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@ephys/remark-directive

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  • License MIT

remark plugin to support directives

Package Exports

  • @ephys/remark-directive

Readme

remark-directive

remark plugin to support the generic directives proposal:

  • Text directives (:abbr[HTML]{title="HyperText Markup Language"}),
  • Leaf directives (::hr{.red}),
  • Container directives (:::main{#readme} ... :::).

Contents

What is this?

This package is a unified (remark) plugin to add support for directives: a syntax for arbitrary extensions in Markdown.

When should I use this?

Directives are one of the four ways to extend Markdown: an arbitrary extension syntax (see Extending markdown in micromark’s docs for the alternatives and more info). This mechanism works well when you control the content: who authors it, what tools handle it, and where it’s displayed. When authors can read a guide on how to embed a tweet but are not expected to know the ins and outs of HTML or JavaScript. Directives don’t work well if you don’t know who authors content, what tools handle it, and where it ends up. Example use cases are a docs website for a project or product, or blogging tools and static site generators.

If you just want to turn markdown into HTML (with maybe a few extensions such as this one), we recommend micromark with micromark-extension-directive instead. If you don’t use plugins and want to access the syntax tree, you can use mdast-util-from-markdown with mdast-util-directive.

Install

This package is ESM only. In Node.js (version 16+), install with npm:

npm install remark-directive

Use

Say our document example.md contains:

:::main{#readme}

Lorem:br
ipsum.

::hr{.red}

A :i[lovely] language know as :abbr[HTML]{title="HyperText Markup Language"}.

:::

…and our module example.js contains:

import {h} from 'hastscript'
import rehypeFormat from 'rehype-format'
import rehypeStringify from 'rehype-stringify'
import {remarkDirective} from '@ephys/remark-directive'
import remarkParse from 'remark-parse'
import remarkRehype from 'remark-rehype'
import {read} from 'to-vfile'
import {unified} from 'unified'
import {visit} from 'unist-util-visit'

const file = await unified()
  .use(remarkParse)
  .use(remarkDirective())
  .use(myRemarkPlugin)
  .use(remarkRehype)
  .use(rehypeFormat)
  .use(rehypeStringify)
  .process(await read('example.md'))

console.log(String(file))

// This plugin is an example to let users write HTML with directives.
// It’s informative but rather useless.
// See below for others examples.
function myRemarkPlugin() {
  /**
   * @param {Root} tree
   *   Tree.
   * @returns {undefined}
   *   Nothing.
   */
  return function (tree) {
    visit(tree, function (node) {
      if (
        node.type === 'containerDirective' ||
        node.type === 'leafDirective' ||
        node.type === 'textDirective'
      ) {
        const data = node.data || (node.data = {})
        const hast = h(node.name, node.attributes || {})

        data.hName = hast.tagName
        data.hProperties = hast.properties
      }
    })
  }
}

…then running node example.js yields:

<main id="readme">
  <p>Lorem<br>ipsum.</p>
  <hr class="red">
  <p>A <i>lovely</i> language know as <abbr title="HyperText Markup Language">HTML</abbr>.</p>
</main>

Notes

This plugin only parses the directives syntax. You need to create your own plugin to handle the resulting nodes in the syntax tree (see Use and Examples).

Options

You can pass the following options to remarkDirective:

  • directiveTypes (Array of 'text' | 'leaf' | 'container', default: ['text', 'leaf', 'container']) — types of directives to support

Examples

Example: YouTube

This example shows how directives can be used for YouTube embeds. It’s based on the example in Use above. If myRemarkPlugin was replaced with this function:

/**
 * @import {} from 'mdast-util-directive'
 * @import {} from 'mdast-util-to-hast'
 * @import {Root} from 'mdast'
 * @import {VFile} from 'vfile'
 */

import {visit} from 'unist-util-visit'

// This plugin is an example to turn `::youtube` into iframes.
function myRemarkPlugin() {
  /**
   * @param {Root} tree
   *   Tree.
   * @param {VFile} file
   *   File.
   * @returns {undefined}
   *   Nothing.
   */
  return (tree, file) => {
    visit(tree, function (node) {
      if (
        node.type === 'containerDirective' ||
        node.type === 'leafDirective' ||
        node.type === 'textDirective'
      ) {
        if (node.name !== 'youtube') return

        const data = node.data || (node.data = {})
        const attributes = node.attributes || {}
        const id = attributes.id

        if (node.type === 'textDirective') {
          file.fail(
            'Unexpected `:youtube` text directive, use two colons for a leaf directive',
            node
          )
        }

        if (!id) {
          file.fail('Unexpected missing `id` on `youtube` directive', node)
        }

        data.hName = 'iframe'
        data.hProperties = {
          src: 'https://www.youtube.com/embed/' + id,
          width: 200,
          height: 200,
          frameBorder: 0,
          allow: 'picture-in-picture',
          allowFullScreen: true
        }
      }
    })
  }
}

…and example.md contains:

# Cat videos

::youtube[Video of a cat in a box]{#01ab2cd3efg}

…then running node example.js yields:

<h1>Cat videos</h1>
<iframe src="https://www.youtube.com/embed/01ab2cd3efg" width="200" height="200" frameborder="0" allow="picture-in-picture" allowfullscreen>Video of a cat in a box</iframe>

Example: Styled blocks

👉 Note: this is sometimes called admonitions, callouts, etc.

This example shows how directives can be used to style blocks. It’s based on the example in Use above. If myRemarkPlugin was replaced with this function:

/**
 * @import {} from 'mdast-util-directive'
 * @import {} from 'mdast-util-to-hast'
 * @import {Root} from 'mdast'
 */

import {h} from 'hastscript'
import {visit} from 'unist-util-visit'

// This plugin is an example to turn `::note` into divs,
// passing arbitrary attributes.
function myRemarkPlugin() {
  /**
   * @param {Root} tree
   *   Tree.
   * @returns {undefined}
   *   Nothing.
   */
  return (tree) => {
    visit(tree, (node) => {
      if (
        node.type === 'containerDirective' ||
        node.type === 'leafDirective' ||
        node.type === 'textDirective'
      ) {
        if (node.name !== 'note') return

        const data = node.data || (node.data = {})
        const tagName = node.type === 'textDirective' ? 'span' : 'div'

        data.hName = tagName
        data.hProperties = h(tagName, node.attributes || {}).properties
      }
    })
  }
}

…and example.md contains:

# How to use xxx

You can use xxx.

:::note{.warning}
if you chose xxx, you should also use yyy somewhere…
:::

…then running node example yields:

<h1>How to use xxx</h1>
<p>You can use xxx.</p>
<div class="warning">
  <p>if you chose xxx, you should also use yyy somewhere…</p>
</div>

Syntax

See Syntax in micromark-extension-directive.

Syntax tree

See Syntax tree in mdast-util-directive.