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MMark

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MMark (read “em-mark”) is a strict markdown processor for writers. “Strict” means that not every input is considered valid markdown document and parse errors are possible and even desirable, because they allow us to spot markup issues without searching for them in rendered document. If a markdown document passes MMark parser, then it'll likely produce HTML without quirks. This feature makes it a good choice for writers and bloggers.

MMark in its current state features:

  • A parser that produces high-quality error messages and does not choke on first parse error. It is capable of reporting many parse errors where makes sense.

  • An extension system allowing to create extensions that alter parsed markdown document in some way.

  • A lucid-based render.

There is also a blog post announcing the project:

https://markkarpov.com/post/announcing-mmark.html

Quick start: MMark vs GitHub-flavored markdown

It's easy to start using MMark if you're used to GitHub-flavored markdown. There are four main differences:

  1. URIs are not automatically recognized, you must enclose them in < and >.

  2. Block quotes require only one > and they continue as long as the inner content is indented.

    This is OK:

    > Here goes my block quote.
      And this is the second line of the quote.
    

    This produces two block quotes:

    > Here goes my block quote.
    > And this is another block quote!
    
  3. HTML blocks and inline HTML are not supported.

  4. See differences in inline parsing.

MMark and Common Mark

MMark mostly tries to follow the Common Mark specification as given here:

https://spec.commonmark.org/0.28/

However, due to the fact that we do not allow inputs that do not make sense, and also try to guard against common mistakes (like writing ##My header and having it rendered as a paragraph starting with hashes) MMark obviously can't follow the specification precisely. In particular, parsing of inlines differs considerably from Common Mark (see below).

Another difference between Common Mark and MMark is that the latter supports more (pun alert) common markdown extensions out-of-the-box. In particular, MMark supports:

  • parsing of an optional YAML block
  • strikeout using ~~this~~ syntax
  • superscript using ^this^ syntax
  • subscript using ~this~ syntax
  • automatic assignment of ids to headers
  • pipe tables (as on GitHub)

One does not need to enable or tweak anything for these to work, they are built-in features.

Differences in inline parsing

Emphasis and strong emphasis is an especially hairy topic in the Common Mark specification. There are 17 ad-hoc rules defining interaction between * and _ -based emphasis and more than an half of all Common Mark examples (that's about 300) test just this tricky logic.

Not only it is hard to implement, it's hard to understand for humans too. For example, this input:

*(*foo*)*

results in the following HTML:

<p><em>(<em>foo</em>)</em></p>

(Note the nested emphasis.)

Could it produce something like this instead?

<p><em>(</em>foo<em>)</em></p>

Well, why not? Without remembering those 17 ad-hoc rules, there going to be a lot of tricky cases when a user won't be able to tell how markdown will be parsed.

I decided to make parsing of emphasis, strong emphasis, and similar constructs like strikethrough, subscript, and superscript more symmetric and less ad-hoc. In 99% of practical cases it is identical to Common Mark, and normal markdown intuitions will work OK for the users.

Let's start by dividing all characters into four groups:

  • Space characters, including space, tab, newline, carriage return, and other characters like non-breaking space.

  • Markup characters, including the following: *, ~, _, `, ^, [, ]. These are used for markup and whenever they appear in a document, they must form valid markup constructions. To be used as ordinary punctuation characters they must be backslash escaped.

  • Punctuation characters, which include all punctuation characters that are not markup characters.

  • Other characters, which include all characters not falling into the three groups described above.

Next, let's assign levels to all groups but markup characters:

  • Space characters—level 0
  • Punctuation characters—level 1
  • Other characters—level 2

When markup characters or punctuation characters are escaped with backslash they become other characters.

We'll call markdown characters placed between a character of level L and a character of level R left-flanking delimiter run if and only if:

level(L) < level(R)

These markup characters sort of hang on the left hand side of a word.

Similarly we'll call markdown characters placed between a character of level L and a character of level R right-flanking delimiter run if and only if:

level(L) > level (R)

These markup characters hang on the right hand side of a word.

