#!/usr/bin/perl
#
# Markdown -- A text-to-HTML conversion tool for web writers
#
# Copyright (c) 2004 John Gruber
#
s around # "paragraphs" that are wrapped in non-block-level tags, such as anchors, # phrase emphasis, and spans. The list of tags we're looking for is # hard-coded: my $block_tags_a = qr/p|div|h[1-6]|blockquote|pre|table|dl|ol|ul|script|noscript|form|fieldset|iframe|math|ins|del/; my $block_tags_b = qr/p|div|h[1-6]|blockquote|pre|table|dl|ol|ul|script|noscript|form|fieldset|iframe|math/; # First, look for nested blocks, e.g.: #
tags.
# my $tags_to_skip = qr!<(/?)(?:pre|code|kbd|script|math)[\s>]!;
foreach my $cur_token (@$tokens) {
if ($cur_token->[0] eq "tag") {
# Within tags, encode * and _ so they don't conflict
# with their use in Markdown for italics and strong.
# We're replacing each such character with its
# corresponding MD5 checksum value; this is likely
# overkill, but it should prevent us from colliding
# with the escape values by accident.
$cur_token->[1] =~ s! \* !$g_escape_table{'*'}!gx;
$cur_token->[1] =~ s! _ !$g_escape_table{'_'}!gx;
$text .= $cur_token->[1];
} else {
my $t = $cur_token->[1];
$t = _EncodeBackslashEscapes($t);
$text .= $t;
}
}
return $text;
}
sub _DoAnchors {
#
# Turn Markdown link shortcuts into XHTML tags.
#
my $text = shift;
#
# First, handle reference-style links: [link text] [id]
#
$text =~ s{
( # wrap whole match in $1
\[
($g_nested_brackets) # link text = $2
\]
[ ]? # one optional space
(?:\n[ ]*)? # one optional newline followed by spaces
\[
(.*?) # id = $3
\]
)
}{
my $result;
my $whole_match = $1;
my $link_text = $2;
my $link_id = lc $3;
if ($link_id eq "") {
$link_id = lc $link_text; # for shortcut links like [this][].
}
if (defined $g_urls{$link_id}) {
my $url = $g_urls{$link_id};
$url =~ s! \* !$g_escape_table{'*'}!gx; # We've got to encode these to avoid
$url =~ s! _ !$g_escape_table{'_'}!gx; # conflicting with italics/bold.
$result = "? # href = $3
[ \t]*
( # $4
(['"]) # quote char = $5
(.*?) # Title = $6
\5 # matching quote
)? # title is optional
\)
)
}{
my $result;
my $whole_match = $1;
my $link_text = $2;
my $url = $3;
my $title = $6;
$url =~ s! \* !$g_escape_table{'*'}!gx; # We've got to encode these to avoid
$url =~ s! _ !$g_escape_table{'_'}!gx; # conflicting with italics/bold.
$result = " tags.
#
my $text = shift;
#
# First, handle reference-style labeled images: ![alt text][id]
#
$text =~ s{
( # wrap whole match in $1
!\[
(.*?) # alt text = $2
\]
[ ]? # one optional space
(?:\n[ ]*)? # one optional newline followed by spaces
\[
(.*?) # id = $3
\]
)
}{
my $result;
my $whole_match = $1;
my $alt_text = $2;
my $link_id = lc $3;
if ($link_id eq "") {
$link_id = lc $alt_text; # for shortcut links like ![this][].
}
$alt_text =~ s/"/"/g;
if (defined $g_urls{$link_id}) {
my $url = $g_urls{$link_id};
$url =~ s! \* !$g_escape_table{'*'}!gx; # We've got to encode these to avoid
$url =~ s! _ !$g_escape_table{'_'}!gx; # conflicting with italics/bold.
$result = "? # src url = $3
[ \t]*
( # $4
(['"]) # quote char = $5
(.*?) # title = $6
\5 # matching quote
[ \t]*
)? # title is optional
\)
)
}{
my $result;
my $whole_match = $1;
my $alt_text = $2;
my $url = $3;
my $title = '';
if (defined($6)) {
$title = $6;
}
$alt_text =~ s/"/"/g;
$title =~ s/"/"/g;
$url =~ s! \* !$g_escape_table{'*'}!gx; # We've got to encode these to avoid
$url =~ s! _ !$g_escape_table{'_'}!gx; # conflicting with italics/bold.
