Files
doomemacs/modules/lang/markdown
Henrik Lissner 8951de19d8 bump: :lang
JuliaEditorSupport/julia-emacs@2aca8cf585 -> JuliaEditorSupport/julia-emacs@0f4d74f904
ProofGeneral/PG@b30d65de80 -> ProofGeneral/PG@d668946929
abicky/nodejs-repl.el@03d0b64768 -> abicky/nodejs-repl.el@130d49b073
agda/agda@819993172d -> agda/agda@3344ca8058
ardumont/markdown-toc@3d724e518a -> ardumont/markdown-toc@d2fb4cbd95
babashka/neil@78ffab1868 -> babashka/neil@0b7373dd1b
clojure-emacs/cider@c228dec27d -> clojure-emacs/cider@f00e83d338
clojure-emacs/clojure-mode@59888c84b6 -> clojure-emacs/clojure-mode@eabe29b076
davazp/graphql-mode@c3baca9280 -> davazp/graphql-mode@ee49531935
dgutov/robe@6bc8a07fc4 -> dgutov/robe@ec4b7e74e9
diml/utop@b490baca21 -> diml/utop@3322adaa52
emacs-ess/ESS@8b4664e4a7 -> emacs-ess/ESS@c72b911d70
emacs-geiser/chicken@a480598b59 -> emacs-geiser/chicken@5f2c1bb446
emacs-geiser/geiser@97ce88463f -> emacs-geiser/geiser@74eed1669a
emacs-jupyter/jupyter@e966c5d3d6 -> emacs-jupyter/jupyter@db8a9e233a
emacs-lsp/lsp-metals@b5139c9593 -> emacs-lsp/lsp-metals@6a6a345a8a
emacs-php/php-mode@31f702ee2d -> emacs-php/php-mode@0f756a8c07
emacs-rustic/rustic@9fdf5c76b2 -> emacs-rustic/rustic@e5c0271f1e
emacs-straight/auctex@0de9730957 -> emacs-straight/auctex@f00256cbfd
emacs-straight/org-mode@6a5d0ed342 -> emacs-straight/org-mode@5a4686915e
emacsorphanage/macrostep@419873665f -> emacsorphanage/macrostep@44faf4f7bf
erlang/otp@094260aba7 -> erlang/otp@3e7f126fe4
fxbois/web-mode@0c83581d1e -> fxbois/web-mode@be2d59c8fa
gcv/julia-snail@dff92c4250 -> gcv/julia-snail@24f79a067b
godotengine/emacs-gdscript-mode@bee7f99c6f -> godotengine/emacs-gdscript-mode@c3d9988984
greghendershott/racket-mode@c5bee6895b -> greghendershott/racket-mode@f2645aadd2
hakimel/reveal.js@0d02d8a303 -> hakimel/reveal.js@e15cf92ccd
hvesalai/emacs-scala-mode@bd0638c32a -> hvesalai/emacs-scala-mode@661337d8aa
jrblevin/markdown-mode@b8637bae07 -> jrblevin/markdown-mode@e100778594
jwiegley/emacs-async@af47d6f930 -> jwiegley/emacs-async@b99658e831
jwiegley/nix-update-el@aab70a3816 -> jwiegley/nix-update-el@77022ccd91
nonsequitur/inf-ruby@6399a36682 -> nonsequitur/inf-ruby@dad78a13f1
ocaml/dune@5ac095c7c0 -> ocaml/dune@098117d229
ocaml/merlin@a36f42a5b1 -> ocaml/merlin@3a806ef87f
oer/org-re-reveal@91610ba9b0 -> oer/org-re-reveal@ab1422c163
org-roam/org-roam@2a630476b3 -> org-roam/org-roam@cad3518788
polymode/poly-R@e4a39caaf4 -> polymode/poly-R@8024e852cf
polymode/polymode@15b6c1e94a -> polymode/polymode@74ba75d4bc
psibi/dhall-mode@87ab69fe76 -> psibi/dhall-mode@fca383a9c4
purescript-emacs/purescript-mode@d187b3d4bb -> purescript-emacs/purescript-mode@07e4d6ecfe
rwv/android-mode@d5332e339a -> rwv/android-mode@67f7c0d7d3
seagle0128/grip-mode@d6c7e33e40 -> seagle0128/grip-mode@df0ba7589d
technomancy/fennel-mode@259470b297 -> technomancy/fennel-mode@3632cc77de
tpapp/julia-repl@bb90cc1fce -> tpapp/julia-repl@317d560218
2025-01-09 23:47:38 -05:00
..
2024-09-14 20:47:39 -04:00
2025-01-09 23:47:38 -05:00

:lang markdown

Description   unfold

This module provides Markdown support for Emacs.

