@mdx-js/mdxMDX compiler.
This package is a compiler that turns MDX into JavaScript. It can also evaluate MDX code.
This is the core compiler for turning MDX into JavaScript which gives you the most control. If you’re using a bundler (Rollup, esbuild, webpack), a site builder (Next.js), or build system (Vite) which comes with a bundler, you’re better off using an integration: see § Integrations.
This package is ESM only. In Node.js (version 16+), install with npm:
npm install @mdx-js/mdx
In Deno with esm.sh:
import {compile} from 'https://esm.sh/@mdx-js/mdx@3'
In browsers with esm.sh:
<script type="module">
import {compile} from 'https://esm.sh/@mdx-js/mdx@3?bundle'
</script>
Say we have an MDX document, example.mdx:
export function Thing() {
return <>World!</>
}
# Hello, <Thing />
…and some code in example.js to compile example.mdx to JavaScript:
import fs from 'node:fs/promises'
import {compile} from '@mdx-js/mdx'
const compiled = await compile(await fs.readFile('example.mdx'))
console.log(String(compiled))
Yields roughly:
import {Fragment as _Fragment, jsx as _jsx, jsxs as _jsxs} from 'react/jsx-runtime'
export function Thing() {
return _jsx(_Fragment, {children: 'World!'})
}
function _createMdxContent(props) {
const _components = {h1: 'h1', ...props.components}
return _jsxs(_components.h1, {children: ['Hello, ', _jsx(Thing, {})]})
}
export default function MDXContent(props = {}) {
const {wrapper: MDXLayout} = props.components || {}
return MDXLayout
? _jsx(MDXLayout, {...props, children: _jsx(_createMdxContent, {...props})})
: _createMdxContent(props)
}
See § Using MDX for more on how MDX work and how to use the result.
This package exports the following identifiers:
compile,
compileSync,
createProcessor,
evaluate,
evaluateSync,
nodeTypes,
run, and
runSync.
There is no default export.
compile(file, options?)Compile MDX to JS.
file (Compatible from vfile)
— MDX document to parseoptions (CompileOptions, optional)
— compile configurationPromise to compiled file (Promise<VFile>).
The input value for file can be many different things.
You can pass a string, Uint8Array in UTF-8, VFile, or anything
that can be given to new VFile.
import {compile} from '@mdx-js/mdx'
import {VFile} from 'vfile'
await compile(':)')
await compile(Buffer.from(':-)'))
await compile({path: 'path/to/file.mdx', value: '🥳'})
await compile(new VFile({path: 'path/to/file.mdx', value: '🤭'}))
The output VFile can be used to access more than the generated code:
import {compile} from '@mdx-js/mdx'
import remarkPresetLintConsistent from 'remark-preset-lint-consistent' // Lint rules to check for consistent markdown.
import {reporter} from 'vfile-reporter'
const file = await compile('*like this* or _like this_?', {remarkPlugins: [remarkPresetLintConsistent]})
console.error(reporter(file))
Yields:
1:16-1:27 warning Emphasis should use `*` as a marker emphasis-marker remark-lint
⚠ 1 warning
compileSync(file, options?)Synchronously compile MDX to JS.
When possible please use the async compile.
file (Compatible from vfile)
— MDX document to parseoptions (CompileOptions, optional)
— compile configurationCompiled file (VFile).
createProcessor(options?)Create a processor to compile markdown or MDX to JavaScript.
Note:
format: 'detect'is not allowed inProcessorOptions.
options (ProcessorOptions, optional)
— process configurationProcessor (Processor from unified).
evaluate(file, options)When you trust your content, evaluate can work.
When possible, use compile, write to a file, and then run with
Node or use one of the § Integrations.
☢️ Danger: it’s called evaluate because it
evals JavaScript.
file (Compatible from vfile)
— MDX document to parseoptions (EvaluateOptions, required)
— configurationPromise to a module (Promise<MDXModule> from
mdx/types.js).
The result is an object with a default field set to the component;
anything else that was exported is available too.
For example, assuming the contents of example.mdx from § Use was in
file, then:
import {evaluate} from '@mdx-js/mdx'
import * as runtime from 'react/jsx-runtime'
console.log(await evaluate(file, runtime))
…yields:
{Thing: [Function: Thing], default: [Function: MDXContent]}
Compiling (and running) MDX takes time.
If you are live-rendering a string of MDX that often changes using a virtual DOM
based framework (such as React), one performance improvement is to call the
MDXContent component yourself.
