828

I have come across a number of mentions of MultiMarkdown's support for internal links / named anchors but I am unable to find a single example of how to actually do it.

So, what is the syntax for denoting the named anchor, and what is the syntax for linking to it the same as linking to any other URLs (only using #foo instead of http://....)?

2
  • If you're doing this to create a table of contents I'd recommend doctoc to automate this (requires node.js). Doctoc generates the markdown code so it will provide an example of how to link to headings throughout the document too (as described in @user1789493's answer). Mar 8, 2014 at 21:38
  • 3
    Possible duplicate of Cross-reference (named anchor) in markdown Dec 8, 2015 at 16:21

10 Answers 10

848

In standard Markdown, place an anchor <a name="abcd"></a> where you want to link to and refer to it on the same page by [link text](#abcd).

(This uses name= and not id=, for reasons explained in this answer.)

Remote references can use [link text](http://...#abcd) of course.

This works like a dream, provided you have control over the source and target texts. The anchor can even appear in a heading, thus:

### <a name="head1234"></a>A Heading in this SO entry!

produces:

A Heading in this SO entry!

and we can even link to it so:

and we can even [link](#head1234) to it so:

(On SO, the link doesn't work because the anchor is stripped.)

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  • 27
    @jj1bdx I do now -- the <a id="id"></a> form is best. See this SO question/answer. May 28, 2012 at 16:12
  • 6
    Fyi: Github markdown expects you to use name= instead of id, it seems.
    – Dieter
    Oct 2, 2013 at 8:17
  • 5
    @Dieter: name= was deprecated in XHTML, but now I find that id= has a side-effect in HTML5, so I am reverting to name= in this answer. Oct 27, 2013 at 12:03
  • 3
    Works on github-flavored-markdown (the ruby gem renders it as expected) May 17, 2015 at 13:43
  • 1
    It looks to be supported by BitBucket with name attribute (did not try the id attribute).
    – рüффп
    Jul 9, 2020 at 8:49
798

If you have headers in the markdown files, you can directly link them in the file.

Markdown Header:

## The Header

this will generate an implicit id #the-header (replace internal spaces with hyphens and make lowercase).

To navigate to this id, you can create the link like this:

[Link to Header](#the-header)

This is equivalent to:

<a href="#the-header">Link to Header</a>

Please note the reference's name is a lower-case #header.

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  • 48
    BitBucket seems to prefix the anchor id with "markdown-header-". So if your header is ## This Header ##, the link would be [To This Header](#markdown-header-this-header). If you aren't sure what the id of your header is, use a page inspector to see the HTML values. Mar 19, 2014 at 21:13
  • 2
    Didn't work for me in Pandoc extended markdown, might work elsewhere. Dec 5, 2015 at 14:40
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    @SaurabhM this will ONLY work IF your markdown to html converter DOES NOT adhere to the standard. The standard doesn't create anchor tags. Now, many don't adhere, but you should NOT expect this to work anywhere.
    – masukomi
    Jan 15, 2016 at 16:55
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    Why oh why did we have to standardize in something as standard-less and half-baked as Markdown. Can't wait for AsciiDoc to take the lead.
    – hmijail
    Feb 21, 2017 at 11:03
  • 2
    GitHub adds user-content before the name of the header: [Link](user-content-the-header) Mar 27, 2020 at 8:23
153

Taken from the Multimarkdown Users Guide (thanks to @MultiMarkdown on Twitter for pointing it out)

[Some Text][]will link to a header named “Some Text”
e.g.

### Some Text ###

An optional label of your choosing to help disambiguate cases where multiple headers have the same title:

### Overview [MultiMarkdownOverview] ##

This allows you to use [MultiMarkdownOverview] to refer to this section specifically, and not another section named Overview. This works with atx- or settext-style headers.

If you have already defined an anchor using the same id that is used by a header, then the defined anchor takes precedence.

In addition to headers within the document, you can provide labels for images and tables which can then be used for cross-references as well.

5
  • 1
    FWIW, it doesn't work with emacs' markdown-mode as of 23.4.1. Oct 29, 2012 at 7:38
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    Markdown does not support footnotes. As such it won't work in most "Markdown" modes. MultiMarkdown, however supports a number of extensions that make life easier for writers.
    – masukomi
    Oct 29, 2012 at 11:46
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    Github does not seem to support labels in headers?
    – andig
    Feb 28, 2015 at 9:13
  • 1
    This does not work (at least on codepen.io) when there is ':' in the header. Apr 10, 2015 at 0:33
  • 3
    that link is the documentation by the guy who wrote MultiMarkdown. Not sure what you're doing in codepen.io but i'm confident the docs are accurate. Keep in mind MULTIMarkdown NOT Markdown.
    – masukomi
    Apr 10, 2015 at 16:02
142

I tested Github Flavored Markdown for a while and can summarize with four rules:

  1. punctuation marks will be dropped
  2. leading white spaces will be dropped
  3. upper case will be converted to lower
  4. spaces between letters will be converted to -

For example, if your section is named this:

## 1.1 Hello World

Create a link to it this way:

