Huge News!Announcing our $40M Series B led by Abstract Ventures.Learn More
Socket
Sign inDemoInstall
Socket

writr

Package Overview
Dependencies
Maintainers
0
Versions
88
Alerts
File Explorer

Advanced tools

Socket logo

Install Socket

Detect and block malicious and high-risk dependencies

Install

writr

Markdown Rendering Simplified

  • 4.1.4
  • latest
  • Source
  • npm
  • Socket score

Version published
Weekly downloads
367
increased by1.1%
Maintainers
0
Weekly downloads
 
Created
Source

Writr

Markdown Rendering Simplified

tests GitHub license codecov npm npm

Table of Contents

Features

  • Removes the remark / unified complexity and easy to use.
  • Built in caching 💥 making it render very fast when there isnt a change
  • Frontmatter support built in by default. :tada:
  • Easily Render to React or HTML.
  • Generates a Table of Contents for your markdown files (remark-toc).
  • Slug generation for your markdown files (rehype-slug).
  • Code Highlighting (rehype-highlight).
  • Math Support (rehype-katex).
  • Markdown to HTML (rehype-stringify).
  • Github Flavor Markdown (remark-gfm).
  • Emoji Support (remark-emoji).
  • MDX Support (remark-mdx).

ESM and Node Version Support

This package is ESM only and tested on the current lts version and its previous. Please don't open issues for questions regarding CommonJS / ESM or previous Nodejs versions. To learn more about using ESM please read this from sindresorhus: https://gist.github.com/sindresorhus/a39789f98801d908bbc7ff3ecc99d99c

Getting Started

> npm install writr

Then you can use it like this:

import { Writr } from 'writr';

const writr = new Writr(`# Hello World ::-):\n\n This is a test.`);

const html = await writr.render(); // <h1>Hello World 🙂</h1><p>This is a test.</p>

Its just that simple. Want to add some options? No problem.

import { Writr } from 'writr';
const writr = new Writr(`# Hello World ::-):\n\n This is a test.`);
const options  = {
	emoji: false
}
const html = await writr.render(options); // <h1>Hello World ::-):</h1><p>This is a test.</p>

An example passing in the options also via the constructor:

import { Writr, WritrOptions } from 'writr';
const writrOptions = {
  renderOptions: {
    emoji: true,
    toc: true,
    slug: true,
    highlight: true,
    gfm: true,
    math: true,
    mdx: true,
    caching: true,
  }
};
const writr = new Writr(`# Hello World ::-):\n\n This is a test.`, writrOptions);
const html = await writr.render(options); // <h1>Hello World ::-):</h1><p>This is a test.</p>

API

new Writr(arg?: string | WritrOptions, options?: WritrOptions)

By default the constructor takes in a markdown string or WritrOptions in the first parameter. You can also send in nothing and set the markdown via .content property. If you want to pass in your markdown and options you can easily do this with new Writr('## Your Markdown Here', { ...options here}). You can access the WritrOptions from the instance of Writr. Here is an example of WritrOptions.

import { Writr, WritrOptions } from 'writr';
const writrOptions = {
  renderOptions: {
    emoji: true,
    toc: true,
    slug: true,
    highlight: true,
    gfm: true,
    math: true,
    mdx: true,
    caching: true,
  }
};
const writr = new Writr(writrOptions);

.content

Setting the markdown content for the instance of Writr. This can be set via the constructor or directly on the instance and can even handle frontmatter.


import { Writr } from 'writr';
const writr = new Writr();
writr.content = `---
title: Hello World
---
# Hello World ::-):\n\n This is a test.`;

.body

gets the body of the markdown content. This is the content without the frontmatter.

import { Writr } from 'writr';
const writr = new Writr();
writr.content = `---
title: Hello World
---
# Hello World ::-):\n\n This is a test.`;
console.log(writr.body); // '# Hello World ::-):\n\n This is a test.'

.options

Accessing the default options for this instance of Writr.

.frontmatter

Accessing the frontmatter for this instance of Writr. This is a Record<string, any> and can be set via the .content property.

import { Writr } from 'writr';
const writr = new Writr();
writr.content = `---
title: Hello World
---
# Hello World ::-):\n\n This is a test.`;
console.log(writr.frontmatter); // { title: 'Hello World' }

you can also set the front matter directly like this:

import { Writr } from 'writr';
const writr = new Writr();
writr.frontmatter = { title: 'Hello World' };

.frontMatterRaw

Accessing the raw frontmatter for this instance of Writr. This is a string and can be set via the .content property.

import { Writr } from 'writr';
const writr = new Writr();
writr.content = `---
title: Hello World
---
# Hello World ::-):\n\n This is a test.`;
console.log(writr.frontMatterRaw); // '---\ntitle: Hello World\n---'

.cache

Accessing the cache for this instance of Writr. By default this is an in memory cache and is disabled (set to false) by default. You can enable this by setting caching: true in the RenderOptions of the WritrOptions or when calling render passing the RenderOptions like here:

import { Writr } from 'writr';
const writr = new Writr(`# Hello World ::-):\n\n This is a test.`);
const options  = {
  caching: true
}
const html = await writr.render(options); // <h1>Hello World ::-):</h1><p>This is a test.</p>

.engine

Accessing the underlying engine for this instance of Writr. This is a Processor<Root, Root, Root, undefined, undefined> fro the unified .use() function. You can use this to add additional plugins to the engine.