The reason is that the evaluate creates a new function each time, which cannot
be diffed:
const {default: MDXContent} = await evaluate('…')
-<MDXContent {...props} />
+MDXContent(props)
evaluateSync(file, options)Compile and run MDX, synchronously.
When possible please use the async evaluate.
☢️ Danger: it’s called evaluate because it
evals JavaScript.
file (Compatible from vfile)
— MDX document to parseoptions (EvaluateOptions, required)
— configurationModule (MDXModule from mdx/types.js).
nodeTypesList of node types made by mdast-util-mdx, which have to be passed
through untouched from the mdast tree to the hast tree (Array<string>).
run(code, options)Run code compiled with outputFormat: 'function-body'.
☢️ Danger: this
evals JavaScript.
code (VFile or string)
— JavaScript function body to runoptions (RunOptions, required)
— configurationPromise to a module (Promise<MDXModule> from
mdx/types.js);
the result is an object with a default field set to the component;
anything else that was exported is available too.
On the server:
import {compile} from '@mdx-js/mdx'
const code = String(await compile('# hi', {outputFormat: 'function-body'}))
// To do: send `code` to the client somehow.
On the client:
import {run} from '@mdx-js/mdx'
import * as runtime from 'react/jsx-runtime'
const code = '' // To do: get `code` from server somehow.
const {default: Content} = await run(code, {...runtime, baseUrl: import.meta.url})
console.log(Content)
…yields:
[Function: MDXContent]
runSync(code, options)Run code, synchronously.
When possible please use the async run.
☢️ Danger: this
evals JavaScript.
code (VFile or string)
— JavaScript function body to runoptions (RunOptions, required)
— configurationModule (MDXModule from mdx/types.js).
CompileOptionsConfiguration for compile (TypeScript type).
CompileOptions is the same as ProcessorOptions
with the exception that the format option supports a 'detect' value,
which is the default.
The 'detect' format means to use 'md' for files with an extension in
mdExtensions and 'mdx' otherwise.
/**
* Configuration for `compile`
*/
type CompileOptions = Omit<ProcessorOptions, 'format'> & {
/**
* Format of `file` (default: `'detect'`).
*/
format?: 'detect' | 'md' | 'mdx' | null | undefined
}
EvaluateOptionsConfiguration for evaluate (TypeScript type).
EvaluateOptions is the same as CompileOptions,
except that the options baseUrl, jsx, jsxImportSource, jsxRuntime,
outputFormat, pragma, pragmaFrag, pragmaImportSource, and
providerImportSource are not allowed, and that
RunOptions are also used.
/**
* Configuration for `evaluate`.
*/
type EvaluateOptions = Omit<
CompileOptions,
| 'baseUrl' // Note that this is also in `RunOptions`.
| 'jsx'
| 'jsxImportSource'
| 'jsxRuntime'
| 'outputFormat'
| 'pragma'
| 'pragmaFrag'
| 'pragmaImportSource'
| 'providerImportSource'
> &
RunOptions
FragmentRepresent the children, typically a symbol (TypeScript type).
type Fragment = unknown
JsxCreate a production element (TypeScript type).
type (unknown)
— element type: Fragment symbol, tag name (string), componentproperties (Properties)
— element properties and childrenkey (string or undefined)
— key to useElement from your framework (JSX.Element).
JsxDevCreate a development element (TypeScript type).
type (unknown)
— element type: Fragment symbol, tag name (string), componentproperties (Properties)
— element properties and childrenkey (string or undefined)
— key to useisStaticChildren (boolean)
— whether two or more children are passed (in an array), which is whether
jsxs or jsx would be usedsource (Source)
— info about sourceself (unknown)
— context object (this)ProcessorOptionsConfiguration for createProcessor (TypeScript type).
