Note: This repo is unmaintained and has been for a while. If you are interested in taking over this repo, then please let me know (trentm at google's email thing).
A small Django app that provides template tags for using Markdown using the python-markdown2 library.
The obvious name for this project is django-markdown2
. However, there
already is one! and name
confusion doesn't help anybody. Plus, I took French immersion in school for 12
years: might as well put it to use.
Because I wanted to do something slightly different. Django-markdown2's
markdown
filter takes
"extras" as arguments
-- with the one exception that "safe" is transformed to python-markdown2's
safe_mode
argument. This is handy for quick usage. My use case is more
commonly: lots of markdown
filter and block usage in my Django templates with
the same set of python-markdown2 options.
Choose the one of the following that works best for you:
-
Install the latest release from PyPI:
pip install django-markdown-deux
or, if you use ActivePython:
pypm install django-markdown-deux
These should install the dependent
python-markdown2
package. -
Get a git clone of the source tree:
git clone git://github.com/trentm/django-markdown-deux.git
You might want a particular tag:
cd django-markdown-deux git tag -l # list available tags git checkout $tagname
Then you'll need the "lib" subdir on your PYTHONPATH:
python setup.py install # or 'export PYTHONPATH=`pwd`/lib:$PYTHONPATH'
You'll also need the python-markdown2 library:
git clone [email protected]:trentm/python-markdown2.git cd python-markdown2 python setup.py install # or 'export PYTHONPATH=`pwd`/python-markdown2/lib'
-
Add
markdown_deux
toINSTALLED_APPS
in your project's "settings.py". -
Optionally set some of the
MARKDOWN_DEUX_*
settings. See the "Settings" section below.
The markdown_deux
facilities typically take an optional "style" argument. This
is a name for a set of options to the python-markdown2
processor. There is
a "default" style that is used if no argument is given. See the
MARKDOWN_DEUX_STYLES
setting below for more.
{% load markdown_deux_tags %}
...
{{ myvar|markdown:"STYLE" }} {# convert `myvar` to HTML using the "STYLE" style #}
{{ myvar|markdown }} {# same as `{{ myvar|markdown:"default"}}` #}
{% load markdown_deux_tags %}
...
{% markdown STYLE %} {# can omit "STYLE" to use the "default" style #}
This is some **cool**
[Markdown](http://daringfireball.net/projects/markdown/)
text here.
{% endmarkdown %}
In a template:
{% markdown_allowed %}
will emit a short HTML blurb that says Markdown syntax is allowed. This can be
handy for placing under form elements that accept markdown syntax. You can also
use it as the help_text
for a form field something like:
# myapp/forms.py
from markdown_deux.templatetags.markdown_deux_tags import markdown_allowed
class MyForm(forms.Form):
#...
description = forms.CharField(
label="Description (required)",
widget=forms.Textarea(attrs={"rows": 5}),
help_text=_secondary_span("A brief description of your thing.<br/> "
+ markdown_allowed()),
required=True)
{% markdown_cheatsheet %}
This outputs HTML giving a narrow (appropriate for, e.g., a sidebar) listing of some of the more common Markdown features.
The markdown
filter and block tags above ultimately use this
markdown_deux.markdown(...)
function. You might find it useful to do Markdown
processing in your Python code (e.g. in a view, in a model .save()
method).
All settings for this app are optional.
A mapping of style name to a dict of keyword arguments for python-markdown2's
markdown2.markdown(text, **kwargs)
. For example the default setting is
effectively:
MARKDOWN_DEUX_STYLES = {
"default": {
"extras": {
"code-friendly": None,
},
"safe_mode": "escape",
},
}
I.e. only the "default" style is defined and it just uses the code-friendly extra and escapes raw HTML in the given Markdown (for safety).
Here is how you might add styles of your own, and preserve the default style:
# settings.py
from markdown_deux.conf.settings import MARKDOWN_DEUX_DEFAULT_STYLE
MARKDOWN_DEUX_STYLES = {
"default": MARKDOWN_DEUX_DEFAULT_STYLE,
"trusted": {
"extras": {
"code-friendly": None,
},
# Allow raw HTML (WARNING: don't use this for user-generated
# Markdown for your site!).
"safe_mode": False,
}
# Here is what http://code.activestate.com/recipes/ currently uses.
"recipe": {
"extras": {
"code-friendly": None,
},
"safe_mode": "escape",
"link_patterns": [
# Transform "Recipe 123" in a link.
(re.compile(r"recipe\s+#?(\d+)\b", re.I),
r"http://code.activestate.com/recipes/\1/"),
],
"extras": {
"code-friendly": None,
"pyshell": None,
"demote-headers": 3,
"link-patterns": None,
# `class` attribute put on `pre` tags to enable using
# <http://code.google.com/p/google-code-prettify/> for syntax
# highlighting.
"html-classes": {"pre": "prettyprint"},
"cuddled-lists": None,
"footnotes": None,
"header-ids": None,
},
"safe_mode": "escape",
}
}
A URL for to which to link for full markdown syntax default. This link is
only in the output of the markdown_allowed
and markdown_cheatsheet
template tags.
The default is http://daringfireball.net/projects/markdown/syntax, the canonical Markdown syntax reference. However, if your site uses Markdown with specific tweaks, you may prefer to have your own override. For example, ActiveState Code uses:
MARKDOWN_DEUX_HELP_URL = "/help/markdown/"
To link to its own Markdown syntax notes URL.