Convert markdown to GitHub-style HTML using a common set of remark and rehype plugins
Used by electron/i18n and electronjs.org.
unified processes content with syntax trees and transforms between different formats. remark and rehype are its markdown and HTML ecosystems. We use this because its performant and has a large collection of plugins. Primarily, unlike some other node markdown parsers that provide syntax highlighting capabilities, unified does not have any native C++ dependencies. This makes it easier to install and reduces the likelihood of system-dependent installation failures.
The following remark and rehype plugins are used by hubdown:
npm install hubdown --save
hubdown exports a single function that returns a promise:
const hubdown = require('hubdown')
hubdown('I am markdown').then(doc => {
console.log(doc)
})
The resolved promise yields an object with a content
property
containing the parsed HTML:
{
content: '<p>I am markdown</p>'
}
hubdown's remark
markdown parser is pretty fast, but things can start to slow
down when you're processing hundreds or thousands of files. To make life easier
in these situations you can use hubdown's optional cache, which stores
preprocessed markdown for fast retrieval on subsequent runs.
To use the cache, bring your own level instance and supply it as an option to hubdown. This helps keep hubdown lean on (native) dependencies for users who don't need the cache.
const hubdown = require('hubdown')
const cache = require('level')('./my-hubdown-cache')
hubdown('I will be cached.', { cache }).then(doc => {
console.log(doc)
})
hubdown(markdownString[, options])
Arguments:
markdownString
String - (required)options
Object - (optional)
runBefore
Array of remark plugins - Custom plugins to be run before the commonly used plugins listed above.frontmatter
Boolean - Whether or not to try to parse YML frontmatter in
the file. Defaults to false
.cache
LevelDB - An optional level
instance in which
to store preprocessed content. See Usage with Cache.highlight
- Object of rehype-highlight options.Returns a promise. The resolved object looks like this:
{
content: 'HTML goes here'
}
If YML frontmatter is parsed, those properties will be present on the object too:
{
title: 'The Feminine Mystique',
author: 'Betty Friedan',
content: '<p>The Feminine Mystique is a book written by Betty Friedan which is widely credited with sparking the beginning of second-wave feminism in the United States.</p>'
}
npm install
npm test
MIT