Github-flavored Markdown to html python and command line interface.
Project description
github-flavored-markdown-to-html
A user-friendly python-module and command-line frontend to convert markdown to html. It uses GitHubs online Markdown-to-html-API by default (which requires internet connection), but any other python- or commandline tool can be plugged into it as well. Whatever you use it with is automatically extended with a ton of functionality, like more in- and output options, github-flavored CSS, formula support, image downloading, host-ready file- and image-placement, pdf-conversion, and more.
Whilst its main purpose is the creation of static pages from markdown files, for example in conjunction with a static website builder or github actions if you host on Github, it can be very well-used for any other purpose.
Advantages include:
- Lets you specify the markdown to convert as a string, as a repository path, as a local file name or as a hyperlink.
- Pulls any images referenced in the markdown files from the web/ your local storage and places them in a directory relative to your specified website root, so the resulting file structure is host-ready for static sites. Multiple arguments allow the customization of the saving locations, but the images will always be referenced correctly in the resulting html files.
- Creates all links as root-relative hyperlinks and lets you specify the root directory as well as the locations for css and images, but uses smart standard values for everything.
- Supports inline LaTeX-formulas (use
$
-formula-$
to use them), which GitHub usually doesn't (this is done using the Codecogs EqnEditor). - Supports exporting to pdf with or without Github styling, using the pdfkit python module (if it is installed).
- Tested and optimized to look good when using Darkreader (the .js-module, not necessarily the browser extension. This means that formulas are displayed with a light text when in darkmode, amongst other things).
- Supports umlauts and other non-ascii-characters in plain text as well as in multiline code blocks, which the github REST api usually doesn't.
- Allows you to choose which tool or module to use at its core for the basic markdown to html conversion.
- Styles its output with github's README-css (can be turned off).
- Comes with an option to compress and downscale all images referenced in the markdown file (does not affect the original images) with a specified background color (default is white) for converting RGB to RGBA, and a specified compression rate (default is 90). Images with a specified width or height attribute in pixels get scaled down to that size to reduce loading time. This helps severely reduce the size of generated pages for markdown files with lots of images. There is also an option to save all images in multiple sizes and let the html viewer/browser pick the one fitting for the viewport size (using the img srcset attribute), thus making gh-md-to-html the only md-to-html converter with builtin srcset support for image load reduction.
- If two equal images from equal or different sources are referenced in the given markdown file, and both would be saved in the same resolution et cetera, both are pointed to the same copy in the generated html to minimize loading overhead.
Whilst using pandoc to convert from markdown to pdf usually yields more beautiful results (pandoc uses LaTeX, after all), gh-md-to-html has its own set of advantages when it comes to quickly converting complex files for a homework assignment or other purposes where reliability weights more than beauty:
- pandoc converts .md to LaTeX and then renders it to pdf, which means that images embedded in the .md are shown where they fit best in the .pdf and not, as one would expect it from a .md-file, exactly where they were embedded.
- pandoc's pandoc-flavored markdown supports formulas; however, some specific rules apply regarding the amount of
whitespace cornering the
$
-signs and what characters the formula may start with. These rules do not apply in some common markdown editors like MarkText, though, which leads to lots of frustration when formulas that worked in the editor don't work anymore when converting with pandoc (MarkText's own export-to-pdf-function sometimes fails on formula-heavy files without an error message, though, which makes it even less reliable). The worst part is that, whenever pandoc fails converting .md to .pdf because of this, it shows the line number of the error based on the intermediate .tex-file instead of the input .md-file, which makes it difficult to find the problem's root. As you might have guessed, gh-md-to-html couldn't care less about the amount of whitespace you start your formulas with, leaving the decision up to you. - pandoc supports multiple markdown flavors. The sole formula-supporting one of these is pandoc-flavored markdown, which comes with some quite specific requirements regarding the amount of trailing whitespace before a sub-list in a nested list, and other requirements to create multi-line bullet point entries. These requirements are not fulfilled my many markdown-editors (such as MarkText) and not required by many other markdown flavors, causing pandoc to not render multiline bullet point entries and nestled lists correctly in many cases. gh-md-to-html, on the other hand, supports both nested lists like you would expect it, and formulas, releasing the burden of having to edit entire markdown files to make then work with pandoc's md-to-html-conversion from your shoulders.
To sum it up, pandoc's md-to-pdf-conversion acts quite unusual when it comes to images, nested lists, multiline bullet point entries, or formulas, and gh-md-to-html does not.
