mirror of https://github.com/zulip/zulip.git
277 lines
13 KiB
Markdown
277 lines
13 KiB
Markdown
# Markdown implementation
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Zulip uses a special flavor of Markdown/CommonMark for its message
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formatting. Our Markdown flavor is unique primarily to add important
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extensions, such as quote blocks and math blocks, and also to do
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previews and correct issues specific to the chat context. Beyond
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that, it has a number of minor historical variations resulting from
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its history predating CommonMark (and thus Zulip choosing different
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solutions to some problems) and based in part on Python-Markdown,
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which is proudly a classic Markdown implementation. We reduce these
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variations with every major Zulip release.
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Zulip has two implementations of Markdown. The backend implementation
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at `zerver/lib/markdown/` is based on
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[Python-Markdown](https://pypi.python.org/pypi/Markdown) and is used to
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authoritatively render messages to HTML (and implements
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slow/expensive/complex features like querying the Twitter API to
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render tweets nicely). The frontend implementation is in JavaScript,
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based on [marked.js](https://github.com/chjj/marked)
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(`static/js/echo.js`), and is used to preview and locally echo
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messages the moment the sender hits Enter, without waiting for round
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trip from the server. Those frontend renderings are only shown to the
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sender of a message, and they are (ideally) identical to the backend
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rendering.
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The JavaScript Markdown implementation has a function,
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`markdown.contains_backend_only_syntax`, that is used to check whether a message
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contains any syntax that needs to be rendered to HTML on the backend.
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If `markdown.contains_backend_only_syntax` returns true, the frontend simply won't
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echo the message for the sender until it receives the rendered HTML
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from the backend. If there is a bug where `markdown.contains_backend_only_syntax`
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returns false incorrectly, the frontend will discover this when the
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backend returns the newly sent message, and will update the HTML based
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on the authoritative backend rendering (which would cause a change in
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the rendering that is visible only to the sender shortly after a
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message is sent). As a result, we try to make sure that
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`markdown.contains_backend_only_syntax` is always correct.
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## Testing
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The Python-Markdown implementation is tested by
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`zerver/tests/test_markdown.py`, and the marked.js implementation and
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`markdown.contains_backend_only_syntax` are tested by
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`frontend_tests/node_tests/markdown.js`.
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A shared set of fixed test data ("test fixtures") is present in
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`zerver/tests/fixtures/markdown_test_cases.json`, and is automatically used
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by both test suites; as a result, it is the preferred place to add new
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tests for Zulip's Markdown system. Some important notes on reading
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this file:
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- `expected_output` is the expected output for the backend Markdown
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processor.
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- When the frontend processor doesn't support a feature and it should
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just be rendered on the backend, we set `backend_only_rendering` to
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`true` in the fixtures; this will automatically verify that
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`markdown.contains_backend_only_syntax` rejects the syntax, ensuring
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it will be rendered only by the backend processor.
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- When the two processors disagree, we set `marked_expected_output` in
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the fixtures; this will ensure that the syntax stays that way. If
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the differences are important (i.e. not just whitespace), we should
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also open an issue on GitHub to track the problem.
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- For mobile push notifications, we need a text version of the
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rendered content, since the APNS and GCM push notification systems
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don't support richer markup. Mostly, this involves stripping HTML,
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but there's some syntax we take special care with. Tests for what
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this plain-text version of content should be are stored in the
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`text_content` field.
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If you're going to manually test some changes in the frontend Markdown
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implementation, the easiest way to do this is as follows:
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1. Log in to your development server.
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2. Stop your Zulip server with Ctrl-C, leaving the browser open.
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3. Compose and send the messages you'd like to test. They will be
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locally echoed using the frontend rendering.
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This procedure prevents any server-side rendering. If you don't do
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this, backend will likely render the Markdown you're testing and swap
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it in before you can see the frontend's rendering.
