Markdown
Markdown is a lightweight markup language for adding formatting elements to plain text. MPS recognizes Markdown files, provides a dedicated editor with highlighting, completion, and formatting, and shows the rendered HTML in a live preview pane. Support is based on the CommonMark specification.
Create a new Markdown file
By default, MPS recognizes any file with the .md or .markdown extension as a Markdown file.
Right-click a directory in the Project tool window Alt+1 and select .
Alternatively, you can select the necessary directory, press Alt+Insert, and then select File.
Enter a name for your file with a recognized extension, for example: readme.md.
The Markdown editor provides several basic formatting actions in the floating toolbar that appears when you select a text fragment. You can use the preview pane to see the rendered HTML.
There is also completion for links to files in the current project, for example, if you need to reference source code, images, or other Markdown files. For more information, refer to Links.
Code blocks
To insert a fenced code block, use triple backticks ```
before and after the code block. If you specify the language for the code block, by default, the Markdown editor injects the corresponding language.
This enables syntax highlighting and other coding assistance features for the specified language: completion, inspections, and intention actions.
Disable coding assistance in code blocks
If your code blocks are not meant to be syntactically correct, you may want to disable code injection and syntax errors in code blocks.
Press Ctrl+Alt+S to open settings and then select
.Clear the following options:
Inject languages in code fences
Show problems in code fences
Click OK to apply the changes.
Run commands from Markdown files
When you clone a project, there is usually a README.md file with instructions and commands to run the application, configure your environment, and so on. MPS detects these commands and provides gutter icons for running the commands.
Click the corresponding gutter icon or press Ctrl+Shift+F10 while the caret is at the command that you want to run.
You can disable the gutter icons for running commands in Markdown files in IDE settings Ctrl+Alt+S under Detect commands that can be run right from Markdown files checkbox.
: clear theFor more information, refer to Markdown language settings.
Diagrams
The Markdown editor can render diagrams defined with Mermaid and PlantUML. This is disabled by default and requires additional steps.
Enable Mermaid diagram support
Press Ctrl+Alt+S to open settings and then select
.Find and install the Mermaid plugin.
Enable PlantUML diagram support
Press Ctrl+Alt+S to open settings and then select
.Install and enable PlantUML under Markdown Extensions.
After MPS downloads the relevant extension, click OK to apply the changes.
HTML preview
By default, the Markdown editor shows a preview pane for rendered HTML code next to the Markdown source. You can click Editor or Preview in the top right corner of the Markdown editor to show only the editor or the preview pane.
Split editor and preview horizontally
By default, the editor and the preview are split vertically (side by side), which is convenient for wide monitors. You can also split it horizontally, so that the preview is displayed in the lower part of the editor, which is more convenient for portrait displays.
In the top-right corner of the editor, click to open the Editor Preview pane.
Click to split the editor and the preview horizontally.
To configure the default layout of the preview, you can use the Preview layout list in .
Disable editor and preview scrollbar synchronization
By default, the scrollbars in the editor and in the preview pane are synchronized, meaning that the location in the preview pane corresponds to the location in the source.
Press Ctrl+Alt+S to open settings and then select
.Clear Sync scroll in the editor and preview.
Click OK to apply the changes.
Change preview font size
Although you can define the font size for the preview by customizing the CSS, it is possible to set the font size for the built-in style sheets.
Press Ctrl+Alt+S to open settings and then select
.Set the font size in the Preview font size field.
Click OK to apply the changes.
If you often need to adjust the preview font size, instead of changing it in the settings, assign shortcuts to the following two actions: Increase Preview Font Size and Decrease Preview Font Size.
Custom CSS
MPS provides default style sheets for rendering HTML in the preview pane. These style sheets were designed to be consistent with the default UI themes. You can configure specific CSS rules to make small presentation changes: for example, change the font size for headings or line spacing in lists. Or you can provide an entirely new CSS to better match your expected output: for example, if you want to replicate the GitHub Markdown style.
Configure CSS for rendering HTML preview
Press Ctrl+Alt+S to open settings and then select
.Configure the settings under Custom CSS:
Select Load from to specify the location of a custom CSS file.
Select CSS rules rules to enter specific CSS rules that you want to override.
Click OK to apply the changes.
Here is an example of custom CSS rules:
Images
By default, Markdown uses the following syntax for images, which you can enter yourself with completion for paths inside your project:
Insert image
Press Ctrl+U.
Alternatively, press Alt+Insert to open the Insert popup, and select Image.
Specify the path to the image in the Insert Image dialog.
Click OK.
To configure the image, click in the gutter on the line where the image is inserted. For example, you can select Convert to HTML in the Insert Image and Configure Image dialogs to insert the image with raw HTML markup in the Markdown file.
This will produce the following:
Links
You can define links with the following syntax:
Insert link
Press Ctrl+Shift+U.
Alternatively, press Alt+Insert to open the Insert popup, and select Link.
If you had some text highlighted, it will be enclosed in [ ]
as the text of the link. If you had a URL copied to the clipboard, it will be enclosed in ( )
as the link URL.
The optional title appears when you hover over the link.
