unified
Highlight.js
unified | Highlight.js | |
---|---|---|
14 | 83 | |
4,250 | 23,076 | |
1.1% | 0.5% | |
7.2 | 8.7 | |
12 days ago | 4 days ago | |
JavaScript | JavaScript | |
MIT License | BSD 3-clause "New" or "Revised" 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.
unified
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No CMS? Writing Our Blog in React
From TFA:
> My idea was that surely it's possible to write a bunch of markdown, and then have that get wrapped in a bunch of JSX tags that come pre-styled, using the styles of your existing repo? For example, what I expected was to be able to write *test* (Markdown for bold) and then get a component that looked liketest where is a library-defined React component
It surely is possible, so perhaps I can share some links if others are wondering the same thing.
If you like to roll your own solution for that, you can use the unified ecosystem: https://unifiedjs.com/
However, if you want JSX just do what everyone does and reach for MDX:
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The hustle free way to build a next.js blog with dev.to
Styling the blog, figure out the eco-system within UnifiedJs, remark-rehype, oh boy, I could write another blog with that.
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building a basic markdown editor: unified, trees and data
To build the Markdown editor (and the preview, mostly), I decided to use unified, an ecosystem of tools allowing the developer to parse a format into an abstract tree and back into another format (for example, markdown to html) and modify said tree (for example, to add specific classes to certain html elements before they are converted to an actual html string. The basics of how to do so can be found in this article, but they mostly consist of:
- Content as structured data, Compile content to syntax trees and vice versa
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HTML to React service
It’ll take you a few hours to become proficient in the “unified” syntax tree libraries. So worth it. Easy fully customized conversion to/from html, react, plain text, markdown, you name it. https://unifiedjs.com/
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Universal compiler using WASM architecture
Why universal? Because a lot of languages are simillar in a bunch of ways and it might be good to reuse existing parts of the compiler to speed up the process of writing new DSLs for example. Also a pretty big use-case is not for compilers itself but just for transformers like Markdown to HTML, there are already a lot of libraries (like https://github.com/unifiedjs/unified for ASTs and https://tree-sitter.github.io/tree-sitter/ for parsing) that try achieve similar goals but they are not working together.
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Converting and customizing Markdown files to HTML with Unified, remark & rehype
Unified is a framework to process Markdown. It's a plugin-based tool that allows you to inspect and modify the way Markdown is converted to other formats like HTML.
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Wrighter (β) - A Powerful Markdown Blogger & A Writing Companion ⚡
under the hood, the markdown is parsed by the unified remark and rehype processors, which in turn under the hood manipulate the markdown + HTML as an AST, which gives a lot of flexibility on parsing and rendering markdown. The editor uses them as plugins, which allows me to pick the features and inject them into the editor, one such injectable feature is the custom-made "copy from anywhere & paste as markdown" feature.
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Building React Components from headless CMS markdown
Having the flexibility to create custom React Components for markdown is essential and with react-markdown, we can achieve this in just a few lines of code. Boosting performance, increasing link security, and having overall increased capabilities for our markdown data are what we achieve here. Aside from the improvements within our application, this component is super easy to use and taps us into the unifiedjs (giving us superpowers!).
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I create my own homepage!
The Markdown processor used unified assets.
Highlight.js
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Vala Programming Language
> it was designed to resemble C#
I actually first heard of Vala just a few days ago when I was looking at a C#-related PR[1] for highlight.js:
> This fails the tests as the Vala default.txt is recognized now as C#. However, Vala is very close in syntax to C#, and the default.txt also seems to be valid C# so not sure what to do about this.
[1] https://github.com/highlightjs/highlight.js/pull/3906
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Dev.to and GitHub usage pl Syntax Highlighter
About GitHub Source - https://github.com/highlightjs/highlight.js/issues/1224
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Code Syntax highlighting in Next Js
Let's get started by installing the highlight js
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Build a simple code editor
Luckily, implementing syntax highlighting in our simple code editor is easy with the use of external libraries. There are several JavaScript libraries available, such as Prism and Highlight.js. For our editor, we'll use Prism since it's easy to use and supports a wide range of programming languages.
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We're Not a CDN – Highlight.js
They do actually document the recommended path in their GitHub docs: https://github.com/highlightjs/highlight.js#GettingTheLibrar...
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Show HN: A template for Markdown-based sites (no static site generator required)
The templates grabs Markdown file data with XMLHttpRequest and converts it to HTML with https://showdownjs.com/ . Classless styles are done with https://picocss.com/ and code block syntax highlighting is done with https://highlightjs.org/ .
GitHub repo: https://github.com/dandalpiaz/markdown-pages
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Is copying from open source projects stealing?
My search for a third-party syntax highlighter brought me to highlight.js. ctil converts text (.txt) and Markdown (.md) to generated HTML (.html) files, so I want the generated HTML files to support syntax highlighting. highlight.js can be used as HTML Tags by using a Content Delivery Network, CDN, so I was able to add highlight.js by adding the following lines to the generated HTML files:
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building a basic markdown editor: unified, trees and data
The real magic is what happens once you generate the syntax trees; at that point, you can modify them with the existing plugins (or make you own, if you really want to). For instance, I use a plugin to add specific css classes to certain elements so they integrate better with the visual design of the website another to add code highlighting with highlight.js and some others for generating a js object from the frontmatter of a Markdown file and to add support for Github flavored Markdown. I could do a lot more with these, like add support for videos, embeds and more, but for now this is enough for a simple preview.
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HTML5 - Text markup elements
pre is for a block of preformatted text, so spaces are preserved, and the font can be monospaced. Another element is code for programming codes. Notice that code doesn't offer code highlighting; for this, use JavaScript + CSS code, like Highlight.js.
- Scraping Google Maps
What are some alternatives?
mdx - Markdown for the component era
PrismJS - Lightweight, robust, elegant syntax highlighting.
uniorg - An accurate Org-mode parser for JavaScript/TypeScript
Rouge - A pure Ruby code highlighter that is compatible with Pygments
orgajs - parse org-mode content into AST
Pygments
retext - natural language processor powered by plugins part of the @unifiedjs collective
Javascript Left-Right Parser - Parser for JavaScript
ntast - Notion Abstract Syntax Tree specification.
tiptap - The headless rich text editor framework for web artisans.
unist - Universal Syntax Tree used by @unifiedjs
quill - Quill is a modern WYSIWYG editor built for compatibility and extensibility.