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vmd

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Features | Installation | Usage | Examples | Command-line options | Configuration

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Features

Installation

$ npm install -g vmd

Usage

vmd [FILE] [OPTIONS]

If no FILE is provided it will try to read from standard input, or automatically look for "README.md" if in a TTY.

Examples

Read a file from disk:

$ vmd DOCUMENT.md

When no path to a document is supplied, "README.md" will be opened by default:

$ vmd

When a path to a directory is supplied, "directory/README.md" will be opened by default:

$ vmd node_modules/electron # opens node_modules/electron/README.md

It reads from stdin so you can pipe markdown text in to it:

$ cat README.md | vmd

For example, you can see the readme for browserify like so:

$ npm view browserify readme | vmd

Or from a GitHub project:

$ gh-rtfm substack/node-browserify | vmd

Options

Configuration

All Options that contain a value can be persisted in configuration file in INI, YAML or JSON format. The configuration file can be in any of the following locations: $HOME/.vmdrc, $HOME/.vmd/config, $HOME/.config/vmd, $HOME/.config/vmd/config, /etc/vmdrc, or a custom location provided using the --config=FILE option.

If you wish to change some of the default settings create a config file called .vmdrc in your home directory or in ~/.config/vmd.

Here's a sample config file:

zoom = 1.2
highlight.theme = monokai
styles.extra = /my/custom/vmd/style-fixes.css

Options provided as command-line arguments will always have precedence over the values in the configuration file. So --zoom=1.5 will set the zoom factor to 1.5 regardless of what's in the config file.

Authors

Max Kueng, Yoshua Wuyts and contributors.

License

MIT