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303 lines
12 KiB
Markdown
303 lines
12 KiB
Markdown
---
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title: Making your own plugins
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---
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> [!warning]
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> This part of the documentation will assume you have working knowledge in TypeScript and will include code snippets that describe the interface of what Quartz plugins should look like.
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Quartz's plugins are a series of transformations over content. This is illustrated in the diagram of the processing pipeline below:
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![[quartz transform pipeline.png]]
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All plugins are defined as a function that takes in a single parameter for options `type OptionType = object | undefined` and return an object that corresponds to the type of plugin it is.
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```ts
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type OptionType = object | undefined
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type QuartzPlugin<Options extends OptionType = undefined> = (opts?: Options) => QuartzPluginInstance
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type QuartzPluginInstance =
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| QuartzTransformerPluginInstance
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| QuartzFilterPluginInstance
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| QuartzEmitterPluginInstance
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```
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The following sections will go into detail for what methods can be implemented for each plugin type. Before we do that, let's clarify a few more ambiguous types:
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- `BuildCtx` is defined in `quartz/ctx.ts`. It consists of
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- `argv`: The command line arguments passed to the Quartz [[build]] command
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- `cfg`: The full Quartz [[configuration]]
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- `allSlugs`: a list of all the valid content slugs (see [[paths]] for more information on what a `ServerSlug` is)
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- `StaticResources` is defined in `quartz/resources.tsx`. It consists of
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- `css`: a list of URLs for stylesheets that should be loaded
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- `js`: a list of scripts that should be loaded. A script is described with the `JSResource` type which is also defined in `quartz/resources.tsx`. It allows you to define a load time (either before or after the DOM has been loaded), whether it should be a module, and either the source URL or the inline content of the script.
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## Transformers
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Transformers **map** over content, taking a Markdown file and outputting modified content or adding metadata to the file itself.
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```ts
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export type QuartzTransformerPluginInstance = {
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name: string
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textTransform?: (ctx: BuildCtx, src: string | Buffer) => string | Buffer
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markdownPlugins?: (ctx: BuildCtx) => PluggableList
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htmlPlugins?: (ctx: BuildCtx) => PluggableList
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externalResources?: (ctx: BuildCtx) => Partial<StaticResources>
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}
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```
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All transformer plugins must define at least a `name` field to register the plugin and a few optional functions that allow you to hook into various parts of transforming a single Markdown file.
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- `textTransform` performs a text-to-text transformation _before_ a file is parsed into the [Markdown AST](https://github.com/syntax-tree/mdast).
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- `markdownPlugins` defines a list of [remark plugins](https://github.com/remarkjs/remark/blob/main/doc/plugins.md). `remark` is a tool that transforms Markdown to Markdown in a structured way.
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- `htmlPlugins` defines a list of [rehype plugins](https://github.com/rehypejs/rehype/blob/main/doc/plugins.md). Similar to how `remark` works, `rehype` is a tool that transforms HTML to HTML in a structured way.
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- `externalResources` defines any external resources the plugin may need to load on the client-side for it to work properly.
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Normally for both `remark` and `rehype`, you can find existing plugins that you can use to . If you'd like to create your own `remark` or `rehype` plugin, checkout the [guide to creating a plugin](https://unifiedjs.com/learn/guide/create-a-plugin/) using `unified` (the underlying AST parser and transformer library).
