prism-react-renderer
next-mdx-remote
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prism-react-renderer | next-mdx-remote | |
---|---|---|
13 | 20 | |
1,798 | 2,386 | |
1.4% | 4.8% | |
6.8 | 5.2 | |
16 days ago | about 1 month ago | |
TypeScript | TypeScript | |
MIT License | Mozilla Public License 2.0 |
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.
prism-react-renderer
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Starlight vs. Docusaurus for building documentation
Both frameworks also support code blocks with syntax highlighting. Docusaurus uses prism-react-renderer for theming, while Starlight uses an Astro package called expressive-code to control customizations.
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Is copying from open source projects stealing?
In my previous blog post on Code Reading, I read the codebase of Docusaurus to research how the project implements Syntax Highlighting for fenced code blocks. My research taught me that Docusaurus actually uses Prism-React-Renderer, a third-party library, to provide Syntax Highlighting. This knowledge was useful because I wanted to add syntax highlighting to ctil, my Markdown-to-HTML converter, but didn't want to implement the feature from scratch. Although I can't use Prism React Renderer in my own project, researching Docusaurus gave me the idea to find a Open Source library I could use.
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How to embed live code editor for React components in MDX docs
For non-live codeBlock, you may want to render it by prism-react-renderer which is working also under the LiveEditor. I'm not sure what is the best way to share the style and theme between them but do so anyhow.
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Adding Syntax Highlighting with Line Numbers to Gatsby MDX Using prism-react-renderer
If you already haven’t integrated MDX into your project (you should because MDX is awesome), here’s the official guide on Gatsby's documentation to add it to your project. However, if you are already using Markdown Remark in your project, consider Migrating to MDX. In this post, we will integrate PrismJS syntax highlighting with MDX using prism-react-renderer. Also, we are going to add line numbers to code blocks. This is what we are aiming for:
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How I built my second brain using Next.JS
Syntax Highlighting - Nextra comes with in-built syntax highlighting. However, when I created my site the syntax highlighting feature doesn’t seem to be working. So, I ended up creating my own syntax-highlighting component with prism-react-renderer.
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Make Better Blog Posts with Beautiful Syntax Highlighting in Nextjs with React-Prism-Render
If you have a Nextjs blog (or any React Framework blog) and want to create beautiful code blocks out of your MDX posts, then this post will show you how to do that using prism-react-renderer.
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Contributing to IPC144 Repo
To fix it, I just went to this repo, specifically to prism-react-renderer/themes/ and checked the available themes I could use, and found out that the Visual Studio themes looked the best for my purpose.
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Getting simple code syntax highlighting
From memory you need to target the `pre` block so you can apply the styles/theme to them. I uses prism-react-renderer.
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Language Tabs for Markdown & MDX Code Blocks
Integrating syntax highlighting in Gatsby is solvable with solutions like gatsby-remark-prismjs or prism-react-renderer. When creating the code block in Markdown you specify the desired language (e.g. js or css) after the opening three backticks. It's a nice touch to display the specified language also in the code block itself, like I do it on my blog here:
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Adding Line Numbers and Code Highlighting to MDX
In this very short quick tip you'll learn how to set up code blocks in MDX and Gatsby that support line numbers and code highlighting using the code renderer prism-react-renderer. A preview can be found on CodeSandbox.
next-mdx-remote
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Give your blog superpowers with MDX in a Next.js
next-mdx-remote
- Is there a way to change where components are loaded from?
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Making a blog with Directus, MDX, and Next.js On-Demand ISR
We are going to be using next-mdx-remote for this tutorial. Let us install it -
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NextJS MDX from Database
So, i was reading the docs and Next/MDX looks exactly what i need for my blog. Well, not exactly because having hundreds of Markdown Pages doesn't look the best way to store the pages, and i was wondering if are any way to generate those pages from a DataBase full of Markdown pages. I read about next-MDX-remote but i was wondering if is there a native way to do that.
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Next.js + MDX
next-mdx-remote, a community package maintained by Hashicorp that allows you to use MDX from outside your project.
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Powerful Code Blocks with Code Hike and MDX
Do note that Code Hike also works with Next MDX Remote and MDX Bundler however, we are going to look at a simple example with the official MDX plugin for Next.js.
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How to setup a dev blog using Next.js and next-mdx-remote.
Refer the next-mdx-remote github to learn more the use of plugins and how awesome things could be done using MDX.
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Define my Pages in Wordpress
You could try storing mdx in wordpress somehow (I'm not a wordpress expert) and using next-mdx-remote to render that at runtime. MDX can contain both markdown and react components.
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Beginners Guide to Using mdx-bundler With Your Next.js Blog
MDX is an extension on Markdown which, lets you import custom React components into your blog posts. To use MDX with Next.js you need to use a separate package. There are a few choices with MDX-remote being a popular one, but it has some drawbacks. For that reason, I chose to use mdx-bundler.
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Adding an in-browser code preview to your React Application with Sandpack
Sandpack is a live coding environment that runs on the browser. It is made by the team behind CodeSandbox/. The main objective here is to provide interactive examples to play around with, to users. I see it being widely used in things like blog posts and documentation (in fact the, work in progress, new React Docs is using Sandpack). In this article, we are going to look at how to add Sandpack to a React Application and then we will look at integrating it with Next MDX Remote in a NextJS Application.
What are some alternatives?
rehype-prism - rehype plugin to highlight code blocks in HTML with Prism (via refractor)
mdx - Markdown for the component era
nextjs-prism-markdown - Example using Prism / Markdown with Next.js including switching syntax highlighting themes.
mdx-bundler - 🦤 Give me MDX/TSX strings and I'll give you back a component you can render. Supports imports!
PrismJS - Lightweight, robust, elegant syntax highlighting.
use-dark-mode - A custom React Hook to help you implement a "dark mode" component.
tailwind-nextjs-starter-blog - This is a Next.js, Tailwind CSS blogging starter template. Comes out of the box configured with the latest technologies to make technical writing a breeze. Easily configurable and customizable. Perfect as a replacement to existing Jekyll and Hugo individual blogs.
rehype - HTML processor powered by plugins part of the @unifiedjs collective
next-mdx-enhanced - A Next.js plugin that enables MDX pages, layouts, and front matter
nextra - Simple, powerful and flexible site generation framework with everything you love from Next.js.