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---
title: CommonMark Spec
author: John MacFarlane
version: '0.30'
date: '2021-06-19'
license: '[CC-BY-SA 4.0](http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/4.0/)'
...
# Introduction
## What is Markdown?
Markdown is a plain text format for writing structured documents,
based on conventions for indicating formatting in email
and usenet posts. It was developed by John Gruber (with
help from Aaron Swartz) and released in 2004 in the form of a
[syntax description](http://daringfireball.net/projects/markdown/syntax)
and a Perl script (`Markdown.pl`) for converting Markdown to
HTML. In the next decade, dozens of implementations were
developed in many languages. Some extended the original
Markdown syntax with conventions for footnotes, tables, and
other document elements. Some allowed Markdown documents to be
rendered in formats other than HTML. Websites like Reddit,
StackOverflow, and GitHub had millions of people using Markdown.
And Markdown started to be used beyond the web, to author books,
articles, slide shows, letters, and lecture notes.
What distinguishes Markdown from many other lightweight markup
syntaxes, which are often easier to write, is its readability.
As Gruber writes:
> The overriding design goal for Markdown's formatting syntax is
> to make it as readable as possible. The idea is that a
> Markdown-formatted document should be publishable as-is, as
> plain text, without looking like it's been marked up with tags
> or formatting instructions.
> (<http://daringfireball.net/projects/markdown/>)
The point can be illustrated by comparing a sample of
[AsciiDoc](http://www.methods.co.nz/asciidoc/) with
an equivalent sample of Markdown. Here is a sample of
AsciiDoc from the AsciiDoc manual:
```
1. List item one.
+
List item one continued with a second paragraph followed by an
Indented block.
+
.................
$ ls *.sh
$ mv *.sh ~/tmp
.................
+
List item continued with a third paragraph.
2. List item two continued with an open block.
+
--
This paragraph is part of the preceding list item.
a. This list is nested and does not require explicit item
continuation.
+
This paragraph is part of the preceding list item.
b. List item b.
This paragraph belongs to item two of the outer list.
--
```
And here is the equivalent in Markdown:
```
1. List item one.
List item one continued with a second paragraph followed by an
Indented block.
$ ls *.sh
$ mv *.sh ~/tmp
List item continued with a third paragraph.
2. List item two continued with an open block.
This paragraph is part of the preceding list item.
1. This list is nested and does not require explicit item continuation.
This paragraph is part of the preceding list item.
2. List item b.
This paragraph belongs to item two of the outer list.
```
The AsciiDoc version is, arguably, easier to write. You don't need
to worry about indentation. But the Markdown version is much easier
to read. The nesting of list items is apparent to the eye in the
source, not just in the processed document.
## Why is a spec needed?
John Gruber's [canonical description of Markdown's
syntax](http://daringfireball.net/projects/markdown/syntax)
does not specify the syntax unambiguously. Here are some examples of
questions it does not answer:
1. How much indentation is needed for a sublist? The spec says that
continuation paragraphs need to be indented four spaces, but is
not fully explicit about sublists. It is natural to think that
they, too, must be indented four spaces, but `Markdown.pl` does
not require that. This is hardly a "corner case," and divergences
between implementations on this issue often lead to surprises for
users in real documents. (See [this comment by John
Gruber](https://web.archive.org/web/20170611172104/http://article.gmane.org/gmane.text.markdown.general/1997).)
2. Is a blank line needed before a block quote or heading?
Most implementations do not require the blank line. However,
this can lead to unexpected results in hard-wrapped text, and
also to ambiguities in parsing (note that some implementations
put the heading inside the blockquote, while others do not).
(John Gruber has also spoken [in favor of requiring the blank
lines](https://web.archive.org/web/20170611172104/http://article.gmane.org/gmane.text.markdown.general/2146).)
3. Is a blank line needed before an indented code block?
(`Markdown.pl` requires it, but this is not mentioned in the
documentation, and some implementations do not require it.)
``` markdown
paragraph
code?
```
4. What is the exact rule for determining when list items get
wrapped in `<p>` tags? Can a list be partially "loose" and partially
"tight"? What should we do with a list like this?
``` markdown
1. one
2. two
3. three
```
Or this?
``` markdown
1. one
- a
- b
2. two
```
(There are some relevant comments by John Gruber
[here](https://web.archive.org/web/20170611172104/http://article.gmane.org/gmane.text.markdown.general/2554).)
