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Quick Look extension for Markdown files on macOS Catalina and Big Sur.

License: GNU General Public License v3.0

Makefile 0.35% Go 0.01% C 4.02% Swift 0.42% Objective-C 0.01% C++ 93.10% CMake 0.01% CSS 0.03% Lua 0.32% M4 0.02% Shell 0.70% Roff 0.12% Python 0.02% HTML 0.73% JavaScript 0.01% SourcePawn 0.16%

qlmarkdown's Introduction

logo

QLMarkdown

QLMarkdown is a macOS Quick Look extension to preview Markdown files. It can also preview textbundle packages and rmarkdown (.rmd) files.

RMarkdown files are rendered as normal markdown without evaluating r code. The header is rendered as a yaml code block.

Please note that this software is provided "as is", without any warranty of any kind.

You can download the last compiled release (as universal binary) from this link. The application also has the automatic update function.

Screenshots

Quick Look Markdown preview

main interface

Installation

To use the Quick Look preview you must launch the application at least once. In this way the Quick Look extension will be discovered by the system. After the first execution, the Quick Look extension will be available (and enabled) among those present in the System preferences/Extensions.

If you have problems, try moving the application to the trash and then back in the Applications folder. If the QLMarkdown Preview Extension is present (and checked) in the list of Quick Look Extensions in the System preferences but the .md files are not displayed it is probably due to other applications that have registered support for that type of file. You can change the order of priority of the Quick Look Extensions indide the System preferences.

Finally, the problems may depend on how the .md files were registered on the system by other applications.

In the terminal try the following command:

mdls -name kMDItemContentType PATH_OF_AN_EXISTS_MD_FILE

The output is the UTI associated with the .md file.

This application handle these UTIs:

  • net.daringfireball.markdown
  • com.unknown.md
  • net.ia.markdown
  • org.textbundle.package
  • dyn.ah62d4rv4ge81e5pe (dynamic UTI for unassociated .rmd files)
  • com.rstudio.rmarkdown

Please inform me of any other UTI associated to .md files.

Markdown processing

For maximum compatibility with the Markdown format, the cmark-gfm library is used. The library is a GitHub fork of the standard cmark tool to process the Markdown files.

Compared to the cmark-gfm, these extensions have been added:

  • Emoji: translate the emoji placeholders like :smile:.
  • Heads anchors: create anchors for the heads.
  • Inline local images: embed the image files inside the formatted output (required for the Quick Look preview).
  • Syntax highlighting: highlight the code inside fenced block.

Difference with the GitHub Markdown engine

Although GitHub has customized the cmark-gfm library, it does not use it directly in the rendering process of Markdown files (see this repository). GitHub uses a number of libraries in Ruby for parsing and formatting source code that cannot easily be converted into a compiled library.

The accurate engine for the language detection (used however only when the language is not specified) is a library derived from the Linguistic framework used by GitHub.

So, the main difference between this application and GitHub is in the choice of the theme and in the formatting of the source code.

The syntax highlighting is based to a different library, so the formatting, colors scheme, and token recognition of the language is potentially different.

Settings

Launching the application, you can configure the options, enable the desired extensions and set the theme for formatting the Quick Look preview of Markdown files.

main interface

Some lesser-used options are available in the advanced panel.

main interface

Also, the theme popup menu has some extra commands available pressing the alt key.

Options

The options follow those offered by the cmark-gfm:

  • Hard break (available on advanced options panel): Render softbreak elements as hard line breaks.
  • No soft break (available on advanced options panel): Render softbreak elements as spaces.
  • Inline HTML (unsafe) (available on advanced options panel): Render raw HTML and unsafe links (javascript:, vbscript:, file:, and data:, except for image/png, image/gif, image/jpeg, or image/webp mime types) present in the Markdown file. By default, HTML tags are stripped and unsafe links are replaced by empty strings. So this option is required for preview SVG images.
  • Validate UTF (available on advanced options panel): Validate UTF-8 in the input before parsing, replacing illegal sequences with the standard replacement character (U+FFFD �).
  • Smart quotes: Convert straight quotes to curly, --- to em dashes and -- to en dashes.
  • Footnotes: Parse the footnotes.

In the advanced options, you can also choose if open external link inside the Quick Look preview window or in the default browser.

Extensions

Autolink

Available on advanced options panel. Automatically translate URL to link and parse email addresses.

Emoji

Parse the emoji placeholder defined by GitHub. You can render the emoji with an emoticons glyph or using the image provided by GitHub (internet connection required).

Multibyte emoji are supported, so :it: equivalent to the code \u1f1ee\u1f1f9 must be rendered as the Italian flag 🇮🇹.