Installation
Use pip3 install gh-md-to-html
to install directly from the python package index, or python3 -m pip install ...
if
you are on windows.
Or use
git clone https://github.com/phseiff/github-flavored-markdown-to-html.git
cd github-flavored-markdown-to-html
pip3 install .
to clone from master and add changes before installing.
Both might require sudo
on Linux, and you can optionally do
sudo apt-get install wkhtmltopdf
python3 -m pip install pdfkit
(if you want to use the optional pdf features) to include pdf support into your installation.
Usage
If you want to access the interface with your command line, you can just supply
gh-md-to-html
with the arguments documented in the help text (accessible with
gh-md-to-html -h
and shown below). On windows, you must supply python3 -m gh_md_to_html
with the corresponding
arguments.
If you want to access the interface via python, you can use
import gh_md_to_html
and then use gh_md_to_html.main()
with the same arguments (and default values) you would
supply to the command line interface.
Documentation
All arguments and how they work are documented in the help text of the program, which looks like this:
usage: __main__.py [-h] [-t {file,repo,web,string}]
[-w WEBSITE_ROOT [WEBSITE_ROOT ...]]
[-d DESTINATION [DESTINATION ...]]
[-i IMAGE_PATHS [IMAGE_PATHS ...]]
[-c CSS_PATHS [CSS_PATHS ...]]
[-n OUTPUT_NAME [OUTPUT_NAME ...]]
[-p OUTPUT_PDF [OUTPUT_PDF ...]] [-s STYLE_PDF]
[-f FOOTER [FOOTER ...]] [-m MATH]
[-r FORMULAS_SUPPORTING_DARKREADER]
[-x EXTRA_CSS [EXTRA_CSS ...]]
[-o CORE_CONVERTER [CORE_CONVERTER ...]]
[-e COMPRESS_IMAGES [COMPRESS_IMAGES ...]]
MD-origin [MD-origin ...]
Convert markdown to HTML using the GitHub API and some additional tweaks with
python.
positional arguments:
MD-origin Where to find the markdown file that should be
converted to html
optional arguments:
-h, --help show this help message and exit
-t {file,repo,web,string}, --origin-type {file,repo,web,string}
In what way the MD-origin-argument describes the origin
of the markdown file to use. Defaults to file. The
options mean:
* file: takes a relative or absolute path to a file
* repo: takes a path to a markdown-file in a github
repository, such as <user_name>/<repo_name>/<branch-
name>/<path_to_markdown>.md
* web: takes an url to a markdown file
* string: takes a string containing the files content
-w WEBSITE_ROOT [WEBSITE_ROOT ...], --website-root WEBSITE_ROOT [WEBSITE_ROOT ...]
Only relevant if you are creating the html for a static
website which you manage using git or something similar.
--html-root is the directory from which you serve your
website (which is needed to correctly generate the links
within the generated html, such as the link pointing to
the css, since they are all root- relative), and can be
a relative as well as an absolute path. Defaults to the
directory you called this script from. If you intent to
view the html file on your laptop instead of hosting it
on a static site, website-root should be a dot and
destination not set. The reason the generated html files
use root-relative links to embed images is that on many
static websites, https://foo/bar/index.html can be
accessed via https://foo/bar, in which case relative
(non-root- relative) links in index.html will be
interpreted as relative to foo instead of bar, which can
cause images not to load.
-d DESTINATION [DESTINATION ...], --destination DESTINATION [DESTINATION ...]
Where to store the generated html. This path is relative
to --website-root. Defaults to "".
-i IMAGE_PATHS [IMAGE_PATHS ...], --image-paths IMAGE_PATHS [IMAGE_PATHS ...]
Where to store the images needed or generated for the
html. This path is relative to website-root. Defaults to
the "images"-folder within the destination folder.
-c CSS_PATHS [CSS_PATHS ...], --css-paths CSS_PATHS [CSS_PATHS ...]
Where to store the css needed for the html (as a path
relative to the website root). Defaults to the
"<WEBSITE_ROOT>/github-markdown-css"-folder.
-n OUTPUT_NAME [OUTPUT_NAME ...], --output-name OUTPUT_NAME [OUTPUT_NAME ...]
What the generated html file should be called like. Use
<name> within the value to refer to the name of the
markdown file that is being converted (if you don't use
"-t string"). You can use '-n print' to print the file
(if using the command line interface) or return it (if
using the python module), both without saving it.
Default is '<name>.html'.