5. Can list markers be indented? Can ordered list markers be right-aligned?
``` markdown
8. item 1
9. item 2
10. item 2a
```
6. Is this one list with a thematic break in its second item,
or two lists separated by a thematic break?
``` markdown
* a
* * * * *
* b
```
7. When list markers change from numbers to bullets, do we have
two lists or one? (The Markdown syntax description suggests two,
but the perl scripts and many other implementations produce one.)
``` markdown
1. fee
2. fie
- foe
- fum
```
8. What are the precedence rules for the markers of inline structure?
For example, is the following a valid link, or does the code span
take precedence ?
``` markdown
[a backtick (`)](/url) and [another backtick (`)](/url).
```
9. What are the precedence rules for markers of emphasis and strong
emphasis? For example, how should the following be parsed?
``` markdown
*foo *bar* baz*
```
10. What are the precedence rules between block-level and inline-level
structure? For example, how should the following be parsed?
``` markdown
- `a long code span can contain a hyphen like this
- and it can screw things up`
```
11. Can list items include section headings? (`Markdown.pl` does not
allow this, but does allow blockquotes to include headings.)
``` markdown
- # Heading
```
12. Can list items be empty?
``` markdown
* a
*
* b
```
13. Can link references be defined inside block quotes or list items?
``` markdown
> Blockquote [foo].
>
> [foo]: /url
```
14. If there are multiple definitions for the same reference, which takes
precedence?
``` markdown
[foo]: /url1
[foo]: /url2
[foo][]
```
In the absence of a spec, early implementers consulted `Markdown.pl`
to resolve these ambiguities. But `Markdown.pl` was quite buggy, and
gave manifestly bad results in many cases, so it was not a
satisfactory replacement for a spec.
Because there is no unambiguous spec, implementations have diverged
considerably. As a result, users are often surprised to find that
a document that renders one way on one system (say, a GitHub wiki)
renders differently on another (say, converting to docbook using
pandoc). To make matters worse, because nothing in Markdown counts
as a "syntax error," the divergence often isn't discovered right away.
## About this document
This document attempts to specify Markdown syntax unambiguously.
It contains many examples with side-by-side Markdown and
HTML. These are intended to double as conformance tests. An
accompanying script `spec_tests.py` can be used to run the tests
against any Markdown program:
python test/spec_tests.py --spec spec.txt --program PROGRAM
Since this document describes how Markdown is to be parsed into
an abstract syntax tree, it would have made sense to use an abstract
representation of the syntax tree instead of HTML. But HTML is capable
of representing the structural distinctions we need to make, and the
choice of HTML for the tests makes it possible to run the tests against
an implementation without writing an abstract syntax tree renderer.
Note that not every feature of the HTML samples is mandated by
the spec. For example, the spec says what counts as a link
destination, but it doesn't mandate that non-ASCII characters in
the URL be percent-encoded. To use the automatic tests,
implementers will need to provide a renderer that conforms to
the expectations of the spec examples (percent-encoding
non-ASCII characters in URLs). But a conforming implementation
can use a different renderer and may choose not to
percent-encode non-ASCII characters in URLs.
This document is generated from a text file, `spec.txt`, written
in Markdown with a small extension for the side-by-side tests.
The script `tools/makespec.py` can be used to convert `spec.txt` into
HTML or CommonMark (which can then be converted into other formats).
In the examples, the `→` character is used to represent tabs.
# Preliminaries
## Characters and lines
Any sequence of [characters] is a valid CommonMark
document.
A [character](@) is a Unicode code point. Although some
code points (for example, combining accents) do not correspond to
characters in an intuitive sense, all code points count as characters
for purposes of this spec.
This spec does not specify an encoding; it thinks of lines as composed
of [characters] rather than bytes. A conforming parser may be limited
to a certain encoding.
A [line](@) is a sequence of zero or more [characters]
other than line feed (`U+000A`) or carriage return (`U+000D`),
followed by a [line ending] or by the end of file.
A [line ending](@) is a line feed (`U+000A`), a carriage return
(`U+000D`) not followed by a line feed, or a carriage return and a
following line feed.
A line containing no characters, or a line containing only spaces
(`U+0020`) or tabs (`U+0009`), is called a [blank line](@).
The following definitions of character classes will be used in this spec:
A [Unicode whitespace character](@) is
any code point in the Unicode `Zs` general category, or a tab (`U+0009`),
line feed (`U+000A`), form feed (`U+000C`), or carriage return (`U+000D`).
[Unicode whitespace](@) is a sequence of one or more
[Unicode whitespace characters].
A [tab](@) is `U+0009`.
