rehype-highlight-code-lines

This package is a unified (rehype) plugin that wraps each line of code in a container, enabling code block numbering and line highlighting.
unified is a project that transforms content with abstract syntax trees (ASTs) using the new parser micromark. remark adds support for markdown to unified. mdast is the Markdown Abstract Syntax Tree (AST) which is a specification for representing markdown in a syntax tree. rehype is a tool that transforms HTML with plugins. hast stands for HTML Abstract Syntax Tree (HAST) that rehype uses.
This plugin enables line numbering for code blocks and highlights specific lines as needed.
When should I use this?
The rehype-highlight-code-lines
is ideal for adding line numbers to code blocks and highlighting specific lines.
The rehype-highlight-code-lines
is NOT code highlighter and does NOT provide code highlighting! You can use a code highlighter for example rehype-highlight to highlight the code, then use the rehype-highlight-code-lines
after.
[!IMPORTANT]
If the code highlighter already provides numbering and highlighting code lines, don't use rehype-highlight-code-lines
!
You can use rehype-highlight-code-lines
even without a code highlighter.
Installation
This package is suitable for ESM only. In Node.js (version 16+), install with npm:
npm install rehype-highlight-code-lines
or
yarn add rehype-highlight-code-lines
Usage
In a code fence, right after the language of the code block:
- Use curly braces
{}
to specify a range of line numbers to highlight specific lines.
- Add
showLineNumbers
to enable line numbering.
```[language] {2,4-6} showLineNumbers
```[language] showLineNumbers {2}
```[language] {1-3}
```[language] showLineNumbers
You can use the specifiers without a language:
```{5} showLineNumbers
```showLineNumbers {5}
```{2,3}
```showLineNumbers
Say we have the following markdown file, example.md
:
```javascript {2} showLineNumbers
let a1;
let a2;
let a3;
```
I assume you use rehype-highlight
for code highlighting. Our module, example.js
, looks as follows:
import { read } from "to-vfile";
import remark from "remark";
import gfm from "remark-gfm";
import remarkRehype from "remark-rehype";
import rehypeHighlight from "rehype-highlight";
import rehypeHighlightLines from "rehype-highlight-code-lines";
import rehypeStringify from "rehype-stringify";
main();
async function main() {
const file = await remark()
.use(gfm)
.use(remarkRehype)
.use(rehypeHighlight)
.use(rehypeHighlightLines)
.use(rehypeStringify)
.process(await read("example.md"));
console.log(String(file));
}
Now, running node example.js
you will see that each line of code is wrapped in a div
, which has appropriate class names (code-line
, numbered-code-line
, highlighted-code-line
) and line numbering attribute data-line-number
.
<pre>
<code class="hljs language-javascript">
<div class="code-line numbered-code-line" data-line-number="1">
<span class="hljs-keyword">let</span> a1;
</div>
<div
class="code-line numbered-code-line highlighted-code-line" data-line-number="2">
<span class="hljs-keyword">let</span> a2;
</div>
<div class="code-line numbered-code-line" data-line-number="3">
<span class="hljs-keyword">let</span> a3;
</div>
</code>
</pre>
Without rehype-highlight-code-lines
, the lines of code wouldn't be in a div
.
<pre>
<code class="hljs language-javascript">
<span class="hljs-keyword">let</span> a1;
<span class="hljs-keyword">let</span> a2;
<span class="hljs-keyword">let</span> a3;
</code>
</pre>
Note: hljs
prefix comes from rehype-highlight
.
Options
All options are optional and have default values.
type HighlightLinesOptions = {
showLineNumbers?: boolean;
lineContainerTagName?: "span" | "div";
trimBlankLines?: boolean;
};
use(rehypeHighlightLines, HighlightLinesOptions);
showLineNumbers
It is a boolean option which is for all code to be numbered.
By default, it is false
.
use(rehypeHighlightLines, {
showLineNumbers: true,
});
Now, all code blocks will become numbered. If you want to exclude a specific code block not to be numbered, use noLineNumbers
.
