As of April 2024, this repo is no longer being used by the Mapbox docs team.
rehype plugin to highlight code blocks in HTML with Prism (via refractor).
(If you would like to highlight code blocks with highlight.js, instead, check out rehype-highlight.)
Best suited for usage in Node. If you would like to perform syntax highlighting in the browser, you should look into less heavy ways to use refractor.
npm install @mapbox/rehype-prism
rehype().use(rehypePrism, [options])
Syntax highlights pre > code
.
Under the hood, it uses refractor, which is a virtual version of Prism.
The code language is configured by setting a language-{name}
class on the <code>
element.
You can use any language supported by refractor.
If no language-{name}
class is found on a <code>
element, it will be skipped.
Type: boolean
.
Default: false
.
By default, if {name}
does not correspond to a language supported by refractor an error will be thrown.
If you would like to silently skip <code>
elements with invalid languages, set this option to true
.
Type: Record<string, string | string[]>
.
Default: undefined
.
Provide aliases to refractor to register as alternative names for a language.
Use this package as a rehype plugin.
Some examples of how you might do that:
const rehype = require('rehype');
const rehypePrism = require('@mapbox/rehype-prism');
rehype()
.use(rehypePrism)
.process(/* some html */);
const unified = require('unified');
const rehypeParse = require('rehype-parse');
const rehypePrism = require('@mapbox/rehype-prism');
unified()
.use(rehypeParse)
.use(rehypePrism)
.processSync(/* some html */);
If you'd like to get syntax highlighting in Markdown, parse the Markdown (with remark-parse), convert it to rehype, then use this plugin.
const unified = require('unified');
const remarkParse = require('remark-parse');
const remarkRehype = require('remark-rehype');
const rehypePrism = require('@mapbox/rehype-prism');
unified()
.use(remarkParse)
.use(remarkRehype)
.use(rehypePrism)
.process(/* some markdown */);
language-
class to the <pre>
tag?` tag like this:
```html
p { color: red }
```
It bases this recommendation on the HTML5 spec. However, an undocumented behavior of their JavaScript is that, in the process of highlighting the code, they also copy the `language-` class to the `` tag:
```html
p { color: red }
```
This resulted in many [Prism themes](https://github.com/PrismJS/prism-themes) relying on this behavior by using CSS selectors like `pre[class*="language-"]`. So in order for people using rehype-prism to get the most out of these themes, we decided to do the same.