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A good example of a transformer plugin that borrows from the `remark` and `rehype` ecosystems is the [[plugins/Latex|Latex]] plugin:
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```ts title="quartz/plugins/transformers/latex.ts"
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import remarkMath from "remark-math"
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import rehypeKatex from "rehype-katex"
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import rehypeMathjax from "rehype-mathjax/svg"
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import { QuartzTransformerPlugin } from "../types"
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interface Options {
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renderEngine: "katex" | "mathjax"
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}
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export const Latex: QuartzTransformerPlugin<Options> = (opts?: Options) => {
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const engine = opts?.renderEngine ?? "katex"
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return {
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name: "Latex",
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markdownPlugins() {
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return [remarkMath]
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},
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htmlPlugins() {
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if (engine === "katex") {
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// if you need to pass options into a plugin, you
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// can use a tuple of [plugin, options]
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return [[rehypeKatex, { output: "html" }]]
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} else {
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return [rehypeMathjax]
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}
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},
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externalResources() {
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if (engine === "katex") {
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return {
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css: [
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// base css
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"https://cdnjs.cloudflare.com/ajax/libs/KaTeX/0.16.9/katex.min.css",
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],
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js: [
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{
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// fix copy behaviour: https://github.com/KaTeX/KaTeX/blob/main/contrib/copy-tex/README.md
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src: "https://cdnjs.cloudflare.com/ajax/libs/KaTeX/0.16.9/contrib/copy-tex.min.js",
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loadTime: "afterDOMReady",
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contentType: "external",
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},
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],
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}
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} else {
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return {}
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}
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},
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}
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}
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```
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Another common thing that transformer plugins will do is parse a file and add extra data for that file:
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```ts
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export const AddWordCount: QuartzTransformerPlugin = () => {
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return {
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name: "AddWordCount",
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markdownPlugins() {
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return [
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() => {
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return (tree, file) => {
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// tree is an `mdast` root element
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// file is a `vfile`
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const text = file.value
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const words = text.split(" ").length
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file.data.wordcount = words
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}
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},
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]
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},
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}
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}
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// tell typescript about our custom data fields we are adding
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// other plugins will then also be aware of this data field
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declare module "vfile" {
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interface DataMap {
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wordcount: number
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}
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}
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```
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Finally, you can also perform transformations over Markdown or HTML ASTs using the `visit` function from the `unist-util-visit` package or the `findAndReplace` function from the `mdast-util-find-and-replace` package.
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```ts
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export const TextTransforms: QuartzTransformerPlugin = () => {
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return {
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name: "TextTransforms",
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markdownPlugins() {
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return [() => {
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return (tree, file) => {
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// replace _text_ with the italics version
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findAndReplace(tree, /_(.+)_/, (_value: string, ...capture: string[]) => {
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// inner is the text inside of the () of the regex
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const [inner] = capture
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// return an mdast node
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// https://github.com/syntax-tree/mdast
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return {
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type: "emphasis",
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children: [{ type: 'text', value: inner }]
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}
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})
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// remove all links (replace with just the link content)
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// match by 'type' field on an mdast node
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// https://github.com/syntax-tree/mdast#link in this example
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visit(tree, "link", (link: Link) => {
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return {
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type: "paragraph"
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children: [{ type: 'text', value: link.title }]
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}
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})
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}
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}]
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}
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}
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}
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```
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All transformer plugins can be found under `quartz/plugins/transformers`. If you decide to write your own transformer plugin, don't forget to re-export it under `quartz/plugins/transformers/index.ts`
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A parting word: transformer plugins are quite complex so don't worry if you don't get them right away. Take a look at the built in transformers and see how they operate over content to get a better sense for how to accomplish what you are trying to do.
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## Filters
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Filters **filter** content, taking the output of all the transformers and determining what files to actually keep and what to discard.
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```ts
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export type QuartzFilterPlugin<Options extends OptionType = undefined> = (
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opts?: Options,
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) => QuartzFilterPluginInstance
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export type QuartzFilterPluginInstance = {
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name: string
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shouldPublish(ctx: BuildCtx, content: ProcessedContent): boolean
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}
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```
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A filter plugin must define a `name` field and a `shouldPublish` function that takes in a piece of content that has been processed by all the transformers and returns a `true` or `false` depending on whether it should be passed to the emitter plugins or not.