A [space](@) is `U+0020`.
An [ASCII control character](@) is a character between `U+0000–1F` (both
including) or `U+007F`.
An [ASCII punctuation character](@)
is `!`, `"`, `#`, `$`, `%`, `&`, `'`, `(`, `)`,
`*`, `+`, `,`, `-`, `.`, `/` (U+0021–2F),
`:`, `;`, `<`, `=`, `>`, `?`, `@` (U+003A–0040),
`[`, `\`, `]`, `^`, `_`, `` ` `` (U+005B–0060),
`{`, `|`, `}`, or `~` (U+007B–007E).
A [Unicode punctuation character](@) is an [ASCII
punctuation character] or anything in
the general Unicode categories `Pc`, `Pd`, `Pe`, `Pf`, `Pi`, `Po`, or `Ps`.
## Tabs
Tabs in lines are not expanded to [spaces]. However,
in contexts where spaces help to define block structure,
tabs behave as if they were replaced by spaces with a tab stop
of 4 characters.
Thus, for example, a tab can be used instead of four spaces
in an indented code block. (Note, however, that internal
tabs are passed through as literal tabs, not expanded to
spaces.)
```````````````````````````````` example
→foo→baz→→bim
.
<pre><code>foo→baz→→bim
</code></pre>
````````````````````````````````
```````````````````````````````` example
→foo→baz→→bim
.
<pre><code>foo→baz→→bim
</code></pre>
````````````````````````````````
```````````````````````````````` example
a→a
ὐ→a
.
<pre><code>a→a
ὐ→a
</code></pre>
````````````````````````````````
In the following example, a continuation paragraph of a list
item is indented with a tab; this has exactly the same effect
as indentation with four spaces would:
```````````````````````````````` example
- foo
→bar
.
<ul>
<li>
<p>foo</p>
<p>bar</p>
</li>
</ul>
````````````````````````````````
```````````````````````````````` example
- foo
→→bar
.
<ul>
<li>
<p>foo</p>
<pre><code> bar
</code></pre>
</li>
</ul>
````````````````````````````````
Normally the `>` that begins a block quote may be followed
optionally by a space, which is not considered part of the
content. In the following case `>` is followed by a tab,
which is treated as if it were expanded into three spaces.
Since one of these spaces is considered part of the
delimiter, `foo` is considered to be indented six spaces
inside the block quote context, so we get an indented
code block starting with two spaces.
```````````````````````````````` example
>→→foo
.
<blockquote>
<pre><code> foo
</code></pre>
</blockquote>
````````````````````````````````
```````````````````````````````` example
-→→foo
.
<ul>
<li>
<pre><code> foo
</code></pre>
</li>
</ul>
````````````````````````````````
```````````````````````````````` example
foo
→bar
.
<pre><code>foo
bar
</code></pre>
````````````````````````````````
```````````````````````````````` example
- foo
- bar
→ - baz
.
<ul>
<li>foo
<ul>
<li>bar
<ul>
<li>baz</li>
</ul>
</li>
</ul>
</li>
</ul>
````````````````````````````````
```````````````````````````````` example
#→Foo
.
<h1>Foo</h1>
````````````````````````````````
```````````````````````````````` example
*→*→*→
.
<hr />
````````````````````````````````
## Insecure characters
For security reasons, the Unicode character `U+0000` must be replaced
with the REPLACEMENT CHARACTER (`U+FFFD`).
## Backslash escapes
Any ASCII punctuation character may be backslash-escaped:
```````````````````````````````` example
\!\"\#\$\%\&\'\(\)\*\+\,\-\.\/\:\;\<\=\>\?\@\[\\\]\^\_\`\{\|\}\~
.
<p>!"#$%&'()*+,-./:;<=>?@[\]^_`{|}~</p>
````````````````````````````````
Backslashes before other characters are treated as literal
backslashes:
```````````````````````````````` example
\→\A\a\ \3\φ\«
.
<p>\→\A\a\ \3\φ\«</p>
````````````````````````````````
Escaped characters are treated as regular characters and do
not have their usual Markdown meanings:
```````````````````````````````` example
\*not emphasized*
\<br/> not a tag
\[not a link](/foo)
\`not code`
1\. not a list
\* not a list
\# not a heading
\[foo]: /url "not a reference"
\ö not a character entity
.
<p>*not emphasized*
<br/> not a tag
[not a link](/foo)
`not code`
1. not a list
* not a list
# not a heading
[foo]: /url "not a reference"
&ouml; not a character entity</p>
````````````````````````````````
If a backslash is itself escaped, the following character is not:
```````````````````````````````` example
\\*emphasis*
.
