Andersbakken/rtags@65113e2a13 -> Andersbakken/rtags@cdff9b47fc Emacs-Kotlin-Mode-Maintainers/kotlin-mode@0e4bafb31d -> Emacs-Kotlin-Mode-Maintainers/kotlin-mode@876cc27dc1 Groovy-Emacs-Modes/groovy-emacs-modes@99eaf70720 -> Groovy-Emacs-Modes/groovy-emacs-modes@84f89b68ec JuliaEditorSupport/julia-emacs@fe6f6f7a80 -> JuliaEditorSupport/julia-emacs@06f6fdb94c NixOS/nix-mode@3cca5b6527 -> NixOS/nix-mode@8e20de5ba7 OVYA/php-cs-fixer@c5b5d8a498 -> OVYA/php-cs-fixer@cc9a3624dc ProofGeneral/PG@bc86736abb -> ProofGeneral/PG@e2b4227e1f Raku/raku-mode@7496ad3a03 -> Raku/raku-mode@eaac071f17 Somelauw/evil-markdown@064fe9b476 -> Somelauw/evil-markdown@8e6cc68af8 StanfordLegion/terra-mode@eab9e59ded -> StanfordLegion/terra-mode@ceef8cae5b amake/flutter.el@960b63576a -> amake/flutter.el@81c524a43c ananthakumaran/tide@ccff099e94 -> ananthakumaran/tide@296c0e0e3a asok/projectile-rails@6a18ada356 -> asok/projectile-rails@30828afbfa beancount/beancount-mode@02fe03ee44 -> beancount/beancount-mode@dbafe6a73d bradyt/dart-mode@43975c9208 -> bradyt/dart-mode@3bac14200f brianc/jade-mode@4dbde92542 -> brianc/jade-mode@111460b056 brotzeit/rustic@6ca73bb3cc -> brotzeit/rustic@804ebfe029 cdominik/cdlatex@614a8d94f6 -> cdominik/cdlatex@f215b70c5c clojure-emacs/clojure-mode@3e426b3a47 -> clojure-emacs/clojure-mode@e1dc7caee7 cython/cython@fae33cf7d4 -> cython/cython@aea4e6b84b dgutov/robe@e1304d123d -> dgutov/robe@fd972e912d emacs-csharp/csharp-mode@093f0f21a9 -> emacs-csharp/csharp-mode@fe8a68e984 emacs-ess/ESS@4fefd0feaa -> emacs-ess/ESS@a7ce81bb76 emacs-geiser/gauche@66e51430bd -> emacs-geiser/gauche@fd52cbaed9 emacs-geiser/geiser@4099dce8f5 -> emacs-geiser/geiser@327ff01e5b emacs-lsp/lsp-metals@ca927e5a83 -> emacs-lsp/lsp-metals@695291761b emacs-php/php-mode@cbf2723264 -> emacs-php/php-mode@535aec8173 emacs-straight/auctex@ea410dce4f -> emacs-straight/auctex@3b0a080ae5 emacs-typescript/typescript.el@1043025d42 -> emacs-typescript/typescript.el@2a58631230 erlang/otp@645ea8110d -> erlang/otp@118cb37bd5 ethereum/emacs-solidity@5f6ef3156f -> ethereum/emacs-solidity@6f7bd1641e factor/factor@b989a860d1 -> factor/factor@7b451bb813 fsharp/emacs-fsharp-mode@93b1fbc31d -> fsharp/emacs-fsharp-mode@c90d762c06 fxbois/web-mode@8ef47935d6 -> fxbois/web-mode@61f057a6ba greghendershott/racket-mode@7f12cb1ff2 -> greghendershott/racket-mode@a879a8d67b haskell/haskell-mode@98ba392236 -> haskell/haskell-mode@8402caa341 hhvm/hack-mode@f9315be699 -> hhvm/hack-mode@4c1c2b0939 idris-hackers/idris-mode@f52ad0b477 -> idris-hackers/idris-mode@3cc9361b4c immerrr/lua-mode@2bd9077dd0 -> immerrr/lua-mode@5a9bee8d5f iyefrat/evil-tex@87445d4d23 -> iyefrat/evil-tex@aa0ddf8e76 jimhourihan/glsl-mode@b071120164 -> jimhourihan/glsl-mode@9b2e5f28e4 joaotavora/sly@41f4d65048 -> joaotavora/sly@540a8c5b9a jrblevin/markdown-mode@359347b2bb -> jrblevin/markdown-mode@862ae8addd jwiegley/emacs-async@9a8cd0c3d5 -> jwiegley/emacs-async@5d365ffc6a liblit/demangle-mode@aaef0bd77a -> liblit/demangle-mode@04f545adab necaris/conda.el@6db0720b6d -> necaris/conda.el@4de6eccda5 ocaml-ppx/ocamlformat@5dd6574d8f -> ocaml-ppx/ocamlformat@22a3707da3 ocaml/dune@75ecfe3421 -> ocaml/dune@4d0a47edd5 ocaml/merlin@5731826810 -> ocaml/merlin@e4791e2298 ocaml/merlin@5731826810 -> ocaml/merlin@e4791e2298 ocaml/tuareg@b59c422759 -> ocaml/tuareg@00faf47a7c pashky/restclient.el@2cc1fd3496 -> pashky/restclient.el@176d9cb655 polymode/polymode@7d1f822f08 -> polymode/polymode@54888d6c15 s-kostyaev/go-gen-test@44c202ac97 -> s-kostyaev/go-gen-test@35df36dcd5 seagle0128/grip-mode@c0ca789903 -> seagle0128/grip-mode@1c82e27bee smihica/emmet-mode@1acb821e01 -> smihica/emmet-mode@6b2e554f7f swift-emacs/swift-mode@1b47a09f1c -> swift-emacs/swift-mode@800efe2910 technomancy/fennel-mode@a908db8696 -> technomancy/fennel-mode@47152970a9 vspinu/company-math@a796053590 -> vspinu/company-math@45778f5731 yoshiki/yaml-mode@3a57058468 -> yoshiki/yaml-mode@63b637f846 ziglang/zig-mode@0babe7ec52 -> ziglang/zig-mode@aba01b6199
lang/markdown
Description
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
Enables grip support (on<localleader> p
), to provide live github-style previews of your markdown (or org) files.
Plugins
- markdown-mode
- markdown-toc
Hacks
- Flyspell has been configured not to spell check in code blocks, links, HTML tags or references.
Prerequisites
This module has two soft dependencies: a linter and a compiler (for previewing markdown).
Linters
Out of the box, flycheck recognizes these checkers for markdown-mode and gfm-mode:
-
Markdown-specific
- markdownlint (
npm install markdownlint
) - mdl (
gem install mdl
)
- markdownlint (
-
General (natural language)
Markdown preview
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:
- John Gruber's original perl script
- The C implementation called discount, by David Parsons
- 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
Features
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 +grip
.
Configuration
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")