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next-markdown

v1.8.0

Published

Static pages generated from markdown files for your Next.js website.

Downloads

12

Readme

Made for people

  • having a nextjs project
  • in ❤️ with markdown
  • who want to generate boring (but very necessary!) pages like /about, /terms, /blog, /docs or /whatever/other/route from markdown files with 0 effort

Used by

  • lembot.com - all pages except the home page are generated from markdown hosted in a separate public github repo.
  • snappify.io (blog, docs) - a powerful design tool to create and manage beautiful images of your code.
  • frouo.com - a dev blog
  • create a PR to add your website, or use twitter DM

Get Started ✨

In your nextjs project, run

npm install next-markdown

Add the following [...nextmd].jsx file in the pages/ folder

import NextMarkdown from "next-markdown";

const nextmd = NextMarkdown({ pathToContent: "./pages-markdown" });

export const getStaticPaths = nextmd.getStaticPaths;
export const getStaticProps = nextmd.getStaticProps;

export default function MarkdownPage({ frontMatter, html, subPaths }) {
  return <div dangerouslySetInnerHTML={{ __html: html }} /> 👈 design your own layout 🧑‍🎨
}

Usage 👋

At the root of your project create the folder pages-markdown/, add the following hello.md file

# Hello World

This is **awesome**

That's it. Open http://localhost:3000/hello page and see the magic.

Enjoy.

nextmd demo

Features 🚀

Dynamic Routes for Markdown Files

next-markdown generates routes based on the path of your markdown files.

Just like nextjs does with pages/.

For example, the following project structure will result into creating the following pages:

pages/
├ index.jsx    ......... ➡️ /
├ caveat.jsx   ......... ➡️ /caveat
├ [...nextmd].jsx

pages-markdown/
├ about.md     ......... ➡️ /about
├ caveat.md    ......... ➡️ ❌ because `pages/caveat.jsx` is already defined cf. https://nextjs.org/docs/routing/dynamic-routes#caveats
├ hello/
  ├ index.md   ......... ➡️ /hello
  ├ world.md   ......... ➡️ /hello/world
  ├ jurassic/
    ├ park.md  ......... ➡️ /hello/jurassic/park
├ blog/
  ├ index.md   ......... ➡️ /blog
  ├ hello.md   ......... ➡️ /blog/hello
  ├ world.md   ......... ➡️ /blog/world
├ docs/
  ├ index.md   ......... ➡️ /docs
  ├ get-started.md   ... ➡️ /docs/get-started
  ├ features.md   ...... ➡️ /docs/features
  ├ contribute.md   .... ➡️ /docs/contribute

See the example.

Blog Aware (example)

next-markdown is blog-aware:

  • list all the posts
  • write draft or unpublish a post by simply prefixing the file name with an underscore (eg. _hello.md will redirect to 404)
  • reading time
  • etc.

Documentation (example)

next-markdown lets you build a documentation:

  • sidebar
  • previous / next
  • organize your docs by folders
  • etc.

Table of Contents (example)

For each page you'll receive the Table of Contents based on headings in your markdown.

MDX Support (example)

There is nothing to setup on your side, MDX support comes for free.

You can mix .md and .mdx files.

Configure custom remark and rehype plugins (example)

next-markdown comes with some default remark and rehype plugins to ensure its basic functionality.

In some cases you might want to specify additional plugins to enrich your page with extra features.

You can pass custom remark and rehype plugins via the next-markdown initializer config:

import NextMarkdown from "next-markdown";

const nextmd = NextMarkdown({
  ...,
  remarkPlugins: [],
  rehypePlugins: [],
});

Host Your .md Files in Another Repo (example)

For many good reasons you may want to host your content in another GIT repo.

Examples 🖥

Feel free to browse the examples to see next-markdown in action.

Contributing 🏗️

Thanks for your interest in next-markdown! You are very welcome to contribute. If you are proposing a new feature, please open an issue to make sure it is inline with the project goals.

1. Fork this repository to your own GitHub account and clone it to your local device

git clone https://github.com/your-name/next-markdown.git
cd next-markdown

2. Install the dependencies and run dev script

npm install
npm run dev

terminal 1

3. Open another terminal, pick an example in the examples/ folder, install dependencies and run dev

cd examples/blogging # or dynamic-routes, or remote-content
npm install
npm run dev

terminal 2

4. Start coding

  • edit files in src/, save: http://localhost:3000 gets updated automatically (aka hot-reloading)
  • add tests in src/__tests__/. Run tests with npm test command.

browser

5. Submitting a PR

Before you make your pull request, make sure to run:

  • npm test to make sure nothing is broken
  • npm run format to make sure the code looks consistent
  • npm run lint to make sure there is no problem in the code

Contributors 🙏