Markdown is a great format for representing an application's internal data structures for debugging and diagnostic purposes. It is a flexible format that is readable in its raw form yet capable of being transformed into HTML for documentation or reporting.
MarkdownLog can produce all features described in John Gruber's original spec from common .NET types.
A table can be built from a List of objects:
var data = new[]
{
new { Year = 1991, Album = "Out of Time", Songs = 11, Rating = "* * * *" },
new { Year = 1992, Album = "Automatic for the People", Songs = 12, Rating = "* * * * *" },
new { Year = 1994, Album = "Monster", Songs = 12, Rating = "* * *" }
};
Console.Write(data.ToMarkdownTable());
Produces:
Year | Album | Songs | Rating ----:| ------------------------ | -----:| --------- 1991 | Out of Time | 11 | * * * * 1992 | Automatic for the People | 12 | * * * * * 1994 | Monster | 12 | * * *
Once passed through a GitHub-flavoured parser, you get a HTML table, complete with headings and alignments:
Year | Album | Songs | Rating
----:| ------------------------ | -----:| ---------
1991 | Out of Time | 11 | * * * *
1992 | Automatic for the People | 12 | * * * * *
1994 | Monster | 12 | * * *
A collection can be output as a numbered list:
var planets = new[] { "Mercury", "Venus", "Earth", "Mars", "Jupiter", "Saturn", "Uranus", "Neptune" };
Console.Write(planets.ToMarkdownNumberedList());
Produces:
1. Mercury 2. Venus 3. Earth 4. Mars 5. Jupiter 6. Saturn 7. Uranus 8. Neptune
When passed through a Markdown parser, this becomes:
- Mercury
- Venus
- Earth
- Mars
- Jupiter
- Saturn
- Uranus
- Neptune
Instead of numbers, you can use bullets:
var beatles = new[] { "John", "Paul", "Ringo", "George" };
Console.Write(beatles.ToMarkdownBulettedList());
Produces:
* John * Paul * Ringo * George
And is parsed to:
- John
- Paul
- Ringo
- George
A barchart can be produced from a collection of KeyValue or Tuple objects
var worldCup = new Dictionary<string, int>
{
{ "Brazil", 5 },
{ "Italy", 4 },
{ "Germany", 4 },
{ "Argentina", 2 },
{ "Uruguay", 2 },
{ "France", 1 },
{ "Spain", 1 },
{ "England", 1 }
};
Console.Write(worldCup.ToMarkdownBarChart());
Produces:
Brazil |##### 5 Italy |#### 4 Germany |#### 4 Argentina |## 2 Uruguay |## 2 France |# 1 Spain |# 1 England |# 1 ------
Bar charts are not supported by standard Markdown. When a barchart is passed through a Markdown parser, it is rendered as a code block that retains its structure.
A bar chart can be produced from floating point and negative numbers and scaling can be applied as desired:
const int valueCount = 20;
var chart = new BarChart
{
ScaleAlways = true,
MaximumChartWidth = 40,
DataPoints = from i in Enumerable.Range(0, valueCount)
let rad = (i * 2.0 * Math.PI) / valueCount
select new BarChartDataPoint
{
CategoryName = string.Format("Cos({0:0.0})", rad),
Value = Math.Cos(rad)
}
};
Produces:
Cos(0.0) |#################### 1 Cos(0.3) |################### 0.95 Cos(0.6) |################ 0.81 Cos(0.9) |############ 0.59 Cos(1.3) |###### 0.31 Cos(1.6) | 0 Cos(1.9) ######| -0.31 Cos(2.2) ############| -0.59 Cos(2.5) ################| -0.81 Cos(2.8) ###################| -0.95 Cos(3.1) ####################| -1 Cos(3.5) ###################| -0.95 Cos(3.8) ################| -0.81 Cos(4.1) ############| -0.59 Cos(4.4) ######| -0.31 Cos(4.7) | 0 Cos(5.0) |###### 0.31 Cos(5.3) |############ 0.59 Cos(5.7) |################ 0.81 Cos(6.0) |################### 0.95 -----------------------------------------
Strings can be written as a word-wrapped paragraph:
var text = "Lolita, light of my life, fire of my loins. My sin, my soul. Lo-lee-ta: the tip of the tongue taking a trip of three steps down the palate to tap, at three, on the teeth. Lo. Lee. Ta.";
Console.Write(text.ToMarkdownParagraph());
Produces:
Lolita, light of my life, fire of my loins. My sin, my soul. Lo-lee-ta: the tip of the tongue taking a trip of three steps down the palate to tap, at three, on the teeth. Lo. Lee. Ta.
After parsing, this becomes:
Lolita, light of my life, fire of my loins. My sin, my soul. Lo-lee-ta: the tip of the tongue taking a trip of three steps down the palate to tap, at three, on the teeth. Lo. Lee. Ta.
MarkdownLog was originally developed by BlackJet Software to produce a report of performance test results for an iOS application. It is maintained by Wheelies