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README.md |
Turndown
Convert HTML into Markdown with JavaScript.
Modifications
This is a mod of the original turndown package for use with Joplin. The following changes have been made:
- Remove JavaScript code from links.
- Prevent newlines inside link text.
- Fixed ordered lists indentation when there are more than 9 items.
- Added support for
<picture>
tags. - Fixed encoding of anchor URLs.
- Support named anchors (
<a href="#internal-link">Internal link</a>
, which would link to<a id="internal-link"></a>
) - Detect more types of code blocks based on special cases.
- Handle MathJax blocks
- Allow a rule to specify whether it wants its content escaped or not
- Handle non-OL ordered lists
- Added option
preserveImageTagsWithSize
to keep<img/>
tags as HTML (no Markdown conversion) if they have width or height attributes - Added support for replacing unicode nonbreaking spaces with
in output markdown.
The src/
folder of this fork is currently based on commit 97e4535ca76bb2e70d9caa2aa4d4686956b06d44
of the upstream Turndown project. The test
and config
folders are based on an earlier commit.
to-markdown has been renamed to Turndown. See the migration guide for details.
Installation
npm:
npm install @joplin/turndown
Browser:
<script src="https://unpkg.com/turndown/dist/turndown.js"></script>
For usage with RequireJS, UMD versions are located in lib/turndown.umd.js
(for Node.js) and lib/turndown.browser.umd.js
for browser usage. These files are generated when the npm package is published. To generate them manually, clone this repo and run npm run build
.
Getting TypeScript typings
Install typings:
npm install @types/turndown
Create a declarations.d.ts
file:
declare module '@joplin/turndown' {
export { default } from 'turndown';
}
Add the path to the declarations.d.ts
file in the "files"
array
in your tsconfig.json
:
{
// ...
"files": ["declarations.d.ts"]
// ...
}
Usage
// For Node.js
var TurndownService = require('turndown')
var turndownService = new TurndownService()
var markdown = turndownService.turndown('<h1>Hello world!</h1>')
Turndown also accepts DOM nodes as input (either element nodes, document nodes, or document fragment nodes):
var markdown = turndownService.turndown(document.getElementById('content'))
Options
Options can be passed in to the constructor on instantiation.
Option | Valid values | Default |
---|---|---|
headingStyle |
setext or atx |
setext |
hr |
Any Thematic break | * * * |
bulletListMarker |
- , + , or * |
* |
codeBlockStyle |
indented or fenced |
indented |
fence |
``` or ~~~ |
``` |
emDelimiter |
_ or * |
_ |
strongDelimiter |
** or __ |
** |
linkStyle |
inlined or referenced |
inlined |
linkReferenceStyle |
full , collapsed , or shortcut |
full |
Advanced Options
Option | Valid values | Default |
---|---|---|
blankReplacement |
rule replacement function | See Special Rules below |
keepReplacement |
rule replacement function | See Special Rules below |
defaultReplacement |
rule replacement function | See Special Rules below |
Methods
addRule(key, rule)
The key
parameter is a unique name for the rule for easy reference. Example:
turndownService.addRule('strikethrough', {
filter: ['del', 's', 'strike'],
replacement: function (content) {
return '~' + content + '~'
}
})
addRule
returns the TurndownService
instance for chaining.
See Extending with Rules below.
keep(filter)
Determines which elements are to be kept and rendered as HTML. By default, Turndown does not keep any elements. The filter parameter works like a rule filter (see section on filters belows). Example:
turndownService.keep(['del', 'ins'])
turndownService.turndown('<p>Hello <del>world</del><ins>World</ins></p>') // 'Hello <del>world</del><ins>World</ins>'
This will render <del>
and <ins>
elements as HTML when converted.
keep
can be called multiple times, with the newly added keep filters taking precedence over older ones. Keep filters will be overridden by the standard CommonMark rules and any added rules. To keep elements that are normally handled by those rules, add a rule with the desired behaviour.