$result = "" . _RunSpanGamut($1) . "\n\n";
}egmx;
$text =~ s{ ^(.+)[ \t]*\n-+[ \t]*\n+ }{
"" . _RunSpanGamut($1) . "
\n\n";
}egmx;
# atx-style headers:
# # Header 1
# ## Header 2
# ## Header 2 with closing hashes ##
# ...
# ###### Header 6
#
$text =~ s{
^(\#{1,6}) # $1 = string of #'s
[ \t]*
(.+?) # $2 = Header text
[ \t]*
\#* # optional closing #'s (not counted)
\n+
}{
my $h_level = length($1);
"" . _RunSpanGamut($2) . " \n\n";
}egmx;
return $text;
}
sub _DoLists {
#
# Form HTML ordered (numbered) and unordered (bulleted) lists.
#
my $text = shift;
my $less_than_tab = $g_tab_width - 1;
# Re-usable patterns to match list item bullets and number markers:
my $marker_ul = qr/[*+-]/;
my $marker_ol = qr/\d+[.]/;
my $marker_any = qr/(?:$marker_ul|$marker_ol)/;
# Re-usable pattern to match any entirel ul or ol list:
my $whole_list = qr{
( # $1 = whole list
( # $2
[ ]{0,$less_than_tab}
(${marker_any}) # $3 = first list item marker
[ \t]+
)
(?s:.+?)
( # $4
\z
|
\n{2,}
(?=\S)
(?! # Negative lookahead for another list item marker
[ \t]*
${marker_any}[ \t]+
)
)
)
}mx;
# We use a different prefix before nested lists than top-level lists.
# See extended comment in _ProcessListItems().
#
# Note: There's a bit of duplication here. My original implementation
# created a scalar regex pattern as the conditional result of the test on
# $g_list_level, and then only ran the $text =~ s{...}{...}egmx
# substitution once, using the scalar as the pattern. This worked,
# everywhere except when running under MT on my hosting account at Pair
# Networks. There, this caused all rebuilds to be killed by the reaper (or
# perhaps they crashed, but that seems incredibly unlikely given that the
# same script on the same server ran fine *except* under MT. I've spent
# more time trying to figure out why this is happening than I'd like to
# admit. My only guess, backed up by the fact that this workaround works,
# is that Perl optimizes the substition when it can figure out that the
# pattern will never change, and when this optimization isn't on, we run
# afoul of the reaper. Thus, the slightly redundant code to that uses two
# static s/// patterns rather than one conditional pattern.
if ($g_list_level) {
$text =~ s{
^
$whole_list
}{
my $list = $1;
my $list_type = ($3 =~ m/$marker_ul/) ? "ul" : "ol";
# Turn double returns into triple returns, so that we can make a
# paragraph for the last item in a list, if necessary:
$list =~ s/\n{2,}/\n\n\n/g;
my $result = _ProcessListItems($list, $marker_any);
$result = "<$list_type>\n" . $result . "$list_type>\n";
$result;
}egmx;
}
else {
$text =~ s{
(?:(?<=\n\n)|\A\n?)
$whole_list
}{
my $list = $1;
my $list_type = ($3 =~ m/$marker_ul/) ? "ul" : "ol";
# Turn double returns into triple returns, so that we can make a
# paragraph for the last item in a list, if necessary:
$list =~ s/\n{2,}/\n\n\n/g;
my $result = _ProcessListItems($list, $marker_any);
$result = "<$list_type>\n" . $result . "$list_type>\n";
$result;
}egmx;
}
return $text;
}
sub _ProcessListItems {
#
# Process the contents of a single ordered or unordered list, splitting it
# into individual list items.
#
my $list_str = shift;
my $marker_any = shift;
