There are many web components these days to render Markdown to HTML. Here are a few:
<zero-md>
<marked-element>
- …and I’m sure many others
However, all render the resulting Markdown in Shadow DOM, making it painful to style like a regular part of the page, which my use cases required.
<zero-md>
supports opt-in light DOM rendering, but it's tedious to add an extra attribute per element.
I also wanted a few more things existing web components didn't have. Plus, making stuff is fun. 😅
So I made my own. Feel free to use it. Or don't. 🤷🏽♀️ I primarily wrote it to scratch my own itch anyway! 😊
- Zero dependencies (except marked, obvs, which is only loaded if a
<md-block>
or<md-span>
element is actually used on the page) - Styleable with regular selectors, just like the rest of the page
- Load external Markdown files or render inline content
- Customize start heading level (e.g. so that
# Foo
becomes a<h3>
and not an<h1>
) - Also comes with
<md-span>
, for lightweight inline markdown - Prism is automatically used for syntax highlighting, if included (but can be included dynamically too)
Via HTML:
<script type="module" src="https://md-block.verou.me/md-block.js"></script>
In JS:
import {MarkdownBlock, MarkdownSpan, MarkdownElement} from "https://md-block.verou.me/md-block.js";
Of course you can also use npm if that's your jam:
npm install md-block
import {MarkdownBlock, MarkdownSpan, MarkdownElement} from "md-block";
Importing the module in any of these ways also registers two custom elements: <md-block>
for block level content and <md-span>
for inline content.
If you additionally want to use other tag names, you can.
Attribute | Property | Type | Description |
---|---|---|---|
- | mdContent |
String | Actual Markdown code initially read from the HTML or fetched from src . Can also be set to render new Markdown code |
rendered |
rendered (Read-only) |
String | Added to the element after Markdown has been rendered. Thus, you can use md-block:not([rendered]) in your CSS to style the element differently before rendering and minimize FOUC |
untrusted |
untrusted (Read-only) |
Boolean | Sanitize contents. Read more |
Attribute | Property | Type | Description |
---|---|---|---|
src |
src |
String or URL | External Markdown file to load. If specified, original element content will be rendered and displayed while the file is loading (or if it fails to load). |
hmin |
hmin |
Number | Minimum heading level |
hlinks |
hlinks |
String | Whether to linkify headings. If present with no value, the entire heading text becomes the link, otherwise the symbol provided becomes the link. Note that this is only about displaying links, headings will get ids anyway |
(No attributes or properties at the moment)
While you can provide initial Markdown inline, after the element is rendered, changing its contents will not cause it to re-render, since its contents are now the parsed HTML (this is a disadvantage of this approach, compared to the Shadow DOM ones).
If you need to update its contents dynamically, use element.mdContent
.
You can also read that property to get access to the Markdown code that was last rendered, whether it came from the element's contents,
or fetched from a URL.
Note that setting mdContent
will override any remote URL provided via src
.
md-block adds a rendered
attribute to elements whose Markdown has been rendered.
This allows you to style unrendered content however you please, by using a md-block:not([rendered])
CSS selector.
- You could hide it entirely via
md-block:not([rendered]) { display: none }
- You could apply
white-space: pre-line
to it so that at least paragraphs are not all smushed together - …or you could do something fancier.
I'd recommend you consider how it fails before deciding what to do. It's the Internet, 💩 happens. Do you want your content to not be visible if a script doesn't load?
When loading remote content, there are two renders: First, any fallback content renders, then the remote content.
Because we often want to style the element differently until the remote content renders, the rendered
attribute has keyword values, depending on what happened:
fallback
when only fallback content has been renderedremote
if remote content has been renderedcontent
if element content has been rendered and there is nosrc
attribute presentproperty
if content has been rendered by settingthis.mdContent
directly
By default, md-block registers two custom elements: <md-block>
for block-level content and <md-span>
for inline content.
You can use different names, but since each class can only be associated with one tag name, you need to create your own subclass:
import {MarkdownBlock, MarkdownSpan, MarkdownElement} from "https://md-block.verou.me/md-block.js"
customElements.define("md-content", class MarkdownContent extends MarkdownBlock {});
By default md-block does not santize the Markdown you provide, since in most use cases the content is trusted.
If you need to render untrusted content use the untrusted
attribute, which will dynamically load DOMPurify and use it.
This is not dynamic, you need to add it in your actual markup (or before the element is connected, if dynamically generated).
The reason is that it's unsafe to add it later: if the content has been already rendered once and treated as safe, it's pointless to sanitize it afterwards and re-render.
Important: Do not rely on the untrusted
attribute for inline Markdown! This is mainly useful for content linked via the src
attribute.
If there is potentially malicious code in the inline Markdown you are using, it will be picked up by the browser before md-block has the chance to do anything about it.
Instead, use a regular <md-block>
element, and MarkdownElement.sanitize()
for the untrusted content.
By default, md-block
dynamically loads marked and DOMPurify from a CDN. If you want to use different versions, there is a number of ways:
Probably the easiest is if you use the versions of these libraries that create a global, md-block will use that instead of loading them.
The URLs md-block uses to fetch these libraries reside on a separate URLs
export. So theoretically you could do something like this:
import {URLs as MdBlockURLS, MarkdownBlock, MarkdownSpan, MarkdownElement} from "./md-block.js";
MdBlockURLS.marked = "./marked.js";
MdBlockURLS.DOMPurify = "./purify.es.js";
But it's uncertain whether the new URLs will be picked up before the default ones load. In my tests that seems to work for DOMPurify but not marked.
These libraries are loaded when the element is connected, so you could add the <md-block>
elements dynamically to the document after you set the URLs, but that's a bit of a hassle.
You can also use the URLs
export to import these modules yourself, in case you want to add plugins or whatnot.
By default md-block
will use Prism if it's available, but won’t load it dynamically if it isn't.
You could tell it to load Prism dynamically, only if there are actual code elements, by providing a Prism URL:
import {URLs as MdBlockURLS, MarkdownBlock, MarkdownSpan, MarkdownElement} from "./md-block.js";
MdBlockURLS.Prism = "./prism.js";
// You can optionally also provide a Prism CSS URL:
MdBlockURLS.PrismCSS = "./prism.css";
Did you know you can actualy use <md-block>
inside your Markdown and it works correctly?
For a cool example of this, check out the Stretchy docs
Right now, this element uses GFM as a Markdown flavor and doesn’t expose a whole lot of options (besides hmin
and hlinks
).
That’s because I originally wrote it for my own needs, and that’s what I needed.
I’m not opposed to adding more customizability, if there are actual use cases that require it.
If you have such use cases, please open an issue.