Taking the fight to the establishment.

Overview

Throwdown

Taking the fight to the establishment.

Wat?

I wanted a simple markdown interpreter in python and/or javascript to output html for my website. Python does not have a bug-free official distribution, javascript only has things you install through npm and I don't want to have anything to do with node and the 100 MB of dependencies you end up uploading to your FTP server in order to do the most basic tasks.

So writing my own parser it is then eh? I tried to trudge through the commonmark markdown spec and had a heart attack at the complexity. 24722 words and 181 pages of complicated language explaining features I absolutely don't need.

I just want minimal, well defined, syntactical elements with maximum payoff, so here is throwdown. Taking the fight to the establishment to have a stupidly minimal markup language in both definition and capability.

Goals

Keep it a subset for markdown so we can use existing IDEs & plugins. Support HTML tags in line with text. Write a well defined language spec in the manual to ease creating new interpreters for it.

The spec

Tokenization

Given a piece of text we tokenize the following concepts (these are regular expressions using DOTALL and MULTILINE modifiers):

blank_line(s): (\r | \n | \r\n){2,}
html tag: <.*?>
code: ```.*?```
unescaped italic: ^_|(?

any characters inbetween matching tokens are flagged content.

Content itself gets an additional treatment where we replace this regex

\\(?)

for escaped characters, with whatever was in the matched group. I currently do this in the generation stage but it could move to any stage.

I am not sure if in the UTF8 2/3/4 byte characters any of these elements may match, so make sure to perform these single-characetr checks per unicode char, not per byte.

Parsing

We then have a parsing pass that tries to group matching tokens:

In this example:

This *word* is bold but this* is wrong.

We have the following tokens:

content, bold, content, bold, content, bold, content

The parser simply finds any content block surrounded by matching code|italic|bold neighbours, and then 'consumes' these neighbours so they can not be picked up more than once. Reading from left to right this means we get (note we search outwards from content recursively to support *_content_* notations, instead of holding on to the boundary tokens as soon as we encounter them):

content group content bold content

Then, any token outside of a group gets merged into it's content, any consecutive content gets merged into 1 content. The first step reduced the bold into it's left neighbour:

content group content content

The next step reduces the two content blocks into one:

content group content

The above step should include html tags.

A final step is to remove the blank line tokens, but first we must make sure to merge consecutive group and content blocks, because after this any consecutive content and/or group tokens are known unique paragraphs (or headers) so the blank lines are no longer necessary to imply this separation.

Generation

Then there is the generation step. We simply walk the resulting tokens and output a html document.

  • If a content group is preceded by a heading, the node gets wrapped into tags where n is the number of #.
  • Every other content node gets wrapped into

    tags.

  • Every group gets wrapped based on the first and last tokens (which are identical).
    • italic becomes In this case the wrapping is recursive, a bold group in an intalic group may exist.
    • bold becomes In this case the wrapping is recursive, an italic group in a bold group may exist.
    • code becomes

Write
to insert single line breaks manually.

TODO:

Consider bullet points and numbered lists, though the html is not super invasive.

Owner
Trevor van Hoof
I write tools & shaders TropicalTrevor in the Demoscene
Trevor van Hoof
Enjoy Discords Unlimited Storage

Discord Storage V.3.5 (Beta) Made by BoKa Enjoy Discords free and unlimited storage... Prepare: Clone this from Github, make sure there either a folde

0 Dec 16, 2021
A simple panel with IP, CNPJ, CEP and PLACA queries

Painel mpm Um painel simples com consultas de IP, CNPJ, CEP e PLACA Início 🌐 apt update && apt upgrade -y pkg i python git pip install requests Insta

MrDiniz 4 Nov 04, 2022
Use this function to get list of routes for particular journey

route-planner Functions api_processing Use this function to get list of routes for particular journey. Function has three parameters: Origin Destinati

2 Nov 28, 2021
Platform Tree for Xiaomi Redmi Note 7/7S (lavender)

The Xiaomi Redmi Note 7 (codenamed "lavender") is a mid-range smartphone from Xiaomi announced in January 2019. Device specifications Device Xiaomi Re

MUHAMAD KHOIRON 2 Dec 20, 2021
Source-o-grapher is a tool built with the aim to investigate software resilience aspects of Open Source Software (OSS) projects.

