marky-markdown
marky-markdown
is a markdown parser, written in NodeJS, that aims for
parity with GitHub-style markdown. It is built on top of markdown-it
,
a CommonMark markdown parser. You can use marky-markdown:
marky-markdown
is the thing that parses package READMEs on
http://www.npmjs.com. If you see a markdown parsing bug there,
file an issue here!
Node Version Support
marky-markdown strives to support all LTS, current, and maintenance
versions of Node.js. When a version of Node.js is EOL, we will EOL
support for that version for marky-markdown.
For more information on Node.js LTS and support, click here.
- marky-markdown <
9.0.0
supports 0.10
, 0.12
, iojs
, 4
, 5
- marky-markdown >=
9.0.0
supports 0.12
, 4
, 6
Installation
npm install marky-markdown --save
Programmatic Usage
marky-markdown exports a single function. For basic use, that function
takes a single argument: a string to convert.
var marky = require("marky-markdown")
var html = marky("# hello, I'm markdown")
Options
The exported function takes an optional options object
as its second argument:
marky("some trusted string", {sanitize: false})
The default options are as follows:
{
sanitize: true,
nofollow: true,
linkify: true,
highlightSyntax: true,
prefixHeadingIds: true,
enableHeadingLinkIcons: true,
serveImagesWithCDN: false,
debug: false,
package: null,
headingAnchorClass: 'anchor',
headingSvgClass: ['octicon']
}
Low Level Parser Access
If you need lower level access to the markdown-it parser (to add your own
markdown-it plugins, for
example), you can call the getParser
method:
var parser = marky.getParser()
parser.use(someMarkdownItPlugin)
var html = parser.render("# markdown string")
getParser
takes an optional options
argument, the same format as the main
marky-markdown export function. If you omit it, it uses the same default options
described above.
When you're done customizing the parser, call parser.render(markdown)
to
render to HTML.
Command-line Usage
You can use marky-markdown to parse markdown files in the shell.
The easiest way to do this is to install globally:
npm i -g marky-markdown
marky-markdown some.md > some.html
In the Browser
This module mostly works in the browser, with the exception of the highlights
module.
You can require('marky-markdown')
in scripts you browserify yourself,
or just use the standalone file in [dist/marky-markdown.js].
Here is an example using HTML5 to render text inside <marky-markdown>
tags.
<script src="marky-markdown.js"></script>
<marky-markdown>**Here** _is_ some [Markdown](https://github.com/)</marky-markdown>
<script>
for (el of document.getElementsByTagName('marky-markdown')) {
el.innerHTML = markyMarkdown(el.innerHTML, {highlightSyntax: false})
}
</script>
Note: Usage with webpack requires that your
webpack.config.js
configure a loader (such as
json-loader) for .json files. Also, you need to config process.browser
in webpack.config.js
when you target browser:
plugins: [
new webpack.DefinePlugin({
'process.browser': true
})
],
Tests
npm install
npm test
What it does
- Parses markdown with markdown-it, a fast and commonmark-compliant parser.
- Removes broken and malicious user input with sanitize-html
- Applies syntax highlighting to GitHub-flavored code blocks using the highlights library from Atom.
- Converts
:emoji:
-style shortcuts to unicode emojis. - Converts headings (h1, h2, etc) into anchored hyperlinks.
- Converts relative GitHub links to their absolute equivalents.
- Converts relative GitHub images sources to their GitHub raw equivalents.
- Converts insecure Gravatar URLs to HTTPS.
- Converts list items with leading
[ ]
and [x]
into GitHub-style task lists - Wraps embedded YouTube videos so they can be styled.
- Parses and sanitizes
package.description
as markdown. - Applies CSS classes to redundant content that closely matches npm package name and description.
npm packages
Pass in an npm package
object to do stuff like rewriting relative URLs
to their absolute equivalent on GitHub, normalizing package metadata
with redundant readme content, etc
var package = {
name: "foo",
description: "foo is a thing",
repository: {
type: "git",
url: "https://github.com/kung/foo"
}
}
marky(
"# hello, I am the foo readme",
{package: package}
)
Dependencies
Extra syntax highlighting, in addition to what comes with highlights:
License
ISC