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I've been learning github markdown, I had a question about variables and macros.

is it possible to define a variable or macro to prevent repeated printing of a block of text?

The use case is that I have a table producing a big grid of hyperlinks - the links look like the below.

http://www.a-big-long-big-big-long-hyperlink/more-long-stuff?id=1234

it would be nice if I could do something like the below once:

$link=http://www.a-big-long-big-big-long-hyperlink/more-long-stuff?id

and then in each cell in the table, I can say something like

$link=1234

Some other cell

$link=2345

the idea being that:

  • The table (which has ~10 columns and ~10 rows) is a bit easier to see on a normal screen, at the moment with the prefix to the links being so long, it looks really ugly as the links wrap to the next line
  • If I want to change the root link, I can change it in one place (yes, I know I could do search and replace in an editor!)

Cheers.

4 Answers 4

16

Below are a few ways to write Reference-Links

[I'm an inline-style link](https://www.somewebsite.com)

[I'm an inline-style link with title](https://www.somewebsite.com "somewebsite's Homepage")

[I'm a reference-style link][Arbitrary case-insensitive reference text]

[I'm a relative reference to a repository file](../blob/master/LICENSE)

[You can use numbers for reference-style link definitions][1]

Or leave it empty and use the [link text itself]

Some text to show that the reference links can follow later.

[arbitrary case-insensitive reference text]: https://www.somewebsite.org
[1]: http://somewebsite.org
[link text itself]: http://www.somewebsite.com
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  • 78
    I'm not sure how this answers the question. Doesn't Op wish to define a variable, such as the root of a url and use that in many locations where he only supplies the part that changes (an ID).
    – Gerry
    Jun 6, 2016 at 13:33
  • 2
    Can the context of the text somehow make into the link? For example, [FOO-11](JIRA) expanding into https://jira.example.net/browse/FOO-11 ?
    – Mikhail T.
    Aug 29, 2017 at 18:21
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    @Gerry, it did help me. I was trying to avoid re-typing http://github.com/myrepo/... and @Adi's suggestion was quite helpful here...Thanks :)
    – Aakash
    Oct 29, 2019 at 7:29
7

You can use a feature of Markdown called "Reference-style links".

[link text][id] or just [link text] if link-text is unique and consist only of letters, numbers, spaces and punctuation. They are not case sensitive.

then somewhere in the document you define what id is:

[id]: http://example.com/whatever

See https://github.com/biserkov/markdown-playground/blob/master/README.md and

https://raw.githubusercontent.com/biserkov/markdown-playground/master/README.md

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    This is nice but not answering the question
    – robi-y
    Mar 23, 2015 at 6:20
0

This is not possible in basic Markdown, but there are extensions that add macros and variables. (Example.)

-5

GitHub Markdown (for .md files) has variables through capture:

{% capture nameOfVariableToCapture %}any markdown here...{% endcapture %}

{{ nameOfVariableToCapture }} -- that prints the content of the variable

or from {% assign variableName = "text etc." %}.

As a test, I created https://github.com/SeLite/SeLite.github.io/blob/master/MarkdownTest.md. You can see its content at http://selite.github.io/MarkdownTest (ignore the header and footer, that comes from a framework).

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    @vaughan: Looks like it does not. An enigmatic answer indeed. "you could probably benefit from it" -- if only you could make it work :). Aug 18, 2015 at 9:14
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    @vaughan GitHub Pages uses Jekyll which understands the template language Liquid. This is that. More on Jekyll gh-pages: jekyllrb.com/docs/github-pages I also found a stackoverflow question with examples about variables on GitHub: stackoverflow.com/questions/41606739/… Dec 3, 2017 at 16:55
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    This is quite useful for Github Pages (and if your project is on github, it's not such a stretch) though it would be worth clarifying that it won't work for the inline display of markdown files on github itself. Eg for the README.md file. This is because markdown is a format not an executable language, I guess.
    – Adam Burke
    Apr 27, 2019 at 5:46
  • It looks like the original question asked specifically about github markdown, so this seems legit. Maybe I missed something... Mar 15, 2023 at 18:26

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