markdown-mode is a major mode for editing Markdown-formatted
text. The latest stable version is markdown-mode 2.5, released on
Feb 12, 2022. See the release notes for details.
markdown-mode is free software, licensed under the GNU GPL,
version 3 or later.
Documentation
The primary documentation for Markdown Mode is available below, and
is generated from comments in the source code. For a more in-depth
treatment, the Guide to Markdown Mode for Emacs covers
Markdown syntax, advanced movement and editing in Emacs,
extensions, configuration examples, tips and tricks, and a survey
of other packages that work with Markdown Mode. Finally, Emacs is
also a self-documenting editor. This means that the source code
itself contains additional documentation: each function has its own
docstring available via C-h f (describe-function), individual
keybindings can be investigated with C-h k (describe-key), and
a complete list of keybindings is available using C-h m
(describe-mode).
Installation
Note: To use all of the features of markdown-mode, you'll need
to install the Emacs package itself and also have a local Markdown
processor installed (e.g., Markdown.pl, MultiMarkdown, or Pandoc).
The external processor is not required for editing, but will be
used for rendering HTML for preview and export. After installing
the Emacs package, be sure to configure markdown-command to point
to the preferred Markdown executable on your system. See the
Customization section below for more details.
The recommended way to install markdown-mode is to install the package
from MELPA Stable
using package.el. First, configure package.el and the MELPA Stable
repository by adding the following to your .emacs, init.el,
or equivalent startup file:
Then, after restarting Emacs or evaluating the above statements, issue
the following command: M-x package-install RET markdown-mode RET.
When installed this way, the major modes markdown-mode and gfm-mode
will be autoloaded and markdown-mode will be used for file names
ending in .md, .markdown, .mkd, .mdown, .mkdn, .mdwn.
Alternatively, if you manage loading packages with use-package
then you can automatically install and configure markdown-mode by
adding a declaration such as this one to your init file (as an
example; adjust settings as desired):
Alternatively you can manually download and install markdown-mode.
First, download the latest stable version and
save the file where Emacs can find it (i.e., a directory in your
load-path). You can then configure markdown-mode and gfm-mode
to load automatically by adding the following to your init file:
If you prefer to install and use the development version, which may
become unstable at some times, you can either clone the Git
repository as above or install markdown-mode from
MELPA.
If you clone the repository directly, then make sure that Emacs can
find it by adding the following line to your startup file:
markdown-mode is also available in several package managers. You
may want to confirm that the package you install contains the
latest stable version first (and please notify the package
maintainer if not).
To enable editing of code blocks in indirect buffers using C-c ',
you will need to install the edit-indirect package.
Usage
Keybindings are grouped by prefixes based on their function. For
example, the commands for styling text are grouped under C-c C-s
and toggle commands begin with C-c C-x. The primary commands in
each group will are described below. You can obtain a list of all
keybindings by pressing C-c C-h. Movement and shifting commands
tend to be associated with paired delimiters such as M-{ and
M-} or C-c < and C-c >. Outline navigation keybindings the
same as in org-mode. Finally, commands for running Markdown or
doing maintenance on an open file are grouped under the C-c C-c
prefix. The most commonly used commands are described below. You
can obtain a list of all keybindings by pressing C-c C-h.
Links and Images: C-c C-l and C-c C-i
C-c C-l (markdown-insert-link) is a general command for
inserting new link markup or editing existing link markup. This
is especially useful when markup or URL hiding is enabled, so
that URLs can't easily be edited directly. This command can be
used to insert links of any form: either inline links,
reference links, or plain URLs in angle brackets. The URL or
[reference] label, link text, and optional title are entered
through a series of interactive prompts. The type of link is
determined by which values are provided:
If both a URL and link text are given, insert an inline link:
[text](url).
If both a [reference] label and link text are given, insert
a reference link: [text][reference].
If only link text is given, insert an implicit reference link:
[text][].
If only a URL is given, insert a plain URL link:
<url>.
Similarly, C-c C-i (markdown-insert-image) is a general
command for inserting or editing image markup. As with the link
insertion command, through a series interactive prompts you can
insert either an inline or reference image:
If both a URL and alt text are given, insert an inline
image: ![alt text](url).
