Skip to main content

Terminal Markdown Viewer

Project description

Terminal Markdown Viewer

This is a fork of the axiros mdv The original repo is no longer being maintained. This is an actively maintained fork that drops python2 support and includes support of python3.9+

When you edit multiple md files remotely, like in a larger mkdocs project, context switches between editing terminal(s) and viewing browser may have some efficiency impact. Also sometimes there is just no browser, like via security gateways offering just a fixed set of applications on the hop in machine. Further, reading efficiency and convenience is often significantly improved by using colors. And lastly, using such a thing for cli applications might improve user output, e.g. for help texts.

This is where mdv, a Python based Markdown viewer for the terminal might be a good option.

If markdown is often "simple" enough to be somewhat readable on 256 color terminals (except images that is).

from

### Source
# Header 1
## Header 2
### Header 3
#### Header 4
##### Header 5
###### Header 6
```python
""" Test """
# Make Py2 >>> Py3:
import os, sys; reload(sys); sys.setdefaultencoding('utf-8')
# no? see http://stackoverflow.com/a/29832646/4583360 ...

# code analysis for hilite:
try:
    from pygments import lex, token
    from pygments.lexers import get_lexer_by_name, guess_lexer
```

| Tables | Fmt |
| -- | -- |
| !!! hint: wrapped | 0.1 **strong** |

!!! note: title
    this is a Note

You can also use mdv as a source code viewer, best when you have docstrings with markdown in your code:

from

~/terminal_markdown_viewer $ cat setup.py
#!/usr/bin/env python2.7
# coding: utf-8

"""_
# Mdv installation

## Usage

    [sudo] ./setup.py install

----
"""

from setuptools import setup, find_packages

import mdv

setup(
    name='mdv',
    version=mdv.__version__,

(the '_' after the docstring telling mdv that markdown follows)


mdv is a proof of concept hack: While for simple structures it does its job quite well, for complex markdown you want to use other tools. Especially for inlined html it simply fails.


Features

  • Tons of theme combinations: mdv ships with > 200 luminocity sorted themes, converted from html themes tables to ansi. Those can be combined for code vs regular markdown output...
  • Admonitions
  • Tables, incl. wide table handling avoiding "interleaving"
  • Somewhat hackable, all in one module
  • Useable as lib as well
  • File change monitor
  • Text wrapping
  • Source code highlighter
  • Little directory change monitor (cames handy when working on multiple files, to get the current one always displayed)
    • which can run arbitrary commands on file changes
    • which passes filepath, raw and prettyfied content to the other command Note: Poor man's implementation, polling. Check inotify based tools if you want sth better.

Alternatives

The ones I know of (and which made me write mdv ;-) ):

  1. There are quite a few from the js community (e.g. msee, ansidown, ansimd and also nd which is great) but they require nodejs & npm, which I don't have on my servers. Also I personally wanted table handling and admonition support throughout and prob. too old to hack other peoples' js (struggling enough with my own). But have a look at them, they do some things better than mdv in this early version (I try to learn from them). Also this would be worth a look ;-)
  2. pandoc -> html -> elinks, lynx or pandoc -> groff -> man. (Heavy and hard to use from within other programs. Styling suboptimal)
  3. vimcat (Also heavy and hard to use inline in other programs)

Summary: For production ready robust markdown viewing (e.g. for your customers) I recommend nd still, due to the early state of mdv. For playing around, especially with theming or when with Python, this one might be a valid alternative to look at.

Installation

pip install mdv

If you get no attribute HTML_PLACEHOLDER: update your markdown package.

Here is a macport (thanks Aljaž).

Manual Install: Requirements

  • python == 2.7 or > 3.5
  • py markdown (pip install markdown)
  • py pygments (pip install pygments)
  • py yaml (pip install pyyaml)
  • py docopt (pip install docopt)
  • py tabulate (pip install tabulate)

Further a 256 color terminal (for now best with dark background) and font support for a few special separator characters (which you could change via config).

