Skip to content

Latest commit

 

History

History
132 lines (82 loc) · 4.23 KB

README.rdoc

File metadata and controls

132 lines (82 loc) · 4.23 KB

Literate Maruku

Literate Maruku is a literate programming libary for ruby based on the markdown libary maruku. This is basically what the name say, isn’t it?

The Basics

There are two possible accesses to the libary. A programming API and a command line interface. The first may be used to write better documented tests, for example. Just write a little bit of code in your test_helper and call Literate Maruku there and your markdown formatted tests will be executed.

The command line interface may the be used inside of a rake task, e.g. to generate some html files out of your test files demonstrating their usage. We have used this approach in ContextR, so have a look there to get some input.

Demonstration of Use

The Markdown Syntax

Literate Maruku simply extends the functionality of Maruku and adds some methods to make standard use cases easier. You may find detailed information about maruku at their project page. They added some nice features to Markdown formatting, esp. the meta data syntax which made implementing literate maruku a charm.

Wanna see examples? Okay, here they are:

Markdown

This is a normal paragraph, followed by a plain old code block

    literate_maruku == maruku + ruby

And the following code block will not only be rendered, but also executed.

    def echo_block(string)
      (0...(text.size)).map{|i| text[0..i]}.reverse.join(" ... ")
    end
{: execute}

And, finally, the following block will be executed and its output will be
rendered as well.

    echo_block("hallo")
{: execute attach_output}

HTML

This is a normal paragraph, followed by a plain old code block

literate_maruku == maruku + ruby

And the following code block will not only be rendered, but also executed.

def echo_block(string)
  (0...(text.size)).map{|i| text[0..i]}.reverse.join(" ... ")
end

And, finally, the following block will be executed and its output will be rendered as well.

echo_block("hallo")
>> "hello ... hell ... hel ... he ... h"

The Command Line Interface

Simply call literate_maruku filename.mkd to load your markdown formatted ruby files. This will execute the code but not generate any output. It basically works like a simpe ruby filename.rb call, but without all the command line parameters the ruby command supports.

If you like to generate some html files, append an additional parameter, which tells literate_maruku where to put the output. literate_maruku --output_path=test filename.mkd would file the output of filename.mkd to test/filename.html. That’s all, folks.

The Programming Interface

To use Literate Maruku in your own special way simply use the LiterateMaruku#require method.

require 'literate_maruku'

LiterateMaruku.require('filename.mkd') # or
LiterateMaruku.require('filename.mkd', :output => "test")

These will have the same result as the command line examples.

If you are unhappy with these little possibilities, no problem: You may still use the standard maruku interface to do with your markdown string, what you like after require’ing literate_maruku the maruku code base is extended for the literate programming style.

Installing & Compatibility

gem install literate_maruku

Literate Maruku is currently only tested and known to work with

  • Ruby 2.7, 3.0, 3.1

Additional Resources

How to submit patches

In order to submit patches, please fork the repository on GitHub, add your patches to your own copy and send a “Pull Request” afterwards. I will then try to add your submissions as soon as possible. Patches containing corresponding tests are always welcome.

Bug reports or general feature requests should be added using GitHub Issues.

License

This code is free to use under the terms of the MIT license.

:include: License.txt