If both a [reference] label and alt text are given,
insert a reference link: ![alt text][reference].
If there is an existing link or image at the point, these
command will edit the existing markup rather than inserting new
markup. Otherwise, if there is an active region, these commands
use the region as either the default URL (if it seems to be a
URL) or link text value otherwise. In that case, the region
will be deleted and replaced by the link.
Note that these functions can be used to convert links and
images from one type to another (inline, reference, or plain
URL) by selectively adding or removing properties via the
interactive prompts.
If a reference label is given that is not yet defined, you
will be prompted for the URL and optional title and the
reference will be inserted according to the value of
markdown-reference-location. If a title is given, it will be
added to the end of the reference definition and will be used
to populate the title attribute when converted to HTML. In addition, it is
possible to have the markdown-link-make-text-function function, if
non-nil, define the default link text before prompting the user for it.
If markdown-disable-tooltip-prompt is non-nil, the user will not be
prompted to add or modify a tooltip text.
Images associated with image links may be displayed
inline in the buffer by pressing C-c C-x C-i
(markdown-toggle-inline-images). This is a toggle command, so
pressing this once again will remove inline images.
By default, only local images are displayed. However, remote
images will also be downloaded and displayed if
markdown-display-remote-images is non-nil.
Large images may be scaled down to fit in the buffer using
markdown-max-image-size, a cons cell of the form (max-width . max-height). Resizing requires Emacs to be built with
ImageMagick support.
Text Styles: C-c C-s
C-c C-s i inserts markup to make a region or word italic. If
there is an active region, make the region italic. If the point
is at a non-italic word, make the word italic. If the point is
at an italic word or phrase, remove the italic markup.
Otherwise, simply insert italic delimiters and place the point
in between them. Similarly, use C-c C-s b for bold, C-c C-s c
for inline code, and C-c C-s k for inserting <kbd> tags.
C-c C-s q inserts a blockquote using the active region, if
any, or starts a new blockquote. C-c C-s Q is a variation
which always operates on the region, regardless of whether it
is active or not (i.e., when transient-mark-mode is off but
the mark is set). The appropriate amount of indentation, if
any, is calculated automatically given the surrounding context,
but may be adjusted later using the region indentation
commands.
C-c C-s p behaves similarly for inserting preformatted code
blocks (with C-c C-s P being the region-only counterpart)
and C-c C-s C inserts a GFM style backquote fenced code block.
Headings: C-c C-s
To insert or replace headings, there are two options. You can
insert a specific level heading directly or you can have
markdown-mode determine the level for you based on the previous
heading. As with the other markup commands, the heading
insertion commands use the text in the active region, if any,
as the heading text. Otherwise, if the current line is not
blank, they use the text on the current line. Finally, the
setext commands will prompt for heading text if there is no
active region and the current line is blank.
C-c C-s h inserts a heading with automatically chosen type and
level (both determined by the previous heading). C-c C-s H
behaves similarly, but uses setext (underlined) headings when
possible, still calculating the level automatically.
In cases where the automatically-determined level is not what
you intended, the level can be quickly promoted or demoted
(as described below). Alternatively, a C-u prefix can be
given to insert a heading promoted (lower number) by one
level or a C-u C-u prefix can be given to insert a heading
demoted (higher number) by one level.
To insert a heading of a specific level and type, use C-c C-s 1
through C-c C-s 6 for atx (hash mark) headings and C-c C-s ! or
C-c C-s @ for setext headings of level one or two, respectively.
Note that ! is S-1 and @ is S-2.
If the point is at a heading, these commands will replace the
existing markup in order to update the level and/or type of the
heading. To remove the markup of the heading at the point,
press C-c C-k to kill the heading and press C-y to yank the
heading text back into the buffer.
Horizontal Rules: C-c C-s -
C-c C-s - inserts a horizontal rule. By default, insert the
first string in the list markdown-hr-strings (the most
prominent rule). With a C-u prefix, insert the last string.
With a numeric prefix N, insert the string in position N
(counting from 1).
Footnotes: C-c C-s f
C-c C-s f inserts a footnote marker at the point, inserts a
footnote definition below, and positions the point for
inserting the footnote text. Note that footnotes are an
extension to Markdown and are not supported by all processors.
