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A gemtext (text/gemini) parser with support for streaming, ASTs, and CSTs.

Do you:

Then Gemini might be for you (see this post or this one on why itā€™s cool).

Contents

What is this?

Dioscuri (named for the gemini twins Castor and Pollux) is a tokenizer/lexer/parser/etc for gemtext (the text/gemini markup format). It gives you several things:

These tools can be used if you now have markdown but want to transform it to gemtext. Or if you want to combine your posts into an RSS feed or on your ā€œhomepageā€. And many other things!

When should I use this?

Use this for all your gemtext needs!

Install

This package is ESM only. In Node.js (version 14.14+, 16.0+), install with npm:

npm:

npm install dioscuri

In Deno with esm.sh:

import * as dioscuri from 'https://esm.sh/dioscuri@1'

In browsers with esm.sh:

<script type="module">
  import * as dioscuri from 'https://esm.sh/dioscuri@1?bundle'
</script>

Use

See each interface below for examples.

API

This package exports the identifiers buffer, stream, fromGemtext, toGemtext, fromMdast, toMdast. The raw compiler and parser are also exported. There is no default export.

buffer(doc, encoding?, options?)

Compile gemtext to HTML.

doc

Gemtext to parse (string or Buffer).

encoding

Character encoding to understand doc as when itā€™s a Buffer (string, default: 'utf8').

options.defaultLineEnding

Value to use for line endings not in doc (string, default: first line ending or '\n').

Generally, discuri copies line endings ('\n' or '\r\n') in the document over to the compiled HTML. In some cases, such as > a, extra line endings are added: <blockquote>\n<p>a</p>\n</blockquote>.

options.allowDangerousProtocol

Whether to allow potentially dangerous protocols in URLs (boolean, default: false). URLs relative to the current protocol are always allowed (such as, image.jpg). Otherwise, the allowed protocols are gemini, http, https, irc, ircs, mailto, and xmpp.

Returns

Compiled HTML (string).

Example

Say we have a gemtext document, example.gmi:

# Hello, world!

Some text

=> https://example.com An example

> A quote

* List

ā€¦and our module example.js looks as follows:

import fs from 'node:fs/promises'
import {buffer} from 'dioscuri'

const doc = await fs.readFile('example.gmi')

console.log(buffer(doc))

ā€¦now running node example.js yields:

<h1>Hello, world!</h1>
<br />
<p>Some text</p>
<br />
<div><a href="https://example.com">An example</a></div>
<br />
<blockquote>
<p>A quote</p>
</blockquote>
<br />
<ul>
<li>List</li>
</ul>

stream(options?)

Streaming interface to compile gemtext to HTML. options is the same as the buffering interface above.

Example

Assuming the same example.gmi as before and an example.js like this:

import fs from 'node:fs'
import {stream} from 'dioscuri'

fs.createReadStream('example.gmi')
  .on('error', handleError)
  .pipe(stream())
  .pipe(process.stdout)

function handleError(error) {
  throw error // Handle your error here!
}

ā€¦then running node example.js yields the same as before.

fromGemtext(doc, encoding?)

Parse gemtext to an AST (gast). doc and encoding are the same as the buffering interface above.

Returns

Root.

Example

Assuming the same example.gmi as before and an example.js like this:

import fs from 'node:fs/promises'
import {fromGemtext} from 'dioscuri'

const doc = await fs.readFile('example.gmi')

console.dir(fromGemtext(doc), {depth: null})

ā€¦now running node example.js yields (positional info removed for brevity):

{
  type: 'root',
  children: [
    {type: 'heading', rank: 1, value: 'Hello, world!'},
    {type: 'break'},
    {type: 'text', value: 'Some text'},
    {type: 'break'},
    {type: 'link', url: 'https://example.com', value: 'An example'},
    {type: 'break'},
    {type: 'quote', value: 'A quote'},
    {type: 'break'},
    {type: 'list', children: [{type: 'listItem', value: 'List'}]}
  ]
}

toGemtext(tree)

Serialize gast.

Example

Say our script example.js looks as follows:

import {toGemtext} from 'dioscuri'

const tree = {
  type: 'root',
  children: [
    {type: 'heading', rank: 1, value: 'Hello, world!'},
    {type: 'break'},
    {type: 'text', value: 'Some text'}
  ]
}

console.log(toGemtext(tree))

ā€¦then running node example.js yields:

# Hello, world!

Some text

fromMdast(tree, options?)

Transform mdast to gast.

options.endlinks

Place links at the end of the document (boolean, default: false). The default is to place links before the next heading.

options.tight

Do not put blank lines between blocks (boolean, default: false). The default is to place breaks between each block (paragraph, heading, etc).

Returns

gast, probably. Some mdast nodes have no gast representation so they are dropped. If you pass one of those in as tree, youā€™ll get undefined out.

Example

Say we have a markdown document example.md:

# Hello, world!

Some text, *emphasis*, **strong**\
`code()`, and ~~scratch that~~strikethrough.

Hereā€™s a [link](https://example.com 'Just an example'), [link reference][*],
and images: [image reference][*], [](example.png 'Another example').

