html-to-markdown
Elixir bindings for the Rust html-to-markdown engine. The package exposes a fast HTML to Markdown converter implemented with Rustler. Ship identical Markdown across every runtime while enjoying native performance with Rustler NIF bindings.
Installation
Add {:html_to_markdown, "~> 2.28.1"} to mix.exs deps
Requires Elixir 1.19+ and OTP 28. Add to your mix.exs:
def deps do
[
{:html_to_markdown, "~> 2.28.1"}
]
endPerformance Snapshot
Apple M4 • Real Wikipedia documents • convert() (Elixir)
| Document | Size | Ops/sec | Throughput |
|---|---|---|---|
| Lists (Timeline) | 129KB | 2,547 | 321.7 MB/s |
| Tables (Countries) | 360KB | 835 | 293.8 MB/s |
| Medium (Python) | 656KB | 439 | 281.5 MB/s |
| Large (Rust) | 567KB | 485 | 268.7 MB/s |
| Small (Intro) | 463KB | 581 | 262.9 MB/s |
| HOCR German PDF | 44KB | 7,106 | 303.1 MB/s |
| HOCR Embedded Tables | 37KB | 6,231 | 226.1 MB/s |
| HOCR Invoice | 4KB | 62,657 | 256.4 MB/s |
See Performance Guide for detailed benchmarks.
Quick Start
Basic conversion:
{:ok, markdown} = HtmlToMarkdown.convert("<h1>Hello</h1><p>This is <strong>fast</strong>!</p>")
IO.puts(markdown)With conversion options:
handle = HtmlToMarkdown.options(%HtmlToMarkdown.Options{wrap: true, wrap_width: 40})
{:ok, markdown} = HtmlToMarkdown.convert_with_options("<h1>Hello</h1><p>World</p>", handle)
IO.puts(markdown)API Reference
Core Functions
HtmlToMarkdown.convert(html, options \\ nil) :: String.t()
Basic HTML-to-Markdown conversion. Fast and simple.
HtmlToMarkdown.convert_with_metadata(html, options \\ nil, config \\ nil) :: {String.t(), map()}
Extract Markdown plus metadata in a single pass. See Metadata Extraction Guide.
HtmlToMarkdown.convert_with_inline_images(html, config \\ nil) :: {String.t(), list(map()), list(String.t())}
Extract base64-encoded inline images with metadata.
HtmlToMarkdown.convert_with_tables(html, options \\ nil, config \\ nil) :: %ConversionWithTables{}
Extract structured table data (cells, headers, rendered markdown) alongside conversion.
Options
ConversionOptions – Key configuration fields:
heading_style: Heading format ("underlined"|"atx"|"atx_closed") — default:"underlined"list_indent_width: Spaces per indent level — default:2bullets: Bullet characters cycle — default:"*+-"wrap: Enable text wrapping — default:falsewrap_width: Wrap at column — default:80code_language: Default fenced code block language — default: noneextract_metadata: Embed metadata as YAML frontmatter — default:falseoutput_format: Output markup format ("markdown"|"djot"|"plain") — default:"markdown"
MetadataConfig – Selective metadata extraction:
extract_headers: h1-h6 elements — default:trueextract_links: Hyperlinks — default:trueextract_images: Image elements — default:trueextract_structured_data: JSON-LD, Microdata, RDFa — default:truemax_structured_data_size: Size limit in bytes — default:100KB
Djot Output Format
The library supports converting HTML to Djot, a lightweight markup language similar to Markdown but with a different syntax for some elements. Set output_format to "djot" to use this format.
Syntax Differences
| Element | Markdown | Djot |
|---|---|---|
| Strong | **text** | *text* |
| Emphasis | *text* | _text_ |
| Strikethrough | ~~text~~ | {-text-} |
| Inserted/Added | N/A | {+text+} |
| Highlighted | N/A | {=text=} |
| Subscript | N/A | ~text~ |
| Superscript | N/A | ^text^ |
Example Usage
html = "<p>This is <strong>bold</strong> and <em>italic</em> text.</p>"
# Default Markdown output
{:ok, markdown} = HtmlToMarkdown.convert(html)
# Result: "This is **bold** and *italic* text."
# Djot output
{:ok, djot} = HtmlToMarkdown.convert(html, %{output_format: "djot"})
# Result: "This is *bold* and _italic_ text."Djot's extended syntax allows you to express more semantic meaning in lightweight text, making it useful for documents that require strikethrough, insertion tracking, or mathematical notation.