```[language] noLineNumbers {2}
```[language] noLineNumbers
```noLineNumbers
Sometimes you may want to start the line numbering from a specific number. In that cases, use showLineNumbers=[number]
in code blocks. For example, below, the code block's line numbering will start from number 8
.
```[language] {2} showLineNumbers=8
```[language] showLineNumbers=8
```showLineNumbers=8
lineContainerTagName
(Deprecated)
**It is marked as @deprecated
and will be removed in the next versions.
It was a union option which was "div" | "span" for providing custom HTML tag name for code lines.
By default, it is span
which is inline level container. If you set it as div
, the container will still be span
after deprecation.
use(rehypeHighlightLines, {
lineContainerTagName: "div",
});
trimBlankLines
It is a boolean option. It is designed to delete one blank/empty line at the beginning and one at the end of the code block, if happened due to html parsing <pre><code /></pre>
.
By default, it is false
.
Let's assume you want to highlight pre
, and code
element in markdown (not code fence).
Here is markdown content
<pre><code class="language-javascript">
console.log("rehype-highlight-code-lines");
</code></pre>
For above markdown, the parsed result (for example via rehype-parse
and rehype-stringfy
) is going to contain empty/blank code lines due to nature of pre
preserving whitespaces. In order to prevent having unintentionally blank lines, use the option trimBlankLines
.
use(rehypeHighlightLines, {
trimBlankLines: true,
});
Actually, the trimming could have been the default behaviour. However, some developers may intentionally include empty lines at the beginning and at the end in code fences for specific reasons and may want to preserve them.
```javascript
console.log("rehype-highlight-code-lines");
```
Examples:
use(rehypeHighlightLines);
use(rehypeHighlightLines, {
showLineNumbers: true,
});
An example screen snapshot from a working app:

Here you can find some demo applications below which the rehype-highlight
and rehype-highlight-code-lines
are used together:
Styling
The following styles can be added for line highlighting and line numbering to work correctly:
Choose the colors as you wish!
.parent-container-of-pre {
display: grid;
}
pre,
pre code {
background-color: var(--color-code-background);
direction: ltr;
text-align: left;
white-space: pre;
word-spacing: normal;
word-break: normal;
line-height: 1.2;
tab-size: 2;
hyphens: none;
}
pre {
padding: 0.5rem 1rem;
border: 1px solid var(--color-text-weak);
border-radius: 5px;
overflow-x: auto;
}
pre > code {
float: left;
min-width: 100%;
}
.code-line {
min-width: 100%;
padding-left: 12px;
padding-right: 12px;
margin-left: -12px;
margin-right: -12px;
border-left: 4px solid transparent;
display: inline-block;
}
.code-line.inserted {
background-color: var(--color-inserted-line);
}
.code-line.deleted {
background-color: var(--color-deleted-line);
}
.highlighted-code-line {
background-color: var(--color-highlighted-line);
border-left: 4px solid var(--color-highlighted-line-indicator);
}
.numbered-code-line::before {
content: attr(data-line-number);
margin-left: -8px;
margin-right: 16px;
width: 1rem;
color: var(--color-text-weak);
text-align: right;
display: inline-block;
}
Syntax tree
This plugin modifies the hast
(HTML abstract syntax tree).
Types
This package is fully typed with TypeScript.
The plugin exports the type HighlightLinesOptions
.
Compatibility
This plugin works with rehype-parse
version 1+, rehype-stringify
version 1+, rehype
version 1+, and unified version 4+
.
Security
Use of rehype-highlight-code-lines
involves rehype (hast), but doesn't lead to cross-site scripting (XSS) attacks.
My Plugins
I like to contribute the Unified / Remark / MDX ecosystem, so I recommend you to have a look my plugins.
My Rehype Plugins
My Recma Plugins
recma-mdx-escape-missing-components
– Recma plugin to set the default value () => null
for the Components in MDX in case of missing or not provided so as not to throw an error
recma-mdx-change-props
– Recma plugin to change the props
parameter into the _props
in the function _createMdxContent(props) {/* */}
in the compiled source in order to be able to use {props.foo}
like expressions. It is useful for the next-mdx-remote
or next-mdx-remote-client
users in nextjs
applications.
License
MIT License © ipikuka