2.2 KiB
Concise syntax
Marko's concise syntax is very similar to the HTML syntax, except it's more... concise. Essentially, you take an HTML tag, remove the angle brackets (<>) and use indentation rather than a closing tag:
input.marko
div class="thumbnail"
img src="https://example.com/thumb.png"
output.html
<div class="thumbnail"><img src="https://example.com/thumb.png" /></div>
Shorthand attributes
Marko provides a shorthand for declaring classes and ids on an element:
input.marko
div.my-class
span#my-id
button#submit.primary.large
Yields this HTML:
output.html
<div class="my-class"></div>
<span id="my-id"></span> <button id="submit" class="primary large"></button>
ProTip: These shorthand attributes are available within the HTML syntax as well
Text
Text in concise mode is denoted by two or more dashes (--).
If there is text on the same line following --, it is single-line text:
single-line-text.marko
-- Hello world
The dashes can also follow an element to give it a single text node as a child
single-line-text.marko
div -- Hello world
If there is a line break immediately following --, everything following the -- at the current indentation is parsed as multi-line line text.
multi-line-text.marko
div
--
Hello world
this text
is multi-line
div
--
this is more
text
A multi-line text block can be ended by the same number of dashes that opened it. This allows it to have siblings:
multi-line-text.marko
div
img src="https://example.com/photo.png"
--
Hello world
this text
is multi-line
--
span -- text after
Root level text
There is one "gotcha" that you need to be aware of. The Marko parser starts out in the concise mode. Therefore, given the following template:
input.marko
Hello World
Welcome to Marko
The output would be the following:
output.html
<Hello World></Hello> <Welcome to Marko></Welcome>
Instead, prefix the lines with -- so they are parsed as text:
input.marko
-- Hello World
-- Welcome to Marko