10 KiB
Markdown
Make sure you have known Markdown well before reading this section. If not, please learn some Markdown tutorials first.
Syntax Extensions
The Markdown content in VuePress will be parsed by markdown-it, which supports syntax extensions via markdown-it plugins.
This section will introduce built-in Markdown syntax extensions of VuePress.
You can also configure those built-in extensions, load more markdown-it plugins and implement your own extensions via markdown option and extendsMarkdown option.
Embedded
Embedded by markdown-it:
- Tables (GFM)
- Strikethrough (GFM)
Header Anchors
You might have noticed that, a #
anchor is displayed when you hover the mouse on the headers of each section. By clicking the #
anchor, you can jump to the section directly.
::: tip This header anchors extension is supported by markdown-it-anchor.
Config reference: markdown.anchor :::
Links
When using Markdown link syntax, VuePress will implement some conversions for you.
Take our documentation source files as an example:
└─ docs
├─ guide
│ ├─ getting-started.md
│ ├─ markdown.md # <- Here we are
│ └─ README.md
├─ reference
│ └─ config.md
└─ README.md
Raw Markdown
[Home](/README.md)
[Guide](/guide/)
[Getting Started](./getting-started.md)
[markdown.links](../reference/config.md#links)
[GitHub](https://github.com)
Converted to
<RouterLink to="/">Home</RouterLink>
<RouterLink to="/guide/">Guide</RouterLink>
<RouterLink to="/guide/getting-started.html">Getting Started</RouterLink>
<RouterLink to="/reference/config.html#links">markdown.links</RouterLink>
<a href="https://github.com" target="_blank" rel="noopener noreferrer">GitHub<OutboundLink/></a>
Rendered as
Home
Guide
Getting Started
markdown.links
GitHub
Explanation
- Internal links will be converted to
<RouterLink>
for SPA navigation. - Internal links to
.md
files will be converted to the page route path, and both absolute path and relative path are supported. - External links will get
target="_blank" rel="noopener noreferrer"
attrs and a indicator.
::: tip This links extension is supported by our built-in plugin.
Config reference: markdown.links
Also see: Built-in Components > OutboundLink :::
Emoji 🎉
You can add emoji to your Markdown content by typing :EMOJICODE:
.
For a full list of available emoji and codes, check out emoji-cheat-sheet.com.
Input
VuePress 2 is out :tada: !
Output
VuePress 2 is out 🎉 !
::: tip This emoji extension is supported by markdown-it-emoji.
Config reference: markdown.emoji :::
Table of Contents
If you want to put the table of contents (TOC) of your current page inside your Markdown content, you can use the [[toc]]
syntax.
Input
[[toc]]
Output
The headers in TOC will link to the corresponding header anchors, so TOC won't work well if you disable header anchors.
::: tip This toc extension is supported by our built-in plugin, which is forked and modified from markdown-it-toc-done-right.
Config reference: markdown.toc :::
Code Blocks
Following code blocks extensions are implemented during markdown parsing in Node side. That means, the code blocks won't be processed in client side.
If you want to implement client-side syntax highlighting via prism.js or highlight.js, you could disable our code blocks extensions, and introduce your library manually in client side.
Syntax Highlighting
VuePress uses Prism to highlight language syntax in Markdown code blocks, using coloured text.
Prism supports a wide variety of programming languages. For a full list of available languages, check out Prism supported languages.
You can add an optional language identifier to enable syntax highlighting in your fenced code blocks:
Input
```ts
import type { UserConfig } from '@vuepress/cli'
export const config: UserConfig = {
title: 'Hello, VuePress',
}
```
Output
import type { UserConfig } from '@vuepress/cli'
export const config: UserConfig = {
title: 'Hello, VuePress',
}
::: tip This syntax highlighting extension is supported by our built-in plugin.
