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Compile markdown to HTML with remark.
:warning: This package essentially packs
remark-rehypeandrehype-stringify, and although it does support some customisation, it isn’t very pluggable. It’s probably smarter to useremark-rehypedirectly and benefit from the rehype ecosystem.
npm:
npm install remark-html
Say we have the following file, example.md:
# Hello & World
> A block quote.
* Some _emphasis_, **importance**, and `code`.
And our script, example.js, looks as follows:
var fs = require('fs')
var unified = require('unified')
var markdown = require('remark-parse')
var html = require('remark-html')
unified()
.use(markdown)
.use(html)
.process(fs.readFileSync('example.md'), function(err, file) {
if (err) throw err
console.log(String(file))
})
Now, running node example yields:
<h1>Hello & World</h1>
<blockquote>
<p>A block quote.</p>
</blockquote>
<ul>
<li>Some <em>emphasis</em>, <strong>importance</strong>, and <code>code</code>.</li>
</ul>
remark.use(html[, options])optionsAll options except for sanitize are passed to
hast-util-to-html.
options.sanitizeHow to sanitise the output (Object or boolean, default: false).
If false, no HTML is sanitized, and dangerous HTML is left unescaped.
If true or an object, sanitation is done by hast-util-sanitize
If an object is passed in, it’s given as a schema to hast-util-sanitize.
If true, input is sanitised according to GitHub’s sanitation rules.
Note that raw HTML in markdown cannot be sanitized, so it’s removed. A schema can still be used to allow certain values from integrations though. To support HTML in markdown, use
rehype-raw.
For example, to add strict sanitation but allowing classNames, use
something like:
// ...
var merge = require('deepmerge')
var github = require('hast-util-sanitize/lib/github')
var schema = merge(github, {attributes: {'*': ['className']}})
remark()
.use(html, {sanitize: schema})
.processSync(/* ... */)
You still need to set
commonmark: trueinremark-parses options.
CommonMark support is a goal but not (yet) a necessity. There are some (roughly 115 of 550, relating to inline precedence, lists, emphasis and importance) issues which I’d like to cover in the future. Note that this sounds like a lot, but they have to do with obscure differences which do not often occur in the real world.
remark-html works great with:
remark-autolink-headings
— Automatically add links to headings in Markdownremark-github
— Generate references to GitHub issues, PRs, users, and moreremark-highlight.js
— Highlight code blocksremark-html-emoji-image
— Transform emoji unicodes into html imagesremark-html-katex
— Transform math to HTML with KaTeXremark-math
— Math support for markdown (inline and block)remark-midas
— Highlight CSS code with midasremark-toc
— Generate a Tables of ContentsAll MDAST nodes can be compiled to HTML. Unknown MDAST
nodes are compiled to div nodes if they have children or text nodes
if they have value.
In addition, remark-html can be told how to compile nodes through
three data properties (more information):
hName — Tag-name to compile ashChildren — HTML content to add (instead of children and value),
in HASThProperties — Map of attributes to addFor example, the following node:
{
type: 'emphasis',
data: {
hName: 'i',
hProperties: {className: 'foo'},
hChildren: [{type: 'text', value: 'bar'}]
},
children: [{type: 'text', value: 'baz',}]
}
...would yield:
<i class="foo">bar</i>
See contributing.md in remarkjs/remark for ways to get
started.
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