Markdown is a text-to-HTML conversion tool for web writers. Markdown allows you to write using an easy-to-read, easy-to-write plain text format, then convert it to structurally valid XHTML (or HTML).

Thus, “Markdown” is two things: (1) a plain text formatting syntax; and (2) a software tool, written in Perl, that converts the plain text formatting to HTML. See the Syntax page for details pertaining to Markdown's formatting syntax. You can try it out, right now, using the online Dingus.

The overriding design goal for Markdown's formatting syntax is to make it as readable as possible. The idea is that a Markdown-formatted document should be publishable as-is, as plain text, without looking like it's been marked up with tags or formatting instructions. While Markdown's syntax has been influenced by several existing text-to-HTML filters, the single biggest source of inspiration for Markdown's syntax is the format of plain text email. John Gruber

Module flags

+grip
Enable grip support (on <localleader> p), to provide live github-style previews of your markdown (or org) files.

Hacks

  • doom-package:flyspell has been configured not to spell check in code blocks, links, HTML tags or references.

TODO Changelog

This module does not have a changelog yet.

Installation

Enable this module in your doom! block.

This module requires:

  • A linter (requires doom-module::checkers syntax)
  • A markdown compiler, for previewing Markdown

Linters

Out of the box, flycheck recognizes these checkers for markdown-mode and gfm-mode:

  • Markdown-specific

  • General (natural language)

    • proselint

      • $ pip install proselint
      • Or through your OS package manager

        • MacOS: $ brew install proselint
        • Arch Linux: proselint in AUR
        • Debian & Ubuntu: $ apt-get install python3-proselint
        • Fedora: $ dnf install proselint
    • textlint ($ npm install textlint)

Markdown compiler

This module requires a markdown compiler in order for markdown-preview to work. It will recognize and use one of the following executables, in this order (you only need one):

  • markedjs: a markdown compiler "built for speed"
  • pandoc: the universal markup transpiler
  • markdown: there are various flavors of this compiler. This module will look for these two:

  • multimarkdown: a compiler for a language that is a superset of Markdown, with additional output formats and features.

MarkedJS

Not to be confused with the Marked 2 app, marked is an npm package:

npm install -g marked

Pandoc

Pandoc is the universal markup transpiler. It should be available through your system package manager. For example:

  • MacOS: $ brew install pandoc
  • Arch Linux: $ pacman -S pandoc

Markdown

The C implementation of Markdown.pl, called discount, is available through your OS's package manager:

  • MacOS: $ brew install discount
  • Arch Linux: $ pacman -S discount

The original perl script that discount is inspired from can be found on John Gruber's website.

MultiMarkdown

See its documentation for details on what MultiMarkdown is. The compiler can be installed through your OS's package manager:

  • MacOS: $ brew install multimarkdown
  • Arch Linux: multimarkdown is available on the AUR

Formatter

Formatting is handled using the doom-module::editor format module via prettier.

TODO Usage

󱌣 This module's usage documentation is incomplete. Complete it?

Markdown preview

markdown-preview is bound to <localleader> p. This will open a preview of your compiled markdown document in your browser.

Alternatively, you can use grip-mode through doom-module:+grip.

Configuration

󱌣 This module's configuration documentation is incomplete. Complete it?

Changing how markdown is compiled

When markdown-preview is invoked (<localleader> p) it consults markdown-command. Its default value (#'+markdown-compile) will consult +markdown-compile-functions: a list of functions that take three arguments: the start and end point in the current buffer to use as input, and an output buffer to insert the result in.

By default, the value of +markdown-compile-functions is:

'(+markdown-compile-marked
  +markdown-compile-pandoc
  +markdown-compile-markdown
  +markdown-compile-multimarkdown)

These functions will attempt to use the marked, pandoc and markdown executables, if available. Changing this variable will control how markdown is compiled:

;; Add a new one
(add-hook '+markdown-compile-functions #'my-compile-function)

;; Or remove an existing one
(remove-hook '+markdown-compile-functions #'+markdown-compile-markdown)

Otherwise, you can change markdown-command directly:

(setq markdown-command "markdown | smartypants")

Troubleshooting

There are no known problems with this module. Report one?

Frequently asked questions

This module has no FAQs yet. Ask one?

TODO Appendix

󱌣 This module has no appendix yet. Write one?