# The $g_list_level global keeps track of when we're inside a list.
# Each time we enter a list, we increment it; when we leave a list,
# we decrement. If it's zero, we're not in a list anymore.
#
# We do this because when we're not inside a list, we want to treat
# something like this:
#
# I recommend upgrading to version
# 8. Oops, now this line is treated
# as a sub-list.
#
# As a single paragraph, despite the fact that the second line starts
# with a digit-period-space sequence.
#
# Whereas when we're inside a list (or sub-list), that line will be
# treated as the start of a sub-list. What a kludge, huh? This is
# an aspect of Markdown's syntax that's hard to parse perfectly
# without resorting to mind-reading. Perhaps the solution is to
# change the syntax rules such that sub-lists must start with a
# starting cardinal number; e.g. "1." or "a.".
$g_list_level++;
# trim trailing blank lines:
$list_str =~ s/\n{2,}\z/\n/;
$list_str =~ s{
(\n)? # leading line = $1
(^[ \t]*) # leading whitespace = $2
($marker_any) [ \t]+ # list marker = $3
((?s:.+?) # list item text = $4
(\n{1,2}))
(?= \n* (\z | \2 ($marker_any) [ \t]+))
}{
my $item = $4;
my $leading_line = $1;
my $leading_space = $2;
if ($leading_line or ($item =~ m/\n{2,}/)) {
$item = _RunBlockGamut(_Outdent($item));
}
else {
# Recursion for sub-lists:
$item = _DoLists(_Outdent($item));
chomp $item;
$item = _RunSpanGamut($item);
}
"" . $item . " \n";
}egmx;
$g_list_level--;
return $list_str;
}
sub _DoCodeBlocks {
#
# Process Markdown `` blocks.
#
my $text = shift;
$text =~ s{
(?:\n\n|\A)
( # $1 = the code block -- one or more lines, starting with a space/tab
(?:
(?:[ ]{$g_tab_width} | \t) # Lines must start with a tab or a tab-width of spaces
.*\n+
)+
)
((?=^[ ]{0,$g_tab_width}\S)|\Z) # Lookahead for non-space at line-start, or end of doc
}{
my $codeblock = $1;
my $result; # return value
$codeblock = _EncodeCode(_Outdent($codeblock));
$codeblock = _Detab($codeblock);
$codeblock =~ s/\A\n+//; # trim leading newlines
$codeblock =~ s/\s+\z//; # trim trailing whitespace
$result = "\n\n" . $codeblock . "\n
\n\n";
$result;
}egmx;
return $text;
}
sub _DoCodeSpans {
#
# * Backtick quotes are used for
spans.
#
# * You can use multiple backticks as the delimiters if you want to
# include literal backticks in the code span. So, this input:
#
# Just type ``foo `bar` baz`` at the prompt.
#
# Will translate to:
#
# Just type foo `bar` baz
at the prompt.
#
# There's no arbitrary limit to the number of backticks you
# can use as delimters. If you need three consecutive backticks
# in your code, use four for delimiters, etc.
#
# * You can use spaces to get literal backticks at the edges:
#
# ... type `` `bar` `` ...
#
# Turns to:
#
# ... type `bar`
...
#
my $text = shift;
$text =~ s@
(`+) # $1 = Opening run of `
(.+?) # $2 = The code block
(?$c
";
@egsx;
return $text;
}
sub _EncodeCode {
#
# Encode/escape certain characters inside Markdown code runs.
# The point is that in code, these characters are literals,
# and lose their special Markdown meanings.
#
local $_ = shift;
# Encode all ampersands; HTML entities are not
# entities within a Markdown code span.
s/&/&/g;
# Encode $'s, but only if we're running under Blosxom.
# (Blosxom interpolates Perl variables in article bodies.)
{
no warnings 'once';
if (defined($blosxom::version)) {
s/\$/$/g;
}
}
# Do the angle bracket song and dance:
s! < !<!gx;
s! > !>!gx;
# Now, escape characters that are magic in Markdown:
s! \* !$g_escape_table{'*'}!gx;
s! _ !$g_escape_table{'_'}!gx;
s! { !$g_escape_table{'{'}!gx;
s! } !$g_escape_table{'}'}!gx;
s! \[ !$g_escape_table{'['}!gx;
s! \] !$g_escape_table{']'}!gx;
s! \\ !$g_escape_table{'\\'}!gx;
return $_;
}
sub _DoItalicsAndBold {
my $text = shift;
# must go first:
$text =~ s{ (\*\*|__) (?=\S) (.+?[*_]*) (?<=\S) \1 }
{$2}gsx;
$text =~ s{ (\*|_) (?=\S) (.+?) (?<=\S) \1 }
{$2}gsx;
return $text;
}
sub _DoBlockQuotes {
my $text = shift;
$text =~ s{
( # Wrap whole match in $1
(
^[ \t]*>[ \t]? # '>' at the start of a line
.+\n # rest of the first line
(.+\n)* # subsequent consecutive lines
\n* # blanks
)+
)
}{
my $bq = $1;
$bq =~ s/^[ \t]*>[ \t]?//gm; # trim one level of quoting
$bq =~ s/^[ \t]+$//mg; # trim whitespace-only lines
$bq = _RunBlockGamut($bq); # recurse
$bq =~ s/^/ /g;
# These leading spaces screw with content, so we need to fix that:
$bq =~ s{
(\s*.+?