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If you are working on a feature that breaks multiple testcases, and want
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to debug the testcases one by one, you can add `"ignore": true` to any
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testcases in `markdown_test_cases.json` that you want to ignore. This
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is a workaround due to lack of comments support in JSON. Revert your
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"ignore" changes before committing. After this, you can run the frontend
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tests with `tools/test-js-with-node markdown` and backend tests with
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`tools/test-backend zerver.tests.test_markdown.MarkdownTest.test_markdown_fixtures`.
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## Changing Zulip's Markdown processor
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First, you will likely find these third-party resources helpful:
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- **[Python-Markdown](https://pypi.python.org/pypi/Markdown)** is the Markdown
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library used by Zulip as a base to build our custom Markdown syntax upon.
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- **[Python's XML ElementTree](https://docs.python.org/3/library/xml.etree.elementtree.html)**
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is the part of the Python standard library used by Python Markdown
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and any custom extensions to generate and modify the output HTML.
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When changing Zulip's Markdown syntax, you need to update several
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places:
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- The backend Markdown processor (`zerver/lib/markdown/__init__.py`).
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- The frontend Markdown processor (`static/js/markdown.js` and sometimes
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`static/third/marked/lib/marked.js`), or `markdown.contains_backend_only_syntax` if
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your changes won't be supported in the frontend processor.
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- If desired, the typeahead logic in `static/js/composebox_typeahead.js`.
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- The test suite, probably via adding entries to `zerver/tests/fixtures/markdown_test_cases.json`.
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- The in-app Markdown documentation (`markdown_help_rows` in `static/js/info_overlay.js`).
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- The list of changes to Markdown at the end of this document.
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Important considerations for any changes are:
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- Security: A bug in the Markdown processor can lead to XSS issues.
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For example, we should not insert unsanitized HTML from a
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third-party web application into a Zulip message.
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- Uniqueness: We want to avoid users having a bad experience due to
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accidentally triggering Markdown syntax or typeahead that isn't
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related to what they are trying to express.
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- Performance: Zulip can render a lot of messages very quickly, and
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we'd like to keep it that way. New regular expressions similar to
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the ones already present are unlikely to be a problem, but we need
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to be thoughtful about expensive computations or third-party API
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requests.
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- Database: The backend Markdown processor runs inside a Python thread
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(as part of how we implement timeouts for third-party API queries),
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and for that reason we currently should avoid making database
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queries inside the Markdown processor. This is a technical
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implementation detail that could be changed with a few days of work,
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but is an important detail to know about until we do that work.
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- Testing: Every new feature should have both positive and negative
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tests; they're easy to write and give us the flexibility to refactor
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frequently.
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## Per-realm features
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Zulip's Markdown processor's rendering supports a number of features
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that depend on realm-specific or user-specific data. For example, the
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realm could have
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[linkifiers](https://zulip.com/help/add-a-custom-linkifier)
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or [custom emoji](https://zulip.com/help/add-custom-emoji)
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configured, and Zulip supports mentions for streams, users, and user
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groups (which depend on data like users' names, IDs, etc.).
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At a backend code level, these are controlled by the `message_realm`
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object and other arguments passed into `do_convert` (`sent_by_bot`,
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`translate_emoticons`, `mention_data`, etc.). Because
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Python-Markdown doesn't support directly passing arguments into the
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Markdown processor, our logic attaches these data to the Markdown
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processor object via e.g. `_md_engine.zulip_db_data`, and then
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individual Markdown rules can access the data from there.
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For non-message contexts (e.g. an organization's profile (aka the
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thing on the right-hand side of the login page), stream descriptions,
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or rendering custom profile fields), one needs to just pass in a
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`message_realm` (see, for example, `zulip_default_context` for the
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organization profile code for this). But for messages, we need to
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pass in attributes like `sent_by_bot` and `translate_emoticons` that
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indicate details about how the user sending the message is configured.
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## Zulip's Markdown philosophy
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Note that this discussion is based on a comparison with the original
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Markdown, not newer Markdown variants like CommonMark.
