$ npm install @mapbox/jsxtreme-markdown
Transform Markdown with interpolated JS expressions and JSX elements into JSX or React component modules.
This is the low-level, core module that takes one string (Markdown) and converts it to another string (JSX or a React component module).
That low-level focus means this module can be used by a variety of higher-level modules that target specific contexts (Webpack loaders, Browserify transforms, CLIs, etc.).
npm install @mapbox/jsxtreme-markdown
jsxtremeMarkdown.toJsx(input, [options])
Transforms jsxtreme-markdown into pure JSX, returning the JSX.
The text runs through a series of steps:
const prettier = require('prettier');
const jsxtremeMarkdown = require('@mapbox/jsxtreme-markdown');
const markdown = `
# Title
Here is some **markdown**. *So easy* to write.
You can interpolate JS expressions like {{ data.number }}
or {{ dogs.map(d => d.name).join(', ') }}.
You can also interpolate JSX elements,
whether {{ <span>inline</span> }} or as a block:
{{ <div className="fancy-class">
This is a block.
</div> }}
You can even break up JSX interpolation to process more or your text
as Markdown.
{{ <div className="fancy-class"}> }}
This is a **Markdown** paragraph inside the div.
And this is another.
{{ </div> }}
`;
const jsx = jsxtremeMarkdown.toJsx(markdown);
console.log(prettier.format(jsx, { parser: 'babel' }));
/*
<div>
<h1>Title</h1>
<p>Here is some <strong>markdown</strong>. So <em>easy</em> to write.</p>
<p>
You can interpolate JS expressions like {data.number}
or {dogs.map(d => d.name).join(", ")}.
</p>
<p>
You can also interpolate JSX elements,
whether <span>inline</span> or as a block:
</p>
<div className="fancy-class">
This is a block.
</div>
<p>
You can even break up JSX interpolation to process more or your text
as Markdown.
</p>
<div className="fancy-class">
<p>This is a <strong>Markdown</strong> paragraph inside the div.</p>
<p>And this is another.</p>
</div>
</div>;
*/
Type: string
.
Required.
Your xtreme Markdown.
Type: [string, string]
.
Default: ['{{', '}}']
.
Delimiters set off interpolated JS and JSX from the Markdown text.
Customize them by passing an array with two strings, one for the opener, one for the closer.
For example: ['{%', '%}']
.
Note: Do not use delimiters which could clash with JS (${}
) or JSX ({}
).
Type: string
.
Default: '#'
.
In the rare case that you want to use your delimiters but not for interpolation (e.g. you have code in the text that includes them), you can escape them by prefixing the start delimiter with this character.
The escapeDelimiter
will be stripped from the output, but the delimiter characters will remain untouched.
For example, if you want to include the JSX <div style={{ margin: 10 }} />
in a code block, you would need to escape the double curly brace: <div style=#{{ margin: 10 }} />
.
Type: Array<Function | [Function, any]>
.
The Markdown is parsed by remark. So you can use any remark plugins you'd like (e.g. for linting).
Each item in the array is either a remark plugin function or an array whose first item is the plugin function and second item is plugin options. For example:
{
remarkPlugins: [
require('remark-squeeze-paragraphs'),
[require('remark-lint-emphasis-marker'), '*'],
[require('remark-toc'), { heading: 'ToC', maxDepth: 2 }],
];
}
Type: Array<Function | [Function, Object]>
.
Parsed Markdown is passed into rehype, at which point it represents HTML nodes. At this stage, you can use any rehype plugins you'd like (e.g. for syntax highlighting).
Each item in the array is either a remark plugin function or an array whose first item is the plugin function and second item is plugin options. For example:
{
remarkPlugins: [
require('rehype-picture),
[require('rehype-prism'), { ignoreMissing: true }]
]
}
jsxtremeMarkdown.toComponentModule(input, [options])
Uses toJsx
, above, to transform Markdown to JSX.
Also parses front matter.
Returns a JS string representing a React component module that wraps this content.
