doomemacs/modules/lang/markdown
Henrik Lissner 2e86cceb3f
Bump :lang
200ok-ch/counsel-jq@104c77b -> 200ok-ch/counsel-jq@f5bfed8
Andersbakken/rtags@e6c7005 -> Andersbakken/rtags@63a7d9b
FStarLang/fstar-mode.el@5670fc0 -> FStarLang/fstar-mode.el@3afbf04
Kungsgeten/org-brain@6e3d861) -> Kungsgeten/org-brain@1ae4fd4)
NixOS/nix-mode@bb0b49e -> NixOS/nix-mode@e32c6bf
OVYA/php-cs-fixer@95eace9 -> OVYA/php-cs-fixer@c5b5d8a
ProofGeneral/PG@0fdb1ae -> ProofGeneral/PG@702f5b9
Sarcasm/irony-mode@1e1aaba -> Sarcasm/irony-mode@76fd37f
abicky/nodejs-repl.el@f5ce3d5 -> abicky/nodejs-repl.el@3b84105
agda/agda@08191e6 -> agda/agda@5070bd8
amake/flutter.el@78b3c57 -> amake/flutter.el@696228a
ananthakumaran/tide@ac5f070 -> ananthakumaran/tide@a43a37b
arnested/php-extras@81ebd7c -> arnested/php-extras@d410c5a
borkdude/flycheck-clj-kondo@152df7f -> borkdude/flycheck-clj-kondo@a558bda
brotzeit/rustic@7c9d55b -> brotzeit/rustic@91ad5db
chachi/cuda-mode@9ae9eac -> chachi/cuda-mode@7f59351
clojure-emacs/cider@f1c2a79 -> clojure-emacs/cider@ef47c1d
clojure-emacs/clojure-mode@75c2889 -> clojure-emacs/clojure-mode@53ef8ac
cpitclaudel/company-coq@b096cb5 -> cpitclaudel/company-coq@4da7b41
cython/cython@ba6cbed -> cython/cython@21b4e53
dgutov/robe@082da38 -> dgutov/robe@f04dcc7
dominikh/go-mode.el@d17d210 -> dominikh/go-mode.el@fdf46fe
dominikh/go-mode.el@d17d210 -> dominikh/go-mode.el@fdf46fe
elixir-editors/emacs-elixir@01b3324 -> elixir-editors/emacs-elixir@b78e7f7
emacs-ess/ESS@a694b26 -> emacs-ess/ESS@d013616
emacs-lsp/lsp-dart@c1ff5ce -> emacs-lsp/lsp-dart@b81b1ec
emacs-lsp/lsp-java@3f1ed17 -> emacs-lsp/lsp-java@f43b00a
emacs-lsp/lsp-metals@e42c0b2) -> emacs-lsp/lsp-metals@31dafff)
emacs-lsp/lsp-pyright@ccd0007 -> emacs-lsp/lsp-pyright@d9e7d3c
emacs-lsp/lsp-python-ms@a0c56f4 -> emacs-lsp/lsp-python-ms@c4ebc7a
emacs-php/php-mode@f4c7c69 -> emacs-php/php-mode@7e5722c
emacs-straight/adaptive-wrap@319db64 -> emacs-straight/adaptive-wrap@8f60ee7
emacs-straight/csv-mode@6353374 -> emacs-straight/csv-mode@eb3ec00
emacs-straight/org-mode@a88806b -> emacs-straight/org-mode@7c8dce7
emacs-straight/rainbow-mode@fdff98b -> emacs-straight/rainbow-mode@949166c
emacs-straight/sml-mode@60b01d7 -> emacs-straight/sml-mode@0338e97
emacs-typescript/typescript.el@e6f68ab -> emacs-typescript/typescript.el@54f14c4
erlang/otp@8efb945 -> erlang/otp@8fc0641
factor/factor@c6e15bd -> factor/factor@94a922a
felipeochoa/rjsx-mode@0061587 -> felipeochoa/rjsx-mode@b697fe4
fsharp/emacs-fsharp-mode@68dfc22 -> fsharp/emacs-fsharp-mode@13fbf4c
fxbois/web-mode@b4b0a85 -> fxbois/web-mode@890e837
galaunay/poetry.el@eb238d9 -> galaunay/poetry.el@d5163fe
godotengine/emacs-gdscript-mode@55a6637 -> godotengine/emacs-gdscript-mode@75fe658
greghendershott/racket-mode@0ca8b26 -> greghendershott/racket-mode@3563081
