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gatsby-transformer-remark

Parses Markdown files using Remark.

Install

npm install --save gatsby-transformer-remark

How to use

// In your gatsby-config.js
plugins: [
  {
    resolve: `gatsby-transformer-remark`,
    options: {

      // Defaults to `() => true`
      filter: node => node.sourceInstanceName === `blog`,
      // Defaults to `MarkdownRemark`
      type: `BlogPost`,
      // CommonMark mode (default: true)
      commonmark: true,
      // Footnotes mode (default: true)
      footnotes: true,
      // Pedantic mode (default: true)
      pedantic: true,
      // GitHub Flavored Markdown mode (default: true)
      gfm: true,
      // Plugins configs
      plugins: [],
    },
  },
],

The following parts of options are passed down to Remark as options:

  • options.commonmark
  • options.footnotes
  • options.pedantic
  • options.gfm

The details of the Remark options above could be found in remark-parse’s documentation

A full explanation of how to use markdown in Gatsby can be found here: Creating a Blog with Gatsby

There are many Gatsby Remark plugins which you can install to customize how Markdown is processed. Many of them are demoed at https://using-remark.gatsbyjs.org/. See also the source code for using-remark.

Parsing algorithm

It recognizes files with the following extensions as Markdown:

  • md
  • markdown

Each Markdown file is parsed into a node of type MarkdownRemark.

All frontmatter fields are converted into GraphQL fields. TODO link to docs on auto-inferring types/fields.

This plugin adds additional fields to the MarkdownRemark GraphQL type including html, excerpt, headings, etc. Other Gatsby plugins can also add additional fields.

How to query

A sample GraphQL query to get MarkdownRemark nodes:

{
  allMarkdownRemark {
    edges {
      node {
        html
        headings {
          depth
          value
        }
        frontmatter {
          # Assumes you're using title in your frontmatter.
          title
        }
      }
    }
  }
}

Getting table of contents

Using the following GraphQL query you’ll be able to get the table of contents

{
  allMarkdownRemark {
    edges {
      node {
        html
        tableOfContents
      }
    }
  }
}

Configuring the tableOfContents

By default the tableOfContents is using the field slug to generate URLs. You can however provide another field using the pathToSlugField parameter. Note that providing a non existing field will cause the result to be null. To alter the default values for tableOfContents generation, include values for heading (string) and/or maxDepth (number 1 to 6) in graphQL query. If a value for heading is given, the first heading that matches will be ommitted and the toc is generated from the next heading of the same depth onwards. Value for maxDepth sets the maximum depth of the toc (i.e. if a maxDepth of 3 is set, only h1 to h3 headings will appear in the toc).

{
  allMarkdownRemark {
    edges {
      node {
        html
        tableOfContents(
          pathToSlugField: "frontmatter.path"
          heading: "only show toc from this heading onwards"
          maxDepth: 2
        )
        frontmatter {
          # Assumes you're using path in your frontmatter.
          path
        }
      }
    }
  }
}

To pass default options to the plugin generating the tableOfContents, configure it in gatsby-config.js as shown below. The options shown below are the defaults used by the plugin.

// In your gatsby-config.js
plugins: [
  {
    resolve: `gatsby-transformer-remark`,
    options: {
      tableOfContents: {
        heading: null,
        maxDepth: 6,
      },
    },
  },
]

Excerpts

Length

By default, excerpts have a maximum length of 140 characters. You can change the default using the pruneLength argument. For example, if you need 500 characters, you can specify:

{
  allMarkdownRemark {
    edges {
      node {
        html
        excerpt(pruneLength: 500)
      }
    }
  }
}

Format

By default, Gatsby will return excerpts as plain text. This might be useful for populating opengraph HTML tags for SEO reasons. You can also explicitly specify a PLAIN format like so:

{
  allMarkdownRemark {
    edges {
      node {
        excerpt(format: PLAIN)
      }
    }
  }
}

It’s also possible to ask Gatsby to return excerpts formatted as HTML. You might use this if you have a blog post whose an excerpt contains markdown content—e.g. header, link, etc.—and you want these links to render as HTML.

{
  allMarkdownRemark {
    edges {
      node {
        excerpt(format: HTML)
      }
    }
  }
}

gray-matter options

gatsby-transformer-remark uses gray-matter to parse markdown frontmatter, so you can specify any of the options mentioned here in the gatsby-config.js file.

Example: Excerpts

If you don’t want to use pruneLength for excerpts but a custom seperator, you can specify an excerpt_separator:

{
  "resolve": `gatsby-transformer-remark`,
  "options": {
    "excerpt_separator": `<!-- end -->`
  }
}

Any file that does not have the given excerpt_separator will fall back to the default pruning method.

Troubleshooting

Excerpts for non-latin languages

By default, excerpt uses underscore.string/prune which doesn’t handle non-latin characters (https://github.com/epeli/underscore.string/issues/418).

If that is the case, you can set truncate option on excerpt field, like:

{
  markdownRemark {
    excerpt(truncate: true)
  }
}
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