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Markdown is great for group chat for the same reason it's been
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successful in products ranging from blogs to wikis to bug trackers:
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it's close enough to how people try to express themselves when writing
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plain text (e.g. emails) that it helps more than getting in the way.
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The main issue for using Markdown in instant messaging is that the
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Markdown standard syntax used in a lot of wikis/blogs has nontrivial
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error rates, where the author needs to go back and edit the post to
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fix the formatting after typing it the first time. While that's
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basically fine when writing a blog, it gets annoying very fast in a
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chat product; even though you can edit messages to fix formatting
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mistakes, you don't want to be doing that often. There are basically
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2 types of error rates that are important for a product like Zulip:
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- What fraction of the time, if you pasted a short technical email
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that you wrote to your team and passed it through your Markdown
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implementation, would you need to change the text of your email for it
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to render in a reasonable way? This is the "accidental Markdown
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syntax" problem, common with Markdown syntax like the italics syntax
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interacting with talking about `char *`s.
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- What fraction of the time do users attempting to use a particular
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Markdown syntax actually succeed at doing so correctly? Syntax like
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required a blank line between text and the start of a bulleted list
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raise this figure substantially.
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Both of these are minor issues for most products using Markdown, but
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they are major problems in the instant messaging context, because one
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can't edit a message that has already been sent before others read it
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and users are generally writing quickly. Zulip's Markdown strategy is
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based on the principles of giving users the power they need to express
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complicated ideas in a chat context while minimizing those two error rates.
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## Zulip's changes to Markdown
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Below, we document the changes that Zulip has against stock
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Python-Markdown; some of the features we modify / disable may already
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be non-standard.
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**Note** This section has not been updated in a few years and is not
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accurate.
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### Basic syntax
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- Enable `nl2br` extension: this means one newline creates a line
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break (not paragraph break).
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- Allow only `*` syntax for italics, not `_`. This resolves an issue where
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people were using `_` and hitting it by mistake too often. Asterisks
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surrounded by spaces won't trigger italics, either (e.g. with stock Markdown
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`You should use char * instead of void * there` would produce undesired
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results).
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- Allow only `**` syntax for bold, not `__` (easy to hit by mistake if
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discussing Python `__init__` or something).
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- Add `~~` syntax for strikethrough.
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- Disable special use of `\` to escape other syntax. Rendering `\\` as
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`\` was hugely controversial, but having no escape syntax is also
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controversial. We may revisit this. For now you can always put
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things in code blocks.
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### Lists
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- Allow tacking a bulleted list or block quote onto the end of a
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paragraph, i.e. without a blank line before it.
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- Allow only `*` for bulleted lists, not `+` or `-` (previously
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created confusion with diff-style text sloppily not included in a
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code block).
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- Disable ordered list syntax: stock Markdown automatically renumbers, which
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can be really confusing when sending a numbered list across multiple
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messages.
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### Links
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- Enable auto-linkification, both for `http://...` and guessing at
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things like `t.co/foo`.
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- Force links to be absolute. `[foo](google.com)` will go to
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`http://google.com`, and not `https://zulip.com/google.com` which
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is the default behavior.
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- Set `title=`(the URL) on every link tag.
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- Disable link-by-reference syntax,
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`[foo][bar]` ... `[bar]: https://google.com`.
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- Enable linking to other streams using `#**streamName**`.
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### Code
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- Enable fenced code block extension, with syntax highlighting.
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- Disable line-numbering within fenced code blocks -- the `<table>`
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output confused our web client code.
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### Other
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- Disable headings, both `# foo` and `== foo ==` syntax: they don't
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make much sense for chat messages.
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- Disabled images with `![]()` (images from links are shown as an inline
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preview).
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- Allow embedding any avatar as a tiny (list bullet size) image. This
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is used primarily by version control integrations.
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- We added the `~~~ quote` block quote syntax.
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