You can try out the parser here.
run lein with-profile js cljsbuild once
this will create a standalone js/markdown.js
artifact.
A markdown parser that compiles to both Clojure and ClojureScript.
Note: markdown-clj
versions prior to 0.9.68
requires Clojure 1.2+ to run, versions 0.9.68+
require Clojure 1.7.
Markdown-clj can be invoked either by calling md-to-html
or md-to-html-string
functions.
The md-to-html
function accepts an input containing Markdown markup and an output where
the resulting HTML will be written. The input and output parameters will be passed to a reader
and a writer respectively:
(ns foo
(:use markdown.core))
(md-to-html "input.md" "output.html")
(md-to-html (input-stream "input.md") (output-stream "test.txt"))
The md-to-html-string
function accepts a string with markdown content and returns a string with the resulting HTML:
(md-to-html-string "# This is a test\nsome code follows\n```clojure\n(defn foo [])\n```")
<h1> This is a test</h1>some code follows<pre><code class="clojure">(defn foo [])
</code></pre>
Both md-to-html
and md-to-html-string
accept optional parameters:
Specifying :heading-anchors
will create anchors for the heading tags, eg:
(markdown/md-to-html-string "###foo bar BAz" :heading-anchors true)
<h3 id=\"foo_bar_baz\">foo bar BAz</h3>
The code blocks default to a highlight.js compatible format of:
<pre><code class="clojure">some code</code></pre>
Specifying :code-style
will override the default code class formatting for code blocks, eg:
(md-to-html-string "# This is a test\nsome code follows\n```clojure\n(defn foo [])\n```"
:code-style #(str "class=\"brush: " % "\""))
<h1> This is a test</h1>some code follows<pre><code class="brush: clojure">
(defn foo [])
</code></pre>
Specifying :pre-style
will override the default pre class formatting.
(md-to-html-string "# This is a test\nsome code follows\n```clojure\n(defn foo [])\n```"
:pre-style #(str "class=\"brush: " % "\""))
<h1> This is a test</h1>some code follows<pre class="brush: clojure"><code>
(defn foo [])
</code></pre>
The parser defaults to using inline reference for performance reasons, to enable reference style links pass in the :reference-links? true
option:
(md-to-html-string
"This is [an example][id] reference-style link.
[id]: http://example.com/ 'Optional Title Here'"
:reference-links? true)
To enable footnotes, pass the :footnotes? true
option:
(md-to-html-string
"Footnotes will appear automatically numbered with a link to the footnote at bottom of the page [^footnote1].
[^footnote1]: The footnote will contain a back link to to the referring text."
:footnotes? true)
The metadata encoded using the syntax described by MultiMarkdown can be optionally extracted from the document.
The md-to-html
function will attempt to parse the metadata when passed the :parse-meta? true
option and return it as its output.
Additionally, md-to-html-string-with-meta
function can be used to parse string input. The function returns a map with two keys, :html
containing the parsed HTML, and :metadata
containing a map with the metadata included at the top of the document.
To parse only the metadata, use md-to-meta
. This function returns a metadata map for the given input, but does not otherwise parse the Markdown or return HTML. It can run more quickly than either of the functions that return HTML and can be useful in scenarios where the metadata can be useful by itself.
The value of each key in the metadata map will be a list of either 0, 1 or many strings. If a metadata value ends in two spaces then the string will end in a newline. If a line does not contain a header and has at least 4 spaces in front of it then it will be considered to be a member of the last key that was found.
(let [input (new StringReader text)
output (new StringWriter)
metadata (md-to-html input output :parse-meta? true)
html (.toString output)]
{:metadata metadata :html html})
(md-to-html-string-with-meta
"Author: Rexella van Imp
Kim Jong-un
Date: October 31, 2015
# Hello!")
{:metadata {:author ["Rexella van Imp"
"Kim Jong-un"],
:date ["October 31, 2015"]},
:html "<h1>Hello!</h1>"}
If you pass :inhibit-separator "some-string"
, then any text within occurrences of some-string
will be output verbatim, eg:
(md-to-html-string "For all %$a_0, a_1, ..., a_n in R$% there is _at least one_ %$b_n in R$% such that..."