Wiki Links: C-c C-s w
C-c C-s w inserts a wiki link of the form [[WikiLink]]. If
there is an active region, use the region as the link text. If the
point is at a word, use the word as the link text. If there is
no active region and the point is not at word, simply insert
link markup. Note that wiki links are an extension to Markdown
and are not supported by all processors.
Markdown and Maintenance Commands: C-c C-c
Compile:C-c C-c m will run Markdown on the current buffer
and show the output in another buffer. Preview: C-c C-c p
runs Markdown on the current buffer and previews, stores the
output in a temporary file, and displays the file in a browser.
Export:C-c C-c e will run Markdown on the current buffer
and save the result in the file basename.html, where
basename is the name of the Markdown file with the extension
removed. Export and View: press C-c C-c v to export the
file and view it in a browser. Open:C-c C-c o will open
the Markdown source file directly using markdown-open-command.
Live Export: Press C-c C-c l to turn on
markdown-live-preview-mode to view the exported output
side-by-side with the source Markdown. For all export commands,
the output file will be overwritten without notice.markdown-live-preview-window-function can be customized to open
in a browser other than eww. If you want to force the
preview window to appear at the bottom or right, you can
customize markdown-split-window-direction.
C-c C-c c will check for undefined references. If there are
any, a small buffer will open with a list of undefined
references and the line numbers on which they appear. In Emacs
22 and greater, selecting a reference from this list and
pressing RET will insert an empty reference definition at the
end of the buffer. Similarly, selecting the line number will
jump to the corresponding line.
C-c C-c u will check for unused references. This will
also open a small buffer if any are found, similar to undefined
reference checking. The buffer for unused references will contain
X buttons that remove unused references when selected.
C-c C-c n renumbers any ordered lists in the buffer that are
out of sequence.
C-c C-c ] completes all headings and normalizes all horizontal
rules in the buffer.
Following Links: C-c C-o
Press C-c C-o when the point is on an inline or reference
link to open the URL in a browser. When the point is at a
wiki link, open it in another buffer (in the current window,
or in the other window with the C-u prefix). Use M-p and
M-n to quickly jump to the previous or next link of any type.
Doing Things: C-c C-d
Use C-c C-d to do something sensible with the object at the point:
Jumps between reference links and reference definitions.
If more than one link uses the same reference label, a
window will be shown containing clickable buttons for
jumping to each link. Pressing TAB or S-TAB cycles
between buttons in this window.
Jumps between footnote markers and footnote text.
Toggles the completion status of GFM task list items
(checkboxes).
Re-aligns table columns.
Promotion and Demotion: C-c C-- and C-c C-=
Headings, horizontal rules, and list items can be promoted and
demoted, as well as bold and italic text. For headings,
"promotion" means decreasing the level (i.e., moving from
<h2> to <h1>) while "demotion" means increasing the
level. For horizontal rules, promotion and demotion means
moving backward or forward through the list of rule strings in
markdown-hr-strings. For bold and italic text, promotion and
demotion means changing the markup from underscores to asterisks.
Press C-c C-- or C-c LEFT to promote the element at the point
if possible.
To remember these commands, note that - is for decreasing the
level (promoting), and = (on the same key as +) is for
increasing the level (demoting). Similarly, the left and right
arrow keys indicate the direction that the atx heading markup
is moving in when promoting or demoting.
Completion: C-c C-]
Complete markup is in normalized form, which means, for
example, that the underline portion of a setext header is the
same length as the heading text, or that the number of leading
and trailing hash marks of an atx header are equal and that
there is no extra whitespace in the header text. C-c C-]
completes the markup at the point, if it is determined to be
incomplete.
Editing Lists: M-RET, C-c UP, C-c DOWN, C-c LEFT, and C-c RIGHT
New list items can be inserted with M-RET or C-c C-j. This
command determines the appropriate marker (one of the possible
unordered list markers or the next number in sequence for an
ordered list) and indentation level by examining nearby list
items. If there is no list before or after the point, start a
new list. As with heading insertion, you may prefix this
command by C-u to decrease the indentation by one level.
Prefix this command by C-u C-u to increase the indentation by
one level.
Existing list items (and their nested sub-items) can be moved
up or down with C-c UP or C-c DOWN and indented or
outdented with C-c RIGHT or C-c LEFT.
