GfmEscape
...the only escaper passing backtranslation tests.
GfmEscape
is an enterprise-grade library for transforming untagged plain text
to CommonMark and
GitHub Flavored Markdown (GFM).
Why GfmEscape?
There are neat and configurable markup converters like Turndown,
which even allows transforming any markup that can be converted to HTML first.
While conversion of inline and block constructs is well covered, little attention is
paid to transforming text content itself. And this is tricky especially with
non-delimited "extended" autolinks, which make escaping heavily context-dependent.
In short:
GfmEscape addresses these issues without significant performance penalty, as it
is based on UnionReplacer.
See below for more details.
Outline
Installation and usage
In browsers:
<script src="https://unpkg.com/gfm-escape/dist/gfm-escape.umd.js" />
Using npm:
npm install gfm-escape
In Node.js:
const GfmEscape = require('gfm-escape');
Synopsis
escaper = new GfmEscape(escapingOptions[, syntax])
newStr = escaper.escape(input[, gfmContext[, metadata]])
A created GfmEscape
instance is intended to be reused and shared in your code.
Parameters
escapingOptions
: option object defining how to perform escaping, its keys
correspond to individual replaces. When a replace option is set to any truthy
value, suboption defaults are applied and can be overriden by passed suboptions.
A single option object can be reused for instantiating escapers for
different syntaxes, some options would just render irrelevant.
The current full options are:
{
strikethrough: {
optimizeForDoubleTilde: false,
},
extAutolink: {
breakUrl: false,
breakWww: false,
breaker: '<!-- -->',
allowedTransformations: [ 'entities', 'commonmark' ],
allowAddHttpScheme: false,
inImage: false,
},
table: true,
emphasisNonDelimiters: {
maxIntrawordUnderscoreRun: undefined,
},
linkTitle: {
delimiters: [ '"', '\'', '()' ],
alwaysEscapeDelimiters: [],
},
}
See below for more details.
syntax
: suggests the syntax escaper is built for.
The predefined syntaxes are available as members of GfmEscape.Syntax
:
text
: normal text, the default.linkDestination
: text rendered [sometext](here)
.cmAutolink
: text rendered <here>
. Please note that a valid CommonMark must
contain a URI scheme, which cannot be addressed by the escaper. When deciding if
CommonMark autolink is an appropriate construct to use, we suggest to use
the isEncodable(input)
and wouldBeUnaltered(input)
methods on the
Syntax.cmAutolink
object.codeSpan
: text rendered `here`
.linkTitle
: text rendered [text](destination "here")
or
[text](destination 'here')
or [text](destination (here))
.
input
: the string to escape. Please note that correct escaping is currently
only guaranteed when the input is trimmed and normalized in terms of whitespace.
The library does not perfos qrm whitespace normalizing on its own, as it is often
ensured by the source's origin, e.g. textContent
of a normalized HTML DOM.
Manual normalizing can be done with input.trim().replace(/[ \t\n\r]+/g, ' ')
.
If it is intended to keep the source somewhat organized in lines, the minimum
treatment to make escaping safe would be input.replace(/^[ \t\r\n]+|[ \t]+$/gm, '')
.
In such case, the caller has a responsibility to place the output correctly in
the generated document. I.e. to indent all the lines when the context requires
indenting.
gfmContext
: extra contextual information to be considered. The contexts have
no defaults, i.e. they are falsy by default. The following contexts are available:
{
inLink: true,
inImage: true,
inTable: true,
}
When escaping, metadata
is extra input-output parameter that collects
metadata about the actual escaping. Currently metadata
are used for
codeSpan
syntax and linkTitle
syntax.
const escaper = new GfmEscape({ table: true }, GfmEscape.Syntax.codeSpan);
const x = {};
const context = { inTable: true };
const escaped = escaper.escape('`array|string`', context, x);
console.log(`\`${escaped}\``);
console.log(`${x.extraBacktickString.length} backtickts and ${x.extraSpace.length} spaces added.`);
const linkTitleEscaper = new GfmEscape({}, GfmEscape.Syntax.linkTitle);
const x = {};
let escaped = escaper.escape('cool "link \'title\'"', context, x);
console.log(`${x.startDelimiter}${escaped}${x.endDelimiter}`);
escaped = escaper.escape('average link title', context, x);
console.log(`${x.startDelimiter}${escaped}${x.endDelimiter}`);
const rigidLinkTitleEscaper = new GfmEscape({
linkTitle: {
delimiters: '"',
}
}, GfmEscape.Syntax.linkTitle);
escaped = escaper.escape('cool "link \'title\'"');
console.log(`"${escaped}"`);
Escaping options: strikethrough
Defaults to false
, i.e. '~' is not special and it is not escaped.
Suboptions:
optimizeForDoubleTilde
: only eventual sequences of two tildes are escaped.
Default false
.
Escaping options: extAutolink
Defaults to false
, i.e. autolinks are not detected and do not form special
case for escaping.
