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Cover image for Expand One Line Links 🔗
Waylon Walker
Waylon Walker

Posted on • Originally published at waylonwalker.com

Expand One Line Links 🔗

I wanted a super simple way to cross-link blog posts that require as little effort as possible, yet still looks good in vanilla markdown in GitHub. I have been using a snippet that puts HTML into the markdown. While this works, it's more manual/difficult for me does not look the best, and does not read well as

Goals for new card

The new card should be fully automated to expand with title, description, and
cover image. Bonus if I am able to attach a comment behind it.

  • fully automated
  • card expansion
  • Title
  • description
  • cover image

Old Card

If you can call it a card 🤣. This card was just an image wrapped in an anchor tag and a paragraph tag. I found this was the most consistent way to get an image narrower and centered in both GitHub and dev.to.

<p style='text-align: center'>
  <a href='https://waylonwalker.com/notes/eight-years-cat'>
    <img
    style='width:500px; max-width:80%; margin: auto;'
    src="https://waylonwalker.com/eight-years-cat.png"
    alt="My first eight years as a working professional article"
    />
  </a>
</p>
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My first eight years as a working professional article

The key here is that I have to put the HTML into the markdown. It looks a bit dirty while editing and quite frankly it's a pain to deal with.


New Card


<a class="onelinelink" href="https://waylonwalker.com/eight-years-cat/">
<img style="float: right;" align='right' src="https://waylonwalker.com/static/29cdf6fcfb17d7fd766fc438144fb3e4/630fb/eight-years-cat-xmas2020.png" alt="article cover for My first eight years as a working professional.">
<div class="right">
    <h2>My first eight years as a working professional.</h2>
    <p class="description">
    This day 8 years ago I started my first day as a Mechanical Engineer. I am so grateful for this journey that I have been able to have. There is no way that I could have planned this journey from the beginning.
    </p>
    <p class="url">
    <span class="read-more">read more</span>  waylonwalker.com
    </p>
</div>
</a>

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article cover for My first eight years as a working professional.

My first eight years as a working professional.

This day 8 years ago I started my first day as a Mechanical Engineer. I am so grateful for this journey that I have been able to have. There is no way that I could have planned this journey from the beginning.

read more waylonwalker.com

First step

My first attempt was to make my own transformer for gatsby-remark-embedder. I previously set this up on my site for Twitter and YouTube. I tried to get some custom transformers going, to do what I wanted for my own website, but failed. I really struggled to understand what data was coming in and out of the transformer. My lack of js/node debugging skills was really showing.


article cover for gatsby-remark-embedder

gatsby-remark-embedder

Inspired by discourse's link expansion I am rolling out expansions for one line links on the blog

read more waylonwalker.com

using gatsby-remark-embedder to expand Twitter/YouTube

Redirects

It also works with redirects. I have a redirect to my "latest" post. It's something that I don't do the best job at keeping up to date, but when I feel really proud of a post I make it the latest.


article cover for What's New in Kedro 0.16.6

What's New in Kedro 0.16.6

This version of kedro releases a new set of supported deployment options and the spaceflights pipeline is officially added as a starter alias.

read more waylonwalker.com

this post is a redirect to my "latest post"

Client Side

I started out by running this card expansion client side. This was the strategy that I used to find the list of elements that should be transformed.

  • get all anchors
  • get all paragraphs
  • filter paragraphs where the content is one of the links
  • filter paragraphs where there is only one element in the paragraph
  • filter to paragraphs with links that shouldTransform
  • These elements should have the oneLineLinkCard applied.
const oneLineLinks = () => {
  const linkText = [...document.querySelectorAll('.post-body p a')].map(
    (p) => p.innerText
  )
  const paragraphs = document.querySelectorAll('.post-body p') //

  const regex = /^https?:\/\/waylonwalker\.com\//
  const shouldTransform = (url) => regex.test(url)

  const anchorOnly = [...paragraphs].filter(
    (p) => linkText.includes(p.innerText) && p.childElementCount === 1
  )

  anchorOnly
    .filter((p) => shouldTransform(p.firstElementChild.href))
    .map(
      async (p) =>
        (p.outerHTML = await oneLineLinkCard(p.firstElementChild.href))
    )
}
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Styles

CSS is not my strong suit, but I can generally hammer something into a shape that I am happy with. For this one, I did struggle a bit with how it looked on various screens, particularly because I was holding the cover image size to a hard 300px. I ended up with more media queries than I needed, but it works.

