Safe Haskell | None |
---|---|
Language | Haskell2010 |
The basic task of this library is to parse text as commonmark. Usage example:
import Commonmark import Data.Text.IO as TIO import Data.Text.Lazy.IO as TLIO main = do res <- commonmark "stdin" <$> TIO.getContents case res of Left e -> error (show e) Right (html :: Html ()) -> TLIO.putStr $ renderHtml html
The parser is highly polymorphic: in this example, we use
the type annotation
to indicate that we want it
to produce basic HTML without source location attributes.
And we return a value in the IO monad. But we could have used a different
output format (e.g. Html
()
for HTML with source location
attributes). And we could have used the Identity monad to get a
pure value. (The default parsers work the same way in any monad, but it is
possible to define extensions that constrain the monad. For
example, an extension for include files might only work in IO,
or might have different behavior in IO and Identity.)Html
SourceRange
Extensibility is emphasized throughout. To change the output
for a given format, or support an alternate output format,
one has only to define instances of IsBlock
and IsInline
for a new type. (For an example of this kind of extension,
see the commonmark-pandoc
package, which defines these
instances for pandoc's native types.)
Supporting a new syntactic element generally requires (a) adding
a SyntaxSpec
for it and (b) defining new type classes.
See the examples in the commonmark-extensions
package.
Note that SyntaxSpec
is a Monoid, so one can extend
defaultSyntaxSpec
by specifying myNewSyntaxSpec <> defaultSyntaxSpec
.
Documentation
module Commonmark.Tokens
module Commonmark.Types
module Commonmark.Syntax
module Commonmark.Parser
module Commonmark.SourceMap
module Commonmark.Html