magic.lambda.html
15.2.0
See the version list below for details.
dotnet add package magic.lambda.html --version 15.2.0
NuGet\Install-Package magic.lambda.html -Version 15.2.0
<PackageReference Include="magic.lambda.html" Version="15.2.0" />
paket add magic.lambda.html --version 15.2.0
#r "nuget: magic.lambda.html, 15.2.0"
// Install magic.lambda.html as a Cake Addin #addin nuget:?package=magic.lambda.html&version=15.2.0 // Install magic.lambda.html as a Cake Tool #tool nuget:?package=magic.lambda.html&version=15.2.0
HTML and Markdown support in Hyperlambda
This project provides HTML helper slots for Magic. More specifically, it provides the following slots.
- [html2lambda] - Creates a lambda object out of an HTML input string.
- [lambda2html] - Creates an HTML string out of the specified lambda object.
- [markdown2html] - Creates HTML out of the specified Markdown input string.
[html2lambda]
.html:@"<html>
<head>
<title>Howdy</title>
</head>
<body>
<p class=""foo"">Howdy <strong>world</strong> - This is cool!</p>
</body>
</html>"
html2lambda:x:-
The above results in something resembling the following.
html2lambda
html
head
title
#text:Howdy
body
p
@class:foo
#text:"Howdy "
strong
#text:world
#text:" - This is cool!"
Attributes starts out with the @
character, children nodes does not - While text content inside of elements will
have the name of #text
. This implies you'll need to use escaped expression iterators when traversing the resulting node
lambda object. For instance, to retrieve the above title
element's inner text, you could use something such as the
following.
get-value:x:-/**/title/*\#text
[lambda2html]
This is the reverse of [html2lambda] and returns HTML resulting from the specified lambda object. Below is example usage.
.html:@"<html>
<head>
<title>Howdy</title>
</head>
<body>
<p class=""foo"">Howdy <strong>world</strong> - This is cool!</p>
</body>
</html>"
html2lambda:x:-
lambda2html:x:-/*
The above will result in the following HTML, formatted for brevity.
<html>
<head>
<title>Howdy</title>
</head>
<body>
<p class="foo">Howdy <strong>world</strong> - This is cool!</p>
</body>
</html>
[markdown2html]
This library can also handle Markdown, since Markdown is arguably just another representation of HTML. The [markdown2html] slot converts the specified Markdown content to HTML. Basic usage is as follows.
.yaml:@"
Howdy world
* Foo
* Bar
"
markdown2html:x:@.yaml
The above will produce the following result.
markdown2html:@"<p>Howdy world</p>
<ul>
<li>Foo</li>
<li>Bar</li>
</ul>
Front matter
The [markdown2html] slot can also handle "front matter", which allows you to inject YAML at the front
of your Markdown. Front matter again is just a YAML declaration injected at the front of your Markdown,
separated by ---
to separate your YAML from your Markdown. This allows you to add structured data to
associate with your Markdown content.
.yaml:@"---
foo: bar
---
Howdy world
* Foo
* Bar
"
markdown2html:x:@.yaml
Internally, the library will invoke [yaml2lambda] for any front matter declarations to actually parse the specified YAML front matter parts, implying for details about how this part works, please refer to the "magic.lambda.json" project.
Project website
The source code for this repository can be found at github.com/polterguy/magic.lambda.html, and you can provide feedback, provide bug reports, etc at the same place.
Quality gates
Product | Versions Compatible and additional computed target framework versions. |
---|---|
.NET | net5.0 was computed. net5.0-windows was computed. net6.0 was computed. net6.0-android was computed. net6.0-ios was computed. net6.0-maccatalyst was computed. net6.0-macos was computed. net6.0-tvos was computed. net6.0-windows was computed. net7.0 was computed. net7.0-android was computed. net7.0-ios was computed. net7.0-maccatalyst was computed. net7.0-macos was computed. net7.0-tvos was computed. net7.0-windows was computed. net8.0 was computed. net8.0-android was computed. net8.0-browser was computed. net8.0-ios was computed. net8.0-maccatalyst was computed. net8.0-macos was computed. net8.0-tvos was computed. net8.0-windows was computed. |
.NET Core | netcoreapp2.0 was computed. netcoreapp2.1 was computed. netcoreapp2.2 was computed. netcoreapp3.0 was computed. netcoreapp3.1 was computed. |
.NET Standard | netstandard2.0 is compatible. netstandard2.1 was computed. |
.NET Framework | net461 was computed. net462 was computed. net463 was computed. net47 was computed. net471 was computed. net472 was computed. net48 was computed. net481 was computed. |
MonoAndroid | monoandroid was computed. |
MonoMac | monomac was computed. |
MonoTouch | monotouch was computed. |
Tizen | tizen40 was computed. tizen60 was computed. |
Xamarin.iOS | xamarinios was computed. |
Xamarin.Mac | xamarinmac was computed. |
Xamarin.TVOS | xamarintvos was computed. |
Xamarin.WatchOS | xamarinwatchos was computed. |
-
.NETStandard 2.0
- HtmlAgilityPack (>= 1.11.39)
- magic.node.extensions (>= 15.2.0)
- magic.signals.contracts (>= 15.2.0)
- Markdig (>= 0.30.4)
NuGet packages (1)
Showing the top 1 NuGet packages that depend on magic.lambda.html:
Package | Downloads |
---|---|
magic.library
Helper project for Magic to wire up everything easily by simply adding one package, and invoking two simple methods. When using Magic, this is (probably) the only package you should actually add, since this package pulls in everything else you'll need automatically, and wires up everything sanely by default. To use package go to https://polterguy.github.io |
GitHub repositories
This package is not used by any popular GitHub repositories.