For light terms you'd just need to revert the 5 colors from the themes, since they are sorted by luminocity.

I did not test anything on windows.

Manual Install: Setup

Distribution via setuptools. If setuptools is not installed, run:

pip install setuptools

Use the setup.py provided inside, I.e. run:

sudo ./setup.py install
(or ./setup.py install --user to install only for the current user)

Usage

CLI

# Usage:

    mdv [OPTIONS] MDFILE

# Options:

    MDFILE    : Path to markdown file
    -A        : Strip all ansi (no colors then)
    -C MODE   : Sourcecode highlighting mode
    -H        : Print html version
    -L        : Backwards compatible shortcut for '-u i'
    -M DIR    : Monitor directory for markdown file changes
    -T C_THEME: Theme for code highlight. If not set: Using THEME.
    -X Lexer  : Default lexer name (default: python). Set -x to use it always.
    -b TABL   : Set tab_length to sth. different than 4 [default: 4]
    -c COLS   : Fix columns to this (default: your terminal width)
    -f FROM   : Display FROM given substring of the file.
    -h        : Show help
    -i        : Show theme infos with output
    -l        : Light background (not yet supported)
    -m        : Monitor file for changes and redisplay FROM given substring
    -n NRS    : Header numbering (default: off. Say e.g. -3 or 1- or 1-5
    -t THEME  : Key within the color ansi_table.json. 'random' accepted.
    -u STYL   : Link Style (it=inline table=default, h=hide, i=inline)
    -x        : Do not try guess code lexer (guessing is a bit slow)


# Notes:

We use stty tool to derive terminal size. If you pipe into mdv we use 80 cols.

## To use mdv.py as lib:

Call the main function with markdown string at hand to get a
formatted one back. Sorry then for no Py3 support, accepting PRs if they don't screw Py2.

## FROM:

FROM may contain max lines to display, seperated by colon.
Example:

    -f 'Some Head:10' -> displays 10 lines after 'Some Head'

If the substring is not found we set it to the *first* character of the file -
resulting in output from the top (if your terminal height can be derived correctly through the stty cmd).

## Code Highlighting

Set -C <all|code|doc|mod> for source code highlighting of source code files.
Mark inline markdown with a '_' following the docstring beginnings.

- all: Show markdown docstrings AND code (default if you say, e.g. `-C.`)
- code: Only Code
- doc: Only docstrings with markdown
- mod: Only the module level docstring


## File Monitor:

If FROM is not found we display the whole file.

## Directory Monitor:

We check only text file changes, monitoring their size.

By default .md, .mdown, .markdown files are checked but you can change like `-M 'mydir:py,c,md,'` where the last empty substrings makes mdv also monitor any file w/o extension (like 'README').

### Running actions on changes:

If you append to `-M` a `'::<cmd>'` we run the command on any change detected (sync, in foreground).

The command can contain placeholders:

    _fp_     # Will be replaced with filepath
    _raw_    # Will be replaced with the base64 encoded raw content
               of the file
    _pretty_ # Will be replaced with the base64 encoded prettyfied output

Like: mdv -M './mydocs:py,md::open "_fp_"'  which calls the open
command with argument the path to the changed file.


## Themes

### Theme Rollers


    mdv -T all [file]:  All available code styles on the given file.
    mdv -t all [file]:  All available md   styles on the given file.
                        If file is not given we use a short sample file.

So to see all code hilite variations with a given theme:

Say C_THEME = all and fix THEME

Setting both to all will probably spin your beach ball...

### Environ Vars

`$MDV_THEME` and `$MDV_CODE_THEME` are understood, e.g. `export
MDV_THEME=729.8953` in your .bashrc will give you a consistent color scheme.

Regarding the strange theme ids: Those numbers are the calculated total luminocity of the 5 theme colors.