***

> Some
> quotes

*   a list
*   with another item

1.  ā€œOrderedā€
2.  List

```
A
Poem
```

```js
console.log(1)
```

| Name | Value |
| ---- | ----- |
| Beep | 1.2   |
| Boop | 3.14  |

*   [x] Checked
*   [ ] Unchecked

Footnotes[^ā€ ], ^[even inline].

[*]: https://example.org "URL definition"

[^ā€ ]: Footnote definition

ā€¦and our module example.js looks as follows:

import fs from 'node:fs/promises'
import {gfm} from 'micromark-extension-gfm'
import {footnote} from 'micromark-extension-footnote'
import {fromMarkdown} from 'mdast-util-from-markdown'
import {gfmFromMarkdown} from 'mdast-util-gfm'
import {footnoteFromMarkdown} from 'mdast-util-footnote'
import {fromMdast, toGemtext} from 'dioscuri'

const mdast = fromMarkdown(await fs.readFile('example.md'), {
  extensions: [gfm(), footnote({inlineNotes: true})],
  mdastExtensions: [gfmFromMarkdown, footnoteFromMarkdown]
})

console.log(toGemtext(fromMdast(mdast)))

ā€¦now running node example.js yields:

# Hello, world!

Some text, emphasis, strong code(), and strikethrough.

Hereā€™s a link[1], link reference[2], and images: image reference[2], [3].

> Some quotes

* a list
* with another item

* ā€œOrderedā€
* List

```
A
Poem
```

```js
console.log(1)
```

```csv
Name,Value
Beep,1.2
Boop,3.14
```

* āœ“ Checked
* āœ— Unchecked

Footnotes[a], [b].

=> https://example.com [1] Just an example

=> https://example.org [2] URL definition

=> example.png [3] Another example

[a] Footnote definition

[b] even inline

toMdast(tree)

Transform gast to mdast.

Returns

mdast, probably. Some gast nodes have no mdast representation so they are dropped. If you pass one of those in as tree, youā€™ll get undefined out.

Example

Say we have a gemtext document example.gmi:

# Hello, world!

Some text

=> https://example.com An example

> A quote

* List

ā€¦and our module example.js looks as follows:

import fs from 'node:fs/promises'
import {fromGemtext, toMdast} from 'dioscuri'

const doc = await fs.readFile('example.gmi')

console.dir(toMdast(fromGemtext(doc)), {depth: null})

ā€¦now running node example.js yields (position info removed for brevity):

{
  type: 'root',
  children: [
    {
      type: 'heading',
      depth: 1,
      children: [{type: 'text', value: 'Hello, world!'}]
    },
    {
      type: 'paragraph',
      children: [{type: 'text', value: 'Some text'}]
    },
    {
      type: 'paragraph',
      children: [
        {
          type: 'link',
          url: 'https://example.com',
          title: null,
          children: [{type: 'text', value: 'An example'}]
        }
      ]
    },
    {
      type: 'blockquote',
      children: [
        {type: 'paragraph', children: [{type: 'text', value: 'A quote'}]}
      ]
    },
    {
      type: 'list',
      ordered: false,
      spread: false,
      children: [
        {
          type: 'listItem',
          spread: false,
          children: [
            {type: 'paragraph', children: [{type: 'text', value: 'List'}]}
          ]
        }
      ]
    }
  ]
}

gast

gast extends unist, a format for syntax trees, to benefit from its ecosystem of utilities.

Root

interface Root <: Parent {
  type: 'root'
  children: [Break | Heading | Link | List | Pre | Quote | Text]
}

Root (Parent) represents a document.

Break

interface Break <: Node {
  type: 'break'
}

Break (Node) represents a hard break.

Heading

interface Heading <: Literal {
  type: 'heading'
  rank: 1 | 2 | 3
  value: string?
}

Heading (Literal) represents a heading of a section.

Link

interface Link <: Literal {
  type: 'link'
  url: string
  value: string?
}

Link (Literal) represents a resource.

A url field must be present. It represents a URL to the resource.

List

interface List <: Parent {
  type: 'list'
  children: [ListItem]
}

List (Parent) represents an enumeration.

ListItem

interface ListItem <: Literal {
  type: 'listItem'
  value: string?
}

ListItem (Literal) represents an item in a list.

Pre

interface Pre <: Literal {
  type: 'pre'
  alt: string?
  value: string?
}

Pre (Literal) represents preformatted text.

An alt field may be present. When present, the node represents computer code, and the field gives the language of computer code being marked up.

Quote

interface Quote <: Literal {
  type: 'quote'
  value: string?
}

Quote (Literal) represents a quote.

Text

interface Text <: Literal {
  type: 'text'
  value: string
}

Text (Literal) represents a paragraph.

Types

This package is fully typed with TypeScript. It exports the additional types Value (for the input, string or buffer), BufferEncoding ('utf8' etc), CompileOptions (options to turn things to a string), and FromMdastOptions (options to turn things into gast).

Compatibility

This package is at least compatible with all maintained versions of Node.js. As of now, that is Node.js 14.14+ and 16.0+. It also works in Deno and modern browsers.

Related

Contribute

Yes please! See How to Contribute to Open Source.

Security

Gemtext is safe. As for the generated HTML: thatā€™s safe by default. Pass allowDangerousProtocol: true if you want to live dangerously.

License

MIT Ā© Titus Wormer

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