This PR does two things: 1. fixes using mermaid version `>= 10` from the CDN, by importing the ESM module instead 2. moves script loading code from `head.html` to the mermaid include I've also added some light documentation to clarify how using mermaid with local paths should work (users should specify a version, and they should only use fully-minified bundles with no local references). The nice thing about this approach is that it's a breaking change for nobody, and only adds functionality (v10 support). Eventually, we should remove support for mermaid <10, which should make this much easier! Closes #1206. ## Context In v10, Mermaid has implemented a few (admittedly, very frustrating to deal with) breaking changes: 1. they've removed CJS support, which is fine, *but* 2. that means that the `dist` they publish to JSDelivr now has a **different URL**: for versions `10.0.0` - `10.0.2`, **they do not have a minified bundle -- you have to load the ESM version with relative imports** 3. and, separately the `init` function has been deprecated 2 is really the issue, and so I've had to go into the code to now load mermaid by ESM by default when the user is on mermaid > v10. I've tested this with: - CDN version < 10 (v9) - CDN version 10 - local path with version < 10 (v9) - local path with version 10 (new: also loaded as an ESM module) Separately, I chose to put all the mermaid stuff in one include because: - I think @pdmosses requested something like this - it's a bit confusing that some mermaid code is *not* in the include, and this makes modular components ... more modular - from a developer perspective, it's more clear what's happening with mermaid - mermaid is not render-blocking, so it shouldn't be in the `head` anyways --------- Co-authored-by: Peter Mosses <18308236+pdmosses@users.noreply.github.com>
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Code
{: .no_toc }
Table of contents
{: .no_toc .text-delta }
- TOC {:toc}
Inline code
Code can be rendered inline by wrapping it in single back ticks.
Heading with <inline code snippet>
in it.
{: .no_toc }
Heading with <inline code snippet>
in it.
---
## Syntax highlighted code blocks
Use Jekyll's built-in syntax highlighting with Rouge for code blocks by using three backticks, followed by the language name:
<div class="code-example" markdown="1">
```js
// Javascript code with syntax highlighting.
var fun = function lang(l) {
dateformat.i18n = require('./lang/' + l)
return true;
}
{% highlight markdown %}
```js
// Javascript code with syntax highlighting.
var fun = function lang(l) {
dateformat.i18n = require('./lang/' + l)
return true;
}
```
{% endhighlight %}
Code blocks with rendered examples
To demonstrate front end code, sometimes it's useful to show a rendered example of that code. After including the styles from your project that you'll need to show the rendering, you can use a <div>
with the code-example
class, followed by the code block syntax. If you want to render your output with Markdown instead of HTML, use the markdown="1"
attribute to tell Jekyll that the code you are rendering will be in Markdown format... This is about to get meta...
Link button{: .btn }
Link button{: .btn }
Mermaid diagram code blocks
{: .d-inline-block }
New (v0.4.0) {: .label .label-green }
Mermaid allows you to add diagrams and visualizations using Markdown code blocks. It is disabled by default. However, you can turn on support for mermaid by adding a mermaid
key to your _config.yml
.
The minimum configuration requires a version
key (matching a version in jsDelivr):
mermaid:
# Version of mermaid library
# Pick an available version from https://cdn.jsdelivr.net/npm/mermaid/
version: "9.1.3"
Additional configuration options are loaded through _includes/mermaid_config.js
. By default, the contents of the file are the empty object:
// _includes/mermaid_config.js
{}
This loads the default settings.
The contents of this object should follow mermaid's configuration API. For example, to override the theme, change _includes/mermaid_config.js
to:
// _includes/mermaid_config.js
{
theme: "forest"
}
Once mermaid is installed, it can be used in markdown files. The markdown for a simple flowchart example might look like the following:
{% highlight markdown %}
graph TD;
A-->B;
A-->C;
B-->D;
C-->D;
{% endhighlight %}
which renders:
graph TD;
A-->B;
A-->C;
B-->D;
C-->D;
Note: for demonstration purposes, we've enabled mermaid on this site. It is still disabled by default, and users need to opt-in to use it.
Using a local mermaid library
To load a local version of mermaid, also use the path
key to specify the location of the library; e.g.
mermaid:
version: "10.1.0"
# for (v10+)
path: "/assets/js/mermaid.esm.min.mjs"
# for (<v10):
# path: "/assets/js/mermaid.min.js"
# Note: copy both `mermaid.esm.min.mjs` (v10+) or `mermaid.min.js` (<v10) and the associated
# `.map` file from the specified version of `mermaid/dist` to `/assets/js/`.
For mermaid versions >=10
, this file is imported directly as an ESM module (rather than as a plain <script>
tag); users should use the mermaid.esm.min.mjs
file. In contrast, for mermaid versions <10
, this file is loaded as a script tag; it should be a standalone CJS file (i.e. mermaid.min.js
).
{: .warning }
Mermaid versions 10.0
- 10.1
(and possibly, future releases) still encode relative imports in mermaid.esm.min.mjs
. Local users must copy all of the contents of the dist
folder to the specified path (preserving the relative location of the files). Just the Docs is actively monitoring mermaid releases; an upstream fix is planned.
Using mermaid with AsciiDoc
Users of AsciiDoc (e.g. via jekyll-asciidoc) may need additional configuration to use mermaid.
By default, AsciiDoc generates HTML markup that mermaid cannot properly parse. The simplest way to resolve this is to use a passthrough block: {% highlight asciidoc %} ++++
graph TD; A-->B; A-->C; B-->D; C-->D;
++++ {% endhighlight %}
Alternatively, community member @flyx has contributed a Ruby extension that does not require extra markup. The extension is available as a GitHub Gist. Thank you to @flyx!
The asciidoctor-diagram extension which also supports mermaid is not recommended for use with Just the Docs, since it requires separate configuration e.g. for theming, and is known to not be trivial to set up.
Copy button
{: .d-inline-block }
New (v0.4.0) {: .label .label-green }
The copy button for code blocks can be enabled or disabled via the enable_copy_code_button
key in _config.yml
. By default, the value of this key is false
; users need to opt-in.
# For copy button on code
enable_copy_code_button: true
Note that this feature requires JavaScript; if JavaScript is disabled in the browser, this feature will not work.