Markdown is a light text markup format and a processor to convert that to HTML. The originator describes it as follows:
Markdown is a text-to-HTML conversion tool for web writers. Markdown allows you to write using an easy-to-read, easy-to-write plain text format, then convert it to structurally valid XHTML (or HTML).
This (markdown2) is a fast and complete Python implementation of Markdown. It was written to closely match the behaviour of the original Perl-implemented Markdown.pl. Markdown2 also comes with a number of extensions (called "extras") for things like syntax coloring, tables, header-ids. See the "Extra Syntax" section below. "markdown2" supports all Python versions from 2.4 to 3.3 (and pypy and jython, though I don't frequently test those).
There is another Python markdown.py. However, at least at the time this project was started, markdown2.py was faster (see the Performance Notes) and, to my knowledge, more correct (see Testing Notes). That was a while ago though, so you shouldn't discount Python-markdown from your consideration.
Follow @trentmick for updates to python-markdown2.
To install it in your Python installation run one of the following:
pip install markdown2
pypm install markdown2 # if you use ActivePython (activestate.com/activepython)
easy_install markdown2 # if this is the best you have
python setup.py install
However, everything you need to run this is in "lib/markdown2.py". If it is easier for you, you can just copy that file to somewhere on your PythonPath (to use as a module) or executable path (to use as a script).
As a module:
>>> import markdown2
>>> markdown2.markdown("*boo!*") # or use `html = markdown_path(PATH)`
u'<p><em>boo!</em></p>\n'
>>> markdowner = Markdown()
>>> markdowner.convert("*boo!*")
u'<p><em>boo!</em></p>\n'
>>> markdowner.convert("**boom!**")
u'<p><strong>boom!</strong></p>\n'
As a script (CLI):
$ python markdown2.py foo.md > foo.html
I think pip-based installation will enable this as well:
$ markdown2 foo.md > foo.html
See the project wiki,
lib/markdown2.py
docstrings and/or python markdown2.py --help
for more details.
Many Markdown processors include support for additional optional syntax (often called "extensions") and markdown2 is no exception. With markdown2 these are called "extras". Using the "footnotes" extra as an example, here is how you use an extra ... as a module:
$ python markdown2.py --extras footnotes foo.md > foo.html
as a script:
>>> import markdown2
>>> markdown2.markdown("*boo!*", extras=["footnotes"])
u'<p><em>boo!</em></p>\n'
There are a number of currently implemented extras for tables, footnotes,
syntax coloring of <pre>
-blocks, auto-linking patterns, table of contents,
Smarty Pants (for fancy quotes, dashes, etc.) and more. See the Extras
wiki page for full
details.
The python-markdown2 project lives at https://github.com/trentm/python-markdown2/. (Note: On Mar 6, 2011 this project was moved from Google Code to here on Github.) See also, markdown2 on the Python Package Index (PyPI).
The change log: https://github.com/trentm/python-markdown2/blob/master/CHANGES.md
To report a bug: https://github.com/trentm/python-markdown2/issues
This markdown implementation passes a fairly extensive test suite. To run it:
make test
The crux of the test suite is a number of "cases" directories -- each with a set of matching .text (input) and .html (expected output) files. These are:
tm-cases/ Tests authored for python-markdown2 (tm=="Trent Mick")
markdowntest-cases/ Tests from the 3rd-party MarkdownTest package
php-markdown-cases/ Tests from the 3rd-party MDTest package
php-markdown-extra-cases/ Tests also from MDTest package
See the Testing Notes wiki page for full details.