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mkdocs-mermaid2-plugin

THIS IS AN OLD VERSION, KEPT HERE FOR REFERENCE

Use the documentation on ReadTheDocs.

License: MIT PyPI Github Downloads(PyPI)

An MkDocs plugin that renders textual graph descriptions into Mermaid graphs (flow charts, sequence diagrams, pie charts, etc.).

As of version 1.0.0, this plugin works with versions of the Mermaid library > 10, and with lower versions.

Introduction

Mermaid2 allows you to insert mermaid markup in the markdown of your mkdocs pages.

For example, a markdown page containing the following diagram:

```mermaid
graph LR
    hello --> world
    world --> again
    again --> hello
```

will then be displayed in the final HTML page as:

graph LR
    hello --> world
    world --> again
    again --> hello
Loading

The diagram will be rendered on the fly by the web browser, with the use of the mermaid javascript library. mkdocs-mermaid2 takes care of inserting the javascript library into the html page.

You can use all the diagrams types supported by the version of the Mermaid javascript library that you are using (flowchart, class, state, timeline, etc.).

Installation

Automatic

pip install mkdocs-mermaid2-plugin

Manual

Clone this repository in a local directory and install the package:

python setup.py install

Test

For running the examples the test directory, you will also need the mkdocs-material theme. You may install it directly, or use the following command to install the whole package:

pip install mkdocs-mermaid2-plugin[test]

How it works

When converting the markdown into HTML, mkdocs normally inserts the Mermaid code (text) describing the diagram into segments <pre><code class='mermaid>:

<pre><div class="mermaid">
...
</div></pre>

To make the HTML/css page more robust, the mermaid plugin converts those segments into <div> elements in the final HTML page:

<div class="mermaid">
...
</div>

It also inserts a call to the javascript library :

From version 1.0 of mkdocs-mermaid2:

For versions from 10.0.0 of the Mermaid javascript library, the plugin uses the ESM format, since it is the only one available. This requires a specific call from the HTML page e.g.:

<script type="module">
import mermaid from "https://unpkg.com/[email protected]/dist/mermaid.esm.min.mjs"
</script>

For an earlier version of the library, the plugin uses the traditional call from HTML:

<script src="https://unpkg.com/[email protected]/dist/mermaid.min.js">
</script>

To start displaying of the diagrams, the plugin then automatically inserts a separate call to initialize the Mermaid library:

<script>
mermaid.initialize()
</script>

The user's browser will then read this code and render it on the fly.

No svg/png images are produced during the rendering of that graph.

Configuration

Basic configuration

To enable this plugin, you need to declare it in your mkdocs config file (mkdocs.yml).

In order to work, the plugin also requires the mermaid javascript library (in the example below, it fetched from the last version from the unpkg repository; change the version no as needed).

plugins:
    - search
    - mermaid2

Note: If you declare plugins, you need to declare all of them, including search (which would otherwise have been installed by default.)

Important: If you use another theme than material you must use a version of the plugin >= 0.5.0.

Specifying the version of the Mermaid library

For plugin version >= 0.4

By default, the plugin selects a version of the Mermaid javascript library that is known to work (some versions work better than others).

You may specify a different version of the Mermaid library, like so:

plugins:
  - search
  - mermaid2:
      version: 10.0.2

The plugin will insert the correct call to the javascript library inside the final HTML page.

Explicit declaration of the Mermaid library

You may specify the mermaid library explicitly, as long as it is call mermaid (independently of extension):

extra_javascript:
    - https://unpkg.com/[email protected]/dist/mermaid.min.js

This will be translated in the final HTML page as:

<script src="https://unpkg.com/[email protected]/dist/mermaid.min.js">

This will work only for versions of the Mermaid javascript library that can be called in that way, i.e. that do not use the ES Module standard (ESM). Above version 10.0.0 only ESM format libraries are available.

As a workaround you could declare a local script file:

extra_javascript:
    - js/mermaidloader.js

Where js is a subdirectory of the document directory (docs).

If you are using a local javascript file, it is up to you to write the import, with a version of the Mermaid library > 10 e.g.:

import mermaid from "https://unpkg.com/[email protected]/dist/mermaid.esm.min.mjs"

No explicit call to mermaid.initialize() is required, since it is automatically inserted by the plugin.