)
}{
my $pre = $1;
$pre =~ s/^ //mg;
$pre;
}egsx;
"\n$bq\n
\n\n";
}egmx;
return $text;
}
sub _FormParagraphs {
#
# Params:
# $text - string to process with html tags
#
my $text = shift;
# Strip leading and trailing lines:
$text =~ s/\A\n+//;
$text =~ s/\n+\z//;
my @grafs = split(/\n{2,}/, $text);
#
# Wrap
tags.
#
foreach (@grafs) {
unless (defined( $g_html_blocks{$_} )) {
$_ = _RunSpanGamut($_);
s/^([ \t]*)/
/;
$_ .= "
";
}
}
#
# Unhashify HTML blocks
#
foreach (@grafs) {
if (defined( $g_html_blocks{$_} )) {
$_ = $g_html_blocks{$_};
}
}
return join "\n\n", @grafs;
}
sub _EncodeAmpsAndAngles {
# Smart processing for ampersands and angle brackets that need to be encoded.
my $text = shift;
# Ampersand-encoding based entirely on Nat Irons's Amputator MT plugin:
# http://bumppo.net/projects/amputator/
$text =~ s/&(?!#?[xX]?(?:[0-9a-fA-F]+|\w+);)/&/g;
# Encode naked <'s
$text =~ s{<(?![a-z/?\$!])}{<}gi;
return $text;
}
sub _EncodeBackslashEscapes {
#
# Parameter: String.
# Returns: The string, with after processing the following backslash
# escape sequences.
#
local $_ = shift;
s! \\\\ !$g_escape_table{'\\'}!gx; # Must process escaped backslashes first.
s! \\` !$g_escape_table{'`'}!gx;
s! \\\* !$g_escape_table{'*'}!gx;
s! \\_ !$g_escape_table{'_'}!gx;
s! \\\{ !$g_escape_table{'{'}!gx;
s! \\\} !$g_escape_table{'}'}!gx;
s! \\\[ !$g_escape_table{'['}!gx;
s! \\\] !$g_escape_table{']'}!gx;
s! \\\( !$g_escape_table{'('}!gx;
s! \\\) !$g_escape_table{')'}!gx;
s! \\> !$g_escape_table{'>'}!gx;
s! \\\# !$g_escape_table{'#'}!gx;
s! \\\+ !$g_escape_table{'+'}!gx;
s! \\\- !$g_escape_table{'-'}!gx;
s! \\\. !$g_escape_table{'.'}!gx;
s{ \\! }{$g_escape_table{'!'}}gx;
return $_;
}
sub _DoAutoLinks {
my $text = shift;
$text =~ s{<((https?|ftp):[^'">\s]+)>}{$1}gi;
# Email addresses:
$text =~ s{
<
(?:mailto:)?
(
[-.\w]+
\@
[-a-z0-9]+(\.[-a-z0-9]+)*\.[a-z]+
)
>
}{
_EncodeEmailAddress( _UnescapeSpecialChars($1) );
}egix;
return $text;
}
sub _EncodeEmailAddress {
#
# Input: an email address, e.g. "foo@example.com"
#
# Output: the email address as a mailto link, with each character
# of the address encoded as either a decimal or hex entity, in
# the hopes of foiling most address harvesting spam bots. E.g.:
#
# foo
# @example.com
#
# Based on a filter by Matthew Wickline, posted to the BBEdit-Talk
# mailing list:
#
my $addr = shift;
srand;
my @encode = (
sub { '' . ord(shift) . ';' },
sub { '' . sprintf( "%X", ord(shift) ) . ';' },
sub { shift },
);
$addr = "mailto:" . $addr;
$addr =~ s{(.)}{
my $char = $1;
if ( $char eq '@' ) {
# this *must* be encoded. I insist.
$char = $encode[int rand 1]->($char);
} elsif ( $char ne ':' ) {
# leave ':' alone (to spot mailto: later)
my $r = rand;
# roughly 10% raw, 45% hex, 45% dec
$char = (
$r > .9 ? $encode[2]->($char) :
$r < .45 ? $encode[1]->($char) :
$encode[0]->($char)
);
}
$char;
}gex;
$addr = qq{$addr};
$addr =~ s{">.+?:}{">}; # strip the mailto: from the visible part
return $addr;