Config reference: markdown.code.highlight :::
Line Highlighting
You can highlight specified lines of your code blocks by adding line ranges mark in your fenced code blocks:
Input
```ts{1,6-8}
import type { UserConfig } from '@vuepress/cli'
export const config: UserConfig = {
title: 'Hello, VuePress',
themeConfig: {
logo: 'https://vuejs.org/images/logo.png',
},
}
```
Output
import type { UserConfig } from '@vuepress/cli'
export const config: UserConfig = {
title: 'Hello, VuePress',
themeConfig: {
logo: 'https://vuejs.org/images/logo.png',
},
}
Examples for line ranges mark:
- Line ranges:
{5-8}
- Multiple single lines:
{4,7,9}
- Combined:
{4,7-13,16,23-27,40}
::: tip This line highlighting extension is supported by our built-in plugin, which is forked and modified from markdown-it-highlight-lines.
Config reference: markdown.code.highlightLines :::
Line Numbers
You must have noticed that the number of lines is displayed on the left side of code blocks. This is enabled by default and you can disable it in config.
You can add :line-numbers
/ :no-line-numbers
mark in your fenced code blocks to override the value set in config.
Input
```ts
// line-numbers is enabled by default
const line2 = 'This is line 2'
const line3 = 'This is line 3'
```
```ts:no-line-numbers
// line-numbers is disabled
const line2 = 'This is line 2'
const line3 = 'This is line 3'
```
Output
// line-numbers is enabled by default
const line2 = 'This is line 2'
const line3 = 'This is line 3'
// line-numbers is disabled
const line2 = 'This is line 2'
const line3 = 'This is line 3'
::: tip This line numbers extension is supported by our built-in plugin.
Config reference: markdown.code.lineNumbers :::
Wrap with v-pre
As template syntax is allowed in Markdown, it would also work in code blocks, too.
To avoid your code blocks being compiled by Vue, VuePress will add v-pre directive to your code blocks by default, which can be disabled in config.
You can add :v-pre
/ :no-v-pre
mark in your fenced code blocks to override the value set in config.
::: warning
The template syntax characters, for example, the "Mustache" syntax (double curly braces) might be parsed by the syntax highlighter. Thus, as the following example, :no-v-pre
might not work well in some languages.
If you want to make Vue syntax work in those languages anyway, try to disable the default syntax highlighting and implement your own syntax highlighting in client side. :::
Input
```md
<!-- This will be kept as is by default -->
1 + 2 + 3 = {{ 1 + 2 + 3 }}
```
```md:no-v-pre
<!-- This will be compiled by Vue -->
1 + 2 + 3 = {{ 1 + 2 + 3 }}
```
```js:no-v-pre
// This won't be compiled correctly because of js syntax highlighting
const onePlusTwoPlusThree = {{ 1 + 2 + 3 }}
```
Output
<!-- This will be kept as is -->
1 + 2 + 3 = {{ 1 + 2 + 3 }}
<!-- This will be compiled by Vue -->
1 + 2 + 3 = {{ 1 + 2 + 3 }}
// This won't be compiled correctly because of js syntax highlighting
const onePlusTwoPlusThree = {{ 1 + 2 + 3 }}
::: tip This v-pre extension is supported by our built-in plugin.
Config reference: markdown.code.vPre :::
Using Vue in Markdown
This section will introduce some basic usage of Vue in Markdown.
Check out Advanced > Markdown and Vue SFC for more details.
Template Syntax
As we know:
- HTML is allowed in Markdown.
- Vue template syntax is compatible with HTML.
That means, Vue template syntax is allowed in Markdown.
Input
One plus one equals: {{ 1 + 1 }}
<span v-for="i in 3"> span: {{ i }} </span>
Output
One plus one equals: {{ 1 + 1 }}
span: {{ i }}
Components
You can use Vue components directly in Markdown.
Input
This is default theme built-in `<Badge />` component <Badge text="demo" />
Output
This is default theme built-in <Badge />
component
::: tip Check out the Built-in Components for a full list of built-in components.
Check out the Default Theme > Built-in Components for a full list of default theme built-in components. :::