SourceMapGenerator (SourceMapGenerator from source-map,
optional)
— add a source map (object form) as the map field on the resulting file
Assuming example.mdx from § Use exists, then:
import fs from 'node:fs/promises'
import {compile} from '@mdx-js/mdx'
import {SourceMapGenerator} from 'source-map'
const file = await compile(
{path: 'example.mdx', value: await fs.readFile('example.mdx')},
{SourceMapGenerator}
)
console.log(file.map)
…yields:
{
file: 'example.mdx',
mappings: ';;aAAaA,QAAQ;YAAQ;;;;;;;;iBAE3B',
names: ['Thing'],
sources: ['example.mdx'],
version: 3
}
baseUrl (URL or string, optional, example: import.meta.url)
— use this URL as import.meta.url and resolve import and
export … from relative to it
Say we have a module example.js:
import {compile} from '@mdx-js/mdx'
const code = 'export {number} from "./data.js"\n\n# hi'
const baseUrl = 'https://a.full/url' // Typically `import.meta.url`
console.log(String(await compile(code, {baseUrl})))
…now running node example.js yields:
import {jsx as _jsx} from 'react/jsx-runtime'
export {number} from 'https://a.full/data.js'
function _createMdxContent(props) { /* … */ }
export default function MDXContent(props = {}) { /* … */ }
development (boolean, default: false)
— whether to add extra info to error messages in generated code and use the
development automatic JSX runtime (Fragment and jsxDEV from
/jsx-dev-runtime);
when using the webpack loader (@mdx-js/loader) or the Rollup integration
(@mdx-js/rollup) through Vite, this is automatically inferred from how
you configure those tools
Say we had some MDX that references a component that can be passed or provided at runtime:
**Note**<NoteIcon />: some stuff.
And a module to evaluate that:
import fs from 'node:fs/promises'
import {evaluate} from '@mdx-js/mdx'
import * as runtime from 'react/jsx-runtime'
const path = 'example.mdx'
const value = await fs.readFile(path)
const MDXContent = (await evaluate({path, value}, {...runtime, baseUrl: import.meta.url})).default
console.log(MDXContent({}))
…running that would normally (production) yield:
Error: Expected component `NoteIcon` to be defined: you likely forgot to import, pass, or provide it.
at _missingMdxReference (eval at run (…/@mdx-js/mdx/lib/run.js:18:10), <anonymous>:27:9)
at _createMdxContent (eval at run (…/@mdx-js/mdx/lib/run.js:18:10), <anonymous>:15:20)
at MDXContent (eval at run (…/@mdx-js/mdx/lib/run.js:18:10), <anonymous>:9:9)
at main (…/example.js:11:15)
…but if we add development: true to our example:
@@ -7,6 +7,6 @@
import fs from 'node:fs/promises'
-import * as runtime from 'react/jsx-runtime'
+import * as runtime from 'react/jsx-dev-runtime'
import {evaluate} from '@mdx-js/mdx'
const path = 'example.mdx'
const value = await fs.readFile(path)
-const MDXContent = (await evaluate({path, value}, {...runtime, baseUrl: import.meta.url})).default
+const MDXContent = (await evaluate({path, value}, {development: true, ...runtime, baseUrl: import.meta.url})).default
console.log(MDXContent({}))
…and we’d run it again, we’d get:
Error: Expected component `NoteIcon` to be defined: you likely forgot to import, pass, or provide it.
It’s referenced in your code at `1:9-1:21` in `example.mdx`
provide it.
at _missingMdxReference (eval at run (…/@mdx-js/mdx/lib/run.js:18:10), <anonymous>:27:9)
at _createMdxContent (eval at run (…/@mdx-js/mdx/lib/run.js:18:10), <anonymous>:15:20)
at MDXContent (eval at run (…/@mdx-js/mdx/lib/run.js:18:10), <anonymous>:9:9)
at main (…/example.js:11:15)
elementAttributeNameCase ('html' or 'react, default: 'react')
— casing to use for attribute names;
HTML casing is for example class, stroke-linecap, xml:lang;
React casing is for example className, strokeLinecap, xmlLang;
for JSX components written in MDX, the author has to be aware of which
framework they use and write code accordingly;
for AST nodes generated by this project, this option configures it
format ('md' or 'mdx', default: 'mdx')
— format of the file;
'md' means treat as markdown and 'mdx' means treat as MDX
compile('…') // Seen as MDX.
compile('…', {format: 'mdx'}) // Seen as MDX.
compile('…', {format: 'md'}) // Seen as markdown.
jsx (boolean, default: false)
— whether to keep JSX;
the default is to compile JSX away so that the resulting file is
immediately runnable.