Usage

General Principle

In order to insert a Mermaid diagram in a markdown page, simply type it using the mermaid syntax, and surround it with the code fence for Mermaid:

```mermaid
graph TD
A[Client] --> B[Load Balancer]
B --> C[Server01]
B --> D[Server02]
```

How to write Mermaid diagrams

Adding arguments to the Mermaid engine

By default, the plugin automatically inserts a Javascript command mermaid.initialize(); in the HTML pages, which starts the interpretation. Sometimes, however, you may want to add some initialization commands (see full list).

For example, you could change the theme of the diagram, using 'dark' instead of the default one. Simply add those arguments in the config file, e.g.

plugins:
    - search
    - mermaid2:
        arguments:
          theme: 'dark'

Testing

To test your website with a diagram, restart the mkdocs server:

mkdocs serve

In your browser, open the webpage on the localhost (by default: https://localhost:8000)

Adding a Javascript callback function

New in 0.3.0

CAUTION: As of the [version 10.0.0 of the javascript Library(https://github.com/mermaid-js/mermaid/blob/develop/CHANGELOG.md#changelog)], callbacks are no longer accepted. If you wish to use callbacks, specify a lower version of the library in the config file.

Use Case

To make modifications that are not possible with css, it can be useful to insert a callback function (Javascript) into the target HTML page.

This can be done using the standard pattern, e.g.:

<script src="js/extra.js">
<script>mermaid.initialize({
    theme: "dark",
    mermaid: {
        callback: myMermaidCallbackFunction
    }
});</script>

In this case, myMermaidCallbackFunctionis located in the js/extra.js on the site's root directory.

Here is a simplistic example:

// js/extra.js
function myMermaidCallbackFunction(id) {
  console.log('myMermaidCallbackFunction', id);

You will see the results if you display the browser's console.

Method

This can be translated into the config (mkdocs.yaml) file as:

plugins:
  - mermaid2:
      arguments:
        theme: dark
        mermaid:
            callback: ^myMermaidCallbackFunction

extra_javascript:
  - https://unpkg.com/mermaid/dist/mermaid.min.js
  - js/extra.js
  1. Note that the name of the function must be preceded by a ^ (caret) to signify it's a literal and not a string.
  2. Consider the directory path for the script as relative to the document directory (docs). Mkdocs will then put it in the proper place in the hierarchy of the html pages.

Tips and Tricks

Setting the security level to "loose"

To access these functions, you need to relax mermaid's security level, (since version 8.2).

This requires, of course, your application taking responsibility for the security of the diagram source.

If that is OK with you, you can set the argument in the configuration of the plugin:

    - mermaid2:
        arguments:
          securityLevel: 'loose'

Formatting text in diagrams

To enable this function, you need to relax mermaid's security level to 'loose'.

You may use HTML in the diagram.

Note: This is guaranteed to work with Mermaid 8.6.4, but does not work e.g. on 8.7.0.

graph LR
    hello["<b>Hello</b>"] --> world["<big><i>World</i></big>"]
    world --> mermaid[mermaid web site]
Loading

Use this in the config file:

extra_javascript:
     - https://unpkg.com/[email protected]/dist/mermaid.min.js

Adding Hyperlinks to a Diagram (versions of Mermaid javascript >~ 8.5.0)

To enable this function, you need to relax mermaid's security level to 'loose'.

Use the click directive in the language (for more information, see Interaction on the official mermaid website).

graph LR
    hello --> world
    world --> mermaid[mermaid web site]
    click mermaid "https://mermaid-js.github.io/mermaid" "Website"
Loading

Adding Hyperlinks to a Diagram (versions of Mermaid javascript <~ 8.5.0)

To enable this function, you need to relax mermaid's security level to 'loose'.

It is possible to add hyperlinks to a diagram, e.g.:

box1[An <b>important</b> <a href="https://google.com">link</a>] 

Auto-configure dark mode based on Host OS

Using a combination of the unquote (^) functionality of this plugin and the prefers-color-scheme CSS media feature, one can have the plugin automatically enable dark mode.

plugins:
  - search
  - mermaid2:
      arguments:
          theme: |
            ^(window.matchMedia && window.matchMedia('(prefers-color-scheme: dark)').matches) ? 'dark' : 'light'

This works well with the scheme: preference option in mkdocs-material and referenced in their documentation.

Material Theme: Switching the Mermaid diagram on the fly between light and dark mode

The Material theme for MkDocs allows toggling between colors. Unfortunately the Mermaid diagram will not switch out of the box from light to dark or vice versa.

This solution is similar to switch the theme according to the OS color, though that earlier, simpler solution cannot toggle dynamically.