The JSX is plugged into a template to produce the React component module. A default template is provided that produces the output exemplified below. You can also provide your own template to fit your own needs and preferences.
const jsxtremeMarkdown = require('@mapbox/jsxtreme-markdown');
const markdown = `
---
title: Everything is ok
quantity: 834
wrapper: "../wrapper.js",
prependJs:
- "const Timer = require('./timer')"
- "import { Watcher } from './watcher'"
---
# {{ frontMatter.title }}
Some introductory text. The quantity is {{ frontMatter.quantity }}
{{ <Watcher /> }}
This paragraph includes a {{ <Timer /> }}.
This component also accepts a "foo" prop: {{ props.foo }}
`;
const js = jsxtremeMarkdown.toComponentModule(markdown);
console.log(js);
/*
import React from "react";
import Timer from "./timer";
import { Watcher } from "./watcher";
import Wrapper from "../wrapper";
const frontMatter = {
title: "Everything is ok",
quantity: 834
};
export default class MarkdownReact extends React.PureComponent {
render() {
const props = this.props;
return (
<Wrapper {...props} frontMatter={frontMatter}>
<div>
<h1>{frontMatter.title}</h1>
<p>Some introductory text. The quantity is {frontMatter.quantity}</p>
<Watcher />
<p>This paragraph includes a <Timer />.</p>
<p>This component also accepts a "foo" prop: {props.foo}</p>
</div>
</Wrapper>
);
}
}
*/
Type: string
.
Required.
Your xtreme Markdown.
You can pass any of the options for toJsx
, documented above.
Also the following:
Type: string
.
The path to a wrapper component.
This value can be overridden document-by-document by setting wrapper
in the front matter of the Markdown.
The wrapper component must be exported with module.exports
or export default
, not a named ES2015 export.
The wrapper component will receive the following props:
frontMatter
: The parsed front matter.children
: The JSX content generated from your source Markdown.Type: Array<string>
.
An array of lines of JS code that will be prepended to the top of the JavaScript.
The typical use-case is to require
or import
modules that will be used by interpolated JS and JSX.
This value can be added to document-by-document by setting prependJs
in the front matter of specific documents.
Type: (data: Object) => string
.
An alternative template function.
Receives as its argument a data object and must return a string. Look to the default template as an example. The data object includes the following:
wrapper
: The value of the wrapper
option, above.prependJs
: The value of the prependJs
option, above.name
: The value of the name
option, above, converted to PascalCase.frontMatter
: The parsed front matter.jsx
: The JSX string generated from your source Markdown.Type: boolean
.
Default: false
.
The primary use case for the headings
option is to build a table of contents in your wrapper component.
If true
, the following will happen:
id
attribute whose value is the element's slugified text.frontMatter
object will be augmented with a headings
array.
Each item in the array is an object with text
, slug
, and level
properties.For example:
const jsxtremeMarkdown = require('@mapbox/jsxtreme-markdown');
const markdown = `
# One
Text.
## Two
Some more text.
### Third-level heading
Yet more.
## Two
A section with a duplicate title.
`;
const js = jsxtremeMarkdown.toComponentModule(markdown);
console.log(js);
/*
import React from "react";
const frontMatter = {
headings: [
{
text: "One",
slug: "one",
level: 1
},
{
text: "Two",
slug: "two",
level: 2
},
{
text: "Third-level heading",
slug: "third-level-heading",
level: 3
},
{
text: "Two",
slug: "two-1",
level: 2
}
]
};
export default class MarkdownReact extends React.PureComponent {
render() {
const props = this.props;
return (
<div>
<h1 id="one">One</h1>
<p>Text.</p>
<h2 id="two">Two</h2>
<p>Some more text.</p>
<h3 id="third-level-heading">Third-level heading</h3>
<p>Yet more.</p>
<h2 id="two-1">Two</h2>
<p>A section with a duplicate title.</p>
</div>
);
}
}
*/
A couple of things to keep in mind when using this option:
Type: boolean
.
Default: false
.
If true
, the returned string will be compiled with Babel (using @babel/preset-env
and @babel/preset-react
).
Type: string
.
Default: MarkdownReact
.
The name of the component class that will be generated.
For the default template, there are two special front matter properties that Markdown documents can use:
wrapper
: Path to a wrapper component.
This can be set outside the front matter with the wrapper
option, above.
See those docs for more details.prependJs
: See the the prependJs
option, above.
In a document's front matter, this property will add lines to the value of that option, for that specific module.© 2010 - cnpmjs.org x YWFE | Home | YWFE