Version | Downloads | Last updated |
---|---|---|
17.3.9 | 234 | 2/17/2024 |
17.3.7 | 151 | 2/12/2024 |
17.3.6 | 126 | 2/12/2024 |
17.3.4 | 134 | 2/9/2024 |
17.3.3 | 107 | 2/8/2024 |
17.3.2 | 126 | 2/2/2024 |
17.3.1 | 114 | 1/30/2024 |
17.2.1 | 122 | 1/30/2024 |
17.2.0 | 143 | 1/22/2024 |
17.1.7 | 189 | 1/12/2024 |
17.1.6 | 171 | 1/11/2024 |
17.1.5 | 185 | 1/5/2024 |
17.0.1 | 227 | 1/1/2024 |
17.0.0 | 340 | 12/14/2023 |
16.11.5 | 343 | 11/12/2023 |
16.9.0 | 322 | 10/9/2023 |
16.7.0 | 549 | 7/11/2023 |
16.4.1 | 396 | 7/2/2023 |
16.4.0 | 410 | 6/22/2023 |
16.3.1 | 349 | 6/7/2023 |
16.3.0 | 347 | 5/28/2023 |
16.1.9 | 634 | 4/30/2023 |
15.10.11 | 487 | 4/13/2023 |
15.9.1 | 607 | 3/27/2023 |
15.9.0 | 458 | 3/24/2023 |
15.8.2 | 500 | 3/20/2023 |
15.7.0 | 398 | 3/6/2023 |
15.5.0 | 1,579 | 1/28/2023 |
15.2.0 | 675 | 1/18/2023 |
15.1.0 | 1,147 | 12/28/2022 |
14.5.7 | 712 | 12/13/2022 |
14.5.5 | 805 | 12/6/2022 |
14.5.1 | 660 | 11/23/2022 |
14.5.0 | 615 | 11/18/2022 |
14.4.5 | 722 | 10/22/2022 |
14.4.1 | 753 | 10/22/2022 |
14.4.0 | 663 | 10/17/2022 |
14.3.1 | 1,264 | 9/12/2022 |
14.3.0 | 653 | 9/10/2022 |
14.1.3 | 895 | 8/7/2022 |
14.1.2 | 670 | 8/7/2022 |
14.1.1 | 641 | 8/7/2022 |
14.0.14 | 690 | 7/26/2022 |
14.0.12 | 669 | 7/24/2022 |
14.0.11 | 660 | 7/23/2022 |
14.0.10 | 642 | 7/23/2022 |
14.0.9 | 667 | 7/23/2022 |
14.0.8 | 719 | 7/17/2022 |
14.0.5 | 804 | 7/11/2022 |
14.0.4 | 752 | 7/6/2022 |
14.0.3 | 701 | 7/2/2022 |
14.0.2 | 662 | 7/2/2022 |
14.0.0 | 866 | 6/25/2022 |
13.4.0 | 2,057 | 5/31/2022 |
13.3.4 | 1,445 | 5/9/2022 |
13.3.0 | 969 | 5/1/2022 |
13.2.0 | 1,159 | 4/21/2022 |
13.1.0 | 1,002 | 4/7/2022 |
13.0.0 | 722 | 4/5/2022 |
11.0.5 | 1,397 | 3/2/2022 |
11.0.4 | 775 | 2/22/2022 |
11.0.3 | 745 | 2/9/2022 |
11.0.2 | 786 | 2/6/2022 |
11.0.1 | 784 | 2/5/2022 |
10.0.21 | 766 | 1/28/2022 |
10.0.20 | 770 | 1/27/2022 |
10.0.19 | 748 | 1/23/2022 |
10.0.18 | 718 | 1/17/2022 |
10.0.15 | 923 | 12/31/2021 |
10.0.14 | 560 | 12/28/2021 |
10.0.7 | 1,459 | 12/22/2021 |
10.0.5 | 735 | 12/18/2021 |
9.9.9 | 1,657 | 11/29/2021 |
9.9.3 | 919 | 11/9/2021 |
9.9.2 | 647 | 11/4/2021 |
9.9.0 | 737 | 10/30/2021 |
9.8.9 | 692 | 10/29/2021 |
9.8.7 | 653 | 10/27/2021 |
9.8.6 | 624 | 10/27/2021 |
9.8.5 | 706 | 10/26/2021 |
9.8.0 | 1,344 | 10/20/2021 |
9.7.9 | 627 | 10/19/2021 |
9.7.5 | 1,493 | 10/14/2021 |
9.7.0 | 857 | 10/9/2021 |
9.6.6 | 1,193 | 8/14/2021 |
9.2.0 | 6,246 | 5/26/2021 |
9.1.4 | 1,255 | 4/21/2021 |
9.1.0 | 1,038 | 4/14/2021 |
9.0.0 | 850 | 4/5/2021 |
8.9.9 | 985 | 3/30/2021 |
8.9.3 | 1,536 | 3/19/2021 |