# markdown-it design principles ## Data flow Input data is piped via nestesd chains of rules. There are 3 nested chains - `core`, `block` & `inline`: ``` core core.rule1 ... (normalize) block block.rule1 ... block.ruleX core.ruleXX ... (nothing yet) inline (applyed to each block token with "inline" type) inline.rule1 ... inline.ruleX core.ruleYY ... (abbreviation, footnote, typographer, linkifier) ``` Mutable data are: - array of tokens - `env` sandbox Tokens are the "main" data, but some rules can be "splitted" to several chains, and need sandbox for exchange. Also, `env` can be used to inject per-render variables for your custom parse and render rules. Each chain (core / block / inline) has independent `state` object, to isolate data and protect code from clutter. ## Token stream Instead of traditional AST we use more low-level data representation - tokens. Difference is simple: - Tokens are sequence (Array). - Opening and closing tags are separate tokens. - There are special token objects, "inline containers", having nested token sequences with inline markup (bold, italic, text, ...). Each token has common fields: - __type__ - token name. - __level__ - nesting level, useful to seek closeing pair. - __lines__ - [begin, end], for block tokens only. Range of input lines, compiled to this token. Inline container (`type === "inline"`) has additional properties: - __content__ - raw text, unparsed inline content. - __children__ - token stream for parsed content. In total, token stream is: - On the top level - array of paired or single "block" tokens: - open/close for headers, lists, blockquotes, paragraphs, ... - codes, fenced blocks, horisontal rules, html blocks, inlines containers - Each inline containers have `.children` property with token stream for inline content: - open/close for strong, em, link, code, ... - text, line breaks Why not AST? Because it's not needed for our tasks. We follow KISS principle. If you whish - you can call parser without renderer and convert token stream to AST. Where to search more details about tokens: - [Renderer source](https://github.com/markdown-it/markdown-it/blob/master/lib/renderer.js) - [Live demo](https://markdown-it.github.io/) - type your text ant click `debug` tab. ## Rules Rules are functions, doing "magick" with parser `state` objects. Each rule is registered in one of chain with unique name. Rules are managed by names via [Ruler](https://markdown-it.github.io/markdown-it/#Ruler) instances and `enable` / `disable` methods in [MarkdownIt](https://markdown-it.github.io/markdown-it/#MarkdownIt). You can note, that some rules have "validation mode" - in this mode rule does not modify token stream, and only look ahead for the end of token. It's one of important design principle - token stream is "write only" on block & inline parse stages. Parser is designed to keep rules independent. You can safely disable any, or add new one. There are no universal recipes how to create new rules - design of distributed state machines with good data isolation is tricky business. But you can investigate existing rules & plugins to see possible approaches. Also, in complex cases you can try to ask for help in tracker. Condition is very simple - it should be clear from your ticket, that you studied docs, sources, and tried to do something yourself. We never reject with help to real developpers. ## Renderer After token stream is generated, it's passed to [renderer](https://github.com/markdown-it/markdown-it/blob/master/lib/renderer.js). It just plays all tokens, passing each to rule with the same name as token type. Renderer rules are located in `md.renderer.rules[name]` and are simple functions with the same signature: ```js function (tokens, idx, options, env, renderer) { //... return htmlResult; } ``` In many cases that allows easy output change even without parser intrusion. For example, let's replace images with vimeo links to player's iframe: ```js var md = require('markdown-it')(); var defaultRender = md.renderer.rules.image, vimeoRE = /^https?:\/\/(www\.)?vimeo.com\/(\d+)($|\/)/; md.renderer.rules.image = function (tokens, idx, options, env, self) { var id; if (vimeoRE.test(tokens[idx].href)) { id = tokens[idx].href.match(vimeoRE)[2]; return '
\n'; } return defaultRender(tokens, idx, options, env, self); }); ``` You also can write your own renderer to generate AST for example. ## Summary This was mentioned in [Data flow](#data-flow), but let's repeat sequence again: 1. Blocks are parsed, and top level of token stream filled with block tokens. 2. Content on inline containers is parsed, filling `.children` properties. 3. Rendering happens. And somewhere between you can apply addtional transformations :) . Full content of each chain can be seen on the top of [parser_core.js](https://github.com/markdown-it/markdown-it/blob/master/lib/parser_core.js), [parser_block.js](https://github.com/markdown-it/markdown-it/blob/master/lib/parser_block.js) and [parser_inline.js](https://github.com/markdown-it/markdown-it/blob/master/lib/parser_inline.js) files. Also you can change output directly in [renderer](https://github.com/markdown-it/markdown-it/blob/master/lib/renderer.js) for many simple cases.