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OpenAI rotated macOS signing certificates after a malicious Axios package reached its CI pipeline in a broader software supply chain attack.
remarkable-dev
Advanced tools
Markdown parser, done right. Commonmark support, extensions, syntax plugins, high speed - all in one.
Markdown parser done right. Fast and easy to extend.
node.js:
npm install remarkable --save
bower:
bower install remarkable --save
browser (CDN):
var Remarkable = require('remarkable');
var md = new Remarkable();
console.log(md.render('# Remarkable rulezz!'));
// => <h1>Remarkable rulezz!</h1>
By default remarkable is configured to be similar to GFM, but with HTML disabled. This is easy to change if you prefer to use different settings.
There are two ways to define options.
Define options in the constructor:
// Actual default values
var md = new Remarkable({
html: false, // Enable HTML tags in source
xhtmlOut: false, // Use '/' to close single tags (<br />)
breaks: false, // Convert '\n' in paragraphs into <br>
langPrefix: 'language-', // CSS language prefix for fenced blocks
linkify: false, // Autoconvert URL-like text to links
// Enable some language-neutral replacement + quotes beautification
typographer: false,
// Double + single quotes replacement pairs, when typographer enabled,
// and smartquotes on. Set doubles to '«»' for Russian, '„“' for German.
quotes: '“”‘’',
// Highlighter function. Should return escaped HTML,
// or '' if the source string is not changed
highlight: function (/*str, lang*/) { return ''; }
});
console.log(md.render('# Remarkable rulezz!'));
// => <h1>Remarkable rulezz!</h1>
Or define options via the .set() method:
var Remarkable = require('remarkable');
var md = new Remarkable();
md.set({
html: true,
breaks: true
});
Note: To achieve the best possible performance, don't modify a Remarkable
instance on the fly. If you need multiple configurations it's best to create
multiple instances and initialize each with a configuration that is ideal for
that instance.
Remarkable offers some "presets" as a convenience to quickly enable/disable active syntax rules and options for common use cases.
Enable strict CommonMark mode with the commonmark preset:
var Remarkable = require('remarkable');
var md = new Remarkable('commonmark');
Enable all available rules (but still with default options, if not set):
var Remarkable = require('remarkable');
var md = new Remarkable('full');
// Or with options:
var md = new Remarkable('full', {
html: true,
linkify: true,
typographer: true
});
Apply syntax highlighting to fenced code blocks with the highlight option:
var Remarkable = require('remarkable');
var hljs = require('highlight.js') // https://highlightjs.org/
// Actual default values
var md = new Remarkable({
highlight: function (str, lang) {
if (lang && hljs.getLanguage(lang)) {
try {
return hljs.highlight(lang, str).value;
} catch (err) {}
}
try {
return hljs.highlightAuto(str).value;
} catch (err) {}
return ''; // use external default escaping
}
});
Enabled by default:
Disabled by default:
19^th^H~2~0++inserted text++ (experimental)==marked text== (experimental)* Experimental extensions can be changed later for something like Critic Markup, but you will still be able to use old-style rules via external plugins if you prefer.
var md = new Remarkable();
md.inline.ruler.enable([ 'ins', 'mark' ]);
md.block.ruler.disable([ 'table' ]);
// Enable everything
md = new Remarkable('full', {
html: true,
linkify: true,
typographer: true,
});
Although full-weight typographical replacements are language specific, remarkable
provides coverage for the most common and universal use cases:
var Remarkable = require('remarkable');
var md = new Remarkable({
typographer: true,
quotes: '“”‘’'
});
// Disable rules at all:
md.core.ruler.disable([ 'replacements', 'smartquotes' ]);
// Actual default replacements:
//
// '' → ‘’
// "" → “”. Set '«»' for Russian, '„“' for German, empty to disable
// (c) (C) → ©
// (tm) (TM) → ™
// (r) (R) → ®
// +- → ±
// (p) (P) -> §
// ... → … (also ?.... → ?.., !.... → !..)
// ???????? → ???, !!!!! → !!!, `,,` → `,`
// -- → –, --- → —
//
Of course, you can also add your own rules or replace the defaults with something more advanced or specific to your language.
Easily load plugins with the .use() method:
var md = new Remarkable();
md.use(plugin1)
.use(plugin2, opts)
.use(plugin3);
Big thanks to John MacFarlane for his work on the CommonMark spec and reference implementations. His work saved us a lot of time during this project's development.
Related Links:
Parser consists of several responsibilities chains, filled with rules. You can reconfigure anyone as you wish. Render also can be modified and extended. See source code to understand details. Pay attention to these properties:
Remarkable.core
Remarkable.core.ruler
Remarkable.block
Remarkable.block.ruler
Remarkable.inline
Remarkable.inline.ruler
Remarkable.renderer
Remarkable.renderer.rules
Here is result of CommonMark spec parse at Core i5 2.4 GHz (i5-4258U):
$ benchmark/benchmark.js spec
Selected samples: (1 of 27)
> spec
Sample: spec.txt (110610 bytes)
> commonmark-reference x 40.42 ops/sec ±4.07% (51 runs sampled)
> current x 74.99 ops/sec ±4.69% (67 runs sampled)
> current-commonmark x 93.76 ops/sec ±1.23% (79 runs sampled)
> marked-0.3.2 x 22.92 ops/sec ±0.79% (41 runs sampled)
As you can see, remarkabe doesn't pay with speed for it's flexibility. Because
it's written in monomorphyc style and use JIT inline caches effectively.
FAQs
Markdown parser, done right. Commonmark support, extensions, syntax plugins, high speed - all in one.
We found that remarkable-dev demonstrated a not healthy version release cadence and project activity because the last version was released a year ago. It has 1 open source maintainer collaborating on the project.
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