Link to other files and headers
Besides URLs, you can add links to any header in the current file:
# This is a chapter Link to [this chapter](#this-is-a-chapter)You can also link to any other file relative to the current file:
# This is a chapter Link to [a chapter in another file](another-file.md#some-chapter)
MPS provides completion for link labels that are available in the current context: files relative to the current file and valid header labels.
Ctrl+Click on a link label to navigate to the referenced header.
You can invoke Find Usages Alt+F7 on a header or label to see all the links pointing to this label. You can also invoke the Rename refactoring Shift+F6 on a header or label to rename it along with all relevant usages.
Generate table of contents
You can generate a properly indented list of headers available in the current file.
Place the caret where you want to add the table of contents for the current file and press Alt+Insert to open the Insert popup.
Select Table of Contents.
If you already have a table of contents in this file, select Update Table of Contents to update it after you add, remove, or rename some headers.
The table of contents is enclosed in <!-- TOC -->
comment tags.
Tables
MPS provides support for creating and editing tables in Markdown.
Insert table
Press Alt+Insert to open the Insert popup, and select Table.
Select the size of the table (number of rows and columns).
Type the contents of each cell and press Tab to move the caret from one cell to the next. To add a new row, press Shift+Enter. As you type, MPS automatically adjusts the rows and columns to properly fit the contents in table cells.
MPS highlights any table with incorrect formatting and allows you to fix it. When you select a quick fix from the list, MPS displays a preview with the result of applying the quick fix.
By default, MPS shows table column and row markers in the editor. Use these markers to select, move, insert, remove, and align the columns and rows. The markers are a special type of inlay hints specific to Markdown files. If you don't see these markers, press Ctrl+Alt+S to open the IDE settings, go to , and check the option.
Click the column marker to perform the following actions:
Move Column Left
Move Column Right
Insert Column Left
Insert Column Right
Select Column Cells
Align Left
Align Center
Align Right
Remove Column
Click the row marker to perform the following actions:
Move Row Up
Move Row Down
Insert Row Above
Insert Row Below
Select Row
Remove Row
Floating toolbar
When you select some text in a Markdown file, MPS shows a floating toolbar with various formatting options.
Select between a regular text and a header with levels from H1
to H6
Bold Ctrl+B
Italic Ctrl+I
Strikethrough Ctrl+Shift+S
Code Ctrl+Shift+C
Create Link Ctrl+Shift+U
Unordered List
Ordered List
Checkmark List
Customize the floating toolbar
Press Ctrl+Alt+S to open settings and then select
.Add or remove the necessary actions under Markdown Editor Floating Toolbar.
For more information, refer to Menus and toolbars.
Click OK to apply changes.
Hide the floating toolbar
Press Ctrl+Alt+S to open settings and then select
.Select Hide floating toolbar under Markdown.
Click OK to apply changes.
Reformat Markdown files
MPS can reformat Markdown files with proper line wrappings, blank lines, and indentation.
You can trigger reformatting automatically on VCS commits, when running builds, or some other action, or you can invoke it manually at any time:
In the main menu, go to
or press Ctrl+Alt+L.
MPS formats the contents according to the code style settings for Markdown files.
Configure Markdown code style settings
Press Ctrl+Alt+S to open settings and then select
.
For more information, refer to Markdown code style settings.
Convert Markdown files
The Markdown plugin can export your Markdown files to HTML and PDF out of the box. If you configure Pandoc, it will also be able to export to and import from Microsoft Word files (DOCX).
Configure Pandoc
MPS should be able to detect your Pandoc installation automatically. If not, perform the following:
In the main menu, go to
.Under Pandoc Settings specify the location of the Pandoc executable and the location where you want to store images imported from Microsoft Word documents.
Click OK to apply the changes.
Import from Microsoft Word
In the main menu, go to
.Specify the location of the document.
Export Markdown file to another format
MPS can export to Microsoft Word (requires Pandoc), PDF, and HTML.
Click Editor and Preview or Preview to show the HTML preview pane in the editor.
In the main menu, go to
.In the Export Markdown dialog, specify the name, location, and format for the output file and click OK.
Productivity tips
Customize highlighting for Markdown
MPS highlights various Markdown elements according to the color scheme settings.
In the Settings dialog (Ctrl+Alt+S) , select Editor | Color Scheme | Markdown.
Select the color scheme, accept the highlighting settings inherited from defaults, or customize them as described in Colors and fonts.
Navigate in a large Markdown file
Use the Structure tool window Alt+7 or the File Structure popup Ctrl+F12 to view and jump to the relevant headings.
Add comments to a Markdown file
Markdown does not have dedicated syntax for commenting out lines. However, it is possible to emulate a comment line using a link label without an address, like this:
Place the caret at the line that you want to comment out and press Ctrl+/.
This will add a link label with the commented out text in parentheses and a blank line before it if necessary. Press the same shortcut to uncomment.
Wrap lines and fill paragraphs
By default, MPS doesn't add hard wraps to long lines automatically. It will wrap lines when you reformat the file.
Press Ctrl+Alt+S to open settings and then select Markdown code style settings to enable automatic line breaks when typing.
. ConfigureAlternatively, disable hard wraps entirely to preserve paragraphs that are longer than the configured maximum line length.