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For example, here is the built-in plugin for removing drafts:
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```ts title="quartz/plugins/filters/draft.ts"
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import { QuartzFilterPlugin } from "../types"
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export const RemoveDrafts: QuartzFilterPlugin<{}> = () => ({
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name: "RemoveDrafts",
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shouldPublish(_ctx, [_tree, vfile]) {
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// uses frontmatter parsed from transformers
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const draftFlag: boolean = vfile.data?.frontmatter?.draft ?? false
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return !draftFlag
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},
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})
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```
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## Emitters
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Emitters **reduce** over content, taking in a list of all the transformed and filtered content and creating output files.
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```ts
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export type QuartzEmitterPlugin<Options extends OptionType = undefined> = (
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opts?: Options,
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) => QuartzEmitterPluginInstance
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export type QuartzEmitterPluginInstance = {
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name: string
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emit(ctx: BuildCtx, content: ProcessedContent[], resources: StaticResources): Promise<FilePath[]>
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getQuartzComponents(ctx: BuildCtx): QuartzComponent[]
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}
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```
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An emitter plugin must define a `name` field, an `emit` function, and a `getQuartzComponents` function. `emit` is responsible for looking at all the parsed and filtered content and then appropriately creating files and returning a list of paths to files the plugin created.
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Creating new files can be done via regular Node [fs module](https://nodejs.org/api/fs.html) (i.e. `fs.cp` or `fs.writeFile`) or via the `write` function in `quartz/plugins/emitters/helpers.ts` if you are creating files that contain text. `write` has the following signature:
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```ts
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export type WriteOptions = (data: {
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// the build context
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ctx: BuildCtx
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// the name of the file to emit (not including the file extension)
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slug: ServerSlug
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// the file extension
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ext: `.${string}` | ""
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// the file content to add
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content: string
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}) => Promise<FilePath>
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```
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This is a thin wrapper around writing to the appropriate output folder and ensuring that intermediate directories exist. If you choose to use the native Node `fs` APIs, ensure you emit to the `argv.output` folder as well.
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If you are creating an emitter plugin that needs to render components, there are three more things to be aware of:
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- Your component should use `getQuartzComponents` to declare a list of `QuartzComponents` that it uses to construct the page. See the page on [[creating components]] for more information.
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- You can use the `renderPage` function defined in `quartz/components/renderPage.tsx` to render Quartz components into HTML.
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- If you need to render an HTML AST to JSX, you can use the `htmlToJsx` function from `quartz/util/jsx.ts`. An example of this can be found in `quartz/components/pages/Content.tsx`.
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For example, the following is a simplified version of the content page plugin that renders every single page.
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```tsx title="quartz/plugins/emitters/contentPage.tsx"
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export const ContentPage: QuartzEmitterPlugin = () => {
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// construct the layout
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const layout: FullPageLayout = {
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...sharedPageComponents,
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...defaultContentPageLayout,
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pageBody: Content(),
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}
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const { head, header, beforeBody, pageBody, afterBody, left, right, footer } = layout
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return {
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name: "ContentPage",
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getQuartzComponents() {
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return [head, ...header, ...beforeBody, pageBody, ...afterBody, ...left, ...right, footer]
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},
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async emit(ctx, content, resources, emit): Promise<FilePath[]> {
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const cfg = ctx.cfg.configuration
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const fps: FilePath[] = []
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const allFiles = content.map((c) => c[1].data)
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for (const [tree, file] of content) {
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const slug = canonicalizeServer(file.data.slug!)
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const externalResources = pageResources(slug, resources)
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const componentData: QuartzComponentProps = {
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fileData: file.data,
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externalResources,
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cfg,
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children: [],
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tree,
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allFiles,
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}
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const content = renderPage(cfg, slug, componentData, opts, externalResources)
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const fp = await emit({
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content,
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slug: file.data.slug!,
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ext: ".html",
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})
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fps.push(fp)
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}
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return fps
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},
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}
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}
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```
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Note that it takes in a `FullPageLayout` as the options. It's made by combining a `SharedLayout` and a `PageLayout` both of which are provided through the `quartz.layout.ts` file.
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> [!hint]
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> Look in `quartz/plugins` for more examples of plugins in Quartz as reference for your own plugins!
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