<p>\<em>emphasis</em></p>
````````````````````````````````
A backslash at the end of the line is a [hard line break]:
```````````````````````````````` example
foo\
bar
.
<p>foo<br />
bar</p>
````````````````````````````````
Backslash escapes do not work in code blocks, code spans, autolinks, or
raw HTML:
```````````````````````````````` example
`` \[\` ``
.
<p><code>\[\`</code></p>
````````````````````````````````
```````````````````````````````` example
\[\]
.
<pre><code>\[\]
</code></pre>
````````````````````````````````
```````````````````````````````` example
~~~
\[\]
~~~
.
<pre><code>\[\]
</code></pre>
````````````````````````````````
```````````````````````````````` example
<http://example.com?find=\*>
.
<p><a href="http://example.com?find=%5C*">http://example.com?find=\*</a></p>
````````````````````````````````
```````````````````````````````` example
<a href="/bar\/)">
.
<a href="/bar\/)">
````````````````````````````````
But they work in all other contexts, including URLs and link titles,
link references, and [info strings] in [fenced code blocks]:
```````````````````````````````` example
[foo](/bar\* "ti\*tle")
.
<p><a href="/bar*" title="ti*tle">foo</a></p>
````````````````````````````````
```````````````````````````````` example
[foo]
[foo]: /bar\* "ti\*tle"
.
<p><a href="/bar*" title="ti*tle">foo</a></p>
````````````````````````````````
```````````````````````````````` example
``` foo\+bar
foo
```
.
<pre><code class="language-foo+bar">foo
</code></pre>
````````````````````````````````
## Entity and numeric character references
Valid HTML entity references and numeric character references
can be used in place of the corresponding Unicode character,
with the following exceptions:
- Entity and character references are not recognized in code
blocks and code spans.
- Entity and character references cannot stand in place of
special characters that define structural elements in
CommonMark. For example, although `*` can be used
in place of a literal `*` character, `*` cannot replace
`*` in emphasis delimiters, bullet list markers, or thematic
breaks.
Conforming CommonMark parsers need not store information about
whether a particular character was represented in the source
using a Unicode character or an entity reference.
[Entity references](@) consist of `&` + any of the valid
HTML5 entity names + `;`. The
document <https://html.spec.whatwg.org/entities.json>
is used as an authoritative source for the valid entity
references and their corresponding code points.
```````````````````````````````` example
& © Æ Ď
¾ ℋ ⅆ
∲ ≧̸
.
<p> & © Æ Ď
¾ ℋ ⅆ
∲ ≧̸</p>
````````````````````````````````
[Decimal numeric character
references](@)
consist of `&#` + a string of 1--7 arabic digits + `;`. A
numeric character reference is parsed as the corresponding
Unicode character. Invalid Unicode code points will be replaced by
the REPLACEMENT CHARACTER (`U+FFFD`). For security reasons,
the code point `U+0000` will also be replaced by `U+FFFD`.
```````````````````````````````` example
# Ӓ Ϡ �
.
<p># Ӓ Ϡ �</p>
````````````````````````````````
[Hexadecimal numeric character
references](@) consist of `&#` +
either `X` or `x` + a string of 1-6 hexadecimal digits + `;`.
They too are parsed as the corresponding Unicode character (this
time specified with a hexadecimal numeral instead of decimal).
```````````````````````````````` example
" ആ ಫ
.
<p>" ആ ಫ</p>
````````````````````````````````
Here are some nonentities:
```````````````````````````````` example
  &x; &#; &#x;
�
&#abcdef0;
&ThisIsNotDefined; &hi?;
.
<p>&nbsp &x; &#; &#x;
&#87654321;
&#abcdef0;
&ThisIsNotDefined; &hi?;</p>
````````````````````````````````
Although HTML5 does accept some entity references
without a trailing semicolon (such as `©`), these are not
recognized here, because it makes the grammar too ambiguous:
```````````````````````````````` example
©
.
<p>&copy</p>
````````````````````````````````
Strings that are not on the list of HTML5 named entities are not
recognized as entity references either:
```````````````````````````````` example
&MadeUpEntity;
.
<p>&MadeUpEntity;</p>
````````````````````````````````
Entity and numeric character references are recognized in any
context besides code spans or code blocks, including
URLs, [link titles], and [fenced code block][] [info strings]:
```````````````````````````````` example
<a href="öö.html">
.
