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Remove runtime renderer, still support MDXProvider #1425

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  1. Remove runtime renderer, still support MDXProvider

    This PR moves most of the runtime to the compile time.
    
    This issue has nothing to do with `@mdx-js/runtime`. It’s about
    `@mdx-js/mdx` being compile time, and moving most work there, from the
    “runtimes” `@mdx-js/react`, `@mdx-js/preact`, `@mdx-js/vue`.
    
    Most of the runtime is undocumented features that allow amazing things,
    but those are in my opinion *too magical*, more powerful than needed,
    complex to reason about, and again: undocumented.
    These features are added by overwriting an actual renderer (such as
    react, preact, or vue). Doing so makes it hard to combine MDX with for
    example Emotion or theme-ui, to opt into a new JSX transform when React
    introduces one, to support other hyperscripts, or to add features such
    as members (`<Foo.Bar />`). Removing these runtime features does what
    MDX says in the readme: “**🔥 Blazingly blazing fast: MDX has no
    runtime […]**”
    
    This does remove the ability to overwrite *anything* at runtime. This
    brings back the project to what is documented: users can still
    overwrite markdown things (e.g., blockquotes) to become components and
    pass components in at runtime without importing them. And it does still
    allow undocumented parent-child combos (`blockquote.p`).
    
    * Remove runtime renderers (`createElement`s hijacking) from
      `@mdx-js/react`, `@mdx-js/preact`, `@mdx-js/vue`
    * Add `jsxRuntime` option to switch to the modern automatic JSX runtime
    * Add `jsxImportSource` option to switch to a modern non-React JSX
      runtime
    * Add `pragma` option to define a classic JSX pragma
    * Add `pragmaFrag` option to define a classic JSX fragment
    * Add `mdxProviderImportSource` option to load an optional runtime
      provider
    * Add tests for automatic React JSX runtime
    * Add tests for `@mdx-js/mdx` combined with `emotion`
    * Add support and test members as “tag names” of elements
    * Add support and test qualified names (namespaces) as “tag names” of
      elements
    * Add tests for parent-child combos
    * Add tests to assert explicit (inline) components precede over
      provided/given components
    * Add tests for `mdxFragment: false` (runtime renderers w/o fragment
      support)
    * Fix and test double quotes in attribute values
    
    This PR removes the runtime renderers and related things such as the
    `mdxType` and `parentName` props while keeping the `MDXProvider` in
    tact.
    
    This improves runtime performance, because all that runs at runtime is
    plain vanilla React/preact/vue code.
    
    This reduces the surface of the MDX API while being identical to what
    is documented and hence to user expectations (except perhaps to some
    power users).
    
    This also makes it easier to support other renderers without having to
    maintain projects like `@mdx-js/react`, `@mdx-js/preact`, `@mdx-js/vue`:
    anything that can be used as a JSX pragma (including the [automatic
    runtime](https://reactjs.org/blog/2020/09/22/introducing-the-new-jsx-transform.html))
    is now supported.
    A related benefit is that it’s easier to integrate with
    [emotion](https://github.com/emotion-js/emotion/blob/master/packages/react/src/jsx.js#L7)
    (including through `theme-ui`) and similar projects which also
    overwrite the renderer: as it’s not possible to have two runtimes, they
    were hard to combine; because with this PR MDX is no longer a renderer,
    there’s no conflict anymore.
    
    This is done by the compile time (`@mdx-js/mdx`) knowing about an
    (**optional**) runtime for an `MDXProvider` (such as `@mdx-js/react`,
    `@mdx-js/preact`). Importantly, it’s not required for other
    hyperscript interfaces to have a provider: `MDXContent` exported from
    a compiled MDX file *also* accepts components (it already did), and Vue
    comes with component passing out of the box.
    
    In short, the runtime looked like this:
    
    ```js
    function mdx(thing, props, ...children) {
      const overwrites = getOverwritesSomeWay()
      return React.createElement(overwrites[props.mdxType] || thing, props, ...children)
    }
    ```
    
    And we had a compile time, which added that `mdxType` prop. So:
    
    ```mdx
    <Youtube />
    ```
    
    Became:
    
    ```js
    const Youtube = () => throw new Error('Youtube is not loaded!')
    
    <Youtube mdxType="Youtube" />
    ```
    
    Which in plain JS looks like:
    
    ```js
    const Youtube = () => throw new Error('Youtube is not loaded!')
    
    React.createElement(Youtube, {mdxType: 'Youtube'})
    ```
    
    Instead, this now compiles to:
    
    ```js
    const {Youtube} = Object.assign({Youtube: () => throw new Error('Youtube is not loaded!')}, getOverwritesSomeWay())
    
    React.createElement(Youtube)
    ```
    
    The previous example shows what is sometimes called a “shortcode”: a
    way to inject components as identifiers into the MDX file, which was
    introduced in [MDX 1](https://mdxjs.com/blog/shortcodes)
    
    A different use case for the runtime was overwriting “defaults”. This
    is documented on the website as the “[Table of
    components](https://mdxjs.com/table-of-components)”. This MDX:
    
    ```mdx
    Hello, *world*!
    ```
    
    Became:
    
    ```js
    <p mdxType="p">Hello, <em mdxType="em">world</em>!</p>
    ```
    
    This now compiles to:
    
    ```js
    const overwrites = Object.assign({p: 'p', em: 'em'}, getOverwritesSomeWay())
    
    <overwrites.p>Hello, <overwrites.em>world</overwrites.em>!</overwrites.p>
    ```
    
    This MDX:
    
    ```mdx
    export const Video = () => <Vimeo />
    
    <Video />
    ```
    
    Used like so:
    
    ```jsx
    <MDXProvider components={{Video: () => <Youtube />}}>
      <Content />
    </MDXProvider>
    ```
    
    Would result in a `Youtube` component being rendered. It no longer
    does. I see the previous behavior as a bug and hence this as a fix.
    