haskell/haskell-mode@e726776 -> haskell/haskell-mode@0d39c84
hlissner/evil-org-mode@658dadf) -> hlissner/evil-org-mode@a9706da)
hvesalai/emacs-sbt-mode@4358ed8 -> hvesalai/emacs-sbt-mode@7b121fc
hvesalai/emacs-scala-mode@1d08e88 -> hvesalai/emacs-scala-mode@9d3b56e
hylang/hy-mode@7256844 -> hylang/hy-mode@5253533
joaotavora/sly@fce4f9b -> joaotavora/sly@68561f1
jorgenschaefer/emacs-buttercup@cccdedf -> jorgenschaefer/emacs-buttercup@2f24a44
jorgenschaefer/pyvenv@861998b -> jorgenschaefer/pyvenv@0bf4b87
josteink/csharp-mode@f46d656 -> josteink/csharp-mode@4916829
jrblevin/markdown-mode@152eae2 -> jrblevin/markdown-mode@dcad557
kaushalmodi/ox-hugo@1909c6e) -> kaushalmodi/ox-hugo@f24c9bd)
nim-lang/nim-mode@16a245e -> nim-lang/nim-mode@d832d6b
ocaml-ppx/ocamlformat@1dec6c3 -> ocaml-ppx/ocamlformat@860266b
ocaml/dune@f967df6 -> ocaml/dune@4d097cd
ocaml/merlin@06833e9 -> ocaml/merlin@28193d5
oer/org-re-reveal@2035217 -> oer/org-re-reveal@0062756
org-roam/org-roam@d913447) -> org-roam/org-roam@be95b42)
rexim/org-cliplink@82402ca -> rexim/org-cliplink@13e0940
salmanebah/opencl-mode@55cb49c -> salmanebah/opencl-mode@15091ef
senny/rvm.el@6897576) -> senny/rvm.el@b2498a4)
skuro/plantuml-mode@5889166 -> skuro/plantuml-mode@ea45a13
swift-emacs/swift-mode@e65a80a -> swift-emacs/swift-mode@0bc8d8d
technomancy/fennel-mode@7a8824a -> technomancy/fennel-mode@fa56106
wbolster/emacs-python-pytest@a2f88b1 -> wbolster/emacs-python-pytest@4a1c4c8
xuchunyang/elisp-demos@3cca496 -> xuchunyang/elisp-demos@ed9578d
yoshiki/yaml-mode@68fecb5 -> yoshiki/yaml-mode@fc5e1c5

Fixes #4237
2020-12-05 16:37:59 -05:00
..
autoload.el Refactor +markdown-flyspell-word-p predicate 2020-11-27 22:20:51 -05:00
config.el Add mathjax support for markdown preview in pandoc 2020-10-22 21:47:32 -05:00
doctor.el Add grip-mode for live GF markdown previews 2019-10-19 10:16:33 +13:00
packages.el Bump :lang 2020-12-05 16:37:59 -05:00
README.org Update list of markdown-compile-* in markdown doc 2020-05-24 08:22:01 +02:00

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 Markdowns formatting syntax. You can try it out, right now, using the online Dingus.

The overriding design goal for Markdowns 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 its been marked up with tags or formatting instructions. While Markdowns syntax has been influenced by several existing text-to-HTML filters, the single biggest source of inspiration for Markdowns 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

  • General (natural language)

    • proselint

      • pip install proselint
      • Or through your OS package manager

        • MacOS: brew install proselint
        • Arch Linux: pacman -S proselint
    • textlint (npm install textlint)

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:

  • 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")