.render(options?: RenderOptions): Promise<string>

Rendering markdown to HTML. the options are based on RenderOptions. Which you can access from the Writr instance.

import { Writr } from 'writr';
const writr = new Writr(`# Hello World ::-):\n\n This is a test.`);
const html = await writr.render(); // <h1>Hello World 🙂</h1><p>This is a test.</p>

//passing in with render options
const options  = {
  emoji: false
}

const html = await writr.render(options); // <h1>Hello World ::-):</h1><p>This is a test.</p>

.renderSync(options?: RenderOptions): string

Rendering markdown to HTML synchronously. the options are based on RenderOptions. Which you can access from the Writr instance. The parameters are the same as the .render() function.

import { Writr } from 'writr';
const writr = new Writr(`# Hello World ::-):\n\n This is a test.`);
const html = writr.renderSync(); // <h1>Hello World 🙂</h1><p>This is a test.</p>

'.renderReact(options?: RenderOptions, reactOptions?: HTMLReactParserOptions): Promise<React.JSX.Element />'

Rendering markdown to React. The options are based on RenderOptions and now HTMLReactParserOptions from html-react-parser.

import { Writr } from 'writr';
const writr = new Writr(`# Hello World ::-):\n\n This is a test.`);
const reactElement = await writr.renderReact(); // Will return a React.JSX.Element

'.renderReactSync( options?: RenderOptions, reactOptions?: HTMLReactParserOptions): React.JSX.Element'

Rendering markdown to React. The options are based on RenderOptions and now HTMLReactParserOptions from html-react-parser.

import { Writr } from 'writr';
const writr = new Writr(`# Hello World ::-):\n\n This is a test.`);
const reactElement = writr.renderReactSync(); // Will return a React.JSX.Element

.loadFromFile(filePath: string): Promise<void>

Load your markdown content from a file path.

import { Writr } from 'writr';
const writr = new Writr();
await writr.loadFromFile('path/to/file.md');

.loadFromFileSync(filePath: string): void

Load your markdown content from a file path synchronously.

.saveToFile(filePath: string): Promise<void>

Save your markdown and frontmatter (if included) content to a file path.

import { Writr } from 'writr';
const writr = new Writr(`# Hello World ::-):\n\n This is a test.`);
await writr.saveToFile('path/to/file.md');

.saveToFileSync(filePath: string): void

Save your markdown and frontmatter (if included) content to a file path synchronously.

Caching On Render

Caching is built into Writr and is an in-memory cache using CacheableMemory from Cacheable. It is turned off by default and can be enabled by setting caching: true in the RenderOptions of the WritrOptions or when calling render passing the RenderOptions like here:

import { Writr } from 'writr';
const writr = new Writr(`# Hello World ::-):\n\n This is a test.`, { renderOptions: { caching: true } });

or via RenderOptions such as:

import { Writr } from 'writr';
const writr = new Writr(`# Hello World ::-):\n\n This is a test.`);
await writr.render({ caching: true});

If you want to set the caching options for the instance of Writr you can do so like this:

// we will set the lruSize of the cache and the default ttl
import {Writr} from 'writr';
const writr = new Writr(`# Hello World ::-):\n\n This is a test.`, { renderOptions: { caching: true } });
writr.cache.store.lruSize = 100;
writr.cache.store.ttl = '5m'; // setting it to 5 minutes

Code of Conduct and Contributing

Code of Conduct and Contributing guidelines.

License

MIT © Jared Wray

Keywords

FAQs

Package last updated on 30 Oct 2024

Did you know?

Socket

Socket for GitHub automatically highlights issues in each pull request and monitors the health of all your open source dependencies. Discover the contents of your packages and block harmful activity before you install or update your dependencies.

Install

Related posts

SocketSocket SOC 2 Logo

Product

  • Package Alerts
  • Integrations
  • Docs
  • Pricing
  • FAQ
  • Roadmap
  • Changelog

Packages

npm

Stay in touch

Get open source security insights delivered straight into your inbox.


  • Terms
  • Privacy
  • Security

Made with ⚡️ by Socket Inc