CommonMark
CommonMark is a rationalized version of Markdown syntax,
with a spec and BSD3-licensed reference
implementations in C and JavaScript.
Try it now!
The implementations
The C implementation provides both a shared library (libcmark
) and a
standalone program cmark
that converts CommonMark to HTML. It is
written in standard C99 and has no library dependencies. The parser is
very fast, on par with sundown. Some
benchmarks (on an ancient Thinkpad running Intel Core 2 Duo at 2GHz,
measured using time
and parsing a ~500K book, the English version of
Pro Git by Scott
Chacon and Ben Straub):
|Implementation | Time | Factor|
|---------------|-------|--------|
| Markdown.pl | 5.162s| 286.8|
| PHP Markdown | 1.021s| 56.7|
| commonmark.js | 0.292s| 16.2|
| peg-markdown | 0.279s| 15.5|
| marked | 0.239s| 13.3|
| discount | 0.090s| 5.0|
| cmark | 0.020s| 1.1|
| sundown | 0.018s| 1.0|
It is easy to use libcmark
in python or ruby code: see wrapper.py
and wrapper.rb
in the repository for simple examples.
The JavaScript implementation is a single JavaScript file, with
no dependencies, that can be linked to in an HTML page. Here
is a simple usage example:
var reader = new commonmark.DocParser();
var writer = new commonmark.HtmlRenderer();
var parsed = reader.parse("Hello *world*");
var result = writer.render(parsed);
A node package is also available; it includes a command-line tool called
commonmark
.
A note on security:
Neither implementation attempts to sanitize link attributes or
raw HTML. If you use these libraries in applications that accept
untrusted user input, you must run the output through an HTML
sanitizer to protect against
XSS attacks.
Installing (C)
Building the C program (cmark
) and shared library (libcmark
)
requires cmake and re2c, which is used to generate scanners.c
from
scanners.re
. (Note that re2c is only a build dependency for
developers, since scanners.c
can be provided in a released source
tarball.)
If you have GNU make, you can simply make
, make test
, and make install
. This calls cmake to create a Makefile
in the build
directory, then uses that Makefile
to create the executable and
library.
For a more portable method, you can use cmake manually. cmake knows
how to create build environments for many build systems. For example,
on FreeBSD:
mkdir build
cd build
cmake .. # optionally: -DCMAKE_INSTALL_PREFIX=path
make # executable will be create as build/src/cmake
make test
make install
Or, to create Xcode project files on OSX:
mkdir build
cd build
cmake -G Xcode ..
make
make test
make install
Tests can also be run manually on any executable $PROG
using:
perl runtests.pl spec.txt $PROG
The GNU Makefile also provides a few other targets for developers.
To test the shared library via a python wrapper:
make testlib
To run a "fuzz test" against ten long randomly generated inputs:
make fuzztest
To run a test for memory leaks using valgrind:
make leakcheck
To make a release tarball:
make tarball
Compiling for Windows
You can cross-compile a Windows binary and dll on linux if you have the
mingw32
compiler:
make mingw
The binaries will be in build-mingw/windows/bin
.
Installing (JavaScript)
The JavaScript library can be installed through npm
:
npm install commonmark
To build the JavaScript library as a single standalone file:
browserify --standalone commonmark js/lib/index.js -o js/commonmark.js
Or fetch a pre-built copy from
http://spec.commonmark.org/js/commonmark.js`.
To run tests for the JavaScript library:
make testjs
or
node js/test.js
The spec
The spec contains over 500 embedded examples which serve as conformance
tests. To run the tests for cmark
, do make test
. To run them for
another Markdown program, say myprog
, do make test PROG=myprog
. To
run the tests for commonmark.js
, do make testjs
.
The source of the spec is spec.txt
. This is basically a Markdown
file, with code examples written in a shorthand form:
.
Markdown source
.
expected HTML output
.
To build an HTML version of the spec, do make spec.html
. To build a
PDF version, do make spec.pdf
. Both these commands require that
pandoc is installed, and creating a PDF requires a latex installation.
