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mkdocs-codeinclude-plugin

A plugin for mkdocs that allows some advanced 'includes' functionality to be used for embedded code blocks. This is effectively an extended Markdown format, but is intended to degrade gracefully when rendered with a different renderer.

Installation

  1. Install the plugin:

    pip install mkdocs-codeinclude-plugin
    
  2. Add codeinclude to the list of your MkDocs plugins (typically listed in mkdocs.yml):

    plugins:
      - codeinclude
  3. The plugin should be configured use an appropriate form of tabbed fences, depending on the version of pymdown-extensions that is installed. Tabbed fences provide a 'title' for code blocks, and adjacent code blocks will appear as a multi-tabbed code block.

    a. For version 8.x of pymdown-extensions, use the following or leave blank (default):

    plugins:
      - codeinclude:
          title_mode: pymdownx.tabbed 

    b. For version 7.x or lower of pymdown-extensions, use the following:

    plugins:
      - codeinclude:
          title_mode: legacy_pymdownx.superfences

    c. If no tabbed fences should be used at all:

    plugins:
      - codeinclude:
          title_mode: none

Usage

A codeinclude block resembles a regular markdown link surrounded by a pair of XML comments, e.g.:

<!--codeinclude-->
[Human readable title for snippet](./relative_path_to_example_code.java) targeting_expression
<!--/codeinclude-->

Where targeting_expression could be:

  • block:someString or
  • inside_block:someString

If these are provided, the macro will seek out any line containing the token someString and grab the next curly brace delimited block that it finds. block will grab the starting line and closing brace, whereas inside_block will omit these. If no targeting_expression is provided, the whole file is included.

e.g., given:

public class FooService {

    public void doFoo() {
        foo.doSomething();
    }

}

If we use block:doFoo as our targeting expression, we will have the following content included into our page:

public void doFoo() {
    foo.doSomething();
}

Whereas using inside_block:doFoo we would just have the inner content of the method included:

foo.doSomething();

Note that:

  • Any code included will be have its indentation reduced
  • Every line in the source file will be searched for an instance of the token (e.g. doFoo). If more than one line includes that token, then potentially more than one block could be targeted for inclusion. It is advisable to use a specific, unique token to avoid unexpected behaviour.

When we wish to include a section of code that does not naturally appear within braces, we can simply insert our token, with matching braces, in a comment. While a little ugly, this has the benefit of working in any context, even in languages that do not use curly braces, and is easy to understand. For example:

public class FooService {

    public void boringMethod() {
        doSomethingBoring();
        
        // doFoo {
        doTheThingThatWeActuallyWantToShow();
        // }
    }

}

will be rendered as:

doTheThingThatWeActuallyWantToShow();

Building the Project

Install the dependencies:

pip install -r requirements.txt
pip install pytest # install pytest to run the tests

Running tests

To run the tests:

pytest

Formatting code

Code is formatted with Black. To apply formatting:

black codeinclude tests

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  • Python 98.3%
  • Java 1.1%
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