-p OUTPUT_PDF [OUTPUT_PDF ...], --output-pdf OUTPUT_PDF [OUTPUT_PDF ...]
If set, the file will also be saved as a pdf file in the
same directory as the html file, using pdfkit, a python
library which will also need to be installed for this to
work. You may use the <name> variable in this value like
you did in --output-name.
-s STYLE_PDF, --style-pdf STYLE_PDF
If set to false, the generated pdf (only relevant if you
use --output-pdf) will not be styled using github's css.
-f FOOTER [FOOTER ...], --footer FOOTER [FOOTER ...]
An optional piece of html which will be included as a
footer where the 'hosted with <3 by github'-footer
usually is. Defaults to None, meaning that the section
usually containing said footer will be omitted
altogether.
-m MATH, --math MATH If set to True, which is the default, LaTeX-formulas
using $formula$-notation will be rendered.
-r FORMULAS_SUPPORTING_DARKREADER, --formulas-supporting-darkreader FORMULAS_SUPPORTING_DARKREADER
If set to true, formulas will be shown light if the
darkreader .js library is included in the html and the
user prefers darkmode. This is checked by looking for a
script embedded from a src ending with "darkreader.js"
and by checking the prefers-color- scheme option in the
browser. You can also supply any other script src to
look for. Please note that this won't have any effect
unless you inject the darkreader .js library into the
generated html; doing so is not included in this module.
-x EXTRA_CSS [EXTRA_CSS ...], --extra-css EXTRA_CSS [EXTRA_CSS ...]
A path to a file containing additional css to embed into
the final html, as an absolute path or relative to the
working directory. This file should contain css between
two <style>-tags, so it is actually a html file, and can
contain javascript as well. It's worth mentioning and
might be useful for your css/js that every element of
the generated html is a child element of an element with
id xxx, where xxx is "article-" plus the filename
(without extension) of:
* output- name, if output-name is not "print" and not
the default value.
* the input markdown file, if output- name is "print",
and the input type is not string. * the file with the
extra-css otherwise. If none of these cases applies, no
id is given.
-o CORE_CONVERTER [CORE_CONVERTER ...], --core-converter CORE_CONVERTER [CORE_CONVERTER ...]
The converter to use to convert the given markdown to
html, before additional modifications such as formula
support and image downloading are applied; this can be
* on Unix/ any system with a cmd: a command containing
the string "{md}", where "{md}" will be replaced with an
escaped version of the markdown file's content, and
which returns the finished html. Please note that
commands for Unix-system won't work on Windows systems,
and vice versa etc.
* when using gh-md-to- html in python: A callable which
converts markdown to html, or a string as described
above.
-e COMPRESS_IMAGES [COMPRESS_IMAGES ...], --compress-images COMPRESS_IMAGES [COMPRESS_IMAGES ...]
Reduces load time of the generated html by saving all
images referenced by the given markdown file as jpeg.
This argument takes a piece of json data containing the
following information; if it is not used, no compression
is done:
* bg-color: the color to use as a background color when
converting RGBA-images to jpeg (an RGB-format). Defaults
to "white" and accepts almost any HTML5 color-value
("#FFFFFF", "#ffffff", "white" and "rgb(255, 255, 255)"
would've all been valid values).
* progressive: Save images as progressive jpegs. Default
is False.
* srcset: Save differently scaled versions of the image
and provide them to the image in its srcset attribute.
Defaults to False. Takes an array of different widths or
True, which serves as a shortcut for "[500, 800, 1200,
1500, 1800, 2000]".
* quality: a value from 0 to 100 describing at which
quality the images should be saved (this is done after
they are scaled down, if they are scaled down at all).
Defaults to 90. If a specific size is specified for a
specific image in the html, the image is always
converted to the right size. If this argument is left
empty, no compression is down at all. If this argument
is set to True, all default values are used. If it is
set to json data and values are omitted, the defaults
are also used. If a dict is passed instead of json data
(when using the tool as a python module), the dict is
used as the result of the json data.