The spec is written from the point of view of the human writer, not
the computer reader. It is not an algorithm---an English translation of
a computer program---but a declarative description of what counts as a block
quote, a code block, and each of the other structural elements that can
make up a Markdown document.
Because John Gruber's canonical syntax
description leaves
many aspects of the syntax undetermined, writing a precise spec requires
making a large number of decisions, many of them somewhat arbitrary.
In making them, I have appealed to existing conventions and
considerations of simplicity, readability, expressive power, and
consistency. I have tried to ensure that "normal" documents in the many
incompatible existing implementations of Markdown will render, as far as
possible, as their authors intended. And I have tried to make the rules
for different elements work together harmoniously. In places where
different decisions could have been made (for example, the rules
governing list indentation), I have explained the rationale for
my choices. In a few cases, I have departed slightly from the canonical
syntax description, in ways that I think further the goals of Markdown
as stated in that description.
For the most part, I have limited myself to the basic elements
described in Gruber's canonical syntax description, eschewing extensions
like footnotes and definition lists. It is important to get the core
right before considering such things. However, I have included a visible
syntax for line breaks and fenced code blocks.
Differences from original Markdown
There are only a few places where this spec says things that contradict
the canonical syntax description:
-
It allows all punctuation symbols to be
backslash-escaped,
not just the symbols with special meanings in Markdown. I found
that it was just too hard to remember which symbols could be
escaped.
-
It introduces an alternative syntax for hard line
breaks, a
backslash at the end of the line, supplementing the
two-spaces-at-the-end-of-line rule. This is motivated by persistent
complaints about the “invisible” nature of the two-space rule.
-
Link syntax has been made a bit more predictable (in a
backwards-compatible way). For example, Markdown.pl
allows single
quotes around a title in inline links, but not in reference links.
This kind of difference is really hard for users to remember, so the
spec allows single quotes in both
contexts.
-
The rule for HTML blocks differs, though in most real cases it
shouldn't make a difference. (See
here for
details.) The spec's proposal makes it easy to include Markdown
inside HTML block-level tags, if you want to, but also allows you to
exclude this. It is also makes parsing much easier, avoiding
expensive backtracking.
-
It does not collapse adjacent bird-track blocks into a single
blockquote:
> this is two
> blockquotes
> this is a single
>
> blockquote with two paragraphs
-
Rules for content in lists differ in a few respects, though (as with
HTML blocks), most lists in existing documents should render as
intended. There is some discussion of the choice points and
differences here.
I think that the spec's proposal does better than any existing
implementation in rendering lists the way a human writer or reader
would intuitively understand them. (I could give numerous examples
of perfectly natural looking lists that nearly every existing
implementation flubs up.)
-
The spec stipulates that two blank lines break out of all list
contexts. This is an attempt to deal with issues that often come up
when someone wants to have two adjacent lists, or a list followed by
an indented code block.
-
Changing bullet characters, or changing from bullets to numbers or
vice versa, starts a new list. I think that is almost always going
to be the writer's intent.
-
The number that begins an ordered list item may be followed by
either .
or )
. Changing the delimiter style starts a new
list.
-
The start number of an ordered list is significant.
-
Fenced code blocks are supported, delimited by either
backticks (```
) or tildes (~~~
).
In all of this, I have been guided by eight years experience writing
Markdown implementations in several languages, including the first
Markdown parser not based on regular expression substitutions
(pandoc) and the first markdown parsers
based on PEG grammars
(peg-markdown,
lunamark). Maintaining these projects
and responding to years of user feedback have given me a good sense of
the complexities involved in parsing Markdown, and of the various design
decisions that can be made. I have also explored differences between
Markdown implementations extensively using BabelMark
2. In the early phases of
working out the spec, I benefited greatly from collaboration with David
Greenspan, and from feedback from several industrial users of Markdown,
including Jeff Atwood, Vincent Marti, and Neil Williams.
Contributing
There is a forum for discussing
CommonMark; you should use it instead of
github issues for questions and possibly open-ended discussions.
Use the github issue tracker
only for simple, clear, actionable issues.