Editing Subtrees: C-c UP, C-c DOWN, C-c LEFT, and C-c RIGHT
Entire subtrees of ATX headings can be promoted and demoted
with C-c LEFT and C-c RIGHT, which are the same keybindings
used for promotion and demotion of list items. If the point is in
a list item, the operate on the list item. Otherwise, they operate
on the current heading subtree. Similarly, subtrees can be
moved up and down with C-c UP and C-c DOWN.
These commands currently do not work properly if there are
Setext headings in the affected region.
Please note the following "boundary" behavior for promotion and
demotion. Any level-six headings will not be demoted further
(i.e., they remain at level six, since Markdown and HTML define
only six levels) and any level-one headings will promoted away
entirely (i.e., heading markup will be removed, since a
level-zero heading is not defined).
Shifting the Region: C-c < and C-c >
Text in the region can be indented or outdented as a group using
C-c > to indent to the next indentation point (calculated in
the current context), and C-c < to outdent to the previous
indentation point. These keybindings are the same as those for
similar commands in python-mode.
Killing Elements: C-c C-k
Press C-c C-k to kill the thing at point and add important
text, without markup, to the kill ring. Possible things to
kill include (roughly in order of precedece): inline code,
headings, horizontal rules, links (add link text to kill ring),
images (add alt text to kill ring), angle URIs, email
addresses, bold, italics, reference definitions (add URI to
kill ring), footnote markers and text (kill both marker and
text, add text to kill ring), and list items.
These keys are used for hierarchical navigation in lists and
headings. When the point is in a list, they move between list
items. Otherwise, they move between headings. Use C-c C-n and
C-c C-p to move between the next and previous visible
headings or list items of any level. Similarly, C-c C-f and
C-c C-b move to the next and previous visible headings or
list items at the same level as the one at the point. Finally,
C-c C-u will move up to the parent heading or list item.
Movement by Markdown paragraph: M-{, M-}, and M-h
Paragraphs in markdown-mode are regular paragraphs,
paragraphs inside blockquotes, individual list items, headings,
etc. These keys are usually bound to forward-paragraph and
backward-paragraph, but the built-in Emacs functions are
based on simple regular expressions that fail in Markdown
files. Instead, they are bound to markdown-forward-paragraph
and markdown-backward-paragraph. To mark a paragraph,
you can use M-h (markdown-mark-paragraph).
Movement by Markdown block: C-M-{, C-M-}, and C-c M-h
Markdown blocks are regular paragraphs in many cases, but
contain many paragraphs in other cases: blocks are considered
to be entire lists, entire code blocks, and entire blockquotes.
To move backward one block use C-M-{
(markdown-beginning-block) and to move forward use C-M-}
(markdown-end-of-block). To mark a block, use C-c M-h
(markdown-mark-block).
Movement by Defuns: C-M-a, C-M-e, and C-M-h
The usual Emacs commands can be used to move by defuns
(top-level major definitions). In markdown-mode, a defun is a
section. As usual, C-M-a will move the point to the
beginning of the current or preceding defun, C-M-e will move
to the end of the current or following defun, and C-M-h will
put the region around the entire defun.
Table Editing:
Markdown Mode includes support for editing tables, which
have the following basic format:
The first line contains column headers. The second line
contains a separator line between the headers and the content.
Each following line is a row in the table. Columns are always
separated by the pipe character. The colons indicate column
alignment.
A table is re-aligned automatically each time you press TAB
or RET inside the table. TAB also moves to the next
field (RET to the next row) and creates new table rows at
the end of the table or before horizontal separator lines. The
indentation of the table is set by the first line. Column
centering inside Emacs is not supported.
Beginning pipe characters are required for proper detection of
table borders inside Emacs. Any line starting with |- or |:
is considered as a horizontal separator line and will be
expanded on the next re-align to span the whole table width. No
padding is allowed between the beginning pipe character and
header separator symbol. So, to create the above table, you
would only type
|Right|Left|Center|Default|
|-
and then press TAB to align the table and start filling in
cells.
Then you can jump with TAB from one cell to the next or with
S-TAB to the previous one. RET will jump to the to the
next cell in the same column, and create a new row if there is
no such cell or if the next row is beyond a separator line.