Suboptions:
breakUrl
: if a string capable of forming extended url autolink is encountered,
it is broken to prevent that. E.g. https://orchi.tech
becomes
https://<!-- -->orchi.tech
. Default false
.breakWww
: if a string capable of forming extended www autolink is encountered,
it is broken to prevent that. E.g. www.orchi.tech
becomes
www.<!-- -->orchi.tech
. Default false
.breaker
: a sequence used to break extended autolinks, used both for breaking
and terminating. Default <!-- -->
. Please note that some Markdown renderers
like Redcarpet do not support HTML comments - tag sequences like <span></span>
or artificial <nolink>
can be used instead.allowedTransformations
: array of transformations that are allowed if an
extended autolink-like string needs to be transformed to retain the expected
target and text. The order indicates priority. Defaults to
['entities', 'commonmark']
. Available transformations are:
'keep'
: always the most preferred, no reason to set it explicitly.'entites'
: entity name references are used to escape trailing
characters. E.g. *http://orchi.tech,*
becomes \*http://orchi.tech,*
.'commonmark'
: a CommonMark autolink is used to delimit the actual link
part. E.g. *http://orchi.tech,*
becomes \*<http://orchi.tech>,\*
.'breakup'
: autolink-like string is broken, so that it is not interpreted
as an autolink. E.g. *https://orchi.tech,*
becomes
\*https://<!-- -->orchi.tech,\*
.'breakafter'
: autolink-like string is terminated after the actual link part.
E.g. *https://orchi.tech,*
becomes \*https://orchi.tech<!-- -->,\*
.
This transformation is the default fallback, no reason to set it explicitly.
allowAddHttpScheme
: add http://
scheme when a transformation needs it to
work. E.g. *www.orchi.tech,*
would become \*<http://www.orchi.tech>,\*
with the commonmark
transformation.inImage
: suggest if extended autolink treatment should be applied within
image text. Although the CommonMark spec says links are interpreted and just
the stripped plain text part renders to the alt
attribute, cmark-gfm actually
does not do it for extended autolinks, so the default is false.
How to choose the options:
- Consider rendering details of the target Markdown flavor. Backtranslation
test should pass on text. And if a link is produced, it should match the
input.
- Consider user expectations. The users probably don't expect HTML comments
all over their documents. They probably don't expect HTML entity references
too, but see also the next point.
- Consider declared semantics. Transforming to CommonMark autolinks looks quite
well, but CommonMark autolinks form explicit link demarkation when the input
was not explicitly link-demarked.
'breakafter'
might be better option in
some situations. - Last, but not least - consider the origin of your input. If you transform
HTML rendered from another markup language that supports autolinking too,
you may expect that an autolink-suppression mechanism was used if an
autolink-like string is encountered in plain text. Then it might be better
to break it too.
And if the original renderer supports url autolinks, but not www autolinks, it
might be better to set only 'breakUrl'
, as users may still expect www links
to be autolinked in the plain text.
Escaping options: emphasisNonDelimiters
Defaults to true
, i.e. intraword emphasis delimiters are not escaped if it is safe
not to escape them. E.g. in My account is joe_average.
, the underscore stays
unescaped as joe_average
, not joe\_average
.
Suboptions:
maxIntrawordUnderscoreRun
: if defined as a number, it sets the maximum length of
intraword underscores to be kept as is. E.g. for 1
and input
joe_average or joe__average
, the output would be joe_average or joe\_\_average
.
This is helpful for some renderers like Redcarpet. Both undefined
and false
mean no limit on unescaped intraword underscore run length.
Defaults to undefined
.
Escaping options: table
Defaults to false
, i.e. table pipes are not escaped. If enabled, rendering of table
delimiter rows is suppressed by escaping its pipes and all pipes are escaped when in
table context.
Escaping options: linkTitle
Suboptions:
delimiters
: array of allowed delimiter to be chosen from or a single delimiter.
Delimiters are "
, '
and ()
. When more delimiters are allowed, GfmEscape picks
the least interferring one. The picked delimiter is returned in metadata, as shown
in the example above.alwaysEscapeDelimiters
: array of delimiters that are always escaped.
GFM escaping details
Terminology:
Specs:
Reference implementations examined:
Implementation notes
While cmark-gfm is somewhat a reference
implementation of GFM Spec, we have found a few interesting details...
cmark_gfm-001
: Contrary to the GFM spec stating All such recognized autolinks
can only come at the beginning of a line, after whitespace, or any of the
delimiting characters *, _, ~, and (, it seems this applies just to extended
www autolinks in cmark-gfm. E.g. .https://orchi.tech
is recognized as an
autolink by this library. We follow this.cmark_gfm-002
: Contrary to the GFM spec, extended autolinks in cmark-gfm do
not treat [\v\f]
as space, while CM autolinks do. We follow this.cmark_gfm-003
: cmark-gfm considers <
as valid for autolink detection and
trims the resulting link afterwards. So https://or_chi.tech.<
leads to
autolinking of https://or_chi.tech
, although this wouldn't form autolink
without the trailing <
. We follow this, but non-explicit extended autolink
transformations would break the autolink detection - which is probaly good.
E.g. with the default settings, https://or_chi.tech.<
leads to
https://or_chi.tech.<
(wouldn't be detected as extended autolink by
cmark-gfm), while https://or_chi.tech.<~
leads to
<https://or_chi.tech>\<\~
(forced CM autolink).cmark_gfm-004
: GFM spec says If an autolink ends in a semicolon (;), we
check to see if it appears to resemble an entity reference; if the preceding
text is & followed by one or more alphanumeric characters. If so, it is
excluded from the autolink... Alphabetic references cmark-gfmcmark_gfm-005
: Backslash escape in link destination, e.g.
[foo](http://orchi.tech/foo\_bar)
does not prevent entity reference
from interpreting in rendered HTML. We use entity encoding instead, i.e. &
.
The same applies to link titles.
TODO
- Minification for browsers.
- Complete and polish implementation remarks.