"
, e.g data-theme="light"
. You
can target the data attribute [data-theme='dark']
to apply styles for that
theme.
Now, you can use CSS to display the desired theme:
@media (prefers-color-scheme: dark) {
code[data-theme='light'] {
display: none;
}
}
@media (prefers-color-scheme: light), (prefers-color-scheme: no-preference) {
code[data-theme='dark'] {
display: none;
}
}
2. Use the "css-variables" theme (Shiki version 0.9.9
and above)
This gives you access to CSS variable styling, which you can control across Dark
and Light mode.
Note that this client-side theme is less granular than most other supported VS
Code themes. Also, be aware that this will generate unstyled code if you do
not define these CSS variables somewhere else on your page:
<style>
:root {
--shiki-color-text: rgb(248, 248, 242);
--shiki-color-background: rgb(13 13 15);
--shiki-token-constant: rgb(102, 217, 239);
--shiki-token-string: rgb(230, 219, 116);
--shiki-token-comment: rgb(93,93, 95);
--shiki-token-keyword: rgb(249, 38, 114);
--shiki-token-parameter: rgb(230, 219, 116);
--shiki-token-function: rgb(166, 226, 46);
--shiki-token-string-expression: rgb(230, 219, 116);
--shiki-token-punctuation: rgb(230, 219, 116);
--shiki-token-link: rgb(174, 129, 255);
}
</style>
API
Code blocks are configured via the meta string after the top codeblock fence.
Line highlighting
Highlight lines 1, 2 through 4, and 6.
```js {1,2-4,6}
Word highlighting
Highlight the literal word carrot
. Regex is not currently supported.
```js /carrot/
Limit word highlighting to specific instances
If you want to limit which words get highlighted, this is possible. For
instance:
```js /carrot/1-2,4
The numeric range must be directly after the /
.
This will only highlight the first, second, and fourth instances of carrot
,
but not the third, or fifth+.
Inline highlighting
Append {:lang}
(e.g. {:js}
) at the end of the inline code to highlight it
like it's a regular code block.
This is `inline(){:js}` code which will be colored like a regular code block.
In your MDXProvider
's components
prop, modify span
like so:
const mdxComponents = {
span(props) {
if (props['data-mdx-pretty-code'] != null) {
return (
<code
data-theme={props['data-theme']}
style={{color: props['data-color']}}
>
{props.children.props.children}
</code>
);
}
return <span {...props} />;
},
};
Context-specific highlighting
Shiki will color plain variables as plain text since the highlighting has no
context. But if you're referring to a variable which was colored a different way
by Shiki in a code block above or below the inline code, it won't be semantic.
You can instruct MDX Pretty Code to color a word by supplying a token whose
color is specified in the VS Code theme.
It must start with a .
to indicate it's a token, not a language.
The function name is `hello{:.entity.name.function}`.
You can create a tokensMap
to shorten this throughout your docs:
createRemarkPlugin({
tokensMap: {
function: 'entity.name.function',
},
});
Now you can just do:
The function name is `hello{:.function}`.
Note: for the token feature to work, you must have supplied a JSON object to
shikiOptions.theme
, not a default Shiki theme string.
Line numbers
CSS counters can be used to add line numbers.
code {
counter-reset: line;
}
code > .line::before {
counter-increment: line;
content: counter(line);
display: inline-block;
width: 1rem;
margin-right: 2rem;
text-align: right;
color: gray;
}
Language meta
The code
tag has a data-language
attribute, so you can add the language
information to the code block.
Sanitizing
All HTML is sanitized via
sanitize-html
. To configure the
sanitizing options, pass sanitizeOptions
, which is 1:1 with its API.
License
MIT