Rendering Markdown with Enhance

A frequent question is, “Can I render Markdown files with Enhance?” and the answer is, “of course!” The Enhance documentation site is an Enhance app which renders markdown on demand. You can always dig into that site’s source code to see exactly how w…


This content originally appeared on DEV Community 👩‍💻👨‍💻 and was authored by Simon MacDonald

A frequent question is, “Can I render Markdown files with Enhance?” and the answer is, “of course!” The Enhance documentation site is an Enhance app which renders markdown on demand. You can always dig into that site’s source code to see exactly how we’ve set it up, but I thought I’d review some of the high points.

Arcdown

Enhance does not natively support rendering markdown into HTML, which is out of scope for the project. Instead, we rely on markdown-it, an excellent JavaScript markdown parser that is endlessly configurable with plugins. As we use markdown in many different projects, we’ve created a node module called, Arcdown, which packages together our preferred conventions for parsing markdown files.

Here’s a quick example of parsing a markdown string with Arcdown:

import { Arcdown } from 'arcdown'

const mdString = `
---
title: Hello World
category: Examples
---

## Foo Bar

lorem ipsum _dolor_ sit **amet**

[Enhance](https://enhance.dev/)
`.trim()

const arcdown = new Arcdown()
const result = await arcdown.render(mdString)

The result of the render returns an object with the following properties:

Property Description
html The Markdown document contents as HTML
tocHtml The document's table of contents as HTML (nested unordered lists).
title The document title, lifted from the document's frontmatter.
slug A URL-friendly slug of the title. (possibly empty) Synonymous with links in the table of contents.
frontmatter An object containing all remaining frontmatter. (possibly empty)

Arcdown follows along the convention of markdown-it as being infinitely configurable. For example, you can always disable functionality if you don’t need things like a table of contents or syntax highlighting.

For more information on configuring Arcdown see Configuration

Parsing markdown in an API route

When parsing markdown, we’ll want to do it in an API route and then pass the result to our page route as part of the store. Let’s assume you have a new Enhance project like this:

app
├── markdown
|   └── example.md
└── pages
    └── index.html

Now we want to be able to parse the app/markdown/example.md file. In order to do that we’ll need an API route so you can manually create a new folder called app/api/markdownand add a catch-all API route named app/api/markdown/$$.mjs, or you can run the Begin CLI command:

begin gen api —path ‘markdown/$$

Note: the single quotes around 'markdown/$$' are important as they prevent the shell from doing variable substitution.

Now our project looks like this:

app
├── api
|   └── markdown
|       └── $$.mjs
├── markdown
|   └── example.md
└── pages
    └── index.html

In our app/api/markdown/$$.mjs file, we’ll need to import a few packages and instantiate Arcdown.

import { readFileSync } from 'fs'
import { URL } from 'url'
import { Arcdown } from 'arcdown'
const arcdown = new Arcdown()

Then in our get function we’ll need to figure out which file the user has requested. To do that we’ll determine the document path from the incoming request.

 const { path: activePath } = req
 let docPath = activePath.replace(/^\/?docs\//, '') || 'index'
 if (docPath.endsWith('/')) {
   docPath += 'index' // trailing slash == index.md file
 }

Next we’ll use the docPath to read our markdown file from the app/markdown folder.

 const docURL = new URL(`../../${docPath}.md`, import.meta.url)
 const docMarkdown = readFileSync(docURL.pathname, 'utf-8')

Once we have the markdown string, we can transform it into HTML using Arcdown and add it to the store.

 const doc = await arcdown.render(docMarkdown)
 return {
   json: { doc }
 }

The entire function looks like this:

// app/api/markdown/$$.mjs
import { readFileSync } from 'fs'
import { URL } from 'url'
import { Arcdown } from 'arcdown'
const arcdown = new Arcdown()

export async function get (req) {
 // Get requested path
 const { path: activePath } = req
 let docPath = activePath.replace(/^\/?docs\//, '') || 'index'
 if (docPath.endsWith('/')) {
   docPath += 'index' // trailing slash == index.md file
 }

 // Read markdown file
 const docURL = new URL(`../../${docPath}.md`, import.meta.url)
 const docMarkdown = readFileSync(docURL.pathname, 'utf-8')

 // Convert to HTML and add to store
 const doc = await arcdown.render(docMarkdown)
 return {
   json: { doc }
 }
}

Note: I’m omitting a lot of error checking for the sake of brevity but check out this hardened example for more details on how to handle 404’s.

Displaying markdown

Now that we have successfully transformed our markdown into HTML let’s go about displaying it in a page. First, we’ll create a new catch-all page under app/pages/markdown/$$.html and a new web component to display the markdown at app/elements/doc-content.mjs which you can do manually or by running the Begin CLI commands:

begin gen page --path 'markdown/$$' \
begin gen element --name doc-content

Our project structure now looks like this:

app
├── api
|   └── markdown
|       └── $$.mjs
├── elements
|   └── doc-content.mjs
├── markdown
|   └── example.md
└── pages
    ├── markdown
    |   └── $$.mjs
    └── index.html

Our app/pages/markdown/$$.html file will look really simple as we will just hand everything over to our web component to handle. Feel free to make this page more advanced by adding headers, footers, etc. as required by your design.

// app/pages/markdown/$$.html
<doc-content></doc-content>

Over in app/elements/doc-content.mjs we will read the result of the transformation off the store.Then we’ll return the rendered content to be displayed on our page:

// app/elements/doc-content.mjs
export default function Element ({ html, state }) {
 const { store } = state
 const { doc } = store
 return html`
<h1 class="text3">${doc.title}</h1>
<div>
 ${doc.html}
</div>
`
}

That’s all you need to do in order to convert from markdown to HTML in an Enhance app. If you want to test it out without copying and pasting all the above code run the following commands.

git clone [git@github.com](mailto:git@github.com):macdonst/enhance-markdown.git
cd enhance-markdown
npm install
begin dev

Then open a browser tab to localhost:3333/markdown/example and you’ll see the rendered markdown file. Now, to really blow your mind create a sub-folder in app/markdown, for example, app/markdown/subfolder then copy a markdown file into that new folder, for example foo.md. Now redirect your browser to localhost:3333/markdown/subfolder/foo and the file will display properly as we’ve configured a catch-all route under markdown. This will work for any level of nested sub-folders and markdown files.

For more information on catch all routes see the Enhance docs site.


This content originally appeared on DEV Community 👩‍💻👨‍💻 and was authored by Simon MacDonald


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