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README.md |
Showdown is a Javascript Markdown to HTML converter, based on the original works by John Gruber. Showdown can be used client side (in the browser) or server side (with NodeJs).
Live DEMO
Check a live Demo here http://showdownjs.github.io/demo/
Who uses Showdown (or a fork)
Installation
Download tarball
You can download the latest release tarball directly from releases
Bower
bower install showdown
npm (server-side)
npm install showdown
CDN
You can also use one of several CDNs available:
-
github CDN
https://cdn.rawgit.com/showdownjs/showdown/<version tag>/dist/showdown.min.js
-
cdnjs
https://cdnjs.cloudflare.com/ajax/libs/showdown/<version tag>/showdown.min.js
Browser Compatibility
Showdown has been tested successfully with:
- Firefox 1.5 and 2.0
- Chrome 12.0
- Internet Explorer 6 and 7
- Safari 2.0.4
- Opera 8.54 and 9.10
- Netscape 8.1.2
- Konqueror 3.5.4
In theory, Showdown will work in any browser that supports ECMA 262 3rd Edition (JavaScript 1.5). The converter itself might even work in things that aren't web browsers, like Acrobat. No promises.
Node compatibility
Showdown has been tested with node 0.8 and 0.10. However, it should work with previous versions, such as node 0.6.
Legacy version
If you're looking for showdown v<1.0.0, you can find it in the legacy branch.
Changelog
You can check the full changelog
Extended documentation
Check our wiki pages for examples and a more in-depth documentation.
Quick Example
Node
var showdown = require('showdown'),
converter = new showdown.Converter(),
text = '#hello, markdown!',
html = converter.makeHtml(text);
Browser
var converter = new showdown.Converter(),
text = '#hello, markdown!',
html = converter.makeHtml(text);
Output
Both examples should output...
<h1 id="hellomarkdown">hello, markdown!</h1>
Options
You can change some of showdown's default behavior through options.
Setting options
Options can be set:
Globally
Setting a "global" option affects all instances of showdown
showdown.setOption('optionKey', 'value');
Locally
Setting a "local" option only affects the specified Converter object. Local options can be set:
-
through the constructor
var converter = new showdown.Converter({optionKey: 'value'});
-
through the setOption() method
var converter = new showdown.Converter(); converter.setOption('optionKey', 'value');
Getting an option
Showdown provides 2 methods (both local and global) to retrieve previous set options.
getOption()
// Global
var myOption = showdown.getOption('optionKey');
//Local
var myOption = converter.getOption('optionKey');
getOptions()
// Global
var showdownGlobalOptions = showdown.getOptions();
//Local
var thisConverterSpecificOptions = converter.getOptions();
Retrieve the default options
You can get showdown's default options with:
var defaultOptions = showdown.getDefaultOptions();
Valid Options
-
omitExtraWLInCodeBlocks: (boolean) [default false] Omit the trailing newline in a code block. Ex:
This:
<code><pre>var foo = 'bar'; </pre></code>
Becomes this:
<code><pre>var foo = 'bar';</pre></code>
-
noHeaderId: (boolean) [default false] Disable the automatic generation of header ids. Setting to true overrides prefixHeaderId
-
prefixHeaderId: (string/boolean) [default false] Add a prefix to the generated header ids. Passing a string will prefix that string to the header id. Setting to
true
will add a generic 'section' prefix. -
parseImgDimensions: (boolean) [default false] Enable support for setting image dimensions from within markdown syntax. Examples:
![foo](foo.jpg =100x80) simple, assumes units are in px ![bar](bar.jpg =100x*) sets the height to "auto" ![baz](baz.jpg =80%x5em) Image with width of 80% and height of 5em
-
headerLevelStart: (integer) [default 1] Set the header starting level. For instance, setting this to 3 means that
# foo
will be parsed as
<h3>foo</h3>
-
simplifiedAutoLink: (boolean) [default false] Turning this on will enable GFM autolink style. This means that
some text www.google.com
will be parsed as
<p>some text <a href="www.google.com">www.google.com</a> ```
-
literalMidWordUnderscores: (boolean) [default false] Turning this on will stop showdown from interpreting underscores in the middle of words as
<em>
and<strong>
and instead treat them as literal underscores.Example:
some text with__underscores__in middle
will be parsed as
<p>some text with__underscores__in middle</p>
-
strikethrough: (boolean) [default false] Enable support for strikethrough syntax.
