Creating Shortcodes
Overview
Shortcodes are special markdown directives that generate various types of content. Quarto shortcodes are similar in form and function to Hugo shortcodes and WordPress shortcodes.
For example, the following shortcode prints the title
from document metadata:
{{< meta title >}}
Quarto supports several shortcodes natively:
Shortcode | Description |
---|---|
var | Print value from _variables.yml file |
meta | Print value from document metadata |
env | Print system environment variable |
pagebreak | Insert a native page-break |
include | Include contents of another qmd |
This article describes how to create your own shortcodes.
Shortcode Extensions
Before diving into writing custom shortcodes, we’ll talk first about how to distribute your shortcode as a Quarto Extension. While it is possible to use a shortcode by just listing the Lua file in the shortcodes
document option, bundling a shortcode as an an extension makes it much easier for others to install and use your shortcode.
Here is what the source code repository of an an extension named shorty
might look like:
README.md
LICENSE
example.qmd
_extensions/
shorty/
_extension.yml shorty.lua
Note that the only thing strictly required is the _extensions
directory (anything above that is for your own purposes and is ignored during installation). Even so, it’s good practice to include a README.md
and LICENSE
file, and the example.qmd
will be useful for developing your extension.
Here’s what the contents of the files in _extensions/shorty/
might look like:
_extensions/shorty/_extension.yml
title: Shorty
author: Cooltools
version: 1.0.0
contributes:
shortcodes:
- shorty.lua
_extensions/shorty/shorty.lua
function shorty(args)
return pandoc.Str("shorty!")
end
Finally, the example.qmd
file would typically have code that exercises the extension. For example:
example.qmd
---
title: "Shorty Example"
---
{{< shorty >}}
To develop your extension, just make changes to shorty.lua
and render example.qmd
to test them out.
Distribution
if your extension source code it located within a GitHub repository, then it can be installed by referencing the GitHub organization and repository name. For example:
# install the current HEAD of the extension
quarto install extension cooltools/shorty
# install a tagged release of the extension
quarto install extension cooltools/shorty@v1
Note that it is possible to bundle and distribute extensions as simple gzip archives (as opposed to using a GitHub repository as described above). See the article on Distributing Extensions for additional details.
Examples
You might also find it instructive to examine the source code of these shortcode extensions authored by the Quarto team:
Extension | Description |
---|---|
fancy-text | Output nicely formatted versions of fancy strings such as LaTeX and BibTeX in multiple formats. |
fontawesome | Use Font Awesome icons in HTML and PDF documents. |
Shortcode Basics
You can create your own shortcodes using Lua (the same language used for filters). To get started with developing shortcodes:
- Be sure you have a very recent version of Quarto CLI (shortcode extensions require v1.0.15 or greater).
- If necessary, brush up on Developing with Lua (Lua is the language used to create shortcodes).
- Read the documentation on Pandoc Lua Filters, which describes the Lua extension API for Pandoc.
Custom shortcodes are implemented as Lua functions that take one or more arguments and return a Pandoc AST node (or list of nodes).
Here’s the implementation of the env
shortcode that is built in to Quarto:
env.lua
function env(args)
local var = pandoc.utils.stringify(args[1])
local value = os.getenv(var)
if value ~= nil then
return pandoc.Str(value)
else
return pandoc.Null()
end
end
Note that arguments to shortcodes are provided in args
(a 1-based array), and that each argument is a list of Pandoc inlines (i.e. markdown AST parsed from the text).
We use the pandoc.utils.stringify()
function to convert the inlines to an ordinary string, and then the os.getenv()
function to get its value.
You would use this shortcode as follows:
{{< env HOME >}}
If this shortcode was distributed as an extension (i.e. installed into _extensions/env/
for the current project) then it is available for use without any further declaration. If it’s a plain Lua file not enclosed in an extension then you’ll need to explicitly list it in shortcodes
:
shortcodes:
- env.lua
Below we’ll provide a few a few more examples of custom shortcodes and their implementation. In these examples we’ll assume that the shortcode has been distributed as an extension so won’t use the explicit shortcodes:
import shown above.
Example: Raw Output
Shortcodes can tailor their output to the format being rendered to. This is often useful when you want to conditionally generate rich HTML output but still have the same document render properly to PDF or MS Word.