Emphasis markup (and other similar things like strikethrough, which we won't mention explicitly anymore for brevity) can start only as left-flanking delimiter run and end only as right-flanking delimiter run.

This produces a parse error:

*Something * is not right.
Something __is __ not right.

And this too:

__foo__bar

This means that inter-word emphasis is not supported by this approach.

The next example is OK because s is an other character and . is a punctuation character, so level('s') > level('.').

Here it *goes*.

In some rare cases backslash escaping can help get the right result:

Here goes *(something\)*.

We escaped the closing parenthesis ) so it becomes an other character with level 2 and so its level is greater than the level of plain punctuation character ..

Other differences

Block-level parsing:

  • If a line starts with hash signs it is expected to be a valid non-empty header (level 1–6 inclusive). If you want to start a paragraph with hashes, just escape the first hash with backslash and that will be enough.
  • Setext headings are not supported for the sake of simplicity.
  • Fenced code blocks must be explicitly closed by a closing fence. They are not closed by the end of document or by start of another block.
  • Lists and block quotes are defined by column at which their content starts. Content belonging to a particular list or block quote should start at the same column (or greater column, up to the column where indented code blocks start). As a consequence of this, block quotes do not feature “laziness”.
  • Block quotes are started by a single > character, it's not necessary to put a > character at beginning of every line belonging to a quote (in fact, this would make every line a separate block quote).
  • Paragraphs can be interrupted by unordered and ordered lists with any valid starting index.
  • HTML blocks are not supported because the syntax conflicts with autolinks and the feature is a hack to compensate for the lack of extensibility and customization in the original markdown.

Inline-level parsing:

  • MMark does not support hard line breaks represented as double space before newline. Nevertheless, hard line breaks in the form of backslash before newline are supported (these are more explicit too).
  • All URI references (in links, images, autolinks, etc.) are parsed as per RFC 3986, no support for escaping or support for entity and numeric character references is provided. In addition to that, when a URI reference in not enclosed with < and >, then closing parenthesis character ) is not considered part of URI (use <uri> syntax if you want a closing parenthesis as part of a URI). Since the empty string is a valid URI and it may be confusing in some cases, we also force the user to write <> to represent the empty URI.
  • Putting links in text of another link is not allowed, i.e. no nested links is possible.
  • Putting images in description of other images is not allowed (similarly to the situation with links).
  • HTML inlines are not supported for the same reason why HTML blocks are not supported.

About MMark-specific extensions

  • YAML block must start with three hyphens --- and end with three hyphens ---. It can only be placed at the beginning of a markdown document. Trailing white space after the --- sequences is allowed.

Performance

I have compared speed and memory consumption of various Haskell markdown libraries by running them on an identical, big-enough markdown document and by rendering it as HTML:

Library Parsing library Execution time Allocated Max residency
cmark-0.5.6 Custom C code 323.4 μs 228,440 9,608
mmark-0.0.5.1 Megaparsec 7.027 ms 26,180,272 37,792
cheapskate-0.1.1 Custom Haskell code 10.76 ms 44,686,272 799,200
markdown-0.1.16 Attoparsec 14.13 ms 69,261,816 699,656
pandoc-2.0.5 Parsec 37.90 ms 141,868,840 1,471,080

Results are ordered from fastest to slowest.

† The markdown library is sloppy and parses markdown incorrectly. For example, it parses the following *My * text as an inline containing emphasis, while in reality both asterisks must form flanking delimiter runs to create emphasis, like so *My* text. This allowed markdown to get away with a far simpler approach to parsing at the price that it's not really a valid markdown implementation.

Related packages

  • mmark-ext contains some commonly useful MMark extensions.
  • mmark-cli is a command line interface to MMark.
  • flycheck-mmark is a way to check markdown documents against MMark parser interactively from Emacs.

Contribution

Issues, bugs, and questions may be reported in the GitHub issue tracker for this project.

Pull requests are also welcome.

License

Copyright © 2017–present Mark Karpov

Distributed under BSD 3 clause license.

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