Either you've already heard of pandoc
or if you have searched online for markdown
to pdf
or similar, you are sure to come across pandoc
. This tutorial will help you use pandoc
to generate pdf
and epub
from a GitHub style markdown file. The main motivation for this blog post is to highlight what customizations I did to generate pdf
and epub
versions for self-publishing my ebooks. It wasn't easy to arrive at the set-up I ended up with, so I hope this will be useful for those looking to use pandoc
to generate pdf
and epub
formats. This guide is specifically aimed at technical books that has code snippets.
Via a Visual Studio Code extension (tested in 2020) Download the Yzane Markdown PDF extension. Right click inside a Markdown file ( md) The content below will appear. Select the Markdown PDF: Export (pdf) option. Note: Emojis are better in Windows than Linux (I don't know why) Share. Improve this answer.
- Markdown doesn’t have all the bells and whistles of word processors like Microsoft Word, but it’s good enough for creating basic documents like assignments and letters. You can use a Markdown document authoring application to create and export Markdown-formatted documents to PDF or HTML file format.
- Select and upload your file containing markdown markup and we'll convert it to a PDF for you in an instant. Create Markdown Files We're working on giving you the power to create markdown files directly inside Markdown to PDF with quick export functionality.
- Visual Studio Code User and Workspace Settings. Select File Preferences UserSettings or Workspace Settings. Find markdown-pdf settings in the Default Settings. Copy markdown-pdf. settings. Paste to the settings.json, and change the value.
- Pandoc options input-file. Pandoc is a Haskell library for converting from one markup format to another, and a command-line tool that uses this library. Pandoc can convert between numerous markup and word processing formats, including, but not limited to, various flavors of Markdown, HTML, LaTeX and Word docx.For the full lists of input and output.
Installation🔗
If you use a debian based distro like Ubuntu, the below steps are enough for the demos in this tutorial. If you get an error or warning, search that issue online and you'll likely find what else has to be installed.
I first downloaded deb
file from pandoc: releases and installed it. Followed by packages needed for pdf
generation.
For more details and guide for other OS, refer to pandoc: installation
Minimal example🔗
Once pandoc
is working on your system, try generating a sample pdf
without any customization.
See learnbyexample.github.io repo for all the input and output files referred in this tutorial.
Here sample_1.md
is input markdown file and -f
is used to specify that the input format is GitHub style markdown. The -o
option specifies the output file type based on extension. The default output is probably good enough. But I wished to customize hyperlinks, inline code style, add page breaks between chapters, etc. This blog post will discuss these customizations one by one.
pandoc
has its own flavor of markdown
with many useful extensions — see pandoc: pandocs-markdown for details. GitHub style markdown is recommended if you wish to use the same source (or with minor changes) in multiple places.
It is advised to use markdown
headers in order without skipping — for example, H1
for chapter heading and H2
for chapter sub-section, etc is fine. H1
for chapter heading and H3
for sub-section is not. Using the former can give automatic index navigation on ebook readers.
On Evince reader, the index navigation for above sample looks like this:
Chapter breaks🔗
As observed from previous demo, by default there are no chapter breaks. Searching for a solution online, I got this piece of tex
code:
This can be added using -H
option. From pandoc
manual,
-H FILE, --include-in-header=FILE
Include contents of FILE, verbatim, at the end of the header. Thiscan be used, for example, to include special CSS or JavaScript inHTML documents. This option can be used repeatedly to include multiplefiles in the header. They will be included in the order specified.Implies --standalone.
The pandoc
invocation now looks like:
You can add further customization to headings, for example use sectionfont{underlineclearpage}
to underline chapter names or sectionfont{LARGEclearpage}
to allow chapter names to get even bigger. Here's some more links to read about various customizations:
Changing settings via -V option🔗
-V KEY[=VAL], --variable=KEY[:VAL]
Set the template variable KEY to the value VAL when rendering thedocument in standalone mode. This is generally only useful when the--template option is used to specify a custom template, since pandocautomatically sets the variables used in the default templates. Ifno VAL is specified, the key will be given the value true.
The -V
option allows to change variable values to customize settings like page size, font, link color, etc. As more settings are changed, better to use a simple script to call pandoc
instead of typing the whole command on terminal.
mainfont
is for normal textmonofont
is for code snippetsgeometry
for page size and marginslinkcolor
to set hyperlink color- to increase default font size, use
-V fontsize=12pt
- See stackoverflow: change font size if you need even bigger size options
Using xelatex
as the pdf-engine
allows to use any font installed in the system. One reason I chose DejaVu
was because it supported Greek and other Unicode characters that were causing error with other fonts. See tex.stackexchange: Using XeLaTeX instead of pdfLaTeX for some more details.
