various css fixes, fix new image loading bug when previewing, path docs
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@ -12,17 +12,17 @@ This question is best answered by tracing what happens when a user (you!) runs `
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2. This file has a [shebang](<https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shebang_(Unix)>) line at the top which tells npm to execute it using Node.
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3. `bootstrap-cli.mjs` is responsible for a few things:
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1. Parsing the command-line arguments using [yargs](http://yargs.js.org/).
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2. Transpiling and bundling the rest of Quartz (which is in Typescript) to regular JavaScript using [esbuild](https://esbuild.github.io/). The `esbuild` configuration here is slightly special as it also handles `.scss` file imports using [esbuild-sass-plugin v2](https://www.npmjs.com/package/esbuild-sass-plugin). Additionally, we bundle 'inline' scripts (any `.inline.ts` file) that components can run client-side using a custom plugin that runs another instance of `esbuild` that bundles for browser instead of `node`. Both of these are imported as plain text.
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2. Transpiling and bundling the rest of Quartz (which is in Typescript) to regular JavaScript using [esbuild](https://esbuild.github.io/). The `esbuild` configuration here is slightly special as it also handles `.scss` file imports using [esbuild-sass-plugin v2](https://www.npmjs.com/package/esbuild-sass-plugin). Additionally, we bundle 'inline' client-side scripts (any `.inline.ts` file) that components declare usiong a custom `esbuild` plugin that runs another instance of `esbuild` that bundles for the browser instead of `node`. Modules of both types are imported as plain text.
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3. Running the local preview server if `--serve` is set. This starts two servers:
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1. A WebSocket server on port 3001 to handle hot-reload signals. This tracks all inbound connections and sends a 'rebuild' message a server-side change is detected (either content or configuration).
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2. An HTTP file-server on a user defined port (normally 8080) to serve the actual website files.
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4. Again, if the local preview server is running, it also starts a file watcher to detect source-code changes (e.g. anything that is `.ts`, `.tsx`, `.scss`, or packager files). On a change, we _rebuild_ the module (step 2 above) using esbuild's [rebuild API](https://esbuild.github.io/api/#rebuild) which drastically reduces the build times.
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4. If the `--serve` flag is set, it also starts a file watcher to detect source-code changes (e.g. anything that is `.ts`, `.tsx`, `.scss`, or packager files). On a change, we rebuild the module (step 2 above) using esbuild's [rebuild API](https://esbuild.github.io/api/#rebuild) which drastically reduces the build times.
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5. After transpiling the main Quartz build module (`quartz/build.ts`), we write it to a cache file `.quartz-cache/transpiled-build.mjs` and then dynamically import this using `await import(cacheFile)`. However, we need to be pretty smart about how to bust Node's [import cache](https://github.com/nodejs/modules/issues/307) so we add a random query string to fake Node into thinking it's a new module. This does, however, cause memory leaks so we just hope that the user doesn't hot-reload their configuration too many times in a single session :)) (it leaks about ~350kB memory on each reload). After importing the module, we then invoke it, passing in the command line arguments we parsed earlier along with a callback function to signal the client to refresh.
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4. In `build.ts`, we start by installing source map support manually to account for the query string cache busting hack we introduced earlier. Then, we start processing content:
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1. Clean the output directory.
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2. Recursively glob all files in the `content` folder, respecting the `.gitignore`.
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3. Parse the Markdown files.
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1. Quartz detects the number of threads available and chooses to spawn worker threads if there are >128 pieces of content to parse (rough heuristic). If it needs to spawn workers, it will do another esbuild transpile of the worker script `quartz/worker.ts`. Then, a work-stealing [workerpool](https://www.npmjs.com/package/workerpool) is then created and 'chunks' of 128 files are assigned to workers.
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1. Quartz detects the number of threads available and chooses to spawn worker threads if there are >128 pieces of content to parse (rough heuristic). If it needs to spawn workers, it will invoke esbuild again to transpile the worker script `quartz/worker.ts`. Then, a work-stealing [workerpool](https://www.npmjs.com/package/workerpool) is then created and batches of 128 files are assigned to workers.
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2. Each worker (or just the main thread if there is no concurrency) creates a [unified](https://github.com/unifiedjs/unified) parser based off of the plugins defined in the [[configuration]].
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3. Parsing has three steps:
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1. Read the file into a [vfile](https://github.com/vfile/vfile).
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@ -0,0 +1,45 @@
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---
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title: Paths in Quartz
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---
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Paths are pretty complex to reason about because, especially for a static site generator, they can come from so many places.
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The current browser URL? Technically a path. A full file path to a piece of content? Also a path. What about a slug for a piece of content? Yet another path.
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It would be silly to type these all as `string` and call it a day as it's pretty common to accidentally mistake one type of path for another. Unfortunately, TypeScript does not have [nominal types](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nominal_type_system) for type aliases meaning even if you made custom types of a server-side slug or a client-slug slug, you can still accidentally assign one to another and TypeScript wouldn't catch it.
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Luckily, we can mimic nominal typing using [brands](https://www.typescriptlang.org/play#example/nominal-typing).