If file is the contents of example.mdx from § Use, then:
compile(file, {jsx: true})
…yields this difference:
-import {Fragment as _Fragment, jsx as _jsx, jsxs as _jsxs} from 'react/jsx-runtime'
+/*@jsxRuntime automatic*/
+/*@jsxImportSource react*/
export function Thing() {
- return _jsx(_Fragment, {children: 'World'})
+ return <>World!</>
}
function _createMdxContent(props) {
const _components = {
h1: 'h1',
...props.components
}
- return _jsxs(_components.h1, {children: ['Hello ', _jsx(Thing, {})]})
+ return <_components.h1>{"Hello "}<Thing /></_components.h1>
}
export default function MDXContent(props = {}) {
const {wrapper: MDXLayout} = props.components || {}
return MDXLayout
- ? _jsx(MDXLayout, {
- ...props,
- children: _jsx(_createMdxContent, props)
- })
+ ? <MDXLayout {...props}><_createMdxContent {...props} /></MDXLayout>
: _createMdxContent(props)
}
}
jsxImportSource (string, default: 'react')
— place to import automatic JSX runtimes from;
when in the automatic runtime, this is used to define an import for
Fragment, jsx, jsxDEV, and jsxs
If file is the contents of example.mdx from § Use, then:
compile(file, {jsxImportSource: 'preact'})
…yields this difference:
-import {Fragment as _Fragment, jsx as _jsx, jsxs as _jsxs} from 'react/jsx-runtime'
+import {Fragment as _Fragment, jsx as _jsx, jsxs as _jsxs } from 'preact/jsx-runtime'
jsxRuntime ('automatic' or 'classic', default: 'automatic')
— JSX runtime to use;
the automatic runtime compiles to import _jsx from '$importSource/jsx-runtime'\n_jsx('p');
the classic runtime compiles to calls such as h('p')
👉 Note: support for the classic runtime is deprecated and will likely be removed in the next major version.
If file is the contents of example.mdx from § Use, then:
compile(file, {jsxRuntime: 'classic'})
…yields this difference:
-import {Fragment as _Fragment, jsx as _jsx, jsxs as _jsxs} from 'react/jsx-runtime'
+import React from 'react'
export function Thing() {
- return _jsx(_Fragment, {children: 'World'})
+ return React.createElement(React.Fragment, null, 'World!')
}
…
outputFormat ('function-body' or 'program', default: 'program')
— output format to generate;
in most cases 'program' should be used, it results in a whole program;
internally evaluate uses 'function-body' to compile to
code that can be passed to run;
in some cases, you might want what evaluate does in separate steps, such
as when compiling on the server and running on the client.
With a module example.js:
import {compile} from '@mdx-js/mdx'
const code = 'export const no = 3.14\n\n# hi {no}'
console.log(String(await compile(code, {outputFormat: 'program'}))) // Default.
console.log(String(await compile(code, {outputFormat: 'function-body'})))
…yields:
import {jsx as _jsx, jsxs as _jsxs} from 'react/jsx-runtime'
export const no = 3.14
function _createMdxContent(props) { /* … */ }
export default function MDXContent(props = {}) { /* … */ }
'use strict'
const {Fragment: _Fragment, jsx: _jsx} = arguments[0]
const no = 3.14
function _createMdxContent(props) { /* … */ }
function MDXContent(props = {}) { /* … */ }
return {no, default: MDXContent}
The 'program' format will use import statements to import the runtime (and
optionally provider) and use an export statement to yield the MDXContent
component.
The 'function-body' format will get the runtime (and optionally provider)
from arguments[0], rewrite export statements, and use a return statement to
yield what was exported.
mdExtensions (Array<string>, default: ['.md', '.markdown', '.mdown', '.mkdn', '.mkd', '.mdwn', '.mkdown', '.ron'])
— list of markdown extensions, with dot
affects § Integrations
mdxExtensions (Array<string>, default: ['.mdx'])
— list of MDX extensions, with dot;
affects § Integrations
pragma (string, default: 'React.createElement')
— pragma for JSX, used in the classic runtime as an identifier for function
calls: <x /> to React.createElement('x');
when changing this, you should also define pragmaFrag and
pragmaImportSource too
👉 Note: support for the classic runtime is deprecated and will likely be removed in the next major version.
If file is the contents of example.mdx from § Use, then:
compile(file, {
jsxRuntime: 'classic',
pragma: 'preact.createElement',
pragmaFrag: 'preact.Fragment',
pragmaImportSource: 'preact/compat'
})
…yields this difference:
-import React from 'react'
+import preact from 'preact/compat'
export function Thing() {
- return React.createElement(React.Fragment, null, 'World!')
+ return preact.createElement(preact.Fragment, null, 'World!')
