This is a new markup language that we call markmin designed to produce high quality scientific papers and books and also put them online. We provide serializers for html, latex and pdf. It is implemented in the markmin2html
function in the markmin2html.py
.
Example of usage:
>>> m = "Hello **world** [[link http://web2py.com]]"
>>> from markmin2html import markmin2html
>>> print markmin2html(m)
>>> from markmin2latex import markmin2latex
>>> print markmin2latex(m)
>>> from markmin2pdf import markmin2pdf # requires pdflatex
>>> print markmin2pdf(m)
We wanted a markup language with the following requirements:
(results depend on text but in average for text ~100K markmin is 30% faster than markdown, for text ~10K it is 10x faster)
The web2py book published by lulu, for example, was entirely generated with markmin2pdf from the online web2py wiki
markmin2html.py and markmin2latex.py are single files and have no web2py dependence. Their license is BSD.
SOURCE | OUTPUT |
# title | title |
## section | section |
### subsection | subsection |
**bold** | bold |
''italic'' | italic |
``verbatim`` | verbatim |
http://google.com | http://google.com |
[[click me #myanchor]] | click me |
The format is always [[title link]]
. Notice you can nest bold, italic and code inside the link title.
You can place an anchor anywhere in the text using the syntax [[name]]
where name is the name of the anchor.
You can then link the anchor with link, i.e. [[link #myanchor]]
.
This paragraph has an image aligned to the right with a width of 200px. Its is placed using the code
[[some image http://www.web2py.com/examples/static/web2py_logo.png right 200px]]
.
- Dog
- Cat
- Mouse
is rendered as
Two new lines between items break the list in two lists.
+ Dog
+ Cat
+ Mouse
is rendered as
Something like this
---------
**A** | **B** | **C**
0 | 0 | X
0 | X | 0
X | 0 | 0
-----:abc
is a table and is rendered as
A | B | C |
0 | 0 | X |
0 | X | 0 |
X | 0 | 0 |
:abc
at the end sets the class for the table and it is optional.A table with a single cell is rendered as a blockquote:
Hello world
<code>
, escaping and extra stuffdef test():
return "this is Python code"
Optionally a ` inside a ``...``
block can be inserted escaped with !`!.
The :python
after the markup is also optional. If present, by default, it is used to set the class of the <code> block.
The behavior can be overridden by passing an argument extra
to the render
function. For example:
>>> markmin2html("``aaa``:custom",
extra=dict(custom=lambda text: 'x'+text+'x'))
generates
'xaaax'
(the ``...``:custom
block is rendered by the custom=lambda
function passed to render
).
Markmin also supports the <video> and <audio> html5 tags using the notation:
[[title link video]]
[[title link audio]]
Formulas can be embedded into HTML with $
$
formula$
$
.
You can use Google charts to render the formula:
>>> LATEX = '<img src="http://chart.apis.google.com/chart?cht=tx&chl=%s" align="center"/>'
>>> markmin2html(text,{'latex':lambda code: LATEX % code.replace('"','"')})
This requires a syntax highlighting tool, such as the web2py CODE helper.
>>> extra={'code_cpp':lambda text: CODE(text,language='cpp').xml(),
'code_java':lambda text: CODE(text,language='java').xml(),
'code_python':lambda text: CODE(text,language='python').xml(),
'code_html':lambda text: CODE(text,language='html').xml()}
>>> markmin2html(text,extra=extra)
Code can now be marked up as in this example:
``
<html><body>example</body></html>
``:code_html
Citations are treated as internal links in html and proper citations in latex if there is a final section called "References". Items like
- [[key]] value
in the References will be translated into Latex
\bibitem{key} value
Here is an example of usage:
As shown in Ref.``mdipierro``:cite
## References
- [[mdipierro]] web2py Manual, 3rd Edition, lulu.com
<ul/>
, <ol/>
, <code/>
, <table/>
, <blockquote/>
, <h1/>
, ..., <h6/>
do not have <p>...</p>
around them.