You can also convert selected region to a table. Basic editing
capabilities include inserting, deleting, and moving of columns
and rows, and table re-alignment, sorting, transposition:
C-c UP or C-c DOWN - Move the current row up or down.
C-c LEFT or C-c RIGHT - Move the current column left or right.
C-c S-UP - Kill the current row.
C-c S-DOWN - Insert a row above the current row. With a
prefix argument, row line is created below the current one.
C-c S-LEFT - Kill the current column.
C-c S-RIGHT - Insert a new column to the left of the current one.
C-c C-d - Re-align the current table (markdown-do).
C-c C-c ^ - Sort the rows of a table by a specified column.
This command prompts you for the column number and a sort
method (alphabetical or numerical, optionally in reverse).
C-c C-c | - Convert the region to a table. This function
attempts to recognize comma, tab, and space separated data
and then splits the data into cells accordingly.
C-c C-c t - Transpose table at point.
The table editing functions try to handle markup hiding
correctly when calculating column widths, however, columns
containing hidden markup may not always be aligned properly.
C-c C-s t (markdown-insert-table) is a general command for inserting new table.
The command prompts for table size and column alignment and inserts an empty pipe table at point.
Viewing Modes:
Read-only viewing modes, markdown-view-mode and gfm-view-mode
are provided for viewing Markdown content. These modes provide
simplified keybindings for navigating the buffer. Many of these
are like help-mode and view-mode, such as SPC,
DEL, <, and > for scrolling,
q for quitting, and ? or h for
help. Other keys are provided that mirror the outline navigation
commands when editing: n, p, f,
b, and u. Both of these modes enable markup
hiding by default, but this can be customized by setting
markdown-hide-markup-in-view-modes.
Miscellaneous Commands:
When the edit-indirect package is installed, C-c '
(markdown-edit-code-block) can be used to edit a code block
in an indirect buffer in the native major mode. Press C-c C-c
to commit changes and return or C-c C-k to cancel. You can
also give a prefix argument to the insertion command, as in
C-u C-c C-s C, to edit the code block in an indirect buffer
upon insertion.
As noted, many of the commands above behave differently depending
on whether Transient Mark mode is enabled or not. When it makes
sense, if Transient Mark mode is on and the region is active, the
command applies to the text in the region (e.g., C-c C-s b makes the
region bold). For users who prefer to work outside of Transient
Mark mode, since Emacs 22 it can be enabled temporarily by pressing
C-SPC C-SPC. When this is not the case, many commands then
proceed to look work with the word or line at the point.
When applicable, commands that specifically act on the region even
outside of Transient Mark mode have the same keybinding as their
standard counterpart, but the letter is uppercase. For example,
markdown-insert-blockquote is bound to C-c C-s q and only acts on
the region in Transient Mark mode while markdown-blockquote-region
is bound to C-c C-s Q and always applies to the region (when nonempty).
Note that these region-specific functions are useful in many
cases where it may not be obvious. For example, yanking text from
the kill ring sets the mark at the beginning of the yanked text
and moves the point to the end. Therefore, the (inactive) region
contains the yanked text. So, C-y followed by C-c C-s Q will
yank text and turn it into a blockquote.
markdown-mode attempts to be flexible in how it handles
indentation. When you press TAB repeatedly, the point will cycle
through several possible indentation levels corresponding to things
you might have in mind when you press RET at the end of a line or
TAB. For example, you may want to start a new list item,
continue a list item with hanging indentation, indent for a nested
pre block, and so on. Outdenting is handled similarly when backspace
is pressed at the beginning of the non-whitespace portion of a line.
markdown-mode supports outline-minor-mode as well as org-mode-style
visibility cycling for atx- or hash-style headings. There are two
types of visibility cycling: Pressing S-TAB cycles globally between
the table of contents view (headings only), outline view (top-level
headings only), and the full document view. Pressing TAB while the
point is at a heading will cycle through levels of visibility for the
subtree: completely folded, visible children, and fully visible.
Note that mixing hash and underline style headings will give undesired
results.
Customization
Although no configuration is necessary there are a few things
that can be customized. The M-x customize-mode command
provides an interface to all of the possible customizations:
markdown-command - the command used to run Markdown (default:
markdown). This variable may be customized to pass command-line
options to your Markdown processor of choice. We recommend you to
use list of strings if you want to set command line options like.
