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README.org
chaseadamsio/goorgeous
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goorgeous is a Go Org to HTML Parser.
Pronounced: Go? Org? Yes!
"Org mode is for keeping notes, maintaining TODO lists, planning projects, and authoring documents with a fast and effective plain-text system."
The purpose of this package is to come as close as possible as parsing an *.org
document into HTML, the same way one might publish with org-publish-html from Emacs.
Installation
go get -u github.com/chaseadamsio/goorgeous
Usage
Org Headers
To retrieve the headers from a []byte
, call OrgHeaders
and it will return a map[string]interface{}
:
input := "#+title: goorgeous\n* Some Headline\n"
out := goorgeous.OrgHeaders(input)
map[string]interface{}{
"title": "goorgeous"
}
Org Content
After importing github.com/chaseadamsio/goorgeous
, you can call Org
with a []byte
and it will return an html
version of the content as a []byte
input := "#+TITLE: goorgeous\n* Some Headline\n"
out := goorgeous.Org(input)
out
will be:
<h1>Some Headline</h1>/n
Why?
First off, I've become an unapologetic user of Emacs & ever since finding org-mode
I use it for anything having to do with writing content, organizing my life and keeping documentation of my days/weeks/months.
Although I like Emacs & emacs-lisp
, I publish all of my html sites with Hugo Static Site Generator and wanted to be able to write my content in org-mode
in Emacs rather than markdown.
Hugo's implementation of templating and speed are unmatched, so the only way I knew for sure I could continue to use Hugo and write in org-mode
seamlessly was to write a golang parser for org content and submit a PR for Hugo to use it.
Acknowledgements
I leaned heavily on russross' blackfriday markdown renderer as both an example of how to write a parser (with some updates to leverage the go we know today) and reusing the blackfriday HTML Renderer so I didn't have to write my own!