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markdown-viewer

Markdown (.md file) Viewer WebExtension. Displays markdown documents beautified in your browser.

Markdown is a lightweight markup language which uses plain text to describe formatting information, such as # Heading, 1. numbered lists, **bold**, etc. This add-on identifies markdown documents by the extension in the URL (one of .markdown, .md, .mdown, .mdwn, .mkd, .mkdn). When you navigate to a markdown document, if the content is plain text, not already styled (by GitHub for example), this add-on formats it into HTML (with headings, ordered lists, bold text, etc.) using markup from the document and displays it directly in your browser.

Unicode Characters

So, non-ASCII characters in your document aren't displaying correctly? Special characters like " á " appear as " á "? This is a problem of character encoding, which concerns converting a file (a sequence of octets) into text (a sequence of characters) and back. By the time Firefox activates the Markdown Viewer Web Extension for your document, the file is already converted into text, correctly or incorrectly. If the file begins with a Byte Order Marker (BOM), a pseudo-character which tells how the file is encoded, then Firefox will see it and use that encoding. Otherwise, Firefox may have decoded the file with the wrong encoding. Although UTF-8 is the modern de facto standard encoding, Firefox defaults to using your system's regional encoding, yielding incorrect results.

Some extensions have worked around this by re-loading the file and explicitly decoding it as UTF-8, but it is a pain to do so. Plus, this extension is intended to be a light and simple wrapper around the markdown-to-HTML converter, markdown-it.

When the markdown document is obtained from a web site, the site should return a Content-Type header which specifies the encoding. If it does not and the file lacks a BOM, you're out of luck. Contact the web site owner.

When the markdown is loaded from a local file, there are no HTML headers to lean on. Fortunately, Firefox now has a setting which allows specifying that you want to use UTF-8 for local files without a BOM. Go to about:config, search for intl.charset.fallback.utf8_for_file, and set its value to true. It should look better now.

Viewing Original Markdown

To keep it simple, the extension does not support on and off states. If the document has one of the supported extensions, it should convert. Some web sites however, like raw.githubusercontent.com, return CORS headers, in which case Firefox will not inject this extension's content scripts, so it cannot convert the document.

If you're viewing pretty markdown and you want to see the original source text, right-click and select "View Page Source". (Make sure you don't have any text selected to see that option.) Of course, you can also (Ctrl-S) save the document to a file and open it in any text editor.

Saving Converted Markdown

If you would like to save the HTML-converted text, it is possible to do so in the desktop versions of Firefox.

  • Open developer tools with F12.
  • In the Inspector tab, select the <html> root element.
  • Right-click > Copy > Outer HTML.
  • Paste the text into your favorite text editor and save.

Custom Appearance

You don't like how the styled markdown looks? There are currently 2 default styles to choose from (not from this repo − under MIT):

There are also a number of highlight.js styles to choose from. Styles ending in auto will automatically pick the dark and light variant based on the prefers-color-scheme value of your browser.

Using CSS, you can further customize the appearance any way you like it. View Add-ons (about:addons), and click Options for the Markdown Viewer. There is a box to enter your Custom CSS text. (Sorry, there is not currently a "user-friendly" drop-down option.) As the instructions there state, click or tab out of the text box to save your changes. The CSS is not validated, so you may want to create your CSS outside the options page (or lift it from a site that you like), and paste it in. If you have entered some changes that you don't want to keep, refresh the options page to discard changes.

For example to assign a maximum width root element in the styled markdown:

.markdownRoot {
    margin: 0 auto;
    max-width: 888px;
    padding: 45px;
    border: lightgrey thin solid;
}

"Can You Add This Feature?"

This is an open-source project with the most liberal usage and change license there is. Please feel free to modify it to meet your needs, and to contribute your improvement back to the community.

Think only experts can do that? Although I am a programmer, I can only just make my way around JavaScript, and I'm a total beginner with the WebExtension browser plugin API. I needed a markdown viewer, and the plugin API which the existing add-on had used was deprecated and removed, so I adapted that add-on to the new technology.

I expect the feature set to grow, not from a single author, but by the contributions of users like you who need some additional capabilities. Several features have been added by community contributors who needed them, which include:

  • checkbox support
  • anchored headers
  • reload maintaining scroll location
  • custom CSS

Many thanks to them and to our future contributors. Pull requests are welcomed.

To Build The Extension

  • Required:
  • Run build.bat (Windows) or build.sh (Linux)

To Test The Extension

Firefox won't install the generated .zip file permanently until it's signed by Mozilla. You can test any changes using the cloned project files.

Before that you’ll need to have generated katex dist files with:

cd lib/katex
npm install
USE_TTF=false USE_WOFF=false USE_WOFF2=false npm run build
  • In a command prompt, navigate to the project root folder (containing the manifest.json) and run web-ext run.
  • Or to install the extension temporarily in Firefox:
    • First, uninstall this add-on if you have it already
    • Navigate to "about:debugging"
    • Click "Load Temporary Add-on"
    • Navigate to the project root folder and open the manifest.json file.

Support for local files on Linux

Firefox on Linux may not know how to handle markdown files by default (see #2). There are a number of possible workarounds for this (see this SuperUser question for example). Here are the 2 options that work the best:

  1. One workaround is to add a new MIME type for markdown file extensions. Add the following XML to ~/.local/share/mime/packages/text-markdown.xml:
<?xml version="1.0"?>
<mime-info xmlns='http://www.freedesktop.org/standards/shared-mime-info'>
  <mime-type type="text/plain">
    <glob pattern="*.md"/>
    <glob pattern="*.mkd"/>
    <glob pattern="*.mkdn"/>
    <glob pattern="*.mdwn"/>
    <glob pattern="*.mdown"/>
    <glob pattern="*.markdown"/>
  </mime-type>
</mime-info>

Then run

$ update-mime-database ~/.local/share/mime
  1. Another workaround (which might cover other OSs as well), is to edit Firefox’s private mime types.

These mime types are stored in a file indicated by helpers.private_mime_types_file, by default it is ~/.mime.types. Create this file if it does not exist, otherwise edit it, and add the following line:

type=text/plain exts=md,mkd,mkdn,mdwn,mdown,markdown, desc="Markdown document"

Then restart firefox.

Important note: On some systems, e.g. Ubuntu 21.10 or newer, firefox may be installed with a system like snap, which prevents it from reading files from your disk such as ~/.mime.types, see #86. In that case you need to use a path accessible to firefox, and expand the ~ to the full path of your home, e.g. use as filename and config value: /home/me/snap/firefox/common/mime.types − where me is your username. A suitable directory is likely the parent of .mozilla in your profile path, which you can find in about:profiles.