(example_syntax)=
{sub-ref}
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As a base, MyST adheres to the CommonMark specification. For this, it uses the markdown-it-py parser, which is a well-structured markdown parser for Python that is CommonMark-compliant and also extensible.
MyST adds several new syntax options to CommonMark in order to be used with Sphinx, the documentation generation engine used extensively in the Python ecosystem.
Below is a summary of the syntax 'tokens' parsed, and further details of a few major extensions from the CommonMark flavor of markdown.
:::{seealso}
- For an introduction to writing Directives and Roles with MyST markdown, see {ref}
intro/writing
. - Check out the MyST-Markdown VS Code extension, for MyST extended syntax highlighting. :::
MyST builds on the tokens defined by markdown-it, to extend the syntax described in the CommonMark Spec, which the parser is tested against.
% TODO link to markdown-it documentation
(syntax/directives)=
Directives syntax is defined with triple-backticks and curly-brackets. It is effectively a code block with curly brackets around the language, and a directive name in place of a language name. It is similar to how RMarkdown defines "runnable cells". Here is the basic structure:
---
header-rows: 1
---
* - MyST
- reStructuredText
* - ````md
```{directivename} arguments
---
key1: val1
key2: val2
---
This is
directive content
```
````
- ```rst
.. directivename:: arguments
:key1: val1
:key2: val2
This is
directive content
```
For example, the following code:
```{admonition} This is my admonition
This is my note
```
Will generate this admonition:
This is my note
For directives that take parameters as input, there are two ways to parameterize them.
In each case, the options themselves are given as key: value
pairs. An example of
each is shown below:
Using YAML frontmatter. A block of YAML front-matter just after the
first line of the directive will be parsed as options for the directive. This needs to be
surrounded by ---
lines. Everything in between will be parsed by YAML and
passed as keyword arguments to your directive. For example:
```{code-block} python
---
lineno-start: 10
emphasize-lines: 1, 3
caption: |
This is my
multi-line caption. It is *pretty nifty* ;-)
---
a = 2
print('my 1st line')
print(f'my {a}nd line')
```
---
lineno-start: 10
emphasize-lines: 1, 3
caption: |
This is my
multi-line caption. It is *pretty nifty* ;-)
---
a = 2
print('my 1st line')
print(f'my {a}nd line')
Short-hand options with :
characters. If you only need one or two options for your
directive and wish to save lines, you may also specify directive options as a collection
of lines just after the first line of the directive, each preceding with :
. Then the
leading :
is removed from each line, and the rest is parsed as YAML.
For example:
```{code-block} python
:lineno-start: 10
:emphasize-lines: 1, 3
a = 2
print('my 1st line')
print(f'my {a}nd line')
```
(syntax/directives/parsing)=
Some directives parse the content that is in their content block. MyST parses this content as Markdown.
This means that MyST markdown can be written in the content areas of any directives written in MyST markdown. For example:
```{admonition} My markdown link
Here is [markdown link syntax](https://jupyter.org)
```
Here is [markdown link syntax](https://jupyter.org)
As a short-hand for directives that require no arguments, and when no parameter options are used (see below), you may start the content directly after the directive name.
```{note} Notes require **no** arguments, so content can start here.
```
For special cases, MySt also offers the eval-rst
directive.
This will parse the content as ReStructuredText:
```{eval-rst}
.. figure:: img/fun-fish.png
:width: 100px
:name: rst-fun-fish
Party time!
A reference from inside: :ref:`rst-fun-fish`
A reference from outside: :ref:`syntax/directives/parsing`
```
.. figure:: img/fun-fish.png
:width: 100px
:name: rst-fun-fish
Party time!
A reference from inside: :ref:`rst-fun-fish`
A reference from outside: :ref:`syntax/directives/parsing`
Note how the text is integrated into the rest of the document, so we can also reference party fish anywhere else in the documentation.
You can nest directives by ensuring that the tick-lines corresponding to the outermost directive are longer than the tick-lines for the inner directives. For example, nest a warning inside a note block like so:
````{note}
The next info should be nested
```{warning}
Here's my warning
```
````
Here's how it looks rendered:
The next info should be nested
```{warning}
Here's my warning
```
You can indent inner-code fences, so long as they aren't indented by more than 3 spaces. Otherwise, they will be rendered as "raw code" blocks:
````{note}
The warning block will be properly-parsed
```{warning}
Here's my warning
```
But the next block will be parsed as raw text
```{warning}
Here's my raw text warning that isn't parsed...
