ref: 5ba49c8778351ca407fd608d9f8e9269c91c9c1f
dir: /docs/content/en/getting-started/configuration-markup.md/
--- title: Configure Markup description: How to handle Markdown and other markup related configuration. date: 2019-11-15 categories: [getting started,fundamentals] keywords: [configuration,highlighting] weight: 65 sections_weight: 65 slug: configuration-markup toc: true --- ## Configure Markup {{< new-in "0.60.0" >}} See [Goldmark](#goldmark) for settings related to the default Markdown handler in Hugo. Below are all markup related configuration in Hugo with their default settings: {{< code-toggle config="markup" />}} **See each section below for details.** ### Goldmark [Goldmark](https://github.com/yuin/goldmark/) is from Hugo 0.60 the default library used for Markdown. It's fast, it's [CommonMark](https://spec.commonmark.org/0.29/) compliant and it's very flexible. Note that the feature set of Goldmark vs Blackfriday isn't the same; you gain a lot but also lose some, but we will work to bridge any gap in the upcoming Hugo versions. This is the default configuration: {{< code-toggle config="markup.goldmark" />}} For details on the extensions, refer to [this section](https://github.com/yuin/goldmark/#built-in-extensions) of the Goldmark documentation Some settings explained: unsafe : By default, Goldmark does not render raw HTMLs and potentially dangerous links. If you have lots of inline HTML and/or JavaScript, you may need to turn this on. typographer : This extension substitutes punctuations with typographic entities like [smartypants](https://daringfireball.net/projects/smartypants/). autoHeadingIDType ("github") {{< new-in "0.62.2" >}} : The strategy used for creating auto IDs (anchor names). Available types are `github`, `github-ascii` and `blackfriday`. `github` produces GitHub-compatible IDs, `github-ascii` will drop any non-Ascii characters after accent normalization, and `blackfriday` will make the IDs work as with [Blackfriday](#blackfriday), the default Markdown engine before Hugo 0.60. Note that if Goldmark is your default Markdown engine, this is also the strategy used in the [anchorize](/functions/anchorize/) template func. ### Blackfriday [Blackfriday](https://github.com/russross/blackfriday) was Hugo's default Markdown rendering engine, now replaced with Goldmark. But you can still use it: Just set `defaultMarkdownHandler` to `blackfriday` in your top level `markup` config. This is the default config: {{< code-toggle config="markup.blackFriday" />}} ### Highlight This is the default `highlight` configuration. Note that some of these settings can be set per code block, see [Syntax Highlighting](/content-management/syntax-highlighting/). {{< code-toggle config="markup.highlight" />}} For `style`, see these galleries: * [Short snippets](https://xyproto.github.io/splash/docs/all.html) * [Long snippets](https://xyproto.github.io/splash/docs/longer/all.html) For CSS, see [Generate Syntax Highlighter CSS](/content-management/syntax-highlighting/#generate-syntax-highlighter-css). ### Table Of Contents {{< code-toggle config="markup.tableOfContents" />}} These settings only works for the Goldmark renderer: startLevel : The heading level, values starting at 1 (`h1`), to start render the table of contents. endLevel : The heading level, inclusive, to stop render the table of contents. ordered : Whether or not to generate an ordered list instead of an unordered list. ## Markdown Render Hooks {{< new-in "0.62.0" >}} Note that this is only supported with the [Goldmark](#goldmark) renderer. Render Hooks allow custom templates to override markdown rendering functionality. You can do this by creating templates with base names `render-{feature}` in `layouts/_default/_markup`. You can also create type/section specific hooks in `layouts/[type/section]/_markup`, e.g.: `layouts/blog/_markup`.{{< new-in "0.71.0" >}} The features currently supported are: * `image` * `link` * `heading` {{< new-in "0.71.0" >}} You can define [Output-Format-](/templates/output-formats) and [language-](/content-management/multilingual/)specific templates if needed. Your `layouts` folder may look like this: ```bash layouts └── _default └── _markup ├── render-image.html ├── render-image.rss.xml └── render-link.html ``` Some use cases for the above: * Resolve link references using `.GetPage`. This would make links portable as you could translate `./my-post.md` (and similar constructs that would work on GitHub) into `/blog/2019/01/01/my-post/` etc. * Add `target=_blank` to external links. * Resolve and [process](/content-management/image-processing/) images. * Add [header links](https://remysharp.com/2014/08/08/automatic-permalinks-for-blog-posts). ### Render Hook Templates The `render-link` and `render-image` templates will receive this context: Page : The [Page](/variables/page/) being rendered. Destination : The URL. Title : The title attribute. Text : The rendered (HTML) link text. PlainText : The plain variant of the above. The `render-heading` template will receive this context: Page : The [Page](/variables/page/) being rendered. Level : The header level (1--6) Anchor : An auto-generated html id unique to the header within the page Text : The rendered (HTML) text. PlainText : The plain variant of the above. #### Link with title Markdown example: ```md [Text](https://www.gohugo.io "Title") ``` Here is a code example for how the render-link.html template could look: {{< code file="layouts/_default/_markup/render-link.html" >}} <a href="{{ .Destination | safeURL }}"{{ with .Title}} title="{{ . }}"{{ end }}{{ if strings.HasPrefix .Destination "http" }} target="_blank" rel="noopener"{{ end }}>{{ .Text | safeHTML }}</a> {{< /code >}} #### Image Markdown example: ```md ![Text](https://d33wubrfki0l68.cloudfront.net/c38c7334cc3f23585738e40334284fddcaf03d5e/2e17c/images/hugo-logo-wide.svg "Title") ``` Here is a code example for how the render-image.html template could look: {{< code file="layouts/_default/_markup/render-image.html" >}} <p class="md__image"> <img src="{{ .Destination | safeURL }}" alt="{{ .Text }}" {{ with .Title}} title="{{ . }}"{{ end }} /> </p> {{< /code >}} #### Heading link example Given this template file {{< code file="layouts/_default/_markup/render-heading.html" >}} <h{{ .Level }} id="{{ .Anchor | safeURL }}">{{ .Text | safeHTML }} <a href="#{{ .Anchor | safeURL }}">¶</a></h{{ .Level }}> {{< /code >}} And this markdown ```md ### Section A ``` The rendered html will be ```html <h3 id="section-a">Section A <a href="#section-a">¶</a></h3> ```