:inhibit-separator "%")
For all $a_0, a_1, ..., a_n in R$ there is <i>at least one</i> $b_n in R$ such that...
This may be useful to use markdown-clj
along with other parsers of languages with conflicting syntax (e.g. asciimath2jax).
If you need to output the separator itself, enter it twice without any text inside. Eg:
(md-to-html-string "This is one of those 20%% vs 80%% cases."
:inhibit-separator "%")
This is one of those 20% vs 80% cases.
Some caveats:
-
Like other tags, this only works within a single line.
-
If you remove the default transformers with
:replacement-transformers
(which see below), inhibiting will stop working. -
Currently, dashes (
--
and---
) can't be suppressed this way.
Additional transformers can be specified using the :custom-transformers
key.
A transformer function must accept two arguments.
First argument is the string representing the current line and the second is the map representing the current state.
The default state keys are:
:code
- inside a code section:codeblock
- inside a code block:eof
- end of file:heading
- in a heading:hr
- in a horizontal line:lists
- inside a list:blockquote
- inside a blockquote:paragraph
- in a paragraph:last-line-empty?
- was last line an empty line?
For example, if we wanted to add a transformer that would capitalize all text we could do the following:
(defn capitalize [text state]
[(.toUpperCase text) state])
(markdown/md-to-html-string "#foo" :custom-transformers [capitalize])
<H1>FOO</H1>
Alternatively, you could provide a custom set of transformers to replace the default transformers using the :replacement-transformers
key.
(markdown/md-to-html-string "#foo" :replacement-transformers [capitalize])
This can also be used to add preprocessor transformers. For example, if we wanted to sanitize any image links and escape HTML we could do the following:
(use 'markdown.transformers 'markdown.core)
(defn escape-images [text state]
[(clojure.string/replace text #"(!\[.*?\]\()(.+?)(\))" "") state])
(defn escape-html
"Change special characters into HTML character entities."
[text state]
[(if-not (or (:code state) (:codeblock state))
(clojure.string/escape
text
{\& "&"
\< "<"
\> ">"
\" """
\' "'"})
text) state])
(markdown/md-to-html-string
"<h1>escaped</h1>foo ![Alt text](/path/to/img.jpg \"Optional Title\") bar [text](http://test)"
:replacement-transformers (into [escape-images escape-html] transformer-vector))
"<p><h1>escaped</h1>foo bar <a href='http://test'>text</a></p>"
It's possible to pass a :codeblock-callback
function to the parser that will
postprocess the code as follows:
You can also pass :codeblock-no-escape? true
to disable code escaping.
(markdown/md-to-html-string "```python\ndef f(x):\n return x * 2\n```"
:codeblock-no-escape? true
:codeblock-callback (fn
[code language]
(clygments/highlight code language :html)))
The ClojureScript portion works the same as above except that the entry function is called md->html
. It accepts
a string followed by the options as its input, and returns the resulting HTML string:
(ns myscript
(:require [markdown.core :refer [md->html]]))
(.log js/console
(md->html "##This is a heading\nwith a paragraph following it"))
(.log js/console
(md->html "# This is a test\nsome code follows\n```clojure\n(defn foo [])\n```"
:code-style #(str "class=\"" % "\"")))
(md->html-with-meta "# This is a test\nsome code follows\n```clojure\n(defn foo [])\n```")
console.log(markdown.core.mdToHtml("##This is a heading\nwith a paragraph following it"));
// With keyword arguments
console.log(markdown.core.mdToHtml("##This is a heading\nwith a paragraph following it", "heading-anchors", true));
Control characters can be escaped using \
\\ backslash
\` backtick
\* asterisk
\_ underscore
\{ curly braces
\}
\[ square brackets
\]
\( parentheses
\)
\# hash mark
\+ plus sign
\- minus sign (hyphen)
\. dot
\! exclamation mark
\^ caret / circumflex accent
Blockquote, Strong, Bold, Bold-Italic, Emphasis, Italics, Heading, Line, Linebreak, Paragraph, Strikethrough
This is a shortcut style for creating “automatic” links for URLs and email addresses:
<http://example.com/>
will be turned this into:
<a href="http://example.com/">http://example.com/</a>
Automatic links for email addresses work similarly, except that they are hex encoded:
will be turned into:
<a href=\"address@example.com\">address@example.com</a>
Code Block, Indented Code, Inline Code
the number of hashes indicates the level of the heading
# Heading
##Sub-heading
### Sub-sub-heading
headings can also be defined using =
and -
for h1
and h2
respectively
Heading 1
=========
Heading 2
---------
***
* * *
*****
- - -
______
If a line ends with two or more spaces a <br />
tag will be inserted at the end.