Some emoji do not have an equivalent glyph on the standard font and will be replaced always with the relative image.

A list of GitHub emoji placeholder is available here.

GitHub mentions

Available on advanced options panel. Translate mentions to link to the GitHub account.

Heads anchors

Available on advanced options panel. Create anchors for the heads to use as cross internal reference. Each anchor is named with the lowercased caption, stripped of any punctuation marks (except the dash) and spaces replaced with dash (-). UTF8 character encoding is supported.

Inline local images

Available on advanced options panel. Inject in the HTML code the local images as base64 data. The Quick Look extension, for security limitations, cannot access to the local images defined inside the Markdown code, so embedding the data it's a way around the limitation.

For security reasons are handled only URLs without schema (e.g., ./image.jpg, image.jpg or assets/image.jpg), or with the file schema (e.g., file:///Users/username/Documents/image.jpg) referring to existing files with an image mime type. With the file:// schema you always set the full path. For images inside the same folder of the Markdown file do not use the file:// schema and also ./ is optional.

The extension process both images defined in the Markdown syntax and also with HTML <image> tag if the raw HTML code options is enabled.

Syntax Highlighting

This extension highlights the source code inside a fenced box.

The rendering engine is based on the Highlight. No external program is called, the engine is embedded in a library.

In the advanced options panel you can customize the settings:

  • Colors scheme (for light and dark appearance).
  • Line numbers visibility.
  • Word wrap options.
  • Use spaces instead of tabs for indentation.
  • Font.
  • Guess undefined language.

Some colors scheme (especially those for light appearance) uses a white background that is the same of the Markdown document, making the code block not immediately recognizable. For this reason, it is possible to override the background color in order to use a personal one or the one defined by the Markdown theme.

Setting a custom font also change the font used in the code blocks enclosed by back-ticks (`).

When the code block does not specify the language, it is possible to activate a guessing function. Two engines are available:

  • Fast guess: it is based on the magic library;
  • Accurate guess: it is based on the Enry library, that is a Golang porting of the Ruby linguist library used by GitHub.

If no language is defined and the guessing fail (or is not enabled), the code is rendered as normal text.

Strikethrough

Strikethrough text inside tildes. You can choose to detect single or double tilde delimiters.

Table

Parse table as defined by the GitHub extension to the standard Markdown language.

Tag filter

Available on advanced options panel. Strip potentially dangerous HTML tags (<title>, <textarea>, <style>, <xmp>, <iframe>, <noembed>, <noframes>, <script>, <plaintext>). It only takes effect if the option to include HTML code is enabled.

Task list

Available on advanced options panel. Parse task list as defined by the GitHub extension to the standard Markdown language.

Rmd header

Available on advanced options panel. Allow to handle the header of .rmd files.

Themes

You can choose a CSS theme to render the Markdown file. The application is provided with a predefined theme ( GitHub theme ) valid both for light and dark appearance.

Also, it is possible to use a style to extend the standard theme or to complete override. User customized style sheet must have the settings for both light and dark appearance using the CSS media query:

@media (prefers-color-scheme: dark) { 
    /* … */ 
}

The custom style is appended after the CSS used for the source code. In this way you can customize also the style of the syntax highlight.

Syntax highlighting extension allow to customize the appearance of the code blocks.

Build from source

When you clone this repository, remember to fetch also the submodule with git submodule update --init.

Dependency

The app uses an extra library highlight wrapper. This is a custom C++ shared library that expose the highlight functionality and the guess detection engines. All the code required by this library is included in the Xcode project, and is compiled as a universal library.

The wrapper has statically linked the following libraries:

  • highlight for syntax highlighting.
  • lua required by highlight.
  • magic, used to guess the source code language when the guess mode is set to fast.
  • Enry, used to guess the source code language when the guess mode is set to accurate.

Because Enry is developed in go, to build the wrapper library you must have the go compiler installed (you can use brew install go).

Note about security

To allow the Quick Look view of local images the application and the extension has an entitlement exception to allow only read access to the entire system.

On Big Sur there is a bug in the Quick Look engine and WebKit that cause the immediate crash of any WebView inside a Quick Look preview. To temporary fix this problem this Quick Look extension uses a com.apple.security.temporary-exception.mach-lookup.global-name entitlement.

Note about the developer

I am not primarily an application developer, and I have no particular experience in programming in Swift and much less in C/C++. There may be possible bugs in the code, be patient. Also, I am not a native English speaker 😅.

Thanks to hazarek for the app icon and the CSS style.

This application was developed for pleasure ❤️.

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