    A subset of the above point is that:
    
    ```mdx
    export default props => <main {...props} />
    
    x
    ```
    
    Used like so:
    
    ```jsx
    <MDXProvider components={{wrapper: props => <article {...props} />}}>
      <Content />
    </MDXProvider>
    ```
    
    Would result in an `article` instead of the explicit `main`. It no
    longer does. I see the previous behavior as a bug and hence this as a
    fix.
    
    (#821)
    
    ```mdx
    
    <h2>World</h2>
    ```
    
    Used like so:
    
    ```jsx
    <MDXProvider components={{h2: () => <SomethingElse />}}>
      <Content />
    </MDXProvider>
    ```
    
    Would result in a `SomethingElse` for both. This PR **does not** change
    that. But it could more easily be changed if we want to, because at
    compile time we know whether something was a tag or not.
    
    An undocumented feature of the current MDX runtime renderer is that
    it’s possible to overwrite anything:
    
    ```mdx
    <span />
    ```
    
    Used like so:
    
    ```jsx
    <MDXProvider components={{span: props => <b>{props.children}</b>}}>
      <Content />
    </MDXProvider>
    ```
    
    Would overwrite to become bold, even though it’s not documented
    anywhere. This PR changes that: only allowed markdown “tag names” can
    be changed (`p`, `li`, ...). **This list could be expanded.**
    
    Another undocumented feature is that parent–child combos can be
    overwritten. A `li` in an `ol` can be treated differently from one in
    an `ul` by passing `'ol.li': () => <SomethingElse />`.
    
    This PR no longer lets users “nest” arbitrary parent–child combos
    except for `ol.li`, `ul.li`, and `blockquote.p`. **This list could
    be expanded.**
    
    It was not possible to use members (`<foo.bar />`, `<Foo.bar.baz />`,
    <#953>) and supporting it previously
    would be complex. This PR adds support for them.
    
    Previously, `mdxType` and `parentName` attributes were added to all
    elements. And a `components` prop was accepted on **all** elements to
    change the provider. These are no longer passed and no longer accepted.
    Lastly, `components`, `props` were in scope for all JSX tags defined in
    the “markdown” section (not the import/exports) of each document.
    
    This adds identifiers to the scope prefixed with double underscores:
    `__provideComponents`, `__components`, and `__props`.
    
    A single 1mb MDX file, about 20k lines and 135k words (basically 3
    books). Heavy on the “markdown”, few tags, no import/exports.
    322kb gzipped.
    
    * v1: 2895.122856
    * 2.0.0-next.8: 3187.4684129999996
    * main: 4058.917152000001
    * this pr: 4066.642403
    
    * v1: raw: 1.5mb, gzip: 348kb
    * 2.0.0-next.8: raw: 1.4mb, gzip: 347kb
    * main: raw: 1.3mb, gzip: 342kb
    * this pr: raw: 1.8mb, gzip: 353kb
    * this pr, automatic runtime: raw: 1.7mb, gzip: 355kb
    
    * v1: 321.761208
    * 2.0.0-next.8: 321.79749599999997
    * main: 162.412757
    * this pr: 107.28038599999996
    * this pr, automatic runtime: 123.73588899999999
    
    This PR is much faster on giant markdown-esque documents during runtime.
    The win over the current `main` branch is 34%, the win over the last
    beta and v1 is 66%.
    
    For output size, the raw value increases with this PR, which is because
    the output is now `/*#__PURE__*/React.createElement(__components.span…)`
    or `/*#__PURE__*/_jsx(__components.span…)`, instead of `mdx("span",
    {mdxType: "span"…})`. The change is more repetition, as can be seen by
    the roughly same gzip sizes.
    
    That the build time of `main` and this PR is slower than v1 and the
    last beta does surprise me a lot. I benchmarked earlier with 1000 small
    simple MDX files, totalling 1mb, [where the results were the
    inverse](#1399 (comment)). So
    it looks like we have a problem with giant files. Still, this PR has no
    effect on build time performance, because the results are the same as
    currently on `main`.
    
    This PR makes MDX faster, adds support for the modern automatic JSX
    runtime, and makes it easier to combine with Emotion and similar
    projects.
    
    ---
    
    Some of what this PR does has been discussed over the years:
    
    Related-to: GH-166.
    Related-to: GH-197.
    Related-to: GH-466 (very similar).
    Related-to: GH-714.
    Related-to: GH-938.
    Related-to: GH-1327.
    
    This PR solves some of the items outlined in these issues:
    
    Related-to: GH-1152.
    Related-to: #1014 (comment).
    
    This PR solves:
    
    Closes GH-591.
    Closes GH-638.
    Closes GH-785.
    Closes GH-953.
    Closes GH-1084.
    Closes GH-1385.
    wooorm committed Jan 2, 2021
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