}
sub _UnescapeSpecialChars {
#
# Swap back in all the special characters we've hidden.
#
my $text = shift;
while( my($char, $hash) = each(%g_escape_table) ) {
$text =~ s/$hash/$char/g;
}
return $text;
}
sub _TokenizeHTML {
#
# Parameter: String containing HTML markup.
# Returns: Reference to an array of the tokens comprising the input
# string. Each token is either a tag (possibly with nested,
# tags contained therein, such as , or a
# run of text between tags. Each element of the array is a
# two-element array; the first is either 'tag' or 'text';
# the second is the actual value.
#
#
# Derived from the _tokenize() subroutine from Brad Choate's MTRegex plugin.
#
#
my $str = shift;
my $pos = 0;
my $len = length $str;
my @tokens;
my $depth = 6;
my $nested_tags = join('|', ('(?:<[a-z/!$](?:[^<>]') x $depth) . (')*>)' x $depth);
my $match = qr/(?s: ) | # comment
(?s: <\? .*? \?> ) | # processing instruction
$nested_tags/ix; # nested tags
while ($str =~ m/($match)/g) {
my $whole_tag = $1;
my $sec_start = pos $str;
my $tag_start = $sec_start - length $whole_tag;
if ($pos < $tag_start) {
push @tokens, ['text', substr($str, $pos, $tag_start - $pos)];
}
push @tokens, ['tag', $whole_tag];
$pos = pos $str;
}
push @tokens, ['text', substr($str, $pos, $len - $pos)] if $pos < $len;
\@tokens;
}
sub _Outdent {
#
# Remove one level of line-leading tabs or spaces
#
my $text = shift;
$text =~ s/^(\t|[ ]{1,$g_tab_width})//gm;
return $text;
}
sub _Detab {
#
# Cribbed from a post by Bart Lateur:
#
#
my $text = shift;
$text =~ s{(.*?)\t}{$1.(' ' x ($g_tab_width - length($1) % $g_tab_width))}ge;
return $text;
}
1;
__END__
=pod
=head1 NAME
B
=head1 SYNOPSIS
B [ B<--html4tags> ] [ B<--version> ] [ B<-shortversion> ]
[ I ... ]
=head1 DESCRIPTION
Markdown is a text-to-HTML filter; it translates an easy-to-read /
easy-to-write structured text format into HTML. Markdown's text format
is most similar to that of plain text email, and supports features such
as headers, *emphasis*, code blocks, blockquotes, and links.
Markdown's syntax is designed not as a generic markup language, but
specifically to serve as a front-end to (X)HTML. You can use span-level
HTML tags anywhere in a Markdown document, and you can use block level
HTML tags (like and as well).
For more information about Markdown's syntax, see:
http://daringfireball.net/projects/markdown/
=head1 OPTIONS
Use "--" to end switch parsing. For example, to open a file named "-z", use:
Markdown.pl -- -z
=over 4
=item B<--html4tags>
Use HTML 4 style for empty element tags, e.g.:
instead of Markdown's default XHTML style tags, e.g.:
=item B<-v>, B<--version>
Display Markdown's version number and copyright information.
=item B<-s>, B<--shortversion>
Display the short-form version number.
=back
=head1 BUGS
To file bug reports or feature requests (other than topics listed in the
Caveats section above) please send email to:
support@daringfireball.net
Please include with your report: (1) the example input; (2) the output
you expected; (3) the output Markdown actually produced.
=head1 VERSION HISTORY
See the readme file for detailed release notes for this version.
1.0.1 - 14 Dec 2004
1.0 - 28 Aug 2004
=head1 AUTHOR
John Gruber
http://daringfireball.net
PHP port and other contributions by Michel Fortin
http://michelf.com
=head1 COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE
Copyright (c) 2003-2004 John Gruber
All rights reserved.
Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without
modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions are
met:
* Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright notice,
this list of conditions and the following disclaimer.
* Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above copyright
notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer in the
documentation and/or other materials provided with the distribution.
* Neither the name "Markdown" nor the names of its contributors may
be used to endorse or promote products derived from this software
without specific prior written permission.
This software is provided by the copyright holders and contributors "as
is" and any express or implied warranties, including, but not limited
to, the implied warranties of merchantability and fitness for a
particular purpose are disclaimed. In no event shall the copyright owner
or contributors be liable for any direct, indirect, incidental, special,
exemplary, or consequential damages (including, but not limited to,
procurement of substitute goods or services; loss of use, data, or
profits; or business interruption) however caused and on any theory of
liability, whether in contract, strict liability, or tort (including
negligence or otherwise) arising in any way out of the use of this
software, even if advised of the possibility of such damage.
=cut