rehype plugin to format HTML.
- What is this?
- When should I use this?
- Install
- Use
- API
- Examples
- Types
- Compatibility
- Security
- Related
- Contribute
- License
This package is a unified (rehype) plugin to format whitespace in HTML. In short, it works as follows:
- collapse all existing whitespace to either a line ending or a single space
- remove those spaces and line endings if they do not contribute to the document
- inject needed line endings
- indent previously collapsed line endings properly
unified is a project that transforms content with abstract syntax trees (ASTs). rehype adds support for HTML to unified. hast is the HTML AST that rehype uses. This is a rehype plugin that changes whitespace in hast.
This package is useful when you want to improve the readability of HTML source
code as it adds insignificant but pretty whitespace between elements.
The package hast-util-format
does the same as this plugin
at the utility level.
A different plugin, rehype-stringify
, controls how HTML
is actually printed: which quotes to use, whether to put a /
on <img />
,
etc.
Yet another project, rehype-minify
, does the inverse: improve
the size of HTML source code by making it hard to read.
This package is ESM only. In Node.js (version 16+), install with npm:
npm install rehype-format
In Deno with esm.sh
:
import rehypeFormat from 'https://esm.sh/rehype-format@5'
In browsers with esm.sh
:
<script type="module">
import rehypeFormat from 'https://esm.sh/rehype-format@5?bundle'
</script>
Say we have the following file index.html
:
<!doCTYPE HTML><html>
<head>
<title>Hello!</title>
<meta charset=utf8>
</head>
<body><section> <p>hi there</p>
</section>
</body>
</html>
…and our module example.js
looks as follows:
import rehypeFormat from 'rehype-format'
import rehypeParse from 'rehype-parse'
import rehypeStringify from 'rehype-stringify'
import {read} from 'to-vfile'
import {unified} from 'unified'
const file = await read('index.html')
await unified()
.use(rehypeParse)
.use(rehypeFormat)
.use(rehypeStringify)
.process(file)
console.log(String(file))
…then running node example.js
yields:
<!doctype html>
<html>
<head>
<title>Hello!</title>
<meta charset="utf8">
</head>
<body>
<section>
<p>hi there</p>
</section>
</body>
</html>
This package exports no identifiers.
The default export is rehypeFormat
.
Format whitespace in HTML.
options
(Options
, optional) — configuration
Transform (Transformer
).
Configuration (TypeScript type).
blanks
(Array<string>
, default:[]
) — list of tag names to join with a blank line (default:[]
); these tags, when next to each other, are joined by a blank line (\n\n
); for example, when['head', 'body']
is given, a blank line is added between these twoindent
(number
,string
, default:2
) — indentation per level (default:2
); when number, uses that amount of spaces; whenstring
, uses that per indentation levelindentInitial
(boolean
, default:true
) — whether to indent the first level (default:true
); this is usually the<html>
, thus not indentinghead
andbody
The following example shows how remark and rehype can be combined to turn markdown into HTML, using this plugin to pretty print the HTML:
import rehypeDocument from 'rehype-document'
import rehypeFormat from 'rehype-format'
import rehypeStringify from 'rehype-stringify'
import remarkParse from 'remark-parse'
import remarkRehype from 'remark-rehype'
import {unified} from 'unified'
const file = await unified()
.use(remarkParse)
.use(remarkRehype)
.use(rehypeDocument, {title: 'Neptune'})
.use(rehypeFormat)
.use(rehypeStringify)
.process('# Hello, Neptune!')
console.log(String(file))
Yields:
<!doctype html>
<html lang="en">
<head>
<meta charset="utf-8">
<title>Neptune</title>
<meta name="viewport" content="width=device-width, initial-scale=1">
</head>
<body>
<h1>Hello, Neptune!</h1>
</body>
</html>
The following example shows how this plugin can format with tabs instead of
spaces by passing the indent
option and how blank lines can be added between
certain elements:
import rehypeFormat from 'rehype-format'
import rehypeParse from 'rehype-parse'
import rehypeStringify from 'rehype-stringify'
import {unified} from 'unified'
const file = await unified()
.use(rehypeParse)
.use(rehypeFormat, {blanks: ['body', 'head'], indent: '\t'})
.use(rehypeStringify)
.process('<h1>Hi!</h1><p>Hello, Venus!</p>')
console.log(String(file))
Yields:
<html>
<head></head>
<body>
<h1>Hi!</h1>
<p>Hello, Venus!</p>
</body>
</html>
👉 Note: the added tags (
html
,head
, andbody
) do not come from this plugin. They’re instead added byrehype-parse
, which in document mode (default), adds them according to the HTML spec.
This package is fully typed with TypeScript.
It exports the additional type Options
.
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, rehype-format@5
,
compatible with Node.js 16.
This plugin works with rehype-parse
version 3+, rehype-stringify
version 3+,
rehype
version 5+, and unified
version 6+.
Use of rehype-format
changes whitespace in the tree.
Whitespace in <script>
, <style>
, <pre>
, or <textarea>
is not modified.
If the tree is already safe, use of this plugin does not open you up for a
cross-site scripting (XSS) attack.
When in doubt, use rehype-sanitize
.
rehype-minify
— minify HTMLrehype-document
— wrap a fragment in a documentrehype-sanitize
— sanitize HTMLrehype-toc
— add a table of contents (TOC)rehype-section
— wrap headings and their contents in sections
See contributing.md
in rehypejs/.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.