mkdocs-live-edit-plugin is an MkDocs plugin that allows editing pages directly from the browser.
Things you can do with this plugin when running via mkdocs serve
:
- Editing a page's Markdown source from the page itself.
- Renaming a page's filename
- Deleting a page
- Creating a brand new page
Some basic editor shortcuts available while editing:
- Ctrl+B/Cmd+B toggles your selection to be Bold
- Ctrl+I/Cmd+I toggles your selection to be Italic
- Alt+S/Opt+S toggles your selection to be
Strikethrough - Ctrl+S/Cmd+S to save your changes
If you like this plugin, you'll probably also like mkdocs-categories-plugin and mkdocs-alias-plugin.
Using Python 3.10 or greater, install the package using pip:
pip install mkdocs-live-edit-plugin
Then add the following entry to the plugins section of your mkdocs.yml
file:
plugins:
- live-edit
plugins:
- live-edit:
# If, for any reason, you want to override the websocket host and/or port
# that the Live Edit WebSocket is operating on, you can do so by changing
# the following options:
websockets_host: hostname # or any IP or hostname you wish
websockets_port: 9999 # or any other port you want
# By default, the plugin doesn't log any information to the browser
# developer console other than errors. To make the output more verbose,
# set the debug flag:
debug_mode: true
# If the plugin complains that the article element could not be found,
# this option allow you to specify which selector to use to find it.
# This string is directly fed into the document.querySelector function:
# https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/API/Element/querySelector
article_selector: 'div.my-custom-class'
The short answer: WebSockets handle client-server communication, while MkDocs handles reloading when files change.
Once installed, when running your local live-reload server, the plugin registers a separate WebSockets server that runs on a specified port. Once your wiki is built, a WebSockets client is installed in your browser, allowing for asynchronous communication between the two.
When you edit the contents of a file in the browser, they are sent to the server via WebSockets, where the plugin writes the contents to disk. Here, MkDocs picks up on the change and sends a reload signal back to the browser -- this is the same live-reload mechanism that picks up on changes you make via a text editor.
A similar mechanism is in place for other operations like renaming and deleting.
- Moving pages (also not sure about handling directories here)
- Integration with mkdocs-categories-plugin
- Integration with mkdocs-alias-plugin
✅ Make sure that MkDocs binds to 0.0.0.0 (the default for MkDocs is 127.0.0.1) by specifying the following flag at startup: mkdocs serve -a 0.0.0.0:8000
. The plugin will inherit this hostname (unless websockets_host
is set in the plugin options).
The plugin was unable to automatically determine the element which houses the text of your article. You can use the article_selector
setting to provide the correct selector syntaxt used by the querySelector
function to find your article. This should be the parent element of your article's H1 tag, containing all of your article's text.
Bug Fixes:
- Fixes an issue on Windows where the file's path name would populate using underscores rather than slashes. Fixes #11. Thank you, @ZeeWanderer for the contributing the fix!
- Allows for the setting of an
article_selector
option to specify which element on the page contains the page's text. This should greatly improve compatibility with just about any theme.
Features and Bug Fixes:
- Feature:
websocket_host
option for specifiying a hostname other than the one MkDocs uses. If not provided, the plugin uses the same host as your MkDocs config (127.0.0.1 by default). - Feature: Made the plugin spam the browser console less. This can still be re-enabled by setting
debug_mode
to true in the live-edit section of your config file. - Bug Fix: unpinned the websocket dependency and upgraded to the current version.
- Bug Fix: fixed incorrect path variable on Chrome on Windows.
Bug fix: fixes a compatibility issue reported in #5. This version also pins the websocket dependency to version 13 for the time being since upgrading would be an undertaking outside the scope of a small patch.
New Feature: Creating pages. The plugin now exposes a button that allows you to create a brand new page from any other page.
Bug fix: fixes an issue where the WebSocket connection would host on localhost over IPv6. See #3 for context.
Bug fix: Improved WebSocket connectivity and error handling. Updated the documentation to match.
Bug fix: The WebSocket connection now honors the hostname as supplied by the browser in window.location.hostname
.
Bug fix: include missing data files
Bug fix: include non-python files in the package
Initial release with editing, renaming, and deletion logic in place.