Source-o-grapher is a tool built with the aim to investigate software resilience aspects of Open Source Software (OSS) projects.

Aristotle University 5 Jun 28, 2022
Adds a Bake node to Blender's shader node system

Bake to Target This Blender Addon adds a new shader node type capable of reducing the texture-bake step to a single button press. Please note that thi

Thomas 8 Oct 04, 2022
TikTok Auto Claimer Made By Aim low!#9999 Leaked By bazooka#0001

Zues Auto Claimer Leaked By bazooka#0001 put proxies in prox.txt put ssid in sid.txt put all users you want to target in user.txt for the login just t

1 Jan 14, 2022
Stack-overflow-import - Import arbitrary code from Stack Overflow as Python modules.

StackOverflow Importer Do you ever feel like all you’re doing is copy/pasting from Stack Overflow? Let’s take it one step further. from stackoverflow

Filip Haglund 3.7k Jan 08, 2023
It's like Forth but in Python

It's like Forth but written in Python. But I don't actually know for sure since I never programmed in Forth, I only heard that it's some sort of stack-based programming language. Porth is also stack-

Tsoding 619 Dec 21, 2022
A program made in PYTHON🐍 that automatically performs data insertions into a POSTGRES database 🐘 , using as base a .CSV file 📁 , useful in mass data insertions

A program made in PYTHON🐍 that automatically performs data insertions into a POSTGRES database 🐘 , using as base a .CSV file 📁 , useful in mass data insertions.

Davi Galdino 1 Oct 17, 2022
pyreports is a python library that allows you to create complex report from various sources

pyreports pyreports is a python library that allows you to create complex reports from various sources such as databases, text files, ldap, etc. and p

Matteo Guadrini aka GU 78 Dec 13, 2022
📜Generate poetry with gcc diagnostics

gado (gcc awesome diagnostics orchestrator) is a wrapper of gcc that outputs its errors and warnings in a more poetic format.

Dikson Santos 19 Jun 25, 2022
An extension for Arma 3 that lets you write extensions in Python 3

An Arma 3 extension that lets you to write python extensions for Arma 3. And it's really simple and straightforward to use!

Lukasz Taczuk 48 Dec 18, 2022
A command line interface tool converting starknet warp transpiled outputs into readable cairo contracts.

warp-to-cairo warp-to-cairo is a simple tool converting starknet warp outputs (NethermindEth/warp) outputs into readable cairo contracts. The warp out

Michael K 5 Jun 10, 2022
A Python tool to check ASS subtitles for common mistakes and errors.

A Python tool to check ASS subtitles for common mistakes and errors.

1 Dec 18, 2021
dta Convert Dict To Attributes!

dta (Dict to Attributes) dta is very small dict (or json) to attributes converter. It is only have 1 files and applied to every python versions.

Rukchad Wongprayoon 0 Dec 31, 2021
Python Osmium Examples

Python Osmium Examples This is a set (currently of size 1) of examples showing practical usage of PyOsmium, a thin wrapper around the osmium library.

Martijn van Exel 1 Jan 26, 2022
This package tries to emulate the behaviour of syntax proposed in PEP 671 via a decorator

Late-Bound Arguments This package tries to emulate the behaviour of syntax proposed in PEP 671 via a decorator. Usage Mention the names of the argumen

Shakya Majumdar 0 Feb 06, 2022
A Puzzle A Day Keep the Work Away

A Puzzle A Day Keep the Work Away No moyu again!

P4SSER8Y 5 Feb 12, 2022
Heads Down Application for Mac OSX

Heads Down A Mac app that lives in your ribbon—with a click of the mouse, temporarily block distracting websites and applications to encourage "heads

20 Mar 10, 2021