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Integrating Chroma syntax highlighter as a Blackfriday renderer

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bfchroma

This is a fork of Depado/bfchroma.

This fork supports custom lexical analysis for code guessing, or code knowing if you already know.

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Integrating Chroma syntax highlighter as a Blackfriday renderer.

Install and prerequisites

This project requires and uses the v2 version of Blackfriday.

$ go get github.com/biztos/bfchroma

Features

This renderer integrates chroma to highlight code with triple backtick notation. It will try to use the given language when available otherwise it will try to detect the language. If none of these two method works it will fallback to sane defaults.

Alternatively, a specific Analyser function can be used, allowing full control over the language-guessing logic. If the language is known in advance, a lexer can be passed in via the DetectLexer option-func, or the language name via DetectAs.

Usage

bfchroma uses the functional options approach so you can customize the behavior of the renderer. It uses sane defaults when no option is passed so you can use the renderer simply by doing so :

html := bf.Run([]byte(md), bf.WithRenderer(bfchroma.NewRenderer()))

Options

  • Style(s string) Define the style used by chroma for the rendering. The full list can be found here
  • ChromaStyle(*chroma.Style) This option can be used to passe directly a *chroma.Style instead of the string representing the style as with the Style(string) option.
  • WithoutAutodetect() By default when no language information is written in the code block, this renderer will try to auto-detect the used language. This option disables this behavior and will fallback to a sane default when no language information is available.
  • EmbedCSS() This option will embed CSS needed for chroma's html.WithClasses() at the beginning of blackfriday document. CSS can also be extracted separately by calling Renderer's.ChromaCSS(w) method, which will return styleshet for currently set style
  • Extend(bf.Renderer) This option allows to define the base blackfriday that will be extended.
  • ChromaOptions(...html.Option) This option allows you to pass Chroma's html options in the renderer. Such options can be found here.

Option examples

Disabling language auto-detection and displaying line numbers

r := bfchroma.NewRenderer(
	bfchroma.WithoutAutodetect(),
	bfchroma.ChromaOptions(html.WithLineNumbers()),
)

Auto-detecting Kotlin for all unknown code blocks

r := bfchroma.NewRenderer(
	bfchroma.DetectAs("Kotlin"),
)

Extend a blackfriday renderer

b := bf.NewHTMLRenderer(bf.HTMLRendererParameters{
	Flags: bf.CommonHTMLFlags,
})

r := bfchroma.NewRenderer(bfchroma.Extend(b))

Use a different style

r := bfchroma.NewRenderer(bfchroma.Style("dracula"))
// Or
r = bfchroma.NewRenderer(bfchroma.ChromaStyle(styles.Dracula))

Examples

package main

import (
	"fmt"

	"github.com/biztos/bfchroma"

	bf "github.com/russross/blackfriday/v2"
)

var md = "This is some sample code.\n\n```go\n" +
	`func main() {
	fmt.Println("Hi")
}
` + "```"

func main() {
	html := bf.Run([]byte(md), bf.WithRenderer(bfchroma.NewRenderer()))
	fmt.Println(string(html))
}

Will output :

<p>This is some sample code.</p>
<pre style="color:#f8f8f2;background-color:#272822"><span style="color:#66d9ef">func</span> <span style="color:#a6e22e">main</span>() {
<span style="color:#a6e22e">fmt</span>.<span style="color:#a6e22e">Println</span>(<span style="color:#e6db74">&#34;Hi&#34;</span>)
}
</pre>

Real-life example

In smallblog I'm using bfchroma to render my articles. It's using a combination of both bfchroma's options and blackfriday extensions and flags.

package main

import (
	"github.com/Depado/bfchroma/v2"

	"github.com/alecthomas/chroma/v2/formatters/html"
	bf "github.com/russross/blackfriday/v2"
)

// Defines the extensions that are used
var exts = bf.NoIntraEmphasis | bf.Tables | bf.FencedCode | bf.Autolink |
	bf.Strikethrough | bf.SpaceHeadings | bf.BackslashLineBreak |
	bf.DefinitionLists | bf.Footnotes

// Defines the HTML rendering flags that are used
var flags = bf.UseXHTML | bf.Smartypants | bf.SmartypantsFractions |
	bf.SmartypantsDashes | bf.SmartypantsLatexDashes | bf.TOC

// render will take a []byte input and will render it using a new renderer each
// time because reusing the same can mess with TOC and header IDs
func render(input []byte) []byte {
	return bf.Run(
		input,
		bf.WithRenderer(
			bfchroma.NewRenderer(
				bfchroma.WithoutAutodetect(),
				bfchroma.ChromaOptions(
					html.WithLineNumbers(),
				),
				bfchroma.Extend(
					bf.NewHTMLRenderer(bf.HTMLRendererParameters{
						Flags: flags,
					}),
				),
			),
		),
		bf.WithExtensions(exts),
	)
}

Classes

If you have loads of code in your markdown, you might want to consider using html.WithClasses() in your bfchroma.ChromaOptions(). The CSS of the style you chose can then be accessed like this :

r := bfchroma.NewRenderer(
	bfchroma.WithoutAutodetect(),
	bfchroma.Extend(
		bf.NewHTMLRenderer(bf.HTMLRendererParameters{Flags: flags}),
	),
	bfchroma.Style("monokai"),
	bfchroma.ChromaOptions(html.WithClasses()),
)

var css template.CSS

b := new(bytes.Buffer)
if err := r.ChromaCSS(b); err != nil {
	logrus.WithError(err).Warning("Couldn't write CSS")
}
css = template.CSS(b.String())

bf.Run(input, bf.WithRenderer(r), bf.WithExtensions(exts))

This way, you can pass your css var to any template and render it along the rendered markdown.

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