keep
returns the TurndownService
instance for chaining.
remove(filter)
Determines which elements are to be removed altogether i.e. converted to an empty string. By default, Turndown does not remove any elements. The filter parameter works like a rule filter (see section on filters belows). Example:
turndownService.remove('del')
turndownService.turndown('<p>Hello <del>world</del><ins>World</ins></p>') // 'Hello World'
This will remove <del>
elements (and contents).
remove
can be called multiple times, with the newly added remove filters taking precedence over older ones. Remove filters will be overridden by the keep filters, standard CommonMark rules, and any added rules. To remove elements that are normally handled by those rules, add a rule with the desired behaviour.
remove
returns the TurndownService
instance for chaining.
use(plugin|array)
Use a plugin, or an array of plugins. Example:
// Import plugins from turndown-plugin-gfm
var turndownPluginGfm = require('turndown-plugin-gfm')
var gfm = turndownPluginGfm.gfm
var tables = turndownPluginGfm.tables
var strikethrough = turndownPluginGfm.strikethrough
// Use the gfm plugin
turndownService.use(gfm)
// Use the table and strikethrough plugins only
turndownService.use([tables, strikethrough])
use
returns the TurndownService
instance for chaining.
See Plugins below.
Extending with Rules
Turndown can be extended by adding rules. A rule is a plain JavaScript object with filter
and replacement
properties. For example, the rule for converting <p>
elements is as follows:
{
filter: 'p',
replacement: function (content) {
return '\n\n' + content + '\n\n'
}
}
The filter selects <p>
elements, and the replacement function returns the <p>
contents separated by two new lines.
filter
String|Array|Function
The filter property determines whether or not an element should be replaced with the rule's replacement
. DOM nodes can be selected simply using a tag name or an array of tag names:
filter: 'p'
will select<p>
elementsfilter: ['em', 'i']
will select<em>
or<i>
elements
Alternatively, the filter can be a function that returns a boolean depending on whether a given node should be replaced. The function is passed a DOM node as well as the TurndownService
options. For example, the following rule selects <a>
elements (with an href
) when the linkStyle
option is inlined
:
filter: function (node, options) {
return (
options.linkStyle === 'inlined' &&
node.nodeName === 'A' &&
node.getAttribute('href')
)
}
replacement
Function
The replacement function determines how an element should be converted. It should return the Markdown string for a given node. The function is passed the node's content, the node itself, and the TurndownService
options.
The following rule shows how <em>
elements are converted:
rules.emphasis = {
filter: ['em', 'i'],
replacement: function (content, node, options) {
return options.emDelimiter + content + options.emDelimiter
}
}
Special Rules
Blank rule determines how to handle blank elements. It overrides every rule (even those added via addRule
). A node is blank if it only contains whitespace, and it's not an <a>
, <td>
,<th>
or a void element. Its behaviour can be customised using the blankReplacement
option.
Keep rules determine how to handle the elements that should not be converted, i.e. rendered as HTML in the Markdown output. By default, no elements are kept. Block-level elements will be separated from surrounding content by blank lines. Its behaviour can be customised using the keepReplacement
option.
Remove rules determine which elements to remove altogether. By default, no elements are removed.
Default rule handles nodes which are not recognised by any other rule. By default, it outputs the node's text content (separated by blank lines if it is a block-level element). Its behaviour can be customised with the defaultReplacement
option.
Rule Precedence
Turndown iterates over the set of rules, and picks the first one that matches the filter
. The following list describes the order of precedence:
- Blank rule
- Added rules (optional)
- Commonmark rules
- Keep rules
- Remove rules
- Default rule
Plugins
The plugin API provides a convenient way for developers to apply multiple extensions. A plugin is just a function that is called with the TurndownService
instance.
License
turndown is copyright © 2017+ Dom Christie and released under the MIT license.