'("pandoc" "--from=markdown" "--to=html5"). It can also be a
function; in this case markdown will call it with three
arguments or four arguments, depending on
markdown-command-needs-filename. The first three arguments are:
the beginning and end of the region to process, and a buffer to
write the output to. When markdown-command-needs-filename is t, the fourth
argument is set to the name of the file.
markdown-command-needs-filename - set to t if
markdown-command does not accept standard input (default:
nil). When nil, markdown-mode will pass the Markdown
content to markdown-command using standard input (stdin).
When set to t, markdown-mode will pass the name of the file
as the final command-line argument to markdown-command. Note
that in the latter case, you will only be able to run
markdown-command from buffers which are visiting a file.
markdown-open-command - the command used for calling a standalone
Markdown previewer which is capable of opening Markdown source files
directly (default: nil). This command will be called
with a single argument, the filename of the current buffer.
A representative program is the Mac app Marked 2, a
live-updating Markdown previewer which can be called from a
simple shell script.
This variable can also be a function; in this case markdown-open
will call it without arguments to preview the current buffer.
markdown-open-image-command - the command used for opening image
link (default: nil) via markdown-follow-* commands. This variable
can also be a function, in this case it is called with a single argument,
image-link. If this value is nil, markdown-mode opens image links
by find-file.
markdown-hr-strings - list of strings to use when inserting
horizontal rules. Different strings will not be distinguished
when converted to HTML--they will all be converted to
<hr/>--but they may add visual distinction and style to plain
text documents. To maintain some notion of promotion and
demotion, keep these sorted from largest to smallest.
markdown-bold-underscore - set to a non-nil value to use two
underscores when inserting bold text instead of two asterisks
(default: nil).
markdown-italic-underscore - set to a non-nil value to use
underscores when inserting italic text instead of asterisks
(default: nil).
markdown-asymmetric-header - set to a non-nil value to use
asymmetric header styling, placing header characters only on
the left of headers (default: nil).
markdown-header-scaling - set to a non-nil value to use
a variable-pitch font for headings where the size corresponds
to the level of the heading (default: nil).
markdown-header-scaling-values - list of scaling values,
relative to baseline, for headers of levels one through six,
used when markdown-header-scaling is non-nil
(default: (2.0 1.7 1.4 1.1 1.0 1.0)).
markdown-marginalize-headers - put opening atx header markup
in the left margin when non-nil (default: nil).
markdown-marginalize-headers-margin-width - width of margin
used for marginalized headers (default: 6).
markdown-list-indent-width - depth of indentation for lists
when inserting, promoting, and demoting list items (default: 4).
markdown-indent-function - the function to use for automatic
indentation (default: markdown-indent-line).
markdown-indent-on-enter - Set to a non-nil value to
automatically indent new lines when RET is pressed.
Set to indent-and-new-item to additionally continue lists
when RET is pressed (default: t).
markdown-enable-wiki-links - syntax highlighting for wiki
links (default: nil). Set this to a non-nil value to turn on
wiki link support by default. Wiki link support can be toggled
later using the function markdown-toggle-wiki-links."
markdown-wiki-link-alias-first - set to a non-nil value to
treat aliased wiki links like [[link text|PageName]]
(default: t). When set to nil, they will be treated as
[[PageName|link text]].
markdown-uri-types - a list of protocol schemes (e.g., "http")
for URIs that markdown-mode should highlight.
markdown-enable-math - font lock for inline and display LaTeX
math expressions (default: nil). Set this to t to turn on
math support by default. Math support can be toggled
interactively later using C-c C-x C-e
(markdown-toggle-math).
markdown-enable-html - font lock for HTML tags and attributes
(default: t).
markdown-css-paths - CSS files to link to in XHTML output
(default: nil). These can be either local files (relative or
absolute) or URLs.
markdown-content-type - used to set to the http-equiv
attribute to be included in the XHTML <head> block (default:
"text/html"). Set to an alternate value application/xhtml+xml
if needed, or set to an empty string to remove the attribute. See
also: markdown-coding-system.
