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Oracle Drags Its Feet in the JavaScript Trademark Dispute
Oracle seeks to dismiss fraud claims in the JavaScript trademark dispute, delaying the case and avoiding questions about its right to the name.
markdown-parser-react
Advanced tools
A lightweight and configurable Markdown renderer for React and Next.js with syntax highlighting, definition lists, images, math and table support.
A flexible and feature-rich React component for rendering Markdown content with customizable styling, extensive formatting options, and robust typings.
🚀 Full Markdown syntax support
💅 Customizable styling with CSS classes and inline styles
🔒 HTML sanitization
♿ Accessibility support
📱 Responsive image handling
🎨 Syntax highlighting for code blocks
📝 Task list support
📊 Table support with alignment options
🔗 Custom link handling
🎯 Definition lists
📑 Custom IDs for headers
🔢 Nested list support
➗ Supports Math Equations
Install Markdown Parser React using npm or yarn or pnpm:
npm install markdown-parser-react
# or
yarn add markdown-parser-react
# or
pnpm add markdown-parser-react
The basic usage example demonstrates rendering a simple Markdown string:
import Markdown from "markdown-parser-react";
function MyComponent() {
return <Markdown content="# Hello World
This is **markdown** content." />;
}
In the advanced usage example, we see how you can configure the component with custom styling, classes, and additional features like task lists, code highlighting, and tables
import Markdown from "markdown-parser-react";
function BlogPost() {
const markdownContent = `
# Welcome to My Blog
This is a _formatted_ paragraph with a [link](https://example.com).
- [x] Task 1
- [ ] Task 2
\`\`\`javascript
const hello = "world";
console.log(hello);
\`\`\`
| Column 1 | Column 2 |
|----------|----------|
| Cell 1 | Cell 2 |
`;
return (
<Markdown
content={markdownContent}
options={{
customClasses: {
headings: "blog-heading",
paragraphs: "blog-paragraph",
},
customStyles: {
headings: {
color: "#2c3e50",
fontFamily: "Georgia, serif",
},
},
linkTarget: "_blank",
sanitizeHtml: true,
maxNestingLevel: 4,
}}
className="blog-content"
asArticle={true}
aria={{
label: "Blog post content",
describedBy: "blog-description",
}}
/>
);
}
If you're using Next.js, you may encounter the "Text content does not match server-rendered HTML" error.
To avoid this issue, you can use next/dynamic
to dynamically import the Markdown
component, ensuring that it is only rendered on the client-side.
Here's how to use Markdown
with Next.js:
import dynamic from "next/dynamic";
const Markdown = dynamic(
() => import("markdown-parser-react").then((markdown) => markdown),
{
ssr: false,
}
);
interface MyComponentProps {
content: string;
options?: {
langPrefix?: string;
linkTarget?: string;
};
}
export const MyComponent: React.FC<MyComponentProps> = ({
content,
options,
}) => {
return (
<div>
<Markdown content={content} options={options} />
</div>
);
};
By using the next/dynamic
function and passing ssr as false, we ensure that the Markdown
component is only rendered on the client-side, preventing the mismatch error between server-rendered and client-rendered HTML in Next.js projects.
The MarkdownProps
interface defines the properties that can be passed into the component. These props allow you to customize the behavior, appearance, and accessibility of the rendered Markdown.
Prop | Type | Description | Example |
---|---|---|---|
content | string | The Markdown content to be rendered. This is the main content of the component. | md<br># Hello World<br>**Bold text** [Link](https://example.com) |
options | ParseOptions (optional) | Configuration options for the Markdown parser. | |
className | string (optional) | Additional CSS class names to be applied to the container. | className="my-markdown" |
style | React.CSSProperties (optional) | Custom styles to be applied to the container. | style={{ backgroundColor: 'lightgray' }} |
asArticle | boolean (optional) | Whether to wrap the content in an article element instead of a div. Recommended for semantic HTML when rendering full articles or blog posts. Defaults to false . | asArticle={true} |
id | string (optional) | Custom ID to be applied to the container. | id="blog-post-1" |
aria | { label?: string, describedBy?: string } (optional) | Additional accessibility attributes for the container. label is the accessible name, and describedBy references an element that provides more information. | aria={{ label: 'Blog Content', describedBy: 'content-description' }} |
The ParseOptions
interface provides configuration for parsing and rendering the Markdown content. It gives you the ability to customize how the content is parsed and displayed, including applying custom classes, styles, and controlling link behavior.
