micromark extensions to support math ($C_L$
).
- What is this?
- When to use this
- Install
- Use
- API
- Authoring
- HTML
- CSS
- Syntax
- Types
- Compatibility
- Security
- Related
- Contribute
- License
This package contains two extensions that add support for math syntax
in markdown to micromark
.
As there is no spec for math in markdown, this extension follows how code (fenced and text) works in Commonmark, but uses dollars.
This project is useful when you want to support math in markdown. Extending markdown with a syntax extension makes the markdown less portable. LaTeX equations are also quite hard. But this mechanism works well when you want authors, that have some LaTeX experience, to be able to embed rich diagrams of math in scientific text.
You can use these extensions when you are working with micromark
already.
When you need a syntax tree, you can combine this package with
mdast-util-math
.
All these packages are used remark-math
, which focusses on
making it easier to transform content by abstracting these internals away.
This package is ESM only. In Node.js (version 16+), install with npm:
npm:
npm install micromark-extension-math
In Deno with esm.sh
:
import {math, mathHtml} from 'https://esm.sh/micromark-extension-math@3'
In browsers with esm.sh
:
<script type="module">
import {math, mathHtml} from 'https://esm.sh/micromark-extension-math@3?bundle'
</script>
Say our document example.md
contains:
Lift($L$) can be determined by Lift Coefficient ($C_L$) like the following equation.
$$
L = \frac{1}{2} \rho v^2 S C_L
$$
…and our module example.js
looks as follows:
import fs from 'node:fs/promises'
import {micromark} from 'micromark'
import {math, mathHtml} from 'micromark-extension-math'
const output = micromark(await fs.readFile('example.md'), {
extensions: [math()],
htmlExtensions: [mathHtml()]
})
console.log(output)
…now running node example.js
yields (abbreviated):
<p>Lift(<span class="math math-inline"><span class="katex">…</span></span>) can be determined by Lift Coefficient (<span class="math math-inline"><span class="katex">…</span></span>) like the following equation.</p>
<div class="math math-display"><span class="katex-display"><span class="katex">…</span></span></div>
This package exports the identifiers math
and
mathHtml
.
There is no default export.
The export map supports the development
condition.
Run node --conditions development module.js
to get instrumented dev code.
Without this condition, production code is loaded.
Create an extension for micromark
to enable math syntax.
options
(Options
, default:{}
) — configuration
Extension for micromark
that can be passed in extensions
, to enable math
syntax (Extension
).
Create an extension for micromark
to support math when serializing to HTML.
👉 Note: this uses KaTeX to render math.
options
(HtmlOptions
, default:{}
) — configuration
Extension for micromark
that can be passed in htmlExtensions
, to support
math when serializing to HTML (HtmlExtension
).
Configuration for HTML output (optional).
👉 Note: passed to
katex.renderToString
.displayMode
is overwritten by this plugin, tofalse
for math in text (inline), andtrue
for math in flow (block).
type Options = Omit<import('katex').KatexOptions, 'displayMode'>
Configuration (TypeScript type).
singleDollarTextMath
(boolean
, default:true
) — whether to support math (text, inline) with a single dollar. Single dollars work in Pandoc and many other places, but often interfere with “normal” dollars in text. If you turn this off, you use two or more dollars for text math.
When authoring markdown with math, keep in mind that math doesn’t work in most
places.
Notably, GitHub currently has a really weird crappy client-side regex-based
thing.
But on your own (math-heavy?) site it can be great!
You can use code (fenced) with an info string of math
to improve this, as
that works in many places.
Math (flow) does not relate to HTML elements.
MathML
, which is sort of like SVG but for math, exists but it doesn’t work
well and isn’t widely supported.
Instead, this uses KaTeX, which generates MathML as a fallback but also
generates a bunch of divs and spans so math look pretty.
The KaTeX result is wrapped in <div>
(for flow, block) and <span>
(for text,
inline) elements, with two classes: math
and either math-display
or
math-inline
.
When turning markdown into HTML, each line ending in math (text) is turned into a space.
The HTML produced by KaTeX requires CSS to render correctly.
You should use katex.css
somewhere on the page where the math is shown to
style it properly.
At the time of writing, the last version is:
<link rel="stylesheet" href="https://cdn.jsdelivr.net/npm/[email protected]/dist/katex.min.css">
Math forms with the following BNF:
; Restriction: the number of markers in the closing sequence must be equal
; to the number of markers in the opening sequence.
mathText ::= sequenceText 1*byte sequenceText
mathFlow ::= fenceOpen *( eol *line ) [ eol fenceClose ]
; Restriction: not preceded or followed by the marker.
sequenceText ::= 1*"$"
fenceOpen ::= sequenceFlow meta
; Restriction: the number of markers in the closing fence sequence must be
; equal to or greater than the number of markers in the opening fence
; sequence.
fenceClose ::= sequenceFlow *spaceOrTab
sequenceFlow ::= 2*"$"
; Restriction: the marker cannot occur in `meta`
meta ::= 1*line
; Character groups for informational purposes.
byte ::= %x00-FFFF
eol ::= "\n" | "\r" | "\r\n"
line ::= byte - eol
The above grammar shows that it is not possible to create empty math (text). It is possible to include the sequence marker (dollar) in math (text), by wrapping it in bigger or smaller sequences:
Include more: $a$$b$ or include less: $$a$b$$.
It is also possible to include just one marker:
Include just one: $$ $ $$.
Sequences are “gready”, in that they cannot be preceded or followed by more markers. To illustrate:
Not math: $$x$.
Not math: $x$$.
Escapes work, this is math: \$$x$.
Escapes work, this is math: $x$\$.
Yields:
<p>Not math: $$x$.</p>
<p>Not math: $x$$.</p>
<p>Escapes work, this is math: $<span>…</span>.</p>
<p>Escapes work, this is math: <span>…</span>$.</p>
That is because, when turning markdown into HTML, the first and last space, if both exist and there is also a non-space in the math, are removed. Line endings, at that stage, are considered as spaces.
As the math (flow) construct occurs in flow, like all flow constructs, it must be followed by an eol (line ending) or eof (end of file).
The above grammar does not show how indentation of each line is handled.
To parse math (flow), let x
be the number of space_or_tab
characters
before the opening fence sequence, after interpreting tabs based on how many
virtual spaces they represent.
Each line of text is then allowed (not required) to be indented with up
to x
spaces or tabs, which are then ignored as an indent instead of being
considered as part of the content.
This indent does not affect the closing fence.
It can be indented up to a separate 3 real or virtual spaces.
A bigger indent makes it part of the content instead of a fence.
The meta
part is interpreted as the string content
type.
That means that character escapes and character references are allowed.
The optional meta
part is ignored: it is not used when parsing or
rendering.
This package is fully typed with TypeScript.
It exports the additional types HtmlOptions
and Options
.
Projects maintained by the unified collective are compatible with maintained versions of Node.js.
When we cut a new major release, we drop support for unmaintained versions of
Node.
This means we try to keep the current release line,
micromark-extension-math@^3
, compatible with Node.js 16.
This package works with micromark
version 3
and later.
This package is safe assuming that you trust KaTeX. Any vulnerability in it could open you to a cross-site scripting (XSS) attack.
remark-math
— remark (and rehype) plugins to support mathmdast-util-math
— mdast utility to support math
See contributing.md
in micromark/.github
for ways to get
started.
See support.md
for ways to get help.
This project has a code of conduct. By interacting with this repository, organization, or community you agree to abide by its terms.
MIT © Titus Wormer