markdown-coding-system - used for specifying the character
set identifier in the http-equiv attribute when included
(default: nil). See markdown-content-type, which must
be set for this variable to have any effect. When set to nil,
buffer-file-coding-system will be used to automatically
determine the coding system string (falling back to
utf-8 when unavailable). Common settings are iso-8859-1
and iso-latin-1.
markdown-xhtml-header-content - additional content to include
in the XHTML <head> block (default: "").
markdown-xhtml-body-preamble - additional content to include in
the XHTML block, before the output (default: ""). This
is useful for enclosing additional elements around the Markdown
output.
markdown-xhtml-body-epilogue - additional content to include in
the XHTML block, after the output (default: ""). This is
useful for enclosing additional elements around the Markdown
output.
markdown-xhtml-standalone-regexp - a regular expression which
markdown-mode uses to determine whether the output of
markdown-command is a standalone XHTML document or an XHTML
fragment (default: "^\\(<\\?xml\\|<!DOCTYPE\\|<html\\)"). If
this regular expression not matched in the first five lines of
output, markdown-mode assumes the output is a fragment and
adds a header and footer.
markdown-link-space-sub-char - a character to replace spaces
when mapping wiki links to filenames (default: "_").
For example, use an underscore for compatibility with the
Python Markdown WikiLinks extension. In gfm-mode, this is
set to "-" to conform with GitHub wiki links.
markdown-reference-location - where to insert reference
definitions (default: header). The possible locations are
the end of the document (end), after the current block
(immediately), the end of the current subtree (subtree),
or before the next header (header).
markdown-footnote-location - where to insert footnote text
(default: end). The set of location options is the same as
for markdown-reference-location.
markdown-nested-imenu-heading-index - Use nested imenu
heading instead of a flat index (default: t). A nested
index may provide more natural browsing from the menu, but a
flat list may allow for faster keyboard navigation via tab
completion.
markdown-add-footnotes-to-imenu - Add footnote definitions to
the end of the imenu index (default: t).
comment-auto-fill-only-comments - variable is made
buffer-local and set to nil by default. In programming
language modes, when this variable is non-nil, only comments
will be filled by auto-fill-mode. However, comments in
Markdown documents are rare and the most users probably intend
for the actual content of the document to be filled. Making
this variable buffer-local allows markdown-mode to override
the default behavior induced when the global variable is non-nil.
markdown-gfm-additional-languages, - additional languages to
make available, aside from those predefined in
markdown-gfm-recognized-languages, when inserting GFM code
blocks (default: nil). Language strings must have be trimmed
of whitespace and not contain any curly braces. They may be of
arbitrary capitalization, though.
markdown-gfm-use-electric-backquote - use
markdown-electric-backquote for interactive insertion of GFM
code blocks when backquote is pressed three times (default: t).
markdown-make-gfm-checkboxes-buttons - Whether GitHub
Flavored Markdown style task lists (checkboxes) should be
turned into buttons that can be toggled with mouse-1 or RET. If
non-nil (default), then buttons are enabled. This works in
markdown-mode as well as gfm-mode.
markdown-hide-urls - Determines whether URL and reference
labels are hidden for inline and reference links (default: nil).
When non-nil, inline links will appear in the buffer as
[link](∞) instead of
[link](http://perhaps.a/very/long/url/). To change the
placeholder (composition) character used, set the variable
markdown-url-compose-char. URL hiding can be toggled
interactively using C-c C-x C-l (markdown-toggle-url-hiding)
or from the Markdown | Links & Images menu.
markdown-hide-markup - Determines whether all possible markup
is hidden or otherwise beautified (default: nil). The actual
buffer text remains unchanged, but the display will be altered.
Brackets and URLs for links will be hidden, asterisks and
underscores for italic and bold text will be hidden, text
bullets for unordered lists will be replaced by Unicode
bullets, and so on. Since this includes URLs and reference
labels, when non-nil this setting supersedes markdown-hide-urls.
Markup hiding can be toggled using C-c C-x C-m
(markdown-toggle-markup-hiding) or from the Markdown | Show &
Hide menu.
Unicode bullets are used to replace ASCII list item markers.
The list of characters used, in order of list level, can be
specified by setting the variable markdown-list-item-bullets.