A workable solution has been proposed by elgalu (for more information see Issue 39).

mkdocs.yml

(The palette is an example, where primary color, accent, icons, toggle message, etc. can be adapted to your needs.)

theme:
  name: material
  # https://squidfunk.github.io/mkdocs-material/setup/changing-the-colors/#color-palette
  palette:
    - media: "(prefers-color-scheme: light)"
      scheme: default
      primary: indigo
      accent: light-blue
      toggle:
        icon: material/toggle-switch-off-outline
        name: Switch to dark mode
    - media: "(prefers-color-scheme: dark)"
      scheme: slate
      primary: black
      accent: deep orange
      toggle:
        icon: material/toggle-switch
        name: Switch to light mode

  # https://facelessuser.github.io/pymdown-extensions/extensions/superfences/
  pymdownx.superfences:
      custom_fences:
        - name: mermaid
          class: mermaid
          format: !!python/name:mermaid2.fence_mermaid

plugins:
  - mermaid2:
      arguments:
        # test if its __palette_1 (dark) or __palette_2 (light)
        # for mkdocs-material >=8.0.0
        theme: |
          ^(JSON.parse(__md_get("__palette").index == 1)) ? 'dark' : 'light'
#       for mkdocs-material <8.0.0
#         ^(JSON.parse(window.localStorage.getItem(__prefix('__palette'))).index == 1) ? 'dark' : 'light'

extra_javascript:
    - extra/refresh_on_toggle_dark_light.js

The caret operator (^) means "unquote". It is used here to insert Javascript code into the initialization code of mermaid.initialize().

docs/extra/refresh_on_toggle_dark_light.js

To avoid refreshing the page after switching between dark/light modes so that Mermaid diagram can be updated, two listeners must be installed, which are instructed to reload the page, whenever they detect a change.

That is the function of the additional script (refresh_on_toggle_dark_light.js):

var paletteSwitcher1 = document.getElementById("__palette_1");
var paletteSwitcher2 = document.getElementById("__palette_2");

paletteSwitcher1.addEventListener("change", function () {
  location.reload();
});

paletteSwitcher2.addEventListener("change", function () {
  location.reload();
});

Compatibility

List

Here is a short list of compatibilities and incompatibilities for the mermaid plugin:

Item Type Status Note
mkdocs theme YES (default) plugin version >= 0.5
material theme YES
windmill theme YES plugin version >= 0.5
admonition extension YES
footnotes extension YES
minify plugin NO Breaks the mermaid diagrams.
pymdownx.highlight extension NO Use pymdownx.superfences
pymdownx.superfences extension OK see paragraph
search plugin OK Do not forget to declare it in config.yml.

Using Mermaid and code highlighting at the same time

IMPORTANT Do NOT use Superfences unless you want code highlighting.

Usage

It is quite natural that we want to display mermaid diagrams, while having usual code highlighting (for bash, python, etc.).

Use of markdown extensions

Symptom: The mermaid code is not transformed into a diagram, but processed as code to be displayed (colors, etc.).

The likely reason is that you have a markdown extension that interprets all fenced code as code to display, and it prevents the mkdocs-mermaid2 plugin from doing its job.

Do not use the codehilite markdown extension.

Instead, use facelessusers's splendid PyMdown's superfences; and use the custom fences facility.

Declaring the superfences extension

In the config file (mkdocs.yaml):

markdown_extensions:
  - pymdownx.superfences:
      # make exceptions to highlighting of code:
      custom_fences:
        - name: mermaid
          class: mermaid
          format: !!python/name:mermaid2.fence_mermaid

It means:

  1. Take the fenced parts marked with mermaid
  2. Turn them into class='mermaid'.
  3. To format those pieces, use the function fence_mermaid, from the mermaid2 package.

There are two functions:

  • fence_mermaid for the general case.
  • fence_mermaid_custom for the Material theme (note the use of the custom suffix)

Hence, for the Material theme (only):

markdown_extensions:
  - pymdownx.superfences:
      # make exceptions to highlighting of code:
      custom_fences:
        - name: mermaid
          class: mermaid
          format: !!python/name:mermaid2.fence_mermaid_custom

IMPORTANT: Note that the superfences will be slightly more demanding with HTML tags inside a mermaid diagram: take care to always close the HTML tags that require it (e.g. <small> must have its corresponding </small> tag). Otherwise, the extension system will attempt to close those tags and it will break the diagram.