}
…
pragmaFrag (string, default: 'React.Fragment')
— pragma for fragment symbol, used in the classic runtime as an identifier
for unnamed calls: <> to React.createElement(React.Fragment);
when changing this, you should also define pragma and pragmaImportSource
too
👉 Note: support for the classic runtime is deprecated and will likely be removed in the next major version.
pragmaImportSource (string, default: 'react')
— where to import the identifier of pragma from, used in the classic
runtime;
to illustrate, when pragma is 'a.b' and pragmaImportSource is 'c'
the following will be generated: import a from 'c' and things such as
a.b('h1', {});
when changing this, you should also define pragma and pragmaFrag too
👉 Note: support for the classic runtime is deprecated and will likely be removed in the next major version.
providerImportSource (string, optional, example: '@mdx-js/react')
— place to import a provider from;
normally it’s used for runtimes that support context (React, Preact), but
it can be used to inject components into the compiled code;
the module must export and identifier useMDXComponents which is called
without arguments to get an object of components (see
UseMdxComponents)
If file is the contents of example.mdx from § Use, then:
compile(file, {providerImportSource: '@mdx-js/react'})
…yields this difference:
import {Fragment as _Fragment, jsx as _jsx, jsxs as _jsxs} from 'react/jsx-runtime'
+import {useMDXComponents as _provideComponents} from '@mdx-js/react'
export function Thing() {
return _jsx(_Fragment, {children: 'World'})
}
function _createMdxContent(props) {
const _components = {
h1: 'h1',
+ ..._provideComponents(),
...props.components
}
return _jsxs(_components.h1, {children: ['Hello ', _jsx(Thing, {})]})
}
export default function MDXContent(props = {}) {
- const {wrapper: MDXLayout} = props.components || {}
+ const {wrapper: MDXLayout} = {
+ ..._provideComponents(),
+ ...props.components
+ }
return MDXLayout
? _jsx(MDXLayout, {...props, children: _jsx(_createMdxContent, {})})
: _createMdxContent()
recmaPlugins (PluggableList from unified,
optional)
— list of recma plugins
import recmaMdxIsMdxComponent from 'recma-mdx-is-mdx-component'
await compile(file, {recmaPlugins: [recmaMdxIsMdxComponent]})
rehypePlugins (PluggableList from unified,
optional)
— list of rehype plugins
import rehypeKatex from 'rehype-katex' // Render math with KaTeX.
import remarkMath from 'remark-math' // Support math like `$so$`.
await compile(file, {rehypePlugins: [rehypeKatex], remarkPlugins: [remarkMath]})
await compile(file, {
// A plugin with options:
rehypePlugins: [[rehypeKatex, {strict: true, throwOnError: true}]],
remarkPlugins: [remarkMath]
})
remarkPlugins (PluggableList from unified,
optional)
— list of remark plugins
import remarkFrontmatter from 'remark-frontmatter' // YAML and such.
import remarkGfm from 'remark-gfm' // Tables, footnotes, strikethrough, task lists, literal URLs.
await compile(file, {remarkPlugins: [remarkGfm]}) // One plugin.
await compile(file, {remarkPlugins: [[remarkFrontmatter, 'toml']]}) // A plugin with options.
await compile(file, {remarkPlugins: [remarkGfm, remarkFrontmatter]}) // Two plugins.
await compile(file, {remarkPlugins: [[remarkGfm, {singleTilde: false}], remarkFrontmatter]}) // Two plugins, first w/ options.
remarkRehypeOptions (Options from
remark-rehype, optional)
— options to pass through to remark-rehype;
in particular, you might want to pass configuration for footnotes if your
content is not in English;
the option allowDangerousHtml will always be set to true and the MDX
nodes (see nodeTypes) are passed through.
compile({value: '…'}, {remarkRehypeOptions: {clobberPrefix: 'comment-1'}})
stylePropertyNameCase ('css' or 'dom, default: 'dom')
— casing to use for property names in style objects;
CSS casing is for example background-color and -webkit-line-clamp;
DOM casing is for example backgroundColor and WebkitLineClamp;
for JSX components written in MDX, the author has to be aware of which
framework they use and write code accordingly;
for AST nodes generated by this project, this option configures it
tableCellAlignToStyle (boolean, default: true)
— turn obsolete align properties on td and th into CSS style
properties
RunOptionsConfiguration to run compiled code (TypeScript type).
Fragment, jsx, and jsxs are used when the code is compiled in production
mode (development: false).
Fragment and jsxDEV are used when compiled in development mode
(development: true).
useMDXComponents is used when the code is compiled with
providerImportSource: '#' (the exact value of this compile option doesn’t
matter).
