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A markup parser that outputs html and text. Syntax is similar to MediaWiki.
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adamonduty/marker
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== Marker Marker is a markup language parser designed for two needs: # Need to mimic MediaWiki syntax # Need to provide multiple output formats Mimicing MediaWiki syntax is not exact. One reason is that the MediaWiki parser itself is very complicated and handles many cases specially. It would be very difficult to exactly copy the MediaWiki parser and it probably wouldn't be worth the time because MediaWiki is intended for a wiki and needs to be adapted to be used as a markup lanaguage--especially for multiple output formats. The purpose of mimicing MediaWiki syntax is so that users don't have to learn more than one markup language, so the implementation doesn't *need* to be exact anyway. Marker differs from MediaWiki in several ways, because it is a grammar-based implementation. The grammar is written as a Treetop[http://treetop.rubyforge.org/] parsing expression grammar (PEG). Not implemented: # Table of contents # Tables == Use Parsing is done with either Marker.parse or Marker.parse_file. Both parse methods will return a parse tree that has to_html and to_s methods that "render" the markup. Both render methods will accept an options hash. Example: >> require 'marker' => true >> m = Marker.parse "== heading ==\nparagraph with '''bold''' text" => Markup+... >> puts m.to_s heading -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- paragraph with *bold* text => nil >> puts m.to_html <h2>heading</h2> <p>paragraph with <b>bold</b> text</p> => nil === Templates Templates are implemented as method calls to a templates module. Each method in the templates module is considered a template and can be called using the "{{ name }}" syntax. Each template method is expected to take three arguments: the render format (:html or :text), an array of positional parameters, and a hash of named parameters. For example, module MyTemplates def logo( format, pos_params, name_params ) case format when :html '<img src="/images/logo.png" />' else '' end end end Template modules are passed to Marker by setting the +templates+ property: require 'my_templates' require 'marker' Marker.templates = Templates If no template method is found, the template call is printed for debugging: >> puts Marker.parse( '{{t|one|two|name=val}}' ).to_s render:t( :text, ["one", "two"], {"name"=>"val"} ) === Internal Links Internal links are implemented as links with default prefixes. The link prefix is specified by setting the +link_base+ property: require 'marker' Marker.link_base = 'http://example.com/pages/' >> puts Marker.parse( '[[target|name]]' ).to_html <p><a href='http://example.com/pages/target'>name</a></p> The link target is appended to the link prefix, along with a beginning '/'. If no link base is given, links are just the link target with a beginning '/'. The link base can also be given as a render option. === Unlabelled Links (write me) == Command Line Program == License Marker is copyright 2009 Ryan Blue and distributed under the terms of the GNU General Public License (GPL). See the LICENSE file for further information on the GPL, or visit http://creativecommons.org/licenses/GPL/2.0/.
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A markup parser that outputs html and text. Syntax is similar to MediaWiki.
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