The pagebreak
shortcode generates “native” pagebreaks in a variety of formats. Here’s the implementation of pagebreak
:
pagebreak.lua
function pagebreak()
local raw = {
= '<p style="page-break-after: always;"> </p>',
epub = '<div style="page-break-after: always;"></div>',
html = '\\newpage{}',
latex = '<w:p><w:r><w:br w:type="page"/></w:r></w:p>',
ooxml = '<text:p text:style-name="Pagebreak"/>',
odt = '\\page'
context }
if quarto.doc.isFormat('docx') then
return pandoc.RawBlock('openxml', raw.ooxml)
elseif quarto.doc.isFormat('pdf') then
return pandoc.RawBlock('tex', raw.latex)
elseif quarto.doc.isFormat('odt') then
return pandoc.RawBlock('opendocument', raw.odt)
elseif quarto.doc.isFormat('epub') then
return pandoc.RawBlock('html', raw.epub)
elseif quarto.doc.isFormat('html') then
return pandoc.RawBlock('html', raw.html)
elseif quarto.doc.isFormat('context') then
return pandoc.RawBlock('context', raw.context)
else
-- fall back to insert a form feed character
return pandoc.Para{pandoc.Str '\f'}
end
end
We use the pandoc.RawBlock()
function to output the appropriate raw content for the target format. Note that raw blocks are passed straight through to the output file and are not processed as markdown.
You’d use this shortcode as follows:
{{< pagebreak >}}
Example: Named Arguments
The examples above use either a single argument (env
) or no arguments at all (pagebreak
). Here we demonstrate named argument handling by implementing a git-rev
shortcode that prints the current git revision, providing a short
option to determine whether a short or long SHA1 is displayed:
git.lua
-- run git and read its output
function git(command)
local p = io.popen("git " .. command)
local output = p:read('*all')
:close()
preturn output
end
-- return a table containing shortcode definitions
-- defining shortcodes this way allows us to create helper
-- functions that are not themselves considered shortcodes
return {
["git-rev"] = function(args, kwargs)
-- command line args
local cmdArgs = ""
local short = pandoc.utils.stringify(kwargs["short"])
if short == "true" then
= cmdArgs .. "--short "
cmdArgs end
-- run the command
local cmd = "rev-parse " .. cmdArgs .. "HEAD"
local rev = git(cmd)
-- return as string
return pandoc.Str(rev)
end
}
There are some new things demonstrated here :
Rather than defining our shortcode functions globally, we return a table with the shortcode definitions. This allows us to define helper functions that are not themselves registered as shortcodes. It also enables us to define a shortcode with a dash (
-
) in its name.There is a new argument to our shortcode handler:
kwargs
. This holds any named arguments to the shortcode. As withargs
, values inkwargs
will always be a list of Pandoc inlines (allowing you to accept markdown as an argument). Sinceshort
is a simple boolean value we need to callpandoc.utils.stringify()
to treat it as a string and then compare it to"true"
.
We’d use this shortcode as follows:
---
title: "My Document"
---
{{< git-rev >}} {{< git-rev short=true >}}
Example: Metadata Options
In some cases you may want to provide options that affect how you shortcode behaves. There is a third argument to shortcode handlers (meta
) that provides access to document and/or project level metadata.
Let’s implement a different version of the git-rev
shortcode that emits the revision as a link to GitHub rather than plain text. To do this we make use of github.owner
and github.repo
metadata values:
git.lua
function git(command)
local p = io.popen("git " .. command)
local output = p:read('*all')
:close()
preturn output
end
return {
["git-rev"] = function(args, kwargs, meta)
-- run the command
local rev = git("rev-parse HEAD")
-- target repo
local owner = pandoc.utils.stringify(meta["github.owner"])
local repo = pandoc.utils.stringify(meta["github.repo"])
local url = "https://github.com/"
.. owner .. "/" .. repo .. "/" .. rev
-- return as link
return pandoc.Link(pandoc.Str(rev), url)
end
}
As with args
and kwargs
, meta
values are always provided as a list of Pandoc inlines so often need to be converted to string using pandoc.utils.stringify()
.
To use this shortcode in a document we provide the GitHub info as document options, then include the shortcode where we want the link to be:
---
title: "My Document"
github:
owner: quarto-dev
repo: quarto-cli
---
{{< git-rev >}}
The shortcode registration and GitHub metadata could just as well been provided in a project-level _quarto.yml
file or a directory-level _metadata.yml
file.
Escaping
If you are writing documentation about using variable shortcodes (for example, this article!) you might need to prevent them from being processed. You can do this in two ways:
Escape the shortcode reference with extra braces like this:
{{{< var version >}}}
Add a
shortcodes=false
attribute to any code block you want to prevent processing of shortcodes within:```{shortcodes=false} {{< var version >}} ```