Troubleshooting

The mermaid diagram is not displayed (or displayed incorrectly)

To start with, use a simple diagram that you know is syntactically correct.

e.g.

```mermaid
graph TD
A[Client] --> B[Load Balancer]
B --> C[Server01]
B --> D[Server02]
```

Seeing an error message at the place of the diagram?

In recent versions of the javascript library (> 8.6.0), a pretty error message is displayed in case of incorrect syntax:

error message

In earlier versions, the library displays nothing, which can be confusing.

If you see the error message, it is at least an indication that the mermaid javascript library was called.

The mermaid source code appears as-is (not read)?

In that case, the javascript library was probably not called. See the next questions.

Using superfences, but no diagram is displayed?

If you are using the superfences extension, but you see the source code, you probably forgot to declare the custom_fences. Se more explanations under Declaring the superfences extension

Is mkdocs' version up to date (>= 1.1) ?

Use mkdocs -v.

If not, update it:

pip install mkdocs --upgrade

Or, if you cloned this repo:

python setup.py install

Is the javascript library properly called?

In order to work, the proper javascript library must called from the html page (this is done automatically). If necessary check the link used in the HTML page generated, e.g.:

<script type="module">import mermaid from "https://unpkg.com/[email protected]/dist/mermaid.esm.min.mjs"</script>

Every diagram should start with a valid preamble, e.g. graph TD.

In case of doubt, you may want to test your diagram in the Mermaid Live Editor.

Note, however, that the Mermaid Live Editor does not support loose mode (with HTML code in the mermaid code).

A certain type of diagram (e.g. mindmap, etc.) is not displayed, or the syntax is incorrectly interpreted?

Check the version of the javascript mermaid library you are using (it's indicated in the error message; as a last resort, check in the html page). You can change the library version if needed.

Other issues

Rich text diagrams, or links are not displayed properly?

  1. As a first step, set the security level to 'loose'.
  2. Make sure you use a compatible version of the javascript library (8.6.4, 8.8.0, 8.7.0). In principle, the version used by the plugin is compatible (see instructions to change the version).

With pymdownx.details, diagrams in collapsed elements are not displayed?

This fix is experimental (it has been tested once and it worked).

If you declared pymdownx.details in config.yml (under markdown_extensions), you may notice that a diagram will not display correctly in that case:

???- note "Collapsed"
    ```mermaid
    graph TD
    A[Client] --> B[Load Balancer]
    ```
    This is additional text.

Depending on the browser, you may have a dot, or nothing, etc.

In that case, use the following declaration in your markdown_extensions:

  - pymdownx.superfences:
      # make exceptions to highlighting of code:
      custom_fences:
        - name: mermaid
          class: mermaid
          format: !!python/name:mermaid2.fence_mermaid_custom

The use of this function will trigger a custom behavior, with two effects:

  1. It will create custom HTML tags, <pre class='mermaid'><code>.
  2. It will deactivate the auto-load.

You must then use a special custom javascript loader for the diagram, developed by facelessuser:

  1. Copy the code from the website of PyMdown Extension.
  2. Paste it in a file in your project: docs/js/loader.js
  3. Declare this script in the config.yml file:
extra_javascript:
     - js/loader.js

Using the mermaid2.dumps() function

As a bonus, mermaid2 exports the function dumps() which produces a string describing a JavaScript object. It can be used to help generate JavaScript code from Python (this is typically needed, when generating an HTML page that contains JavaScript).

A JavaScript object is not exactly the same as a JSON object. The reason why this why introduced is that sometimes one needs to produce a key/value pair as:

foo = MyFunctioName

where the value is not a string but an identifier (in this case: a function name).

Here is an example:

import mermaid2

obj = { "hello": "world", 
    "barbaz": "^bazbar",
    "foo": {"bar": 2},
    "bar": True}

s = mermaid2.dumps(obj)

The purpose of the caret is to specify that the value should be an identifier and not a string. The result will be:

{
    hello: "world",
    barbaz: bazbar,
    foo: {
        bar: 2
    },
    bar: true
}

How to contribute

Contributions are welcome.

Use the Issues to signal a bug or propose a feature you believe is necessary.

If this is a usage question, prefer the discussions.

Always open an Issue and consider the answers, before submitting a PR.

Credits

mkdocs-mermaid2 is a fork from Pugong Liu's excellent project, which is no longer maintained. This new plugin offers expanded documentation as well as new functions.

It is also compatible with versions of the mermaid library > 10.0.

Thanks to all the members of the community who participated to the improvement of this project with ideas and PRs.