*foo*
_foo_
**foo**
__foo__
***bold italic***
>
prefixes regular blockquote paragraphs. >-
prefixes a
blockquote footer that can be used for author attribution.
>This is a blockquote
with some content
>this is another blockquote
> Everyone thinks of changing the world,
but no one thinks of changing himself.
>- Leo Tolstoy
This is a paragraph, it's
split into separate lines.
This is another paragraph.
indenting an item makes it into a sublist of the item above it, ordered and unordered lists can be nested within one another. List items can be split over multiple lines.
* Foo
* Bar
* Baz
* foo
* bar
* baz
1. foo
2. bar
more content
## subheading
***
**strong text** in the list
* fuzz
* blah
* blue
* brass
1. Foo
2. Bar
3. Baz
Any special characters in code will be escaped with their corresponding HTML codes.
Here's some code `x + y = z` that's inlined.
Using three backquotes indicates a start of a code block, the next three backquotes ends the code block section. Optionally, the language name can be put after the backquotes to produce a tag compatible with highlight.js, eg:
```clojure
(defn foo [bar] "baz")
```
indenting by at least 4 spaces creates a code block
some
code
here
note: XML is escaped in code sections
~~foo~~
a^2 + b^2 = c^2
[github](http://github.com)
This is [an example][id] reference-style link.
[id]: http://example.com/ "Optional Title Here"
note: reference links require the :reference-links?
option to be set to true
"Footnotes will appear automatically numbered with a link to the footnote at bottom of the page [^footnote1].
[^footnote1]: The footnote will contain a back link to to the referring text."
note: to enable footnotes, the :footnotes?
option must be set to true.
![Alt text](http://server/path/to/img.jpg)
![Alt text](/path/to/img.jpg "Optional Title")
This is ![an example][id] reference-style image descriptor.
[id]: http://example.com/ "Optional Title Here"
note: reference links require the :reference-links?
option to be set to true
[![Continuous Integration status](https://secure.travis-ci.org/yogthos/markdown-clj.png)](http://travis-ci.org/yogthos/markdown-clj)
You can create tables by assembling a list of words and dividing them with hyphens - (for the first row), and then separating each column with a pipe |:
| First Header | Second Header |
| ------------- | ------------- |
| Content Cell | Content Cell |
| Content Cell | Content Cell |
By including colons : within the header row, you can define text to be left-aligned, right-aligned, or center-aligned:
| Left-Aligned | Center Aligned | Right Aligned |
| :------------ | :---------------: | ------------: |
| col 3 is | some wordy text | $1600 |
| col 2 is | centered | $12 |
| zebra stripes | are neat | $1 |
A colon on the left-most side indicates a left-aligned column; a colon on the right-most side indicates a right-aligned column; a colon on both sides indicates a center-aligned column.
The parser reads the content line by line, this means that tag content is not allowed to span multiple lines.
Copyright © 2015 Dmitri Sotnikov
Distributed under the Eclipse Public License, the same as Clojure.