This is ByteMD v1 repository.
v2 is under development actively, see HashMD.
ByteMD is a Markdown editor component built with Svelte. It could also be used in other libraries/frameworks such as React, Vue and Angular.
Playground here: https://bytemd.js.org/playground/
<script>
and <img onerror>
have been correctly handled by ByteMD. No need to introduce extra DOM sanitize steps.Package | Status | Description |
---|---|---|
bytemd | Svelte/Vanilla JS component | |
@bytemd/react | React component | |
@bytemd/vue | Vue 2 component | |
@bytemd/vue-next | Vue 3 component |
The default entry of NPM package only supports modern browsers. To make legacy browsers (IE9+) work, You can compile it with ESNext -> ES5 transpilers, such as Babel or SWC.
The ES5 bundle will no longer be available after version 1.11.0. If you need it, you can use version 1.11.0 or earlier versions
Notice that polyfills are not included, and should be imported manually, see the legacy browser example.
There are two components: Editor
and Viewer
. Editor
is the Markdown editor, as the name suggests; Viewer
is commonly used to display rendered Markdown results without editing.
Before using the component, remember to import CSS file to make styles correct:
import 'bytemd/dist/index.css'
<script>
import { Editor, Viewer } from 'bytemd'
import gfm from '@bytemd/plugin-gfm'
let value
const plugins = [
gfm(),
// Add more plugins here
]
function handleChange(e) {
value = e.detail.value
}
</script>
<template>
<Editor {value} {plugins} on:change={handleChange} />
</template>
import gfm from '@bytemd/plugin-gfm'
import { Editor, Viewer } from '@bytemd/react'
const plugins = [
gfm(),
// Add more plugins here
]
const App = () => {
const [value, setValue] = useState('')
return (
<Editor
value={value}
plugins={plugins}
onChange={(v) => {
setValue(v)
}}
/>
)
}
<template>
<Editor :value="value" :plugins="plugins" @change="handleChange" />
</template>
<script>
import gfm from '@bytemd/plugin-gfm'
import { Editor, Viewer } from '@bytemd/vue'
const plugins = [
gfm(),
// Add more plugins here
]
export default {
components: { Editor },
data() {
return { value: '', plugins }
},
methods: {
handleChange(v) {
this.value = v
},
},
}
</script>
import gfm from '@bytemd/plugin-gfm'
import { Editor, Viewer } from 'bytemd'
const plugins = [
gfm(),
// Add more plugins here
]
const editor = new Editor({
target: document.body, // DOM to render
props: {
value: '',
plugins,
},
})
editor.$on('change', (e) => {
editor.$set({ value: e.detail.value })
})
Key | Type | Description |
---|---|---|
value |
string (required) |
Markdown text |
plugins |
BytemdPlugin[] |
ByteMD plugin list |
sanitize |
(schema: Schema) => Schema |
Sanitize strategy |
remarkRehype |
documentation | remark-rehype config options |
Editor
component also accepts the options of Viewer
for preview. Besides that, there are some other options:
Key | Type | Description |
---|---|---|
mode |
split , tab , auto |
Editor display mode, default: auto |
previewDebounce |
number |
Debounce time (ms) for preview, default: 300 |
placeholder |
string |
Editor placeholder |
editorConfig |
documentation | CodeMirror editor config |
locale |
i18n locale. Available locales could be found at bytemd/locales , default: use en.json |
|
uploadImages |
function |
Specify how to upload images. If set, the image icon will appear on the toolbar |
maxLength |
number |
Maximum length (number of characters) of value |
The default height of ByteMD Editor is 300px
. It could be overridden by CSS:
.bytemd {
height: calc(100vh - 200px);
}
The other styles could also be overridden, see the default style.
There is no built-in styles for the Viewer. You could use third-party markdown themes, for example juejin-markdown-themes and github-markdown-css.