<a href="öö.html">
````````````````````````````````
```````````````````````````````` example
[foo](/föö "föö")
.
<p><a href="/f%C3%B6%C3%B6" title="föö">foo</a></p>
````````````````````````````````
```````````````````````````````` example
[foo]
[foo]: /föö "föö"
.
<p><a href="/f%C3%B6%C3%B6" title="föö">foo</a></p>
````````````````````````````````
```````````````````````````````` example
``` föö
foo
```
.
<pre><code class="language-föö">foo
</code></pre>
````````````````````````````````
Entity and numeric character references are treated as literal
text in code spans and code blocks:
```````````````````````````````` example
`föö`
.
<p><code>f&ouml;&ouml;</code></p>
````````````````````````````````
```````````````````````````````` example
föfö
.
<pre><code>f&ouml;f&ouml;
</code></pre>
````````````````````````````````
Entity and numeric character references cannot be used
in place of symbols indicating structure in CommonMark
documents.
```````````````````````````````` example
*foo*
*foo*
.
<p>*foo*
<em>foo</em></p>
````````````````````````````````
```````````````````````````````` example
* foo
* foo
.
<p>* foo</p>
<ul>
<li>foo</li>
</ul>
````````````````````````````````
```````````````````````````````` example
foo bar
.
<p>foo
bar</p>
````````````````````````````````
```````````````````````````````` example
	foo
.
<p>→foo</p>
````````````````````````````````
```````````````````````````````` example
[a](url "tit")
.
<p>[a](url "tit")</p>
````````````````````````````````
# Blocks and inlines
We can think of a document as a sequence of
[blocks](@)---structural elements like paragraphs, block
quotations, lists, headings, rules, and code blocks. Some blocks (like
block quotes and list items) contain other blocks; others (like
headings and paragraphs) contain [inline](@) content---text,
links, emphasized text, images, code spans, and so on.
## Precedence
Indicators of block structure always take precedence over indicators
of inline structure. So, for example, the following is a list with
two items, not a list with one item containing a code span:
```````````````````````````````` example
- `one
- two`
.
<ul>
<li>`one</li>
<li>two`</li>
</ul>
````````````````````````````````
This means that parsing can proceed in two steps: first, the block
structure of the document can be discerned; second, text lines inside
paragraphs, headings, and other block constructs can be parsed for inline
structure. The second step requires information about link reference
definitions that will be available only at the end of the first
step. Note that the first step requires processing lines in sequence,
but the second can be parallelized, since the inline parsing of
one block element does not affect the inline parsing of any other.
## Container blocks and leaf blocks
We can divide blocks into two types:
[container blocks](#container-blocks),
which can contain other blocks, and [leaf blocks](#leaf-blocks),
which cannot.
# Leaf blocks
This section describes the different kinds of leaf block that make up a
Markdown document.
## Thematic breaks
A line consisting of optionally up to three spaces of indentation, followed by a
sequence of three or more matching `-`, `_`, or `*` characters, each followed
optionally by any number of spaces or tabs, forms a
[thematic break](@).
```````````````````````````````` example
***
---
___
.
<hr />
<hr />
<hr />
````````````````````````````````
Wrong characters:
```````````````````````````````` example
+++
.
<p>+++</p>
````````````````````````````````
```````````````````````````````` example
===
.
<p>===</p>
````````````````````````````````
Not enough characters:
```````````````````````````````` example
--
**
__
.
<p>--
**
__</p>
````````````````````````````````
Up to three spaces of indentation are allowed:
```````````````````````````````` example
***
***
***
.
<hr />
<hr />
<hr />
````````````````````````````````
Four spaces of indentation is too many:
```````````````````````````````` example
***
.
<pre><code>***
</code></pre>
````````````````````````````````
```````````````````````````````` example
Foo
***
.
<p>Foo
***</p>
````````````````````````````````
More than three characters may be used:
```````````````````````````````` example
_____________________________________
.
<hr />
````````````````````````````````
Spaces and tabs are allowed between the characters:
```````````````````````````````` example
- - -
.
<hr />
````````````````````````````````
```````````````````````````````` example
** * ** * ** * **
.
<hr />
````````````````````````````````
```````````````````````````````` example
- - - -
.
<hr />
````````````````````````````````
Spaces and tabs are allowed at the end:
```````````````````````````````` example
- - - -
.
<hr />
````````````````````````````````
However, no other characters may occur in the line:
```````````````````````````````` example
_ _ _ _ a
a------
---a---