Admonitions
In addition to the basic Markdown syntax, we have a special admonitions syntax by wrapping text with a set of 3 colons, followed by a label denoting its type.
Example:
:::note
Some **content** with _Markdown_ `syntax`. Check [this `api`](#).
:::
:::tip
Some **content** with _Markdown_ `syntax`. Check [this `api`](#).
:::
:::info
Some **content** with _Markdown_ `syntax`. Check [this `api`](#).
:::
:::caution
Some **content** with _Markdown_ `syntax`. Check [this `api`](#).
:::
:::danger
Some **content** with _Markdown_ `syntax`. Check [this `api`](#).
:::
:::note
Some content with Markdown syntax
. Check this api
.
:::
:::tip
Some content with Markdown syntax
. Check this api
.
:::
:::info
Some content with Markdown syntax
. Check this api
.
:::
:::caution
Some content with Markdown syntax
. Check this api
.
:::
:::danger
Some content with Markdown syntax
. Check this api
.
:::
Usage with Prettierβ
If you use Prettier to format your Markdown files, Prettier might auto-format your code to invalid admonition syntax. To avoid this problem, add empty lines around the starting and ending directives. This is also why the examples we show here all have empty lines around the content.
<!-- Prettier doesn't change this -->
:::note
Hello world
:::
<!-- Prettier changes this -->
:::note
Hello world
:::
<!-- to this -->
::: note Hello world:::
Specifying titleβ
You may also specify an optional title.
:::note Your Title
Some **content** with _Markdown_ `syntax`.
:::
:::note Your Title
Some content with Markdown syntax
.
:::
Admonitions with MDXβ
You can use MDX inside admonitions too!
import Tabs from '@theme/Tabs';
import TabItem from '@theme/TabItem';
:::tip Use tabs in admonitions
<Tabs>
<TabItem value="apple" label="Apple">This is an apple π</TabItem>
<TabItem value="orange" label="Orange">This is an orange π</TabItem>
<TabItem value="banana" label="Banana">This is a banana π</TabItem>
</Tabs>
:::
:::tip Use tabs in admonitions
- Apple
- Orange
- Banana
:::
Usage in JSXβ
Outside of Markdown, you can use the @theme/Admonition
component to get the same output.
import Admonition from '@theme/Admonition';
export default function MyReactPage() {
return (
<div>
<Admonition type="info">
<p>Some information</p>
</Admonition>
</div>
);
}
The types that are accepted are the same as above: note
, tip
, danger
, info
, caution
. Optionally, you can specify an icon by passing a JSX element or a string, or a title:
<Admonition type="tip" icon="π‘" title="Did you know...">
<p>
Use plugins to introduce shorter syntax for the most commonly used JSX
elements in your project.
</p>
</Admonition>
Use plugins to introduce shorter syntax for the most commonly used JSX elements in your project.
Customizing admonitionsβ
There are two kinds of customizations possible with admonitions: parsing and rendering.
Customizing rendering behaviorβ
You can customize how each individual admonition type is rendered through swizzling. You can often achieve your goal through a simple wrapper. For example, in the follow example, we swap out the icon for info
admonitions only.
import React from 'react';
import Admonition from '@theme-original/Admonition';
import MyCustomNoteIcon from '@site/static/img/info.svg';
export default function AdmonitionWrapper(props) {
if (props.type !== 'info') {
return <Admonition title="My Custom Admonition Title" {...props} />;
}
return <Admonition icon={<MyCustomNoteIcon />} {...props} />;
}
Customizing parsing behaviorβ
Admonitions are implemented with a Remark plugin. The plugin is designed to be configurable. To customize the Remark plugin for a specific content plugin (docs, blog, pages), pass the options through the admonitions
key.
module.exports = {
presets: [
[
'@docusaurus/preset-classic',
{
docs: {
admonitions: {
tag: ':::',
keywords: ['note', 'tip', 'info', 'caution', 'danger'],
extendDefaults: true,
},
},
},
],
],
};
The plugin accepts the following options:
tag
: The tag that encloses the admonition. Defaults to:::
.keywords
: An array of keywords that can be used as the type for the admonition.extendDefaults
: Should the provided options (such askeywords
) be merged into the existing defaults. Defaults tofalse
.
The keyword
will be passed as the type
prop of the Admonition
component.
Custom admonition type componentsβ
By default, the theme doesn't know what do to with custom admonition keywords such as :::my-custom-admonition
. It is your responsibility to map each admonition keyword to a React component so that the theme knows how to render them.
If you registered a new admonition type my-custom-admonition
via the following config:
module.exports = {
// ...
presets: [
[
'classic',
{
// ...
docs: {
admonitions: {
tag: ':::',
keywords: ['my-custom-admonition'],
extendDefaults: true,
},
},
},
],
],
};
You can provide the corresponding React component for `:::my-custom-admonition` by creating the following file (unfortunately, since it's not a React component file, it's not swizzlable):
```js title="src/theme/Admonition/Types.js"
import React from 'react';
import DefaultAdmonitionTypes from '@theme-original/Admonition/Types';
function MyCustomAdmonition(props) {
return (
<div style={{border: 'solid red', padding: 10}}>
<h5 style={{color: 'blue', fontSize: 30}}>{props.title}</h5>
<div>{props.children}</div>
</div>
);
}
const AdmonitionTypes = {
...DefaultAdmonitionTypes,
// Add all your custom admonition types here...
// You can also override the default ones if you want
'my-custom-admonition': MyCustomAdmonition,
};
export default AdmonitionTypes;
Now you can use your new admonition keyword in a Markdown file, and it will be parsed and rendered with your custom logic:
:::my-custom-admonition Custom Admonition
It works!
:::
Custom Admonition
It works!