- Dependency
- Usage
- Details
Earmark.as_ast/2
Earmark.as_html/2
Earmark.Transform.transform/2
- Contributing
- Author
{ :earmark, "> x.y.z" }
Earmark now exposes a well-defined and stable Abstract Syntax Tree
WARNING: This is just a proxy towards EarmarkParser.as_ast
and is deprecated, it will be removed in version 1.5!
Replace your calls to Earmark.as_ast
with EarmarkParse.as_ast
as soon as possible.
N.B. If all you use is Earmark.as_ast
consider only using EarmarkParser
.
The function is described below and the other two API functions as_html
and as_html!
are now based upon
the structure of the result of as_ast
.
{:ok, ast, []} = EarmarkParser.as_ast(markdown)
{:ok, ast, deprecation_messages} = EarmarkParser.as_ast(markdown)
{:error, ast, error_messages} = EarmarkParser.as_ast(markdown)
{:ok, html_doc, []} = Earmark.as_html(markdown)
{:ok, html_doc, deprecation_messages} = Earmark.as_html(markdown)
{:error, html_doc, error_messages} = Earmark.as_html(markdown)
html_doc = Earmark.as_html!(markdown, options)
Formats the error_messages returned by as_html
and adds the filename to each.
Then prints them to stderr and just returns the html_doc
Options can be passed into as_ast/2
as well as as_html/2
or as_html!/2
according to the documentation.
{status, html_doc, errors} = Earmark.as_html(markdown, options)
html_doc = Earmark.as_html!(markdown, options)
{status, ast, errors} = EarmarkParser.as_ast(markdown, options)
$ mix escript.build
$ ./earmark file.md
Some options defined in the Earmark.Options
struct can be specified as command line switches.
Use
$ ./earmark --help
to find out more, but here is a short example
$ ./earmark --smartypants false --code-class-prefix "a- b-" file.md
will call
Earmark.as_html!( ..., %Earmark.Options{smartypants: false, code_class_prefix: "a- b-"})
Standard Gruber markdown.
GFM is supported by default, however as GFM is a moving target and all GFM extension do not make sense in a general context, Earmark does not support all of it, here is a list of what is supported:
iex(1)> Earmark.as_html! ["~~hello~~"]
"<p>\n <del>\nhello </del>\n</p>\n"
All backquoted or fenced code blocks with a language string are rendered with the given language as a class attribute of the code tag.
For example:
iex(2)> [
...(2)> "```elixir",
...(2)> " @tag :hello",
...(2)> "```"
...(2)> ] |> Earmark.as_html!()
"<pre><code class=\"elixir\"> @tag :hello</code></pre>\n"
will be rendered as shown in the doctest above.
If you want to integrate with a syntax highlighter with different conventions you can add more classes by specifying prefixes that will be put before the language string.
Prism.js for example needs a class language-elixir
. In order to achieve that goal you can add language-
as a code_class_prefix
to Earmark.Options
.
In the following example we want more than one additional class, so we add more prefixes.
Earmark.as_html!(..., %Earmark.Options{code_class_prefix: "lang- language-"})
which is rendering
<pre><code class="elixir lang-elixir language-elixir">...
As for all other options code_class_prefix
can be passed into the earmark
executable as follows:
earmark --code-class-prefix "language- lang-" ...
Are supported as long as they are preceded by an empty line.
State | Abbrev | Capital
----: | :----: | -------
Texas | TX | Austin
Maine | ME | Augusta
Tables may have leading and trailing vertical bars on each line
| State | Abbrev | Capital |
| ----: | :----: | ------- |
| Texas | TX | Austin |
| Maine | ME | Augusta |
Tables need not have headers, in which case all column alignments default to left.
| Texas | TX | Austin |
| Maine | ME | Augusta |
Currently we assume there are always spaces around interior vertical unless there are exterior bars.
However in order to be more GFM compatible the gfm_tables: true
option
can be used to interpret only interior vertical bars as a table if a seperation
line is given, therefor
Language|Rating
--------|------
Elixir | awesome
is a table (iff gfm_tables: true
) while
Language|Rating
Elixir | awesome
never is.
