Github flavored Markdown and pygments highlighting in Jekyll

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遥遥无期 2020-12-13 00:50

I\'ve deployed my Jekyll blog on a VPS. I would now like to add Github-flavored Markdown to it, using Pygments highlighting, but I don\'t know which files do I have to edit

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  • 2020-12-13 01:04

    In the config file change

     pygments:    false 
    

    to

     pygments:    true
    

    This will mean when you write code sections in the markdown file (great resource http://daringfireball.net/projects/markdown/) they will use the pygments styling. Make sure you have installed, this is a mistake i made. Also once its installed you will need to create a css file for the styling to take place (sounds obvious but i made this mistake)

     pygmentize -S default -f html > stylesheets/pygments.css
    

    You can change default to anyone of the themes found here:

    http://pygments.org/demo/35195/

    With regards to markdown I have read that in order to get pygments to work you need to markdown to be maruku which you already have set up in the config file.

    Hope this helps, I have found Jekyll is a brillant blogging platform but very under documented.

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  • 2020-12-13 01:05

    The best parts of Jekyll are, as said here,

    ...It takes a template directory (representing the raw form of a website), runs it through Textile or Markdown and Liquid converters, and spits out a complete, static website...

    That means, you get Markdown and pygments highlighting by default.

    You can discard or use the default _config.yaml for this setup. With your existing config, you might want to set pygments to true: pygments: true.

    Here's what you do for

    • Markdown: just name your file as *.markdown, for example 2012-12-01-my-post.markdown and place it anywhere inside the root directory. Normally, you would place it in _posts.

      When jekyll parses this file, it'll pass it through markdown filter. As an added bonus, you get to save as *.textile and it parses using textile. And, ofcourse, you can keep it .html so no parsing takes place for markdown.

    • pygments: Just do this with your code:

      {% highlight python %}
      def yourfunction():
           print "Hello World!"
      {% endhighlight %}
      

      You also get linenumbers by doing:

      {% highlight python linenos %}   
      {% endhighlight %}
      

    Edit: And also, You'll need to generate the syntax stylesheet using the command

    pygmentize -S default -f html > style.css
    

    as mentioned here and by @joshuahornby10. Include style.css in your html, obviously. Then, your code will be syntax-highlighted with pygments.

    Oh, and you needn't change any settings in _config.yaml for this to work. Just run your site using jekyll --server --auto and see if it's looking good. Side note, when editing the _config file you will need to stop the auto run and re run jekyll for any changes to take place.

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  • 2020-12-13 01:10

    Edit: Easier now

    as of Jekyll >= 0.12.1 redcarpet2 is natively supported by Jekyll, so you can simply set your config to markdown: redcarpet and you are good to go with GFM / fenced code blocks without the rest of this mumbojumbo...

    Original answer

    You explicitly ask for Github-flavored markdown, so I presume you aren't looking for answers that create code blocks with the non-markdown liquid format:

    {% highlight python %}
    def yourfunction():
         print "Hello World!"
    {% endhighlight %}
    

    but would rather be able to write something with fenced code blocks:

    ```python
    def yourfunction():
         print "Hello World!"
    ```
    

    etc. For this, you will want to use the redcarpet markdown parser.

    Github-flavored markdown uses a markdown parser called "Redcarpet" 1. Ironically, though Github flavored markdown uses redcarpet2, this markdown parser is not supported by Jekyll by default. Instead, you can add this as a plugin by installing that ruby gem

    gem install redcarpet
    

    and then adding the redcarpet2 Jekyll plugin. (Installing a plugin in Jekyll amounts to placing the .rb ruby script given in that repository into your _plugins directory. Can be in a subdirectory of _plugins too).

    Then, as explained on the documentation there, edit your _config.yml to use redcarpet2:

    markdown: redcarpet2
    redcarpet:
      extensions: ["no_intra_emphasis", "fenced_code_blocks", "autolink", "strikethrough", "superscript"]
    

    which adds the common extensions provided by github-flavored-markdown aka redcarpet2 (Well, almost. This won't do github specific markdown things like identify issues by number, or commits by hash, so they aren't technically the same).

    Having the plugin means, for the moment, you will have to build your site locally and copy the _site to github if you are hosting your site there, as redcarpet2 isn't available on the Github version of the jekyll engine (see this open issue on Jekyll)

    Note: You don't need all the markdown editors you've specified in your _config.yml by the way. For a basic example using redcarpet2, you might want to see this config and the associated jekyll directory that goes with it.

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  • 2020-12-13 01:24

    Since cboettig posted his answer, GitHub has stopped supporting redcarpet. If you want GitHub Flavored Markdown you now specify it directly as markdown: GFM in your _config.yml.

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