Syntax highlighting
There are two primary approaches for adding syntax highlighting to MDX:
- composition via the MDXProvider
- remark plugin
It’s typically preferred to take the compositional approach, but both will be documented here.
Composition
The MDXProvider provides
a way to map components to be rendered for a given Markdown element. So,
this allows you to choose a specific component for the code
block. To
get started you can wrap your app in the MDXProvider and add in a component
to ensure it’s being picked up:
Using the MDXProvider
// src/App.jsimport React from 'react'import {MDXProvider} from '@mdx-js/react'const components = {pre: props => <div {...props} />,code: props => <pre style={{ color: 'tomato' }} {...props} />}export default props => (<MDXProvider components={components}><main {...props}></main></MDXProvider>)
When you render your app you should now see the color become tomato
for
any code block found in your MDX files.
prism-react-renderer
Now that you have a custom component being rendered for code blocks you can choose any React component library to handle the syntax highlighting. A solid library to choose is prism-react-renderer.
You can install it with:
yarn add prism-react-renderer
Build a CodeBlock component
You can essentially cut and paste the entire example into a new
component file. The only big difference is the MDX will pass in the
code string as children
so you will need to destructure that prop
and pass it to Highlight as the code
prop.
// src/CodeBlock.jsimport React from 'react'import Highlight, {defaultProps} from 'prism-react-renderer'export default ({children}) => {return (<Highlight {...defaultProps} code={children} language='javascript'>{({className, style, tokens, getLineProps, getTokenProps}) => (<pre className={className} style={{...style, padding: '20px'}}>{tokens.map((line, i) => (<div key={i} {...getLineProps({line, key: i})}>{line.map((token, key) => (<span key={key} {...getTokenProps({token, key})} />))}</div>))}</pre>)}</Highlight>)}
Now you should see syntax highlighting in your MDX files. However, right now
javascript
is hardcoded as the language. You will need to take the language
from the code fence and pass it to Highlight directly. MDX will pass the language
as className
so you can pull out the language with:
const language = className.replace(/language-/, '')
All together
import React from 'react'import Highlight, {defaultProps} from 'prism-react-renderer'export default ({children, className}) => {const language = className.replace(/language-/, '')return (<Highlight {...defaultProps} code={children} language={language}>{({className, style, tokens, getLineProps, getTokenProps}) => (<pre className={className} style={{...style, padding: '20px'}}>{tokens.map((line, i) => (<div key={i} {...getLineProps({line, key: i})}>{line.map((token, key) => (<span key={key} {...getTokenProps({token, key})} />))}</div>))}</pre>)}</Highlight>)}
Remark plugin
In addition to composition you can use any plugin from the remark ecosystem. One solid library for syntax highlighting is @mapbox/rehype-prism.
Edit this page on GitHub// webpack.config.jsconst rehypePrism = require('@mapbox/rehype-prism')module.exports = {module: {// ...rules: [// ...{test: /.mdx?$/,use: ['babel-loader',{resolve: '@mdx-js/loader',options: {rehypePlugins: [rehypePrism]}}]}]}}