.onelinelink + blockquote {
  position: relative;
  left: 2rem;
  background: rgba(0, 0, 0, .2);
  margin: -6rem auto 1rem;
  padding-top: 3rem;
  border: 1px solid goldenrod;
  border-top: 2px solid goldenrod;

  max-width: 300px;
  @media (max-width: 350px) {
  left: 0rem;
  margin-left: .4rem;
  margin-right: .4rem;
  }
  @media (min-width: 800px) {
    max-width: 600px;
  }
  @media (min-width: 900px) {
    max-width: 700px;
  }
  @media (min-width: 1000px) {
    max-width: 800px;
  }
  border-radius: 15px/45px;
  display: block;
  }

}

.onelinelink {
  position: relative;
  z-index: 2;
  margin: 4rem;
  overflow: hidden;
  display: flex;
  border: 2px solid rgba(255, 50, 50, .1);
  background: rgba(255, 50, 50, .015);
  background: #262236;
  text-decoration: none;
  border-radius: 8px;
  max-height: 126px;

  @media (max-width: 800px) {
    flex-direction: column;
    max-height: 800px;
    max-width: 300px;
    margin: 4rem auto;

  }

  h2 {
    top: -1.2rem;
    postition: relative;
    margin: 0;
    padding: 0;
    font-size: .8rem;
    font-weight: 400;

  }

  .right {
  width: 100%;
    padding: 5px 15px;
  }
  .description {
    font-size: 1rem;
    line-height: 1.2rem;
    height: calc(100% - 31px - 1rem);
    padding: 0;
    padding-bottom: 1rem;
    padding-top: .1rem;
    margin: 0;
  }
  .url {
    padding-right: 30px;
    color: rgba(255, 255, 255, .1);
    text-align: right;
    position: relative;
    z-index: 2;
    background: #262236;
  }

  img {
    max-width: 300px;
    max-height: 126px;
    padding: 0;
    margin: 0;
    border-radius: 8px 0 0 8px;
  }
  .read-more {
    font-size: .6rem;
    color: rgba(255, 255, 255, .08);
  }
}
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Final Look

On mobile, it renders vertically.

mobile

On desktop, it renders horizontally.

desktop

Expansion

I'm sure that all of this can be better, my js skills are still forming. It's quite humbling to see how hard it is to think in an unfamiliar language. The following oneLineLineCard renders a string template literal from a paragraph with a single anchor to a card that contains some of that pages meta information. The
getDescription function uses a fetch to get the metadata right from the content of the page.

const getDescription = (url) =>
  fetch(url)
    .then((r) => r.text())
    .then((html) => {
      let parser = new DOMParser()
      let doc = parser.parseFromString(html, 'text/html')
      let meta = doc.querySelectorAll('meta')
      const description = [...meta].filter(
        (m) => m.name === 'og:description'
      )[0].content
      const image = [...meta].filter((m) => m.name === 'og:image')[0]?.content
      const sm_image = [...meta].filter((m) => m.name === 'og:sm_image')[0]
        ?.content
      const url = [...meta].filter((m) => m.name === 'og:url')[0]?.content
      const title = [...meta].filter((m) => m.name === 'title')[0]?.content
      return { description, image, url, title, sm_image }
    })

const oneLineLinkCard = (url) => {
  return getDescription(url).then(
    (meta) =>
      `<a class="onelinelink" href=${meta.url}>
  <img src='${meta.sm_image ? meta.sm_image : meta.image ? meta.image : ''}' alt='cover image for ${meta.title ? meta.title : ''}>
  <div class="right">
    <h2>${meta.title ? meta.title : ''}</h2>
    <p class='description'>
      ${meta.description ? meta.description : ''}
    </p>
    <p class="url">
       <span class='read-more'>read more</span>  waylonwalker.com
    </p>
  </div>

</a>
  `
  )
}
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It works...

And it works. Whenever I reference my own blog with just a single link on a line in markdown I get a nice card link out to the other post, with a small image sized for the card, the title, and the description of the post.

But

  • too much client-side
  • does not work well with cross-posting

For every link I do this with the client will pull the full page just to get a bit of metadata. I am already doing a bit more than I want to do client-side for a blog, so I would prefer to do it ahead of time.

Additionally, since it is done client-side it does not translate well when I copy my markdown to various other blogging platforms. If it were rendered right into the markdown cross-posting would be much easier.

Future State

actually already implemented at this point

The direction I am going to try is to use python to load each post, look for lines that contain only a link, then render this same markup right in the markdown. For this I am going to use a language I am more familiar with, python, and do this inside of GitHub actions just before build time so that the markdown I write stays the same, the cards will only be rendered in prod.

Why Python 🐍

Python is my every day what I know, I work much more efficiently and cleanly with it. Also the more I blog the more abstractions I am seeing and the lazier I am getting. Things like description, SEO, cover images are all getting automated. Gatsby really doesn't like to run when some of those things are missing, probably due to my lack of JS error handling skills. I find it much easier to load up all the pages and patch up the frontmatter in python before
build time.

I am kinda curious if eventually, I can re-create everything I need in python because I am honestly not using react for much more than a glorified templating system, besides search. If I can pre-render everything in python

What do you think??

Do they look good? Could they be better?

Top comments (1)

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waylonwalker profile image
Waylon Walker

Whoops, I had a trailing backtick that took out the second half of the article, fixed now.