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Contents

# Metadown

tl;dr... This gem gives you a custom markdown parser that allows you to prefix the
markdown itself with YAML metadata.

Sometimes, just having plain markdown isn't good enough. Say you're writing
a blog post, and you want to include some information about the post itself,
such as the date and time it was posted.  Keeping it in a separate file seems
like a bad idea, but Markdown doesn't have any good way of doing this.

Enter [Jekyll](https://github.com/mojombo/jekyll). It lets you put some YAML
at the head of your file:

    ---
    layout: post
    title: An Awesome Blog Post
    ---
    
    Four score and seven years ago,

Woudn't that be neat to use on other projects? I thought so too! Hence,
metadown.

## Installation

Add this line to your application's Gemfile:

    gem 'metadown'

And then execute:

    $ bundle

Or install it yourself as:

    $ gem install metadown

## Usage

Metadown might have the simplest API I've ever written: one method! Just send
the string with the metadown you want rendered, and boom! You get an object
back with two attributes: output and metadata.

    require 'metadown'
    
    data = Metadown.render("hello world")
    data.output #=> "<p>hello, world</p>"
    data.metadata #=> "{}"
    
    text = <<-MARKDOWN
    ---
    key: "value"
    ---
    hello world
    MARKDOWN
    
    data = Metadown.render(text)
    data.output #=> "<p>hello, world</p>\n"
    data.metadata #=> {"key" => "value"}

## Contributing

1. Fork it
2. Create your feature branch (`git checkout -b my-new-feature`)
3. Commit your changes (`git commit -am 'Added some feature'`)
4. Push to the branch (`git push origin my-new-feature`)
5. Create new Pull Request

Version data entries

2 entries across 2 versions & 1 rubygems

Version Path
metadown-1.0.0 README.md
metadown-0.9.0 README.md