Awesome
remark-usage
remark plugin to add a usage example to a readme.
Contents
- What is this?
- When should I use this?
- Install
- Use
- API
- Types
- Compatibility
- Security
- Related
- Contribute
- License
What is this?
This package is a unified (remark) plugin to add a usage section to markdown.
When should I use this?
You can use this on readmes of npm packages to keep the docs in sync with the project through an actual code sample.
Install
This package is ESM only. In Node.js (version 16+), install with npm:
npm install remark-usage
Use
This section is rendered by this module from
example.js
. Turtles all the way down. 🐢🐢🐢
Say we are making a module that exports just enough Pi (3.14159).
We’re documenting it with a readme file, example/readme.md
:
# PI
More than enough 🍰
## Usage
## License
MIT
…and an example script to document it example/example.js
:
// Load dependencies:
import {pi} from './index.js'
// Logging `pi` yields:
console.log('txt', pi)
…if we use remark-usage
, we can generate the Usage
section
import {remark} from 'remark'
import remarkUsage from 'remark-usage'
import {read} from 'to-vfile'
const file = await read({path: 'readme.md', cwd: 'example'})
await remark().use(remarkUsage).process(file)
…then printing file
(the newly generated readme) yields:
# PI
More than enough 🍰
## Usage
Load dependencies:
```javascript
import {pi} from 'pi'
```
Logging `pi` yields:
```txt
3.14159
```
## License
MIT
API
This package exports no identifiers.
The default export is remarkUsage
.
unified().use(remarkUsage[, options])
Add a usage example to a readme.
Looks for the first heading matching options.heading
(case insensitive),
removes everything between it and an equal or higher next heading, and replaces
that with an example.
The example runs in Node.js (so no side effects!).
Line comments (//
) are turned into markdown.
Calls to console.log()
are exposed as code blocks, containing the logged
values, so console.log(1 + 1)
becomes 2
.
Use a string as the first argument to log
to use as the language for the code.
You can ignore lines with remark-usage-ignore-next
:
// remark-usage-ignore-next
const two = sum(1, 1)
// remark-usage-ignore-next 3
function sum(a, b) {
return a + b
}
…if no skip
is given, 1 line is skipped.
Parameters
options
(Options
, optional) — configuration
Returns
Transform (Transformer
).
Options
Configuration (TypeScript type).
Fields
example
(string
, optional) — path to example file (optional); resolved fromfile.cwd
; defaults to the first example that exists:'example.js'
,'example/index.js'
,'examples.js'
,'examples/index.js'
,'doc/example.js'
,'doc/example/index.js'
,'docs/example.js'
,'docs/example/index.js'
heading
(string
, default:'usage'
) — heading to look for; wrapped innew RegExp('^(' + value + ')$', 'i');
main
(string
, default:pkg.exports
,pkg.main
,'index.js'
) — path to the file; resolved fromfile.cwd
; used to rewriteimport x from './main.js'
toimport x from 'name'
name
(string
, default:pkg.name
) — name of the module; used to rewriteimport x from './main.js'
toimport x from 'name'
Types
This package is fully typed with TypeScript.
It exports the additional type Options
.
Compatibility
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, remark-usage@^11
,
compatible with Node.js 16.
This plugin works with remark version 12+ and remark-cli
version 8+.
Security
Use of remark-usage
is unsafe because main
and example
are executed.
This could become dangerous if an attacker was able to inject code into those
files or their dependencies.
Related
remark-toc
— add a table of contents (TOC)remark-license
— add a license sectionremark-contributors
— add a contributors section
Contribute
See contributing.md
in remarkjs/.github
for ways
to get started.
See support.md
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.