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Txtmark - Java markdown processor

Copyright (C) 2011 René Jeschke [email protected]
See LICENSE.txt for licensing information.


Txtmark is yet another markdown processor for the JVM.

  • It is easy to use:

    String result = txtmark.Processor.process("This is ***TXTMARK***");
    
  • It is fast (see below)
    ... well, it is the fastest markdown processor on the JVM right now.

  • It does not depend on other libraries, so classpathing txtmark.jar is
    sufficient to use Txtmark in your project.

For an in-depth explanation of markdown have a look at the original Markdown Syntax.


Maven repository

Txtmark is now available as a maven artifact without additional repository entries. Have a look [here] (http://search.maven.org/#search|ga|1|txtmark).


Txtmark extensions

To enable Txtmark's extended markdown parsing you can use the $PROFILE$ mechanism:

[$PROFILE$]: extended

This seemed to me as the easiest and safest way to enable different behaviours.
Just put this line into your Txtmark file like you would use reference links.

Behavior changes when using [$PROFILE$]: extended

  • Lists and code blocks end a paragraph

    In normal markdown the following:

    This is a paragraph
    * and this is not a list
    

    Will produce:

    This is a paragraph * and this is not a list

    When using Txtmark extensions this changes to:

    This is a paragraph

    • and this is not a list
  • Text anchors

    Headlines and list items may recieve an ID which
    you can refer to using links.

    ## Headline with ID ##     {#headid}
    
    Another headline with ID   {#headid2}
    ------------------------
    
    * List with ID             {#listid}
    
    Links: [Foo] (#headid)
    

    this will produce:

    Headline with ID

    Another headline with ID

    • List with ID

    Links: Foo

    The ID must be the last thing on the first line.

    All spaces before {# get removed, so you can't
    use an ID and a manual line break in the same line.

  • Auto HTML entities

    • (C) becomes © - ©
    • (R) becomes ® - ®
    • (TM) becomes - ™
    • -- becomes - –
    • --- becomes - —
    • ... becomes - …
    • << becomes « - «
    • >> becomes » - »
    • "Hello" becomes “Hello” - “Hello”
  • Underscores (Emphasis)

    Underscores in the middle of a word don't result in emphasis.

    Con_cat_this
    

    normally produces this:

    Concatthis
    
  • Superscript

    You can use ^ to mark a span as superscript.

    2^2^ = 4
    

    turns into

    22 = 4
    
  • Abbreviations

    Abbreviations are defined like reference links, but using a *
    instead of a link and must be single-line only.

    [Git]: * "Fast distributed revision control system"
    

    and used like this

    This is [Git]!
    

    which will produce

    This is Git!
    

Markdown conformity

Txtmark passes all tests inside MarkdownTest_1.0_2007-05-09
except of two:

  1. Images.text

    Fails because Txtmark doesn't produce empty 'title' image attributes.
    (IMHO: Images ... OK)

  2. Literal quotes in titles.text

    What the frell ... this test will continue to FAIL.
    Sorry, but using unescaped " in a title which should be surrounded
    by " is unacceptable for me ;)

    Change:

    Foo [bar](/url/ "Title with "quotes" inside").
    [bar]: /url/ "Title with "quotes" inside"
    

    to:

    Foo [bar](/url/ "Title with \"quotes\" inside").
    [bar]: /url/ "Title with \"quotes\" inside"
    

    and Txtmark will produce the correct result.
    (IMHO: Literal quotes in titles ... OK)


Where Txtmark is not like Markdown

  • Txtmark does not produce empty title attributes in link and image tags.

  • Unescaped " in link titles starting with " are not recognized and result
    in unexpected behaviour.

  • Due to a different list parsing approach some things get interpreted differently:

    * List
    > Quote
    

    will produce when processed with Markdown:

    • List

      Quote

    and this when produced with Txtmark:

    • List

      Quote

    Another one:

    * List
    ====
    

    will produce when processed with Markdown:

    * List

    and this when produced with Txtmark:

    • List

  • List of escapeable characters:

    \   [   ]   (   )   {   }   #
    "   '   .   <   >   +   -   _
    !   `   ^
    

Performance comparison of markdown processors for the JVM

Based on this benchmark suite.

Excerpt from the original post concerning this benchmark suite:

Most of these tests are of course unrealistic: Who would write a
text where each word is a link? Yet they serve an important use:
It makes it possible for the developer to pinpoint the parts of
the parser where there is most room for improvement. Also, it
explains why certain texts might render much faster in one
Processor than in another.

Benchmark system:

  • Ubuntu Linux 10.04 32 Bit
  • Intel(R) Core(TM) 2 Duo T7500 @ 2.2GHz
  • Java(TM) SE Runtime Environment (build 1.6.0_24-b07)
  • Java HotSpot(TM) Server VM (build 19.1-b02, mixed mode)



















TestActuariusPegDownKnockoffTxtmark
1st Run (ms)2nd Run (ms)1st Run (ms)2nd Run (ms)1st Run (ms)2nd Run (ms)1st Run (ms)2nd Run (ms)
Plain Paragraphs11275771273103774040015764
Every Word Emphasized156210011523151313982132215446
Every Word Strong112599711151114954396474441
Every Word Inline Code38227710581052911690745139
Every Word a Fast Link225716005375313980341010955
Every Word Consisting of Special XML Chars4045427029853044312377778775
Every Word wrapped in manual HTML tags33342919901896386337367362
Every Line with a manual line break51058814451440152711305656
Every word with a full link4522461045996188418198655
Every word with a full image26815011401132198519083836
Every word with a reference link98479082189561871912113611541615251380
Every block a quote445206131213014784575045
Every block a codeblock70873733761611756022
Every block a list920912172017256226515555
All tests together32812885518451961013010460206196

Benchmarked versions:

Actuarius version: 0.2
PegDown version: 0.8.5.4
Knockoff version: 0.7.3-15


TODO

  • Inline HTML control (configurable escaping of unallowed HTML tags)
  • Code clean-ups

Mentioned/related projects

Markdown is Copyright (C) 2004 by John Gruber
SmartyPants is Copyright (C) 2003 by John Gruber
Actuarius is Copyright (C) 2010 by Christoph Henkelmann
Knockoff is Copyright (C) 2009-2011 by Tristan Juricek
PegDown is Copyright (C) 2010 by Mathias Doenitz
PHP Markdown & Extra is Copyright (C) 2009 Michel Fortin


Project link: https://github.com/rjeschke/txtmark

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