Wed Jan 03 / Written by: Jonny Mnemonic
After learning some Astro, I couldn't stop!
Table of contents
It uses TextMate grammar to tokenize strings, and colors the tokens with VS Code themes. In short, Shiki generates HTML that looks exactly like your code in VS Code, and it works great in your static website generator.
// Example JavaScript
const shiki = require('shiki')
shiki.getHighlighter({
theme: 'nord'
}).then(highlighter => {
console.log(highlighter.codeToHtml(`console.log('shiki');`, {
lang: 'js'
}))
})
// <pre class="shiki" style="background-color: #2e3440"><code>
// <!-- Highlighted Code -->
// </code></pre>
const fs = require('fs')
const markdown = require('markdown-it')
const shiki = require('shiki')
shiki.getHighlighter({
theme: 'nord'
}).then(highlighter => {
const md = markdown({
html: true,
highlight: (code, lang) => {
return highlighter.codeToHtml(code, { lang })
}
})
const html = md.render(fs.readFileSync('index.md', 'utf-8'))
const out = `
<title>Shiki</title>
<link rel="stylesheet" href="style.css">
${html}
<script src="index.js"></script>
`
fs.writeFileSync('index.html', out)
console.log('done')
})
import { tokenColors } from "./custom-theme.json";
// https://astro.build/config
// VS Code Theme is:
export default defineConfig({
markdown: {
shikiConfig: {
theme: {
name: "custom",
type: "dark",
settings: tokenColors,
},
wrap: true,
skipInline: false,
drafts: false,
},
},
});