marked
PostCSS
marked | PostCSS | |
---|---|---|
60 | 86 | |
31,963 | 28,221 | |
0.7% | 0.2% | |
9.5 | 8.8 | |
3 days ago | 9 days ago | |
JavaScript | TypeScript | |
GNU General Public License v3.0 or later | MIT License |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
marked
-
Eleventy vs. Next.js for static site generation
Next, install gray-matter to extract metadata from the front matter of markdown files, and marked to convert the markdown files to HTML:
-
To learn svelte, I clone Github's issues page including useful features that you might consider reusing.
đź“‘ Marked Markdown parser. Use it to create your own markdown editor.
-
🤖 AI Search and Q&A for Your Dev.to Content with Vrite
Vrite SDK provides a few built-in input and output transformers. These are functions, with standardized signatures to process the content from and into Vrite. In this case, gfmInputTransformer is essentially a GitHub Flavored Markdown parser, using Marked.js under the hood.
-
Better code highlighting on the web: rehype-tree-sitter
Another contestant in this realm is Bright[1]. It runs entirely on the server and doesn't increase bundle size as seen here[2]. Regarding parsing speed tree-sitter is without a doubt performant since it is written in Rust, but I don't have any problems "parsing on every keystroke" with a setup containing Marked[3], highlight.js[4] and a sanitizer. I did however experience performance issues with other Markdown parser libraries than Marked.
[1]: https://bright.codehike.org/
[2]: https://aihelperbot.com/test-suite
[3]: https://github.com/markedjs/marked
[4]: https://highlightjs.org/
-
[Project Share] List dialog that supports complex HTML and Markdown format.
The project uses markedJS to convert markdown into HTML, this is their GitHub page.
-
Vrite Editor: Open-Source WYSIWYG Markdown Editor
To handle pasting block Markdown content like this, I had to tap into ProseMirror and implement a custom mechanism (though somewhat based on TipTap’s paste rules), detecting starting and ending points of the blocks and parsing them with Marked.js.
-
Help needed!
I am using marked for markdown parsing together with marked-highlighting to handle syntax highlighting and everything is working as it should.
-
Need help - sanitizeHtml with marked doesn't render special characters correctly (& is & and then &amp)
I'm trying to render user input using SvelteMarkdown (that uses marked).
-
Looking for a Comprehensive Guide for Building Complex Chatbots with GPT-4 API
GPT API returns data in markdown format. You can parse it using a Markdown library and string manipulation. On Electron app I developed https://jhappsproducts.gumroad.com/l/gpteverywhere, I used https://github.com/markedjs/marked and a code syntax highlighting package to display code blocks. And used JavaScript string manipulation to detect when code blocks start and end so I could add COPY/SAVE buttons to the blocks. I hope this helps, and happy coding! :)
-
How I put ChatGPT into a WYSIWYG editor
Again, with streaming enabled, you’ll now receive new tokens as soon as they’re available. Given that OpenAI’s API uses Markdown in its response format, a full message will need to be put together from the incoming tokens and parsed to HTML, as accepted by the replaceContent function. For this purpose, I’ve used the Marked.js parser.
PostCSS
-
PostCSS - my initial experience
the plugins in the official PostCSS website were old like IE6 or the marquee tag, and
-
Dark Mode with SvelteKit, a Blog Post
Hello internet. I just published a new blog post on how to implement dark mode with SvelteKit, optionally with PostCSS and TailwindCSS:
-
11 Ways to Optimize Your Website
There are many frontend tools available for this purpose. For example, PostCSS is a popular CSS processor that can combine and minimize your code. With the right plugin, it can even fix your code for compatibility issues, making sure your CSS styles work for all browsers.
-
Styling React 2023 edition
I use PostCSS to extend CSS’s features and to add a few things that make writing styles a little more convenient, but it could easily be swapped for another preprocessor like Sass or vanilla CSS. It’s up to you. You can view my PostCSS config here.
-
Abstract Syntax Trees and Practical Applications in JavaScript
Code transpilation isn't specific to JavaScript, You can also add a level of transformation to your CSS source using tools like post-css. Most languages with a fairly mature ecosystem will probably have some tools to help with code transformation.
-
Native CSS nesting now supported by all major browsers!
In large projects, it is still a good idea to use PostCSS, which will translate new CSS features to something that browsers understand today.
- Unicode-range CSS is working wrong in Safari browser?
-
Let's Make Learning Frontend Great Again!
LiveCodes provides many of the commonly used developer tools. These include Monaco editor (that powers VS Code), Prettier, Emmet, Vim/Emacs modes, Babel, TypeScript, SCSS, Less, PostCSS, Jest and Testing Library, among others. All these tools run seamlessly in the browser without any installations or configurations. It feels like a very light-weight version of your own local development environment including the keyboard shortcuts, IntelliSense and code navigation features.
-
How to setup a simple static website using Svelte (with login)
Usually, one of the first things I do on creating a new web app is to throw a UI library in to help style components. There are several UI libraries that can be used by Svelte, but in this case I went with daisyUI because it's a fairly popular UI library which includes tailwind. To install daisyUI, you first need to install tailwind. There's a few different ways to do this (such as this guide), but the easiest way I've found is the following command, which also adds PostCSS and AutoPrefixer:
-
Vanilla+PostCSS as an Alternative to SCSS
Vanilla CSS has taken a similar path with ambitious working drafts, better browser support, and PostCSS to fill the gap for user agents lagging behind. So why is Sass/SCSS still so popular? Maybe we go so used to it that we might have forgotten what problems it was meant to solve in the first place.
What are some alternatives?
remark - markdown processor powered by plugins part of the @unifiedjs collective
styled-components - Visual primitives for the component age. Use the best bits of ES6 and CSS to style your apps without stress đź’…
markdown-it - Markdown parser, done right. 100% CommonMark support, extensions, syntax plugins & high speed
emotion - 👩‍🎤 CSS-in-JS library designed for high performance style composition
snarkdown - :smirk_cat: A snarky 1kb Markdown parser written in JavaScript
esbuild - An extremely fast bundler for the web
DOMPurify - DOMPurify - a DOM-only, super-fast, uber-tolerant XSS sanitizer for HTML, MathML and SVG. DOMPurify works with a secure default, but offers a lot of configurability and hooks. Demo:
Tailwind CSS - A utility-first CSS framework for rapid UI development.
MDsveX - A markdown preprocessor for Svelte.
purgecss - Remove unused CSS
js-yaml - JavaScript YAML parser and dumper. Very fast.
JSS - JSS is an authoring tool for CSS which uses JavaScript as a host language.