Inline

mdv is designed to be used well from other (Py2) programs when they have md at hand which should be displayed to the user:

import mdv

# config like this:
mdv.term_columns = 60

# calling like this (all CLI options supported, check def main
formatted = mdv.main(my_raw_markdown, c_theme=...)  

Note that I set the defaultencoding to utf-8 in __main__. I have this as my default python2 setup and did not test inline usage w/o. Check this for risks.

Sample Inline Use Case: click module docu

Armin Ronacher's click is a great framework for writing larger CLI apps - but its help texts are a bit boring, intended to be customized.

Here is how:

Write a normal click module with a function but w/o a doc string as shown:

@pass_context                                                                   
def cli(ctx, action, name, host, port, user, msg):           
	""" docu from module __doc__ """

On module level you provide markdown for it, like:

~/axc/plugins/zodb_sub $ cat zodb.py | head
"""
# Fetch and push ZODB trees

## ACTION: < info | pull | push | merge | dump | serve>

- info:  Requests server availability information
(...)

which you set at click module import time:

mod.cli.help = mod.__doc__

Lastly do this in your app module:

from click.formatting import HelpFormatter
def write_text(self, text):
    """ since for markdown pretty out on cli I found no good tool
	so I built my own """
    # poor man's md detection:
    if not text.strip().startswith('#'):
        return orig_write_text(self, text)
    from axc.markdown.mdv import main as mdv
    self.buffer.append(mdv(md=text, theme=os.environ['AXC_THEME']))

HelpFormatter.orig_write_text = HelpFormatter.write_text
HelpFormatter.write_text = write_text

The output has then colors:

and at smaller terms rewraps nicely:

Further, having markdown in the module __doc__ makes it simple to add into a global project docu framework, like mkdocs.

Customization

You can supply all CLI args in $HOME/.mdv, in yaml format.

More flex you have via $HOME/.mdv.py, which is execed if present, when running main.

Alternatively, in mdv.py you can change some config straight forward.

# ---------------------------------------------------------------------- Config
txt_block_cut, code_pref, list_pref, br_ends = '✂', '| ', '- ', '◈'
# ansi cols (default):
# R: Red (warnings), L: low visi, BG: background, BGL: background light, C=code
# H1 - H5 = the theme, the numbers are the ansi color codes:
H1,  H2,  H3,  H4,  H5, R,   L,  BG, BGL, T,   TL, C   = \
231, 153, 117, 109, 65, 124, 59, 16, 188, 188, 59, 102
# Code (C is fallback if we have no lexer). Default: Same theme:
CH1, CH2, CH3, CH4, CH5 = H1, H2, H3, H4, H5

code_hl = { "Keyword" : 'CH3', "Name" : 'CH1',
            "Comment" : 'L',  "String": 'CH4',
            "Error"   : 'R',  "Number": 'CH4',
            "Operator": 'CH5',
            "Generic" : 'CH2'
            }

admons = {'note'     : 'H3', 'warning': 'R',
          'attention': 'H1', 'hint'   : 'H4',
          'summary'  : 'H1', 'hint'   : 'H4',
          'question' : 'H5', 'danger' : 'R',
          'caution'  : 'H2'
         }

def_lexer = 'python'
guess_lexer = True
# also global. but not in use, BG handling can get pretty involved...
background = BG

# normal text color:
color = T

show_links = None

# could be given, otherwise read from ansi_tables.json:
themes = {}


# sample for the theme roller feature:
md_sample = ''

# ------------------------------------------------------------------ End Config

Any importing module can overwrite those module global variables as well.

Should you need yet additional themes, add them to ansi_tables.json file by adding your ansi codes there.

Screenshots

Random results, using the theme roller feature:

second

Note the table block splitting when the table does not fit (last picture).

TODO

  • Refactor the implementation, using a config class
  • Lines separators not optimal (nd does better)
  • Test light colorscheme
  • Dimming
  • A few grey scale and 8 color themes
  • Sorting of the json by luminance
  • Some themes have black as darkest color, change to dark grey
  • Common Mark instead of markdown

PerfTests

Rendering this readme 100 times:

black root@ip-10-34-2-19:~/terminal_markdown_viewer/mdv/misc# python perfest.py
0.03 paka
0.04 paka_breaks
0.04 paka_xml
1.47 mistletoe
8.70 markdown
5.22 commonmark
  • markdown did better than commonmark w/o extensions but table and fenced code are definitelly required for 99% users.

