Eleventufte Features

Just in case you needed a few extra markdown patterns to remember.

In addition to basic markdown features like emphasis, strong text, links, and inline code, the tufte-markdown parser pays special attention to figures and footnotes. The official Tufte-CSS site explains the more advanced features in detail, but we’re trying to poke and prod things a bit to eliminate some of the manual HTML entry that’s still necessary.

Sidenotes and Marginalia

Here’s where things really get exciting. Markdown footnotesFootnotes are a convenient way to move digressions and asides out of the primary flow of a document, but shoving them to the bottom of a long page is no good, either. In his books, Tufte instead uses sidenotes, which keep the asides as close as possible to the related text without breaking the flow.

weren’t actually part of the original markdown spec, but they’ve become a popular bolt-on.

During a heated yak-shaving conversation about enhancements to our siteKaren and Ethan are my partners in crime at Autogram, a freshly-minted strategic consultancy for companies with complicated content needs. If “establishing a consistent domain vocabulary and grammar to streamline design system iteration for complex high-variance content” sounds thrilling to you, hire us., Karen McGrane pointed Ethan Marcotte and I to an excellent post by Koos Looijesteijn outlining his approach to sidenotes. That in turn led to Gwern Branwen’s impressive evaluation of damn near every sidenote implementation on the web. And that, in turn, led me to tufte-markdown, which is how we got into this mess.

A few specific formats are supported, with different results: [^foonote-id] markers in a paragraph are paired with [^footnote]: Footnote text below the paragraph in which they appear; they get numbered automatically.For example, this little guy. For a margin note, with no accompanying number, just add a goofy symbol before the footnote text like so:

[^footnote]: {-} This text will appear in the margin without a number.

Completely inlined sidenotes — ones without explicit markers in the rest of the text — can be done like so:

[^ {-} A little fussy, but not bad once you get used to it.]

Blockquotes and Epigraphs

Blockquotes are handled as one would expect:

Image of Marlene Dietrich Dietrich as Monica Teasdale in No Highway in the Sky (1951). Not really.

I love quotations because it is a joy to find thoughts one might have, beautifully expressed with much authority by someone recognized wiser than oneself. —Marlene Dietrich

Epigraphs, however, are a slightly different treatment common in Tufte’s chapter openings. They provide a bit of extra styling for the attribution line.

To appreciate and use correctly a valuable maxim requires a genius, a vital appropriating exercise of mind, closely allied to that which first created it.

We’ll see what we can do later; automatically detecting a double-dash on the last line of a blockquote seems like a convenient enough shortcut, and it’s used by markdown-it-attribution.The downside is that Epigraphs require hand-coded HTML: <div class="epigraph"> wrapping the blockquote itself, and a <footer> tag wrapping the attribution inside the quoted text.

Images and Figures

Standard markdown image treatments do what you’d expect. Wrapping them in extra divs or figures adds special behavior, though, which can be neat.

Who wants some alt text? This dude.

Combining an inline sidenote and an image produces a pretty fancy image-with-caption-in-the-margins effect, though it’s not semantically correct, and I want to keep fussing with it until I get that fixed.

From Edward Tufte, Visual Display of Quantitative Information, page 92. Another thrilling random image, here.

Finally, full-width figures are possible by wrapping an image in the <figure class="fullwidth"> tag. Which brings us back to the whole “why not map that to some sensible markdown patterns” issue again, but we’ll revisit it sometime later.

At long last, another image with alt text.

The Boring Bits

Things like HTML lists and tables aren’t quite as thrilling, but here you go.

  1. An ordered list
  2. Often full of numbered items
  3. Unless they’re not, in which case you need…

Even tables are possible, though it’s a monstrous idea no one should ever really subject themselves to. In the future I’d like to support shortcodes that pipe in an attached .csv file instead; seems a bit more humane.

Column 1 Column 2 Column 3
Cell Contents More Stuff And Again
Cell Contents More Stuff And Again

Last thoughts

Long term, it’s entirely possible that I’ll end up pulling out tufte-markdown and leaning on a heavily customized version of Eleventy’s standard markdown-it parser; it’s a little easier to extend IMO, and would allow me to leverage work others have done on stuff like cleaner figure and blockquote attribution, etc. The big hurdle is duplicating tufte-markdown's very specific way of using H2 tags to open new <section> blocks, automatically chunking a long article into meaningful sections with HTML ids generated from the text in the header. It’s handy!

Overloading Markdown’s semi-standard handling of image title attributesLike so: ![Image Alt](image.jpg Title Text), and using the title text to generate figure captions, feels like it could improve things quite a bit. Not sure how well that will mesh with formatted and linked captions, alas.

Finally, given how much Tufte’s work leans on data visualizations, it’d be nice to integrate a simple chart generation library, possibly wiring it up to the external-csv-file trick I’m dreaming of for the tables. We’ll see.