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Trent Mick edited this page Jul 16, 2011 · 6 revisions

link-patterns extra

The link-patterns extra enables mapping of given regex patterns in text to links. The link_patterns list on the Markdown class provides the mapping.

For example, the following with map "recipe NNNN" and "komodo bug NNNN" to appropriate links:

>>> import markdown2, re
>>> link_patterns = [
...    (re.compile("recipe\s+(\d+)", re.I), r"http://code.activestate.com/recipes/\1/"),
...    (re.compile("(?:komodo\s+)?bug\s+(\d+)", re.I), r"http://bugs.activestate.com/show_bug.cgi?id=\1"),
... ]
>>> markdown2.markdown('Recipe 123 and Komodo bug 234 are related.'
...     extras=["link-patterns"], link_patterns=link_patterns)
'<p><a href="http://code.activestate.com/recipes/123/">Recipe 123</a> and \
<a href="http://bugs.activestate.com/show_bug.cgi?id=234">Komodo bug 234</a> are related.</p>'

Here is a script that uses link-patterns to auto-link UncycloWords (for Uncyclo syntaxes that do that):

https://github.com/trentm/python-markdown2/blob/master/sandbox/wiki.py

link patterns file

For the command-line interface, the --link-patterns-file option has been added. A "link patterns file" has one link pattern per line of the form:

<regex-pattern> <href-pattern>

For example:

/recipe\s+(\d+)/i               http://code.activestate.com/recipes/\1/
/(?:komodo\s+)?bug\s+(\d+)/i    http://bugs.activestate.com/show_bug.cgi?id=\1

Spaces are not allowed in the <href-pattern> (to simplify parsing). Lines beginning with a hash (#) are comments.

$ python markdown2.py -x link-patterns --link-patterns-file patterns foo.text

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