Option | Type | Description | Example |
---|---|---|---|
langPrefix | string (optional) | Prefix for language-specific code block classes. | langPrefix="language-" |
customClasses | CustomClasses (optional) | Custom CSS classes for different Markdown elements. | { headings: 'custom-heading', paragraphs: 'custom-paragraph' } |
customStyles | CustomStyles (optional) | Custom CSS styles for different Markdown elements. | { headings: { color: 'blue', fontFamily: 'Arial' } } |
linkTarget | `"_blank" | "_self" | "_parent" |
sanitizeHtml | boolean (optional) | Whether to sanitize HTML content to prevent XSS attacks. Defaults to false . | sanitizeHtml={true} |
maxNestingLevel | number (optional) | Maximum allowed nesting level for lists. Defaults to 6 . | maxNestingLevel={4} |
Headers (H1-H6)
Bold and Italic text
Strikethrough
Links
Images
Blockquotes with citations
Ordered and unordered lists
Code blocks with syntax highlighting
Task lists with checkboxes
Tables with alignment options
Definition lists
Custom header IDs
Math expressions ($...$
)
Superscript (^...^
)
Subscript (~...~
)
Highlighted text (==...==
)
```javascript
function hello() {
console.log("Hello, world!");
}
```
| Left | Center | Right |
|:-----|:------:|------:|
| L1 | C1 | R1 |
You can customize how the Markdown content is displayed by adjusting the appearance of different elements like headings, paragraphs, links, and more. Below are the options for customizing the styles and classes.
You can pass your classNames to customClasses config inside the options object passed as props to the component
Element | Type | Description | Example |
---|---|---|---|
headings | string | Custom class for headings (H1-H6). | headings:"custom-heading-class" |
paragraphs | string | Custom class for paragraphs. | paragraphs:"custom-paragraph-class" |
lists | string | Custom class for lists (ordered and unordered). | lists:"custom-list-class" |
blockquotes | string | Custom class for blockquotes. | blockquotes:"custom-blockquote-class" |
codeBlocks | string | Custom class for code blocks. | codeBlocks="custom-code-class" |
tables | string | Custom class for tables. | tables:"custom-table-class" |
links | string | Custom class for links. | links:"custom-link-class" |
images | string | Custom class for images. | images:"custom-image-class" |
You can pass your styles to the customStyles property inside the option object.
Element | Type | Description | Example |
---|---|---|---|
headings | CSSProperties | Custom styles for headings (H1-H6). | headings:{{ color: 'blue', fontSize: '2em' }} |
paragraphs | CSSProperties | Custom styles for paragraphs. | paragraphs:{{ lineHeight: '1.5' }} |
lists | CSSProperties | Custom styles for lists (ordered and unordered). | lists:{{ marginLeft: '20px' }} |
blockquotes | CSSProperties | Custom styles for blockquotes. | blockquotes:{{ borderLeft: '4px solid gray' }} |
codeBlocks | CSSProperties | Custom styles for code blocks. | codeBlocks:{{ backgroundColor: 'black', color: 'white' }} |
tables | CSSProperties | Custom styles for tables. | tables:{{ borderCollapse: 'collapse' }} |
links | CSSProperties | Custom styles for links. | links:{{ textDecoration: 'underline' }} |
images | CSSProperties | Custom styles for images. | images:{{ maxWidth: '100%' }} |
The component comes with default styles that can be imported:
import { defaultStyles } from "markdown-parser-react";
// In your global CSS or styled-components
const GlobalStyle = createGlobalStyle`
${defaultStyles}
`;
The component follows WCAG guidelines and provides:
Semantic HTML structure
ARIA attributes support
Keyboard navigation for interactive elements
Screen reader-friendly content structure
Chrome (latest)
Firefox (latest)
Safari (latest)
Edge (latest)
IE11 (with appropriate polyfills)
Contributions are welcome! Please read our contributing guidelines for more information.
If you encounter any issues or have suggestions for improvements, please report them on the GitHub Issues page
If you need a freelance developer for your project, feel free to contact me at LinkedIn I have experience with React, Next.js, TypeScript, and Node.js, and I would be happy to discuss your project with you.
This project is licensed under the MIT License. See the LICENSE file for details.
Happy Coding Everyone! 🧑🏽💻
FAQs
A lightweight and configurable Markdown renderer for React and Next.js with syntax highlighting, definition lists, images, math and table support.
The npm package markdown-parser-react receives a total of 0 weekly downloads. As such, markdown-parser-react popularity was classified as not popular.
We found that markdown-parser-react demonstrated a healthy version release cadence and project activity because the last version was released less than a year ago. It has 0 open source maintainers collaborating on the project.
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