Wrap selected elements with a given element
npm i -S rehype-wrap
const wrap = require('rehype-wrap')
const rehype = require('rehype')
rehype()
.use(wrap, {/* options */})
.process(/* html string */)
.then(/* vfile */)
.catch(/* handle any errors */)
Select an element to be wrapped. Expects a string selector that can be passed to hast-util-select (supported selectors). If wrap.selector
is not set then wrap will check for a body
element and wrap all elements inside. Otherwise, if there is no body
element, wrap treats the html as a fragment and wraps everything.
Element to wrap around wrap.selector
. Expects a string selector
that can be parsed into html using hast-util-parse-selector (see readme)
# dependencies
npm i unified to-vfile remark-parse remark-rehype vfile-reporter rehype-document rehype-stringify remark-wrap
# example.md
```js
const foo = 'bar'
```
/* example.js */
'use strict'
const unified = require('unified')
const toVfile = require('to-vfile')
const remarkParse = require('remark-parse')
const remarkRehype = require('remark-rehype')
const vfileReporter = require('vfile-reporter')
const rehypeDocument = require('rehype-document')
const rehypeStringify = require('rehype-stringify')
const rehypeWrap = require('rehype-wrap')
const markdown = toVfile.readSync('./example.md')
unified()
.use(remarkParse)
.use(remarkRehype)
.use(rehypeDocument)
.use(rehypeWrap, {wrapper: 'div.markdown-body'})
.use(rehypeStringify)
.process(markdown, (err, file) => {
console.error(vfileReporter(err ||file))
console.log(String(file))
})
<!— output —>
<!DOCTYPE html>
<html lang="en">
<head>
<meta charset="utf-8">
<meta name="viewport" content="width=device-width, initial-scale=1">
</head>
<body><div class="markdown-body">
<h1>Foo</h1>
<pre><code class="language-js">const foo = 'bar'
</code></pre>
</div></body>
</html>
Rehype-wrap depends on a few great packages you should check out.
- hast-util-parse-selector - used to parse a selector into an element.
- hast-util-select - used to select an element to wrap.
- unist-util-visit - used to visit elements and their parent element.
MIT © Paul Zimmer