  • paka is a wrapper around the C reference lib -> requires compilation.

  • mistletoe is pure python, crazy that they are so much faster than CommonMark. They say in pypy they are speed up even much more.

mistletoe downside: py2 only via a fork.

Credits

pygments (using their lexer)

tabulate

and, naturally, the python markdown project

Update: Next version will be CommonMark based though...

Updates

July 2016:

Sort of an excuse for the long long time w/o an update: I did actually start working on a more solid version based on CommonMark but that went a bit out of scope, into a general html terminal viewer, which will probably never be finished :-/

So at least here an update containing the stuff you guys sent as PRs, thanks all!!

  • installation and dependencies via a setup.py (thanks Martin)
  • supporting echo -e "# foo\n## bar" | mdv - and a 'light' theme (thanks Stanislav)
  • and a few other improvements regarding python2.7, file location and pyyaml, thanks all.

Also:

  • fixed the most obvious bugs with nested ordered and unordered lists
  • fixed bold marker
  • different color highlighting for the list markers
  • added a source code highlighting mode, which highlights also docstrings in markdown (-C <mode>)
  • some tests in the tests folder
  • using textwrap now for the wrapping, to avoid these word breaks a few complained about
  • you can supply the default lexer now, e.g. -X javascript [-x]
  • fixed but with not rendered strong texts
  • pip install mdv

Nov 2016:

  • travis

  • Inline link tables

Sept 2018:

  • Merged some PRs, thanks.
  • Decent code formatter. Not that this weekend hack got more readable though. Well, maybe a bit.
  • Revised Py3 support (finally found peace with it, since they enforce UTF-8 everywhere the new features begin to outweigh the nightmares of trying to decode everything without need).
  • Indented code in PY3 was broken, fixed that. Why, PY3, are you creating crap like "b'foo'" instead raising or auto-decoding (since you work anyway only with your UTF8-everywhere-assumption)!?
  • Header numbering feature added (-n 2-4 or -n 1-)
- docopt and pyyaml install requirement removed, better config file handling. - pypi markdown rendering for the readme, finally.

Project details


Download files

Download the file for your platform. If you're not sure which to choose, learn more about installing packages.

Source Distributions

No source distribution files available for this release.See tutorial on generating distribution archives.

Built Distribution

mdv3-2.0.0-py3-none-any.whl (45.9 kB view details)

Uploaded Python 3

File details

Details for the file mdv3-2.0.0-py3-none-any.whl.

File metadata

  • Download URL: mdv3-2.0.0-py3-none-any.whl
  • Upload date:
  • Size: 45.9 kB
  • Tags: Python 3
  • Uploaded using Trusted Publishing? No
  • Uploaded via: twine/1.13.0 pkginfo/1.5.0.1 requests/2.21.0 setuptools/41.0.1 requests-toolbelt/0.9.1 tqdm/4.31.1 CPython/2.7.16

File hashes

Hashes for mdv3-2.0.0-py3-none-any.whl
Algorithm Hash digest
SHA256 6d574dc43b25f28f385a8491138a2cd6680c019b0914a0bf4403f39af4d8a6f4
MD5 e055631a3e0352e285ba122ddb20a4c0
BLAKE2b-256 d9c2645ac393ab1e490c754d86061036e4e7378f8c0b161e6099e9675f51d5c9

See more details on using hashes here.

Supported by

AWS AWS Cloud computing and Security Sponsor Datadog Datadog Monitoring Fastly Fastly CDN Google Google Download Analytics Microsoft Microsoft PSF Sponsor Pingdom Pingdom Monitoring Sentry Sentry Error logging StatusPage StatusPage Status page