Provided by: libmarkdown2-dev_2.2.7-2build1_amd64 bug

NAME

       mkd_functions — access and process Markdown documents.

LIBRARY

       Markdown (libmarkdown, -lmarkdown)

SYNOPSIS

       #include <mkdio.h>

       int
       mkd_compile(MMIOT *document, int flags);

       int
       mkd_css(MMIOT *document, char **doc);

       int
       mkd_generatecss(MMIOT *document, FILE *output);

       int
       mkd_document(MMIOT *document, char **doc);

       int
       mkd_generatehtml(MMIOT *document, FILE *output);

       int
       mkd_xhtmlpage(MMIOT *document, int flags, FILE *output);

       int
       mkd_toc(MMIOT *document, char **doc);

       void
       mkd_generatetoc(MMIOT *document, FILE *output);

       void
       mkd_cleanup(MMIOT*);

       char*
       mkd_doc_title(MMIOT*);

       char*
       mkd_doc_author(MMIOT*);

       char*
       mkd_doc_date(MMIOT*);

DESCRIPTION

       The  markdown  format  supported  in  this implementation includes Pandoc-style header and inline <style>
       blocks, and the standard markdown(3) functions do not provide access to the data provided  by  either  of
       those extensions.  These functions give you access to that data, plus they provide a finer-grained way of
       converting Markdown documents into HTML.

       Given  a  MMIOT* generated by mkd_in() or mkd_string(), mkd_compile() compiles the document into <style>,
       Pandoc, and html sections.

       Once  compiled,  the  document  can  be  examined  and  written   by   the   mkd_css(),   mkd_document(),
       mkd_generatecss(),  mkd_generatehtml(),  mkd_generatetoc(),  mkd_toc(), mkd_xhtmlpage(), mkd_doc_title(),
       mkd_doc_author(), and mkd_doc_date() functions.

       mkd_css() allocates a string and populates it  with  any  <style>  sections  provided  in  the  document,
       mkd_generatecss()  writes  any  <style> sections to the output, mkd_document() points text to the text of
       the document and returns the size of the document, mkd_generatehtml() writes the rest of the document  to
       the  output,  and  mkd_doc_title(),  mkd_doc_author(),  mkd_doc_date() are used to read the contents of a
       Pandoc header, if any.

       mkd_xhtmlpage() writes a xhtml page containing the document.  The regular set of flags can be passed.

       mkd_toc() writes a document outline, in the form of a collection of  nested  lists  with  links  to  each
       header in the document, into a string allocated with malloc(), and returns the size.

       mkd_generatetoc()  is  like  mkd_toc(),  except  that  it  writes the document outline to the given FILE*
       argument.

       mkd_cleanup() deletes a MMIOT* after processing is done.

       mkd_compile() accepts the same flags that markdown() and mkd_string() do;
       MKD_NOIMAGE          Do not process `![]' and remove <img> tags from the output.
       MKD_NOLINKS          Do not process `[]' and remove <a> tags from the output.
       MKD_NOPANTS          Do not do Smartypants-style mangling of quotes, dashes, or ellipses.
       MKD_TAGTEXT          Process the input as if you were inside a html tag.  This means that  no  html  tags
                            will  be  generated,  and  mkd_compile()  will attempt to escape anything that might
                            terribly confuse a web browser.
       MKD_NO_EXT           Do not process any markdown pseudo-protocols when handing [][] links.
       MKD_NOHEADER         Do not attempt to parse any Pandoc-style headers.
       MKD_TOC              Label all headers for use with the mkd_generatetoc() function.
       MKD_1_COMPAT         MarkdownTest_1.0 compatibility flag; trim trailing spaces from  the  first  line  of
                            code blocks and disable implicit reference links.
       MKD_NOSTRIKETHROUGH  Disable strikethrough support.

RETURN VALUES

       The  function  mkd_compile()  returns 1 in the case of success, or 0 if the document is already compiled.
       The function mkd_generatecss() returns the number of bytes written in the case of success, or EOF  if  an
       error occurred.  The function mkd_generatehtml() returns 0 on success, -1 on failure.

SEE ALSO

       markdown(1), markdown(3), mkd-line(3), markdown(7), mkd-extensions(7), mmap(2).

       http://daringfireball.net/projects/markdown/syntax

BUGS

       Error handling is minimal at best.

Mastodon                                        January 18, 2008                                MKD_FUNCTIONS(3)