HTML is not parsed recursively or detected in all conditons right now, though GFM compliance is a goal.
But for now the following holds:
A HTML Block defined by a tag starting a line and the same tag starting a different line is parsed as one HTML AST node, marked with %{verbatim: true}
E.g.
iex(3)> lines = [ "<div><span>", "some</span><text>", "</div>more text" ]
...(3)> {:ok, ast, _} = EarmarkParser.as_ast(lines)
{:ok, [{"div", [], ["<span>", "some</span><text>"], %{verbatim: true}}, "more text"], []}
And a line starting with an opening tag and ending with the corresponding closing tag is parsed in similar fashion
iex(4)> EarmarkParser.as_ast(["<span class=\"superspan\">spaniel</span>"])
{:ok, [{"span", [{"class", "superspan"}], ["spaniel"], %{verbatim: true}}], []}
What is HTML?
We differ from strict GFM by allowing all tags not only HTML5 tagsn this holds for oneliners....
iex(5)> {:ok, ast, []} = EarmarkParser.as_ast(["<stupid />", "<not>better</not>"])
...(5)> ast
[
{"stupid", [], [], %{verbatim: true}},
{"not", [], ["better"], %{verbatim: true}}]
and for multiline blocks
iex(6)> {:ok, ast, []} = EarmarkParser.as_ast([ "<hello>", "world", "</hello>"])
...(6)> ast
[{"hello", [], ["world"], %{verbatim: true}}]
Are recoginized if they start a line (after ws and are parsed until the next -->
is found
all text after the next '-->' is ignored
E.g.
iex(7)> EarmarkParser.as_ast(" <!-- Comment\ncomment line\ncomment --> text -->\nafter")
{:ok, [{:comment, [], [" Comment", "comment line", "comment "], %{comment: true}}, {"p", [], ["after"], %{}}], []}
HTML attributes can be added to any block-level element. We use
the Kramdown syntax: add the line {:
attrs }
following the block.
attrs can be one or more of:
.className
#id
- name=value, name="value", or name='value'
For example:
# Warning
{: .red}
Do not turn off the engine
if you are at altitude.
{: .boxed #warning spellcheck="true"}
It is possible to add IAL attributes to generated links or images in the following format.
iex(8)> markdown = "[link](url) {: .classy}"
...(8)> Earmark.as_html(markdown)
{ :ok, "<p>\n<a class=\"classy\" href=\"url\">link</a></p>\n", []}
For both cases, malformed attributes are ignored and warnings are issued.
iex(9)> [ "Some text", "{:hello}" ] |> Enum.join("\n") |> Earmark.as_html()
{:error, "<p>\nSome text</p>\n", [{:warning, 2,"Illegal attributes [\"hello\"] ignored in IAL"}]}
It is possible to escape the IAL in both forms if necessary
iex(10)> markdown = "[link](url)\\{: .classy}"
...(10)> Earmark.as_html(markdown)
{:ok, "<p>\n<a href=\"url\">link</a>{: .classy}</p>\n", []}
This of course is not necessary in code blocks or text lines containing an IAL-like string, as in the following example
iex(11)> markdown = "hello {:world}"
...(11)> Earmark.as_html!(markdown)
"<p>\nhello {:world}</p>\n"
-
Block-level HTML is correctly handled only if each HTML tag appears on its own line. So
<div> <div> hello </div> </div>
will work. However. the following won't
<div>
hello</div>
-
John Gruber's tests contain an ambiguity when it comes to lines that might be the start of a list inside paragraphs.
One test says that
This is the text * of a paragraph that I wrote
is a single paragraph. The "*" is not significant. However, another test has
* A list item * an another
and expects this to be a nested list. But, in reality, the second could just be the continuation of a paragraph.
I've chosen always to use the second interpretation—a line that looks like a list item will always be a list item.
-
Rendering of block and inline elements.