```
````
The warning block will be properly-parsed
```{warning}
Here's my warning
```
But the next block will be parsed as raw text
```{warning}
Here's my raw text warning that isn't parsed...
```
This can really be abused if you'd like ;-)
The next info should be nested
`````{warning}
Here's my warning
````{admonition} Yep another admonition
```python
# All this fuss was about this boring python?!
print('yep!')
```
````
`````
Want to use syntax that renders correctly in standard Markdown editors? See the extended syntax option.
:::{note}
This text is **standard** _Markdown_
:::
:::{note} This text is standard Markdown :::
(syntax/roles)=
Roles are similar to directives - they allow you to define arbitrary new functionality, but they are used in-line. To define an in-line role, use the following form:
---
header-rows: 1
---
* - MyST
- reStructuredText
* - ````md
{role-name}`role content`
````
- ```rst
:role-name:`role content`
```
For example, the following code:
Since Pythagoras, we know that {math}`a^2 + b^2 = c^2`
Becomes:
Since Pythagoras, we know that {math}a^2 + b^2 = c^2
You can use roles to do things like reference equations and other items in your book. For example:
```{math} e^{i\pi} + 1 = 0
---
label: euler
---
```
Euler's identity, equation {math:numref}`euler`, was elected one of the
most beautiful mathematical formulas.
Becomes:
---
label: euler
---
Euler's identity, equation {math:numref}euler
, was elected one of the
most beautiful mathematical formulas.
The content of roles is parsed differently depending on the role that you've used.
Some roles expect inputs that will be used to change functionality. For example,
the ref
role will assume that input content is a reference to some other part of the
site. However, other roles may use the MyST parser to parse the input as content.
Some roles also extend their functionality depending on the content that you pass.
For example, following the ref
example above, if you pass a string like this:
Content to display <myref>
, then the ref
will display Content to display
and use
myref
as the reference to look up.
How roles parse this content depends on the author that created the role.
(syntax/roles/special)=
(extra-markdown-syntax)=
In addition to roles and directives, MyST supports extra markdown syntax that doesn't exist in CommonMark. In most cases, these are syntactic short-cuts to calling roles and directives. We'll cover some common ones below.
This table describes the rST and MyST equivalents:
---
header-rows: 1
---
* - Type
- MyST
- reStructuredText
* - Math shortcuts
- `$x^2$`
- N/A
* - Front matter
- ```md
---
key: val
---
```
- ```md
:key: val
```
* - Comments
- `% comment`
- `.. comment`
* - Targets
- `(mytarget)=`
- `.. _mytarget:`
(syntax/frontmatter)=
This is a YAML block at the start of the document, as used for example in jekyll.
:::{seealso} Top-matter is also used for the substitution syntax extension, and can be used to store information for blog posting (see ablog's myst-parser support). :::
(syntax/html_meta)=
The front-matter can contain the special key html_meta
; a dict with data to add to the generated HTML as <meta>
elements.
This is equivalent to using the RST meta
directive.
HTML metadata can also be added globally in the conf.py
via the myst_html_meta
variable, in which case it will be added to all MyST documents.
For each document, the myst_html_meta
dict will be updated by the document level front-matter html_meta
, with the front-matter taking precedence.
:::{tabbed} Sphinx Configuration
language = "en"
myst_html_meta = {
"description lang=en": "metadata description",
"description lang=fr": "description des métadonnées",
"keywords": "Sphinx, MyST",
"property=og:locale": "en_US"
}
:::
:::{tabbed} MyST Front-Matter
---
html_meta:
"description lang=en": "metadata description"
"description lang=fr": "description des métadonnées"
"keywords": "Sphinx, MyST"
"property=og:locale": "en_US"
---
:::
:::{tabbed} RestructuredText
.. meta::
:description lang=en: metadata description
:description lang=fr: description des métadonnées
:keywords: Sphinx, MyST
:property=og:locale: en_US
:::
:::{tabbed} HTML Output
<html lang="en">
<head>
<meta content="metadata description" lang="en" name="description" xml:lang="en" />
<meta content="description des métadonnées" lang="fr" name="description" xml:lang="fr" />
<meta name="keywords" content="Sphinx, MyST">
<meta content="en_US" property="og:locale" />
:::
(syntax/comments)=
You may add comments by putting the %
character at the beginning of a line. This will
prevent the line from being parsed into the output document.
For example, this code:
% my comment
Is below, but it won't be parsed into the document.
% my comment
Since comments are a block-level entity, they will terminate the previous block.