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```typescript
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// instead of
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type ClientSlug = string
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// we do
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type ClientSlug = string & { __brand: "client" }
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// that way, the following will fail typechecking
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const slug: ClientSlug = "some random slug"
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```
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While this prevents most typing mistakes *within* our nominal typing system (e.g. mistaking a server slug for a client slug), it doesn't prevent us from *accidentally* mistaking a string for a client slug when we forcibly cast it.
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Thus, we still need to be careful when casting from a string to one of these nominal types in the 'entrypoints', illustrated with hexagon shapes in the diagram below.
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The following diagram draws the relationships between all the path sources, nominal path types, and what functions in `quartz/path.ts` convert between them.
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```mermaid
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graph LR
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Browser{{Browser}} --> Window{{Window}} & LinkElement{{Link Element}}
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Window --"getCanonicalSlug()"--> Canonical[Canonical Slug]
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Window --"getClientSlug()"--> Client[Client Slug]
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LinkElement --".href"--> Relative[Relative URL]
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Client --"canonicalizeClient()"--> Canonical
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Canonical --"pathToRoot()"--> Relative
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Canonical --"resolveRelative()" --> Relative
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MD{{Markdown File}} --> FilePath{{File Path}} & Links[Markdown links]
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Links --"transformLink()"--> Relative
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FilePath --"slugifyFilePath()"--> Server[Server Slug]
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Server --> HTML["HTML File"]
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Server --"canonicalizeServer()"--> Canonical
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style Canonical stroke-width:4px
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```
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@ -6,6 +6,7 @@ As you already have Quartz locally, you don't need to fork or clone it again. Si
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```bash
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git checkout v4-alpha
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git pull upstream v4-alpha
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npm i
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npx quartz create
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```
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@ -23,7 +23,7 @@ import { parseMarkdown } from "./processors/parse"
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import { filterContent } from "./processors/filter"
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import { emitContent } from "./processors/emit"
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import cfg from "../quartz.config"
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import { FilePath, joinSegments, slugifyFilePath } from "./path"
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import { FilePath, ServerSlug, joinSegments, slugifyFilePath } from "./path"
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import chokidar from "chokidar"
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import { ProcessedContent } from "./plugins/vfile"
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import { Argv, BuildCtx } from "./ctx"
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@ -91,6 +91,7 @@ async function startServing(
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contentMap.set(vfile.data.filePath!, content)
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}
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const initialSlugs = ctx.allSlugs
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let timeoutId: ReturnType<typeof setTimeout> | null = null
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let toRebuild: Set<FilePath> = new Set()
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let toRemove: Set<FilePath> = new Set()
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@ -102,20 +103,19 @@ async function startServing(
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}
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// dont bother rebuilding for non-content files, just track and refresh
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if (path.extname(fp) !== ".md") {
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fp = toPosixPath(fp)
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const filePath = joinSegments(argv.directory, fp) as FilePath
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if (path.extname(fp) !== ".md") {
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if (action === "add" || action === "change") {
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trackedAssets.add(filePath)
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} else if (action === "delete") {
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trackedAssets.add(filePath)
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trackedAssets.delete(filePath)
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}
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clientRefresh()
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return
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}
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fp = toPosixPath(fp)
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const filePath = joinSegments(argv.directory, fp) as FilePath
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if (action === "add" || action === "change") {
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toRebuild.add(filePath)
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} else if (action === "delete") {
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@ -133,10 +133,12 @@ async function startServing(
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try {
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const filesToRebuild = [...toRebuild].filter((fp) => !toRemove.has(fp))
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ctx.allSlugs = [...new Set([...contentMap.keys(), ...toRebuild, ...trackedAssets])]
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const trackedSlugs =
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[...new Set([...contentMap.keys(), ...toRebuild, ...trackedAssets])]
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.filter((fp) => !toRemove.has(fp))
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.map((fp) => slugifyFilePath(path.posix.relative(argv.directory, fp) as FilePath))
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ctx.allSlugs = [...new Set([...initialSlugs, ...trackedSlugs])]
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const parsedContent = await parseMarkdown(ctx, filesToRebuild)
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for (const content of parsedContent) {
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const [_tree, vfile] = content
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@ -413,12 +413,16 @@ export const ObsidianFlavoredMarkdown: QuartzTransformerPlugin<Partial<Options>
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js.push({
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script: `
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import mermaid from 'https://cdn.jsdelivr.net/npm/mermaid/dist/mermaid.esm.min.mjs';
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document.addEventListener('nav', async () => {
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const darkMode = document.documentElement.getAttribute('saved-theme') === 'dark'
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mermaid.initialize({
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startOnLoad: false,
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securityLevel: 'loose',
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theme: darkMode ? 'dark' : 'default'
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});
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document.addEventListener('nav', async () => {
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await mermaid.run({
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querySelector: '.mermaid'
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})
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});
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`,
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loadTime: "afterDOMReady",
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@ -7,7 +7,7 @@ html {
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scroll-behavior: smooth;
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-webkit-text-size-adjust: none;
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text-size-adjust: none;
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overflow-x: none;
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overflow-x: hidden;
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width: 100vw;
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}
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@ -311,10 +311,10 @@ pre {
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border-radius: 5px;
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overflow-x: auto;
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border: 1px solid var(--lightgray);
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position: relative;
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&:has(> code.mermaid) {
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border: none;
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position: relative;
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}
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& > code {
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