Fragment (Fragment, required)
— symbol to use for fragmentsbaseUrl (URL or string, optional, example: import.meta.url)
— use this URL as import.meta.url and resolve import and
export … from relative to it;
this option can also be given at compile time in CompileOptions;
you should pass this (likely at runtime), as you might get runtime errors
when using import.meta.url / import / export … from otherwisejsx (Jsx, optional)
— function to generate an element with static children in production modejsxDEV (JsxDev, optional)
— function to generate an element in development modejsxs (Jsx, optional)
— function to generate an element with dynamic children in production modeuseMDXComponents (UseMdxComponents, optional)
— function to get components to useA /jsx-runtime module will expose Fragment, jsx, and jsxs:
import * as runtime from 'react/jsx-runtime'
const {default: Content} = await evaluate('# hi', {...runtime, baseUrl: import.meta.url, ...otherOptions})
A /jsx-dev-runtime module will expose Fragment and jsxDEV:
import * as runtime from 'react/jsx-dev-runtime'
const {default: Content} = await evaluate('# hi', {development: true, baseUrl: import.meta.url, ...runtime, ...otherOptions})
Our providers will expose useMDXComponents:
import * as provider from '@mdx-js/react'
import * as runtime from 'react/jsx-runtime'
const {default: Content} = await evaluate('# hi', {...provider, ...runtime, baseUrl: import.meta.url, ...otherOptions})
UseMdxComponentsGet components (TypeScript type).
There are no parameters.
Components (MDXComponents from mdx/types.js).
This package is fully typed with TypeScript.
It exports the additional types
CompileOptions,
EvaluateOptions,
Fragment,
Jsx,
JsxDev,
ProcessorOptions,
RunOptions, and
UseMdxComponents.
For types of evaluated MDX to work, make sure the TypeScript JSX namespace is
typed.
This is done by installing and using the types of your framework, such as
@types/react.
See § Types on our website for information.
To understand what this project does, it’s very important to first understand
what unified does: please read through the unifiedjs/unified readme
(the part until you hit the API section is required reading).
@mdx-js/mdx is a unified pipeline — wrapped so that most folks don’t need to
know about unified.
The processor goes through these steps:
The input is MDX.
That’s serialized markdown with embedded JSX, ESM, and expressions.
In the case of JSX,
the tags are intertwined with markdown.
The markdown is parsed with micromark/micromark and the embedded
JS with one of its extensions
micromark/micromark-extension-mdxjs (which in
turn uses acorn).
Then syntax-tree/mdast-util-from-markdown and its
extension syntax-tree/mdast-util-mdx are used to turn the
results from the parser into a syntax tree: mdast.
Markdown is closest to the source format.
This is where remark plugins come in.
Typically, there shouldn’t be much going on here.
But perhaps you want to support GFM (tables and such) or frontmatter?
Then you can add a plugin here: remark-gfm or remark-frontmatter,
respectively.
After markdown, we go to hast (HTML).
This transformation is done by
syntax-tree/mdast-util-to-hast.
Wait, what, why is HTML needed?
Part of the reason is that we care about HTML semantics: we want to know that
something is an <a>, not whether it’s a link with a resource ([text](url))
or a reference to a defined link definition ([text][id]\n\n[id]: url).
So an HTML AST is closer to where we want to go.
Another reason is that there are many things folks need when they go MDX -> JS,
markdown -> HTML, or even folks who only process their HTML -> HTML: use cases
other than MDX.
By having a single AST in these cases and writing a plugin that works on that
AST, that plugin can supports all these use cases (for example,
rehypejs/rehype-highlight for syntax highlighting or
rehypejs/rehype-katex for math).
So, this is where rehype plugins come in: most of the plugins,
probably.
Then we go to JavaScript: esast (JS; an
AST which is compatible with estree but looks a bit more like other unist ASTs).
This transformation is done by
rehype-recma.
This is a newer ecosystem.
There are some recma plugins already.
It’s where @mdx-js/mdx does its thing: where it adds imports/exports,
where it compiles JSX away into _jsx() calls, and where it does the other cool
things that it provides.
Finally, The output is serialized JavaScript. That final step is done by astring, a small and fast JS generator.
Projects maintained by the unified collective are compatible with maintained versions of Node.js.
When we cut a new major release, we drop support for unmaintained versions of
Node.
This means we try to keep the current release line, @mdx-js/mdx@^3,
compatible with Node.js 16.
See § Security on our website for information.
See § Contribute on our website for ways to get started. See § Support for ways to get help.
This project has a code of conduct. By interacting with this repository, organization, or community you agree to abide by its terms.