Block or void HTML elements that are at the absolute beginning of a line end the preceding paragraph.
Thusly
mypara <hr />
Becomes
<p>mypara</p> <hr />
While
mypara <hr />
will be transformed into
<p>mypara <hr /></p>
By default, that is if the timeout
option is not set Earmark uses parallel mapping as implemented in Earmark.pmap/2
,
which uses Task.await
with its default timeout of 5000ms.
In rare cases that might not be enough.
By indicating a longer timeout
option in milliseconds Earmark will use parallel mapping as implemented in Earmark.pmap/3
,
which will pass timeout
to Task.await
.
In both cases one can override the mapper function with either the mapper
option (used if and only if timeout
is nil) or the
mapper_with_timeout
function (used otherwise).
For the escript only the timeout
command line argument can be used.
Please be aware that Markdown is not a secure format. It produces
HTML from Markdown and HTML. It is your job to sanitize and or
filter the output of Earmark.as_html
if you cannot trust the input
and are to serve the produced HTML on the Web.
as_ast
is a compatibility function to call EarmarkParser.as_ast
It is deprecated and will be removed in 1.5!
Options are passes like to as_html
, some do not have an effect though (e.g. smartypants
) as formatting and escaping is not done
for the AST.
iex(12)> markdown = "```elixir\nIO.puts 42\n```"
...(12)> {:ok, ast, []} = EarmarkParser.as_ast(markdown, code_class_prefix: "lang-")
...(12)> ast
[{"pre", [], [{"code", [{"class", "elixir lang-elixir"}], ["IO.puts 42"], %{}}], %{}}]
Given a markdown document (as either a list of lines or
a string containing newlines), returns a tuple containing either
{:ok, html_doc, error_messages}
, or {:error, html_doc, error_messages}
Where html_doc
is an HTML representation of the markdown document and
error_messages
is a list of tuples with the following elements
severity
e.g.:error
,:warning
or:deprecation
- line number in input where the error occurred
- description of the error
options
can be an %Earmark.Options{}
structure, or can be passed in as a Keyword
argument (with legal keys for %Earmark.Options
-
renderer
: ModuleNameThe module used to render the final document. Defaults to
Earmark.HtmlRenderer
-
gfm
: booleanTrue by default. Turns on the supported Github Flavored Markdown extensions
-
breaks
: booleanOnly applicable if
gfm
is enabled. Makes all line breaks significant (so every line in the input is a new line in the output. -
code_class_prefix
: binaryCode blocks will be rendered with prefixed class names, which might be necessary for usage with 3rd party libraries.
Earmark.as_html("```elixir\nCode\n```", code_class_prefix: "my_prefix_") {:ok, "<pre><code class=\"elixir my_prefix_elixir\">Code\```</code></pre>\n", []}
-
smartypants
: booleanTurns on smartypants processing, so quotes become curly, two or three hyphens become en and em dashes, and so on. True by default.
So, to format the document in
original
and disable smartypants, you'd callalias Earmark.Options Earmark.as_html(original, %Options{smartypants: false})
-
pure_links
: booleanPure links of the form
~r{\bhttps?://\S+\b}
are rendered as links from now on. However, by setting thepure_links
option tofalse
this can be disabled and pre 1.4 behavior can be used.
Needs update for 1.4.7
Pull Requests are happily accepted.
Please be aware of one caveat when correcting/improving README.md
.
The README.md
is generated by the mix task readme
from README.template
and
docstrings by means of %moduledoc
or %functiondoc
directives.
Please identify the origin of the generated text you want to correct and then apply your changes there.
Then issue the mix task readme
, this is important to have a correctly updated README.md
after the merge of
your PR.
Thank you all who have already helped with Earmark, your names are duely noted in CHANGELOG.md.
Copyright © 2014,5,6,7,8 Dave Thomas, The Pragmatic Programmers @/+pragdave, dave@pragprog.com
Same as Elixir, which is Apache License v2.0. Please refer to LICENSE for details.
SPDX-License-Identifier: Apache-2.0