The pandoc
invocation is now through a script:
Do compare the pdf generated side by side with previous output before proceeding.
On my system, DejaVu Serif
did not have italic variation installed, so I had to use sudo apt install ttf-dejavu-extra
to get it.
Syntax highlighting🔗
One option to customize syntax highlighting for code snippets is to save one of the pandoc
themes and editing it. See stackoverflow: What are the available syntax highlighters? for available themes and more details (as a good practice on stackoverflow, go through all answers and comments — the linked/related sections on sidebar are useful as well).
Edit the above file to customize the theme. Use sites like colorhexa to help with color choices, hex values, etc. For this demo, the below settings are changed:
Inline code
Similar to changing background color for code snippets, I found a solution online to change background color for inline code snippets.
Add --highlight-style pygments.theme
and --include-in-header inline_code.tex
to the script and generate the pdf
again.
Generate Pdf From Markdown
With pandoc sample_2.md -f gfm -o sample_2.pdf
the output would be:
With ./md2pdf_syn.sh sample_2.md sample_2_syn.pdf
the output is:
For my Python re(gex)? book, by chance I found that using ruby
instead of python
for REPL code snippets syntax highlighting was better. Snapshot from ./md2pdf_syn.sh sample_3.md sample_3.pdf
result is shown below. For python
directive, string output gets treated as a comment and color for boolean values isn't easy to distinguish from string values. The ruby
directive treats string value as expected and boolean values are easier to spot.
Bullet styling🔗
This stackoverflow Q&A helped for bullet styling.
Comparing pandoc sample_4.md -f gfm -o sample_4.pdf
vs ./md2pdf_syn_bullet.sh sample_4.md sample_4_bullet.pdf
gives:
PDF properties🔗
This tex.stackexchange Q&A helped to change metadata. See also pspdfkit: What’s Hiding in Your PDF? and discussion on HN.
./md2pdf_syn_bullet_prop.sh sample_4.md sample_4_bullet_prop.pdf
gives:
Adding table of contents🔗
There's a handy option --toc
to automatically include table of contents at top of the generated pdf
. You can control number of levels using --toc-depth
option, the default is 3 levels. You can also change the default string Contents
to something else using -V toc-title
option.
./md2pdf_syn_bullet_prop_toc.sh sample_1.md sample_1_toc.pdf
gives:
Adding cover image🔗
To add something prior to table of contents, cover image for example, you can use a tex
file and include it verbatim. Create a tex
file (named as cover.tex
here) with content as shown below:
Then, modify the previous script md2pdf_syn_bullet_prop_toc.sh
by adding --include-before-body cover.tex
and tada — you get the cover image before table of contents. thispagestyle{empty}
helps to avoid page number on the cover page, see also tex.stackexchange: clear page.
The bash
script invocation is now ./md2pdf_syn_bullet_prop_toc_cover.sh sample_5.md sample_5.pdf
.
You'll need at least one image in input markdown file, otherwise settings won't apply to the cover image and you may end up with weird output. sample_5.md
used in the command above includes an image. And be careful to use escapes if the image path can contain tex
metacharacters.
Stylish blockquote🔗
Generate Pdf From Markdown Command Line
By default, blockquotes (lines starting with >
in markdown) are just indented in the pdf
output. To make them standout, tex.stackexchange: change the background color and border of blockquote helped.
Create quote.tex
with the contents as shown below. You can change the colors to suit your own preferred style.
The bash
script invocation is now ./md2pdf_syn_bullet_prop_toc_cover_quote.sh sample_5.md sample_5_quote.pdf
. The difference between default and styled blockquote is shown below.
Customizing epub🔗
For a long time, I thought epub
didn't make sense for programming books. Turned out, I wasn't using the right ebook readers. FBReader is good for novels but not ebooks with code snippets. When I used atril and calibre ebook-viewer, the results were good.
I didn't know how to use css
before trying to generate the epub
version. Somehow, I managed to take the default epub.css provided by pandoc
and customize it as close as possible to the pdf
version. The modified epub.css
is available from the learnbyexample.github.io repo. The bash
script to generate the epub
is shown below and invoked as ./md2epub.sh sample_5.md sample_5.epub
. Note that pygments.theme
is same as the pdf
customization discussed before.
Convert Word To Markdown
Resource links🔗
More options and workflows for generating ebooks:
- pandoc-latex-template — a clean pandoc LaTeX template to convert your markdown files to PDF or LaTeX
- Jupyter Book — open source project for building beautiful, publication-quality books and documents from computational material
- See also fastdoc — the output of fastdoc is an asciidoc file for each input notebook. You can then use asciidoctor to convert that to HTML, DocBook, epub, mobi, and so forth
- Asciidoctor
- Sphinx
Miscellaneous
- picular: search engine for colors and colorhexa