~~strikethrough~~
as<del>strikethrough</del>
-
tables: (boolean) [default false] Enable support for tables syntax. Example:
| h1 | h2 | h3 | |:------|:-------:|--------:| | 100 | [a][1] | ![b][2] | | *foo* | **bar** | ~~baz~~ |
See the wiki for more info
-
tablesHeaderId: (boolean) [default false] If enabled adds an id property to table headers tags.
-
ghCodeBlocks: (boolean) [default true] Enable support for GFM code block style.
-
tasklists:(boolean) [default false] Enable support for GFM takslists. Example:
- [x] This task is done - [ ] This is still pending
-
smoothLivePreview: (boolean) [default false] Prevents weird effects in live previews due to incomplete input
CLI Tool
Showdown also comes bundled with a Command Line Interface tool. You can check the CLI wiki page for more info
Integration with AngularJS
ShowdownJS project also provides seamlessly integration with AngularJS via a "plugin". Please visit https://github.com/showdownjs/ngShowdown for more information.
Integration with TypeScript
If you're using TypeScript you maybe want to use the types from DefinitelyTyped
XSS vulnerability
Showdown doesn't sanitize the input. This is by design since markdown relies on it to allow certain features to be correctly parsed into HTML. This, however, means XSS injection is quite possible.
Please refer to the wiki article Markdown's XSS Vulnerability (and how to mitigate it) for more information.
Extensions
Showdown allows additional functionality to be loaded via extensions. (you can find a list of known showdown extensions here)
Client-side Extension Usage
<script src="showdown.js" />
<script src="twitter-extension.js" />
var converter = new showdown.Converter({ extensions: 'twitter' });
Server-side Extension Usage
var showdown = require('showdown'),
myExtension = require('myExtension'),
converter = new showdown.Converter({ extensions: ['myExtension'] });
Tests
A suite of tests is available which require node.js. Once node is installed, run the following command from the project root to install the dependencies:
npm install
Once installed the tests can be run from the project root using:
npm test
New test cases can easily be added. Create a markdown file (ending in .md
) which contains the markdown to test. Create a .html
file of the exact same name. It will automatically be tested when the tests are executed with mocha
.
Contributing
If you wish to contribute please read the following quick guide.
Want a Feature?
You can request a new feature by submitting an issue. If you would like to implement a new feature feel free to issue a Pull Request.
Pull requests (PRs)
PRs are awesome. However, before you submit your pull request consider the following guidelines:
-
Search GitHub for an open or closed Pull Request that relates to your submission. You don't want to duplicate effort.
-
When issuing PRs that change code, make your changes in a new git branch based on master:
git checkout -b my-fix-branch master
-
Documentation (i.e: README.md) changes can be made directly against master.
-
Run the full test suite before submitting and make sure all tests pass (obviously =P).
-
Try to follow our coding style rules. Breaking them prevents the PR to pass the tests.
-
Refrain from fixing multiple issues in the same pull request. It's preferable to open multiple small PRs instead of one hard to review big one.
-
If the PR introduces a new feature or fixes an issue, please add the appropriate test case.
-
We use commit notes to generate the changelog. It's extremely helpful if your commit messages adhere to the AngularJS Git Commit Guidelines.
-
If we suggest changes then:
- Make the required updates.
- Re-run the Angular test suite to ensure tests are still passing.
- Rebase your branch and force push to your GitHub repository (this will update your Pull Request):
git rebase master -i git push origin my-fix-branch -f
-
After your pull request is merged, you can safely delete your branch.
If you have time to contribute to this project, we feel obliged that you get credit for it. These rules enable us to review your PR faster and will give you appropriate credit in your GitHub profile. We thank you in advance for your contribution!
Joining the team
We're looking for members to help maintaining Showdown. Please see this issue to express interest or comment on this note.
Credits
Full credit list at https://github.com/showdownjs/showdown/blob/master/CREDITS.md