As mentioned above, any image referenced in the markdown file is stored locally and referenced using a root-relative hyperlinks in the generated html. How the converter guesses the location of the image is shown in the following table, with the type of imagelink noted on the top and the type of input markdown noted on the left:
https:// or http:// |
abs. filepath | rel. filepath | starting with / (e.g. /image.png ) |
not starting with / (e.g. image.png ) |
|
---|---|---|---|---|---|
-t file |
from the address | abs. filepath | rel. filepath (from where the .md -file lies) |
- | - |
-t string |
from the address | abs.filepath, but needs confirmation for security reasons | rel. filepath (to where the tool is called from), but needs confirmation for security reasons | - | - |
username/repo/dir/file.md -t repo |
from the address | - | - | username/repo/imagedir/image.png |
username/repo/dir/imagedir/image.png |
https://foo.com/bar/baz.md -t web |
from the address | - | - | https://foo.com/image.png |
https://foo.com/bar/image.png |
Demonstration
I added the following demonstration, whose files where created from the root directory of this projects directory, which relates to the root directory of the site I am hosting them on:
generated with: | view: | demonstrates what: | notes: |
---|---|---|---|
gh-md-to-html github-flavored-markdown-to-html/README.md -d github-flavored-markdown-to-html/docs -c github-flavored-markdown-to-html/docs/css -f "test footer <3" | here | html (+footer) | |
gh-md-to-html github-flavored-markdown-to-html/README.md -n README-darkmode.html -d github-flavored-markdown-to-html/docs -c github-flavored-markdown-to-html/docs/css -r true | here | html (without a footer) and that the html supports embedding the darkreader .js library without showing dark formulas on dark ground etc. | I injected the following into the html: <script type="text/javascript" src="https://phseiff.com/darkreader/darkreader.js"></script><script>DarkReader.setFetchMethod(window.fetch); DarkReader.auto({brightness: 100,contrast: 90, sepia: 10});</script> |
gh-md-to-html github-flavored-markdown-to-html/README.md -d github-flavored-markdown-to-html/docs -n print -c github-flavored-markdown-to-html/docs/css -p README.pdf | here | Converting to pdf. | |
gh-md-to-html github-flavored-markdown-to-html/README.md -d github-flavored-markdown-to-html/docs -n print -c github-flavored-markdown-to-html/docs/css -p README-unstyled.pdf -s false | here | Converting to pdf without styling. | |
gh-md-to-html github-flavored-markdown-to-html/docs/math_test.md -d github-flavored-markdown-to-html/docs -c github-flavored-markdown-to-html/docs/css | result here | Formula parsing (rendering is only marginally shown since it is done by a 3rd-party-service) | Markdown source (for comparison) here |
I also did the following demonstrations for automated image downloading, who where all successful (Note that they where run from the parent directory of my repository and that instructions on how to run them can be found within the test files themselves. Also note that the test not only shows that images are stored and embedded correctly, but also that images from different files using the same name stored within the same image directory don't overwrite each other.):
input file: | output file: | demonstrates: |
---|---|---|
here | here | loading markdown from a file, which contains images from the web as well as absolute and relative file paths. |
here | here | loading markdown from a string, which contains images from the web as well as absolute and relative file paths. |
here | here | loading markdown from an url, which contains images from the web as well as absolute and relative relative paths. |
here | here | loading markdown from an repo, which contains images from the web as well as absolute and relative file paths (within the repo). |
I also added a $formula$ here ($\sum_{i\ge e^2}^{7.3}\frac{4}{5}$) to demonstrate the formula rendering (which you won't see when viewing this README directly on github since, like I said, github usually doesn't support it.)
A directory listing of these example outputs- and inputs can be found here.
Some Notes
In case you are not happy with the margin left and right of the text, you can manually adjust it by modifying the margin-values hardcoded in prototype.html in this repository. An other thing to note is that, even though gh-md-to-html supports multi line formulas, you may still use one (one!) dollar sign per line without it triggering a formula, since every formula requires two of these. However, if you use two single dollar signs in two different columns of the same row off a table, your table will break. In the end, you are always better off properly escaping dollar signs, even though we give you the freedom not to do so on one occasion per line!
When embedding images from disk (not via an url), you should ensure that the path you load the image from does not contain whitespaces. Otherwise, the markdown code to embed the image will be shown like any other text within the resulting html/pdf instead of being replaced with an image. I will eventually get to change this; if you want this to be done ASAP, feel free to drop a comment under the corresponding issue, and I will get to work on it ASAP.
Known Usages
This tool is already used by
- myself (for homework assignments in pdf-format four times a week, so you can rest assured that yes, the person maintaining it is also using it themselves)
- feel free to drop an issue if you want to be included in this list!
DISCLAIMER: This module is neither written by Github, nor is it endorsed with Github, supported by Github, powered by Github or affiliated with Github. It only uses a public API provided by Github as well as a .css-file licensed by Github under the MIT license.
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