Finding a converter that can convert Markdown to PDFMake can be difficult. This package aims to solve that problem by providing a simple function that takes Markdown input (string) and converts it into a format that can be used with the PDFMake library.
This allows you to easily create PDF documents from your Markdown files.
Important
This is a fork that is compatible with browser
-
Headers
: Supports all levels of Markdown headers. -
Lists
: Supports both ordered and unordered lists. -
Links
: Converts Markdown links into clickable links in the PDF. -
Images
: Converts Markdown image syntax into images in the PDF.~~ -
Text Styling
: Supports bold, italic, strikethrough, and underline text styles. -
Complex Markdown
: Supports complex Markdown syntax such as nested bold/italic text, and nested blockquote paragraphs.
Simply use npm to install this package
npm install mdpdfmake
To use this converter, simply import the module and call the convert function with your Markdown text as the argument. The function will return a PDFMake document definition that you can use to create your PDF.
import { mdpdfmake } from "mdpdfmake";
const options = {
headings: {
h1: {
fontSize: 30,
bold: false,
margin: [0, 10, 0, 10],
},
h2: { ...
}
};
const markdown = `# Heading
This is a paragraph with **bold** text and *italic* text.
- List Item 1
- List Item 2
> Blockquote
`;
mdpdfmake(markdown, options).then((docDefinition) => {
// Use docDefinition with a PDFMake instance to generate a PDF
});
Note: The response from the convert function is a Promise, so you will need to use async/await or .then() to get the result.
mdpdfmake(markdown: string, options?: MOptions): Promise<TDocumentDefinitions>
- Converts the given Markdown string into a PDFMake document definition.
markdown
(string, options?): Converts the given Markdown string into a PDFMake document definition.
An object for each headings ( h1 - h6 ) to set custom font size, bold, margins and underline
headings: {
h1: { fontSize: 36, bold: true, margin: [0, 10, 0, 10] },
h2: { fontSize: 30, bold: true, margin: [0, 10, 0, 10] },
h3: { fontSize: 24, bold: true, margin: [0, 5, 0, 5], },
h4: { fontSize: 18, bold: true, margin: [0, 5, 0, 5], },
h5: { fontSize: 15, bold: true, margin: [0, 5, 0, 5], },
h6: { fontSize: 12, bold: true, margin: [0, 5, 0, 5], }
}
headings?: { h1?: { fontSize?: number; bold?: boolean; margin?: number[]; }; h2?: ... }
Custom settings for hr line
hr: { lineThickness: 1, lineWidth: 515, lineColor: "#2c2c2c", margin: [0, 10, 0, 10], }
hr?: { lineThickness?: number; lineWidth?: number; lineColor?: string; margin?: number[]; };
Custom settings for blockquote
{ italics: true, margin: [0, 5, 0, 5], background: "#eae7f2", }
blockquote?: { italics?: boolean; margin?: number[]; background?: string; };
Set custom margins and font size for list
{ margin: [0, 5, 0, 5], fontSize: 14 }
list?: { margin?: number[]; fontSize?: number };
Set custom margins and font size for paragraph
{ margin: [0, 5, 0, 5], fontSize: 14 }
paragraph?: { margin?: number[]; fontSize?: number };
Set custom margins for codeblock
{ margin: [0, 5, 0, 5] }
codeblock?: { margin?: number[]; };
Table Support
: Add support for converting Markdown tables into tables in the PDF.
Contributions to this project are welcome! If you're interested in adding a feature or fixing a bug, please open a pull request.
This project is licensed under the MIT License - see the LICENSE file for details.