The placeholder characters used to replace other markup can
be changed by customizing the corresponding variables:
markdown-blockquote-display-char,
markdown-hr-display-char, and
markdown-definition-display-char.
markdown-fontify-code-blocks-natively - Whether to fontify
code in code blocks using the native major mode. This only
works for fenced code blocks where the language is specified
where we can automatically determine the appropriate mode to
use. The language to mode mapping may be customized by setting
the variable markdown-code-lang-modes. This can be toggled
interactively by pressing C-c C-x C-f
(markdown-toggle-fontify-code-blocks-natively).
markdown-gfm-uppercase-checkbox - When non-nil, complete GFM
task list items with [X] instead of [x] (default: nil).
This is useful for compatibility with org-mode, which doesn't
recognize the lowercase variant.
markdown-translate-filename-function - A function to be used to
translate filenames in links.
markdown-unordered-list-item-prefix - When non-nil,
markdown-insert-list-item inserts enumerated numbers for
ordered list marker. While nil, it always inserts 1..
markdown-enable-highlighting-syntax - font lock for highlighting
syntax like Obsidian, Quilt(default: nil).
markdown-fontify-whole-heading-line - font lock for highlighting
the whole line for headings.(default: nil)
Additionally, the faces used for syntax highlighting can be modified to
your liking by issuing M-x customize-group RET markdown-faces
or by using the "Markdown Faces" link at the bottom of the mode
customization screen.
Extensions
Besides supporting the basic Markdown syntax, Markdown Mode also
includes syntax highlighting for [[Wiki Links]]. This can be
enabled by setting markdown-enable-wiki-links to a non-nil value.
Wiki links may be followed by pressing C-c C-o when the point
is at a wiki link. Use M-p and M-n to quickly jump to the
previous and next links (including links of other types).
Aliased or piped wiki links of the form [[link text|PageName]]
are also supported. Since some wikis reverse these components, set
markdown-wiki-link-alias-first to nil to treat them as
[[PageName|link text]]. If markdown-wiki-link-fontify-missing
is also non-nil, Markdown Mode will highlight wiki links with
missing target file in a different color. By default, Markdown
Mode only searches for target files in the current directory.
You can control search type by setting markdown-wiki-link-search-type.
This value type is a symbol list. Possible values are
sub-directories : search in sub directories
parent-directories : search in parent directories
project : search under project root
SmartyPants support is possible by customizing markdown-command.
If you install SmartyPants.pl at, say, /usr/local/bin/smartypants,
then you can set markdown-command to "markdown | smartypants".
You can do this either by using M-x customize-group markdown
or by placing the following in your .emacs file:
(setq markdown-command "markdown | smartypants")
Syntax highlighting for mathematical expressions written
in LaTeX (only expressions denoted by $..$, $$..$$, or \[..\])
can be enabled by setting markdown-enable-math to a non-nil value,
either via customize or by placing (setq markdown-enable-math t)
in .emacs, and then restarting Emacs or calling
markdown-reload-extensions.
GitHub Flavored Markdown (GFM)
A GitHub Flavored Markdown mode, gfm-mode, is also
available. The GitHub implementation differs slightly from
standard Markdown in that it supports things like different
behavior for underscores inside of words, automatic linking of
URLs, strikethrough text, and fenced code blocks with an optional
language keyword.
The GFM-specific features above apply to README.md files, wiki
pages, and other Markdown-formatted files in repositories on
GitHub. GitHub also enables additional features for
writing on the site (for issues, pull requests, messages, etc.)
that are further extensions of GFM. These features include task
lists (checkboxes), newlines corresponding to hard line breaks,
auto-linked references to issues and commits, wiki links, and so
on. To make matters more confusing, although task lists are not
part of GFM proper, since 2014 they are rendered (in a
read-only fashion) in all Markdown documents in repositories on the
site. These additional extensions are supported to varying degrees
by markdown-mode and gfm-mode as described below.
URL autolinking: Both markdown-mode and gfm-mode support
highlighting of URLs without angle brackets.
Multiple underscores in words: You must enable gfm-mode to
toggle support for underscores inside of words. In this mode
variable names such as a_test_variable will not trigger
emphasis (italics).
Fenced code blocks: Code blocks quoted with backquotes, with
op
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