Community Plugin
View plugin on GitHubGatsby Remark Images Anywhere
Get image from anywhere in your markdown:
---
title: Hello World
---
# Regular relative path
![relative path](./image.png)
# NetlifyCMS path
![relative from root path](/assets/image.png)
# Remote path
![cloud image](https://images.unsplash.com/photo-1563377176922-062e6ae09ceb)
# Protocol relative path*
![cloud image](//images.ctfassets.net/1311eqff/image.png)
# Any of the above also works with <img />
<img src="./image.png" alt="hey" title="hello" />
Why
gatsby-remark-images
is awesome, but it doesn’t work for images that isn’t relative to the markdown file itself, it won’t work. The original package tried to solve this by adding support to both relative-path and URL markdown images. However, it was archived and it doesn’t work with Gatsby v5. This fork attempts to update the plugin and solve the compatibility issues. New features might be added along the way.
- doesn’t blur in or fade in image
-
doesn’t render fancy lazy load imageupdate: it now does via theloading
html attribute. - will take any image paths as mentioned above & feed them to
sharp
- allow you to pass in more customized sharp methods (
fix
,fluid
,resize
) - allow you to write your own image template (so you can implement the stuff above by yourself, though I do want to support those by default)
Protocol relative path
See the whitelisted list here
Installation
yarn add @benedictyappy/gatsby-remark-images-anywhere
# or
npm install @benedictyappy/gatsby-remark-images-anywhere
//gatsby-config.js
{
resolve: `gatsby-transformer-remark`,
options: {
plugins: [
`gatsby-remark-images-anywhere`
],
},
},
Requirement
Your projects need to have…
- gatsby(!)
- gatsby-source-filesystem
- gatsby-transformer-remark
- gatsby-transformer-sharp
- gatsby-plugin-sharp
Configuration
{
resolve: `gatsby-remark-images-anywhere`,
options: {
/**
* @param {string} staticDir
* Root folder for images. For example,
* if your image path is `/assets/image.png`,
* your image is located in `static/assets/image.png`,
* then the staticDir is `static`.
* You can also point it to whichever else folder you have locally.
*/
staticDir: 'static',
/**
* @param {Function} createMarkup
* A function that return string template for image
* All sharp result will be passed in as arguments
*/
createMarkup: ({ src, srcSet }) => `<img src="${src}" srcSet="${srcSet}" class="hey" />`,
/**
* @param {'lazy' | 'eager' | 'auto'} loading
* Set the output markup's 'loading' attribute. Default: 'lazy'
*/
loading: 'lazy',
/**
* @param {string} backgroundColor
* Background color. Default: '#fff'
*/
backgroundColor: '#fff',
/**
* @param {boolean} linkImagesToOriginal
* If enabled, wraps the default markup with an <a> tag pointing to the original image.
* Default: false
*/
linkImagesToOriginal: true,
/**
* @param {string | Function} wrapperStyle
* Inject styles to the image wrapper.
* Also accept a function that receives all image data as arguments, i.e
* ({ aspectRatio, width, height }) => `padding-bottom: ${height/2}px;`
* Alternatively you can also attach additional class to `.gria-image-wrapper`
*/
wrapperStyle: 'padding-bottom: 0.5rem;',
/**
* @param {'fluid' | 'fixed' | 'resize'} sharpMethod
* Default: 'fluid'.
*/
sharpMethod: 'fluid',
/**
* ...imageOptions
* and any sharp image arguments (quality, maxWidth, etc.)
*/
maxWidth: 650,
quality: 50,
}
}
Writing your own markup
Here’s the createMarkup
signature:
type CreateMarkup = (args: CreateMarkupArgs, options?: MarkupOptions) => string;
interface CreateMarkupArgs {
sharpMethod: SharpMethod;
originSrc: string;
title?: string;
alt?: string;
aspectRatio: number;
src: string;
srcSet?: string;
srcWebp?: string;
srcSetWebp?: string;
base64?: string;
tracedSVG?: string;
// fixed, resize
width?: number;
height?: number;
// fluid
presentationHeight?: number;
presentationWidth?: number;
sizes?: string;
originalImg?: string;
}
interface MarkupOptions {
loading: 'lazy' | 'eager' | 'auto';
linkImagesToOriginal: boolean;
showCaptions: boolean;
wrapperStyle: string | Function;
backgroundColor: string;
tracedSVG: boolean | Object;
blurUp: boolean;
}
Example usage
- Codesandbox demo of using this plugin in combination with
gatsby-transformer-remark
custom component to achievegatsby-image
-like benefits (blur up, lazy loading, aspect-ratio).