[Link](#11-hello-world)
4
  • What if there are hyphens in the name? What does it convert to? Note, there are spaces between the words and the hyphens. example: ``` - [My - Header](#my---header) # My - Header ``` Would that be correct? Dec 14, 2018 at 0:00
  • stackoverflow.com/a/17820138/2908724 for terminology on this style. I prefer "kebab-case".
    – bishop
    Jan 3, 2019 at 14:51
  • 2
    All those conversions mean that it's a bit of a crap shoot to rely on anything the markdown formatter does to titles and headings. Much better, IMHO to use anchors (as the most upvoted answer recommends), that way links don't break because someone makes a grammar/spelling correction to a title and breaks untold thousands of internal (and external) links. Aug 25, 2021 at 17:51
  • @SteventheEasilyAmused indeed — at the cost of polluting a Markdown file with HTML. Depending on the target/audience, this might be a good trade-off... or not. For a simple README.md which might be simply read with a non-Markdown viewer, it's best to leave all HTML off — it's less confusing to follow. Nov 22, 2021 at 16:06
53

The best way to create internal links (related with sections) is create list but instead of link, put #section or #section-title if the header includes spaces.

Markdown

Go to section
* [Hello](#hello)  
* [Hello World](#hello-world)
* [Another section](#new-section) <-- it's called 'Another section' in this list but refers to 'New section'


## Hello
### Hello World
## New section

List preview

Go to section
Hello           <-- [Hello](#hello)                 -- go to `Hello` section
Hello World     <-- [Hello World](#hello world)     -- go to `Hello World` section
Another section <-- [Another section](#new-section) -- go to `New section`

HTML

<p>Go to section</p>
<ul>
    <li><a href="#hello">Hello</a></li>
    <li><a href="#hello-world">Hello World</a></li>
    <li><a href="#new-section">Another section</a> &lt;– it’s called ‘Another section’ in this list but refers to ‘New section’</li>
</ul>
<h2 id="hello">Hello</h2>
<h3 id="hello-world">Hello World</h3>
<h2 id="new-section">New section</h2>

It doesn't matter whether it's h1, h2, h3, etc. header, you always refer to it using just one #.
All references in section list should be converted to lowercase text as it is shown in the example above.

The link to the section should be lowercase. It won't work otherwise. This technique works very well for all Markdown variants, also MultiMarkdown.

Currently I'm using the Pandoc to convert documents format. It's much better than MultiMarkdown.
Test Pandoc here

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  • 9
    as noted in other comments here. that will not work in any markdown -> html converter that actually follows the standard. Creating anchor tags in headings only happens in SOME converters. Furthemore, they're not going to all convert spaces to dashes. THIS CAN NOT not be counted on.
    – masukomi
    Jan 24, 2016 at 4:12
  • 1
    I'm using GitHub Markdown in Atom code editor which has a built-in package named "Markdown Preview". From preview mode I create an html files using context menu "Save as HTML...".
    – rflw
    Jan 24, 2016 at 14:44
  • yes, my point is that you can't count on your technique working anywhere else, and neither the question, nor your answer is specifically about markdown in Atom. The question isn't even about Markdown, it's about MultiMarkdown.
    – masukomi
    Jan 24, 2016 at 19:00
  • I'm using this link method but it's not working for me. not sliding to the section/that header. Feb 25, 2016 at 8:03
  • Give a heads up to case sensitive. If you define a ## Hello you should refer to it as [Whatever you want](#Hello) Mar 19, 2016 at 12:19
8

In mdcharm it is like this:

* [Descripción](#descripcion)
* [Funcionamiento](#funcionamiento)
* [Instalación](#instalacion)
* [Configuración](#configuracion)

### Descripción {#descripcion}
### Funcionamiento {#funcionamiento}
### Instalación {#instalacion}
### Configuración {#configuracion}
4

Here is another option (with this, all the links can be placed at the bottom of the file):

Here is an [example label].

  [example label]: #the-anchor-name-or-id "Optional title for mouse hover"
3

Here is my solution (derived from SaraubhM's answer)

**Jump To**: [Hotkeys & Markers](#hotkeys-markers) / [Radii](#radii) / [Route Wizard 2.0](#route-wizard-2-0)

Which gives you:

Jump To: Hotkeys & Markers / Radii / Route Wizard 2.0

Note the changes from and . to - and also the loss of the & in the links.

0

An important piece of being able to link to an anchor is naming the anchor with an easy-to-use id. This is done with the {#foo-bar} (extended) syntax on the heading, supported by some processors (Kramdown, Maruku; not Github or SO apparently)

How To (an example) {#how-to}

It's done as shown at the end of this line:

### Typical Long Heading (w/ needing _annoying_ "escaping") {#some-heading}

This allows for arbitrarily named headings (but keep the IDs simple!), and avoids having to carefully craft them to avoid any escaped characters. It also gives you better control of your document. (Be warned that TOC-generators may not respect these, though.)

Now the references can always be made with the simple [Important Place](#some-heading) syntax, internally; and with [Some other name maybe](http://example.com/some-page#some-heading), externally.

Here (link not even showing up) is a SO processor example showing how it sadly doesn't work here.

0

For me, with dataiku, I have a header like that :

### Préfixes Redshifts

above, if I want jump on it

 [Préfixes Redshifts](#pr-fixes-redshifts-1)

How I've found "#pr-fixes-redshifts-1" ? In view mode, the mouse over the destination and wait the tooltip

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