ByteMD provides a powerful plugin system for customization. There are several official plugins to support features such as code syntax highlight, math equation and Mermaid flowcharts.
If you have more customized needs, you could also write your own plugin to support them.
Package | Status | Description |
---|---|---|
@bytemd/plugin-breaks | Support breaks | |
@bytemd/plugin-frontmatter | Parse frontmatter | |
@bytemd/plugin-gemoji | Support Gemoji shortcodes | |
@bytemd/plugin-gfm | Support GFM (autolink literals, strikethrough, tables, tasklists) | |
@bytemd/plugin-highlight | Highlight code blocks | |
@bytemd/plugin-highlight-ssr | Highlight code blocks (SSR compatible) | |
@bytemd/plugin-math | Support math formula | |
@bytemd/plugin-math-ssr | Support math formula (SSR compatible) | |
@bytemd/plugin-medium-zoom | Zoom images like Medium | |
@bytemd/plugin-mermaid | Support Mermaid diagram |
ByteMD uses remark and rehype ecosystem to process Markdown. The complete process is as follows:
It could also be described as a flowchart:
The 2,5,7 steps are designed for user customization via ByteMD plugin API.
We'll take Math formula plugin as an example to walk you through the process.
First of all, scaffold the project according to the BytemdPlugin
type signature:
import type { BytemdPlugin } from 'bytemd'
export default function mathPlugin(): BytemdPlugin {
return {
// to be implement
}
}
Then we look into the requirement more closely: If we want to render syntax like $a+b$
to Math formula, there are several things we need to do:
$a+b$
syntax as a Math formula in Markdown (step 2)For the first thing, luckily, we don't need to implement it with our own because remark-math already did it. The only thing we need to do is to import and use it:
import type { BytemdPlugin } from 'bytemd'
+import remarkMath from 'remark-math'
export default function mathPlugin(): BytemdPlugin {
return {
- // to be implement
+ remark: (processor) => processor.use(remarkMath),
}
}
Then consider the second thing, it would be a little complicated because we have two choices, do it in step 5 or 7. The difference is that step 5 is more friendly with SSR, while step 7 hand over the rendering to the client-side. This is why we have two plugin: @bytemd/plugin-math and @bytemd/plugin-math-ssr.
// if we choose step 5:
import type { BytemdPlugin } from 'bytemd'
import remarkMath from 'remark-math'
+import rehypeKatex from 'rehype-katex'
export default function mathPlugin(): BytemdPlugin {
return {
remark: (processor) => processor.use(remarkMath),
+ rehype: (processor) => processor.use(rehypeKatex),
}
}
// if we choose step 7:
import type { BytemdPlugin } from 'bytemd'
import remarkMath from 'remark-math'
+import rehypeKatex from 'rehype-katex'
export default function mathPlugin(): BytemdPlugin {
return {
remark: (processor) => processor.use(remarkMath),
+ viewerEffect({ markdownBody }) {
+ const renderMath = async (selector: string, displayMode: boolean) => {
+ const katex = await import('katex').then((m) => m.default)
+
+ const els = markdownBody.querySelectorAll<HTMLElement>(selector)
+ els.forEach((el) => {
+ katex.render(el.innerText, el, { displayMode })
+ })
+ }
+
+ renderMath('.math.math-inline', false)
+ renderMath('.math.math-display', true)
+ },
}
}
The last thing is to add an icon to the toolbar. we use the actions
prop to implement it:
export default function mathPlugin(): BytemdPlugin {
return {
actions: [
{
title: 'Insert an math formula',
icon: '', // 16x16 SVG icon
handler: {
type: 'action',
click(ctx) {
// to be implement:
// the `ctx` is an instance of `BytemdEditorContext`, which has
// several utility methods to help operate the CodeMirror editor state.
// remember to call `focus` to avoid lost of focus
editor.focus()
},
},
},
],
}
}
Now we have completed a minimalist version of the plugin! For more details and references please check out the source code.
MIT