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I have been working on a google docs to markdown converter to convert post written in google docs to something that can be easily used within jekyll. Unfortunately, google docs has some foibles that make conversion non-trivial. For example, kramdown emphasis requires that text being emphasized be "surrounded" by emphasis markers, where:

Surrounded means that the starting delimiter must not be followed by a space and that the stopping delimiter must not be preceded by a space.

Within google docs, on the other hand, one can have whitespace emphasized, which will generate output that kramdown cannot parse.

*em * will produce *em *, not em.

I've written a regular expression that works to match and substitute this incorrect emphasis, but I'm stuck on a corner case.

/(\*+)(\s*\b)([^\*]*)(\b\s*)(\*+)/g will properly match (and thus allow for substitution each of the emphasis regions below):

*** Strong italic text ***, and even just *strong text *, when rendered in * Markdown*, doesn't like *spaces * around the boundaries of the stars.

but chokes when there is emphasis within a word.

* You can see it also within the li**n**es here. *

(the match now stops with the *s within "lines" and does not catch the " "s before the terminating *.)

All this is clear on regexr.

How do I edit the regex to properly handle this corner case, i.e., ignoring *s that are (properly) embedded within words?

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  • If anyone has an alternate methodology of google docs -> jekyll, I'm also all ears, though I have found that going through HTML requires a separate stylesheet to properly render each document's formatting.
    – clearf
    Feb 1, 2015 at 5:21
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    Attempting to parse a non-regular language with regular expressions is not recommended.
    – Dan D.
    Feb 1, 2015 at 5:31
  • note that there isn't a word boundary exists after dot and a space. Feb 1, 2015 at 5:32
  • @clearf you mean this regex101.com/r/jF5vL3/1 ? Feb 1, 2015 at 5:34
  • @AvinashRaj That's very close, thanks. Multiple spaces between the words and the *s aren't captured, just the space right before.
    – clearf
    Feb 1, 2015 at 5:57

1 Answer 1

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Seems like you want something like this.

\B(\*+)(\s*)(?:\b\*+\b|[^*\s]|\s(?=\w))*(\s*)(\*+)\B

DEMO

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  • This does look like it handles all these corner cases, thanks. Could you explain two things: * Why does the statement need to be surrounded by \B, and * What are the distinct parts of the middle match capturing: (?:\b\*+\b|[^*\s]|\s(?=\w))
    – clearf
    Feb 1, 2015 at 15:43

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