In practical terms, this means that the following lines
will be broken up into two paragraphs, resulting in a new line between them:
```
a line
% a comment
another line
```
a line
% a comment
another line
(syntax/blockbreaks)=
You may add a block break by putting +++
at the beginning of a line.
This constuct's intended use case is for mapping to cell based document formats,
like jupyter notebooks,
to indicate a new text cell. It will not show up in the rendered text,
but is stored in the internal document structure for use by developers.
For example, this code:
+++ some text
Is below, but it won't be parsed into the document.
+++
(syntax/targets)=
Targets are used to define custom anchors that you can refer to elsewhere in your documentation. They generally go before section titles so that you can easily refer to them.
:::{tip}
If you'd like to automatically generate targets for each of your section headers, check out the section of extended syntaxes.
:::
Target headers are defined with this syntax:
(header_target)=
They can then be referred to with the ref inline role:
{ref}`header_target`
By default, the reference will use the text of the target (such as the section title), but also you can directly specify the text:
{ref}`my text <header_target>`
For example, see this ref: {ref}syntax/targets
, and here's a ref back to the top of
this page: {ref}my text <example_syntax>
.
Alternatively using the markdown syntax:
[my text](header_target)
is equivalent to using the any inline role:
{any}`my text <header_target>`
but can also accept "nested" syntax (like bold text) and will recognise document paths that include extensions (e.g. syntax/syntax
or syntax/syntax.md
)
Using the same example, see this ref: , here is a reference back to the top of
this page: my text with nested $\alpha$ syntax, and here is a reference to another page ([](../sphinx/intro.md)
): .
If you wish to have the target's title inserted into your text, you can
leave the "text" section of the markdown link empty. For example, this
markdown: `[](syntax.md)` will result in: [](syntax.md).
Tables can be written using the standard Github Flavoured Markdown syntax:
| foo | bar |
| --- | --- |
| baz | bim |
foo | bar |
---|---|
baz | bim |
Cells in a column can be aligned using the :
character:
| left | center | right |
| :--- | :----: | ----: |
| a | b | c |
left | center | right |
---|---|---|
a | b | c |
:::{note}
Text is aligned by assigning text-left
, text-center
, or text-right
to the cell.
It is then necessary for the theme you are using to include the appropriate css styling.
<table class="colwidths-auto table">
<thead>
<tr><th class="text-left head"><p>left</p></th></tr>
</thead>
<tbody>
<tr><td class="text-left"><p>a</p></td></tr>
</tbody>
</table>
:::
MyST provides a few different syntaxes for including images in your documentation.
The standard Markdown syntax is:
![fishy](img/fun-fish.png)
But you can also enable extended image syntaxes, to control attributes like width and captions. See the extended image syntax guide.
(syntax/footnotes)=
Footnotes use the pandoc specification.
Their labels start with ^
and can then be any alpha-numeric string (no spaces), which is case-insensitive.
- If the label is an integer, then it will always use that integer for the rendered label (i.e. they are manually numbered).
- For any other labels, they will be auto-numbered in the order which they are referenced, skipping any manually numbered labels.
All footnote definitions are collected, and displayed at the bottom of the page (in the order they are referenced). Note that un-referenced footnote definitions will not be displayed.
- This is a manually-numbered footnote reference.[^3]
- This is an auto-numbered footnote reference.[^myref]
[^myref]: This is an auto-numbered footnote definition.
[^3]: This is a manually-numbered footnote definition.
Any preceding text after a footnote definitions, which is indented by four or more spaces, will also be included in the footnote definition, and the text is rendered as MyST Markdown, e.g.
A longer footnote definition.[^mylongdef]
[^mylongdef]: This is the _**footnote definition**_.
That continues for all indented lines
- even other block elements
Plus any preceding unindented lines,
that are not separated by a blank line
This is not part of the footnote.
A longer footnote definition.3
This is not part of the footnote.
Although footnote references can be used just fine within directives, e.g.[^myref],
it it recommended that footnote definitions are not set within directives,
unless they will only be referenced within that same directive:
```md
[^other]
[^other]: A definition within a directive
```
[^other]
[^other]: A definition within a directive
This is because, in the current implementation, they may not be available to reference in text above that particular directive.
By default, a transition line (with a footnotes
class) will be placed before any footnotes.
This can be turned off by adding myst_footnote_transition = False
to the config file.
If you'd like to show backticks inside of your markdown, you can do so by nesting them in backticks of a greater length. Markdown will treat the outer-most backticks as the edges of the "raw" block and everything inside will show up. For example:
`` `hi` ``
will be rendered as: `hi`
and
````
```
hi
```
````
will be rendered as:
```
hi
```