Plain Text Output
Set output_format to "plain" to strip all markup and return only visible text. This bypasses the Markdown conversion pipeline entirely for maximum speed.
html = "<h1>Title</h1><p>This is <strong>bold</strong> and <em>italic</em> text.</p>"
{:ok, plain} = HtmlToMarkdown.convert(html, %{output_format: "plain"})
# Result: "Title\n\nThis is bold and italic text."Plain text mode is useful for search indexing, text extraction, and feeding content to LLMs.
Metadata Extraction
The metadata extraction feature enables comprehensive document analysis during conversion. Extract document properties, headers, links, images, and structured data in a single pass.
Use Cases:
- SEO analysis – Extract title, description, Open Graph tags, Twitter cards
- Table of contents generation – Build structured outlines from heading hierarchy
- Content migration – Document all external links and resources
- Accessibility audits – Check for images without alt text, empty links, invalid heading hierarchy
- Link validation – Classify and validate anchor, internal, external, email, and phone links
Zero Overhead When Disabled: Metadata extraction adds negligible overhead and happens during the HTML parsing pass. Disable unused metadata types in MetadataConfig to optimize further.
Example: Quick Start
alias HtmlToMarkdown
html = "<h1>Article</h1><img src=\"test.jpg\" alt=\"test\">"
{markdown, metadata} = HtmlToMarkdown.convert_with_metadata(html)
IO.inspect(metadata.document.title) # Document title
IO.inspect(metadata.headers) # All h1-h6 elements
IO.inspect(metadata.links) # All hyperlinks
IO.inspect(metadata.images) # All images with alt text
IO.inspect(metadata.structured_data) # JSON-LD, Microdata, RDFaFor detailed examples including SEO extraction, table-of-contents generation, link validation, and accessibility audits, see the Metadata Extraction Guide.
Visitor Pattern
The visitor pattern enables custom HTML→Markdown conversion logic by providing callbacks for specific HTML elements during traversal. Use visitors to transform content, filter elements, validate structure, or collect analytics.
Use Cases:
- Custom Markdown dialects – Convert to Obsidian, Notion, or other flavors
- Content filtering – Remove tracking pixels, ads, or unwanted elements
- URL rewriting – Rewrite CDN URLs, add query parameters, validate links
- Accessibility validation – Check alt text, heading hierarchy, link text
- Analytics – Track element usage, link destinations, image sources
Supported Visitor Methods: 40+ callbacks for text, inline elements, links, images, headings, lists, blocks, and tables.
Example: Quick Start
defmodule MyVisitor do
def visit_link(ctx, href, text, title) do
# Rewrite CDN URLs
href = if String.starts_with?(href, "https://old-cdn.com") do
String.replace(href, "https://old-cdn.com", "https://new-cdn.com")
else
href
end
{:custom, "[#{text}](#{href})"}
end
def visit_image(ctx, src, alt, title) do
# Skip tracking pixels
if String.contains?(src, "tracking") do
:skip
else
:continue
end
end
end
html = "<a href=\"https://old-cdn.com/file.pdf\">Download</a>"
markdown = HtmlToMarkdown.convert_with_visitor(html, visitor: MyVisitor)For comprehensive examples including content filtering, link footnotes, accessibility validation, and asynchronous URL validation, see the Visitor Pattern Guide.
Examples
Links
Kreuzberg Ecosystem:kreuzberg.dev
Discord:discord.gg/pXxagNK2zN
Contributing
We welcome contributions! Please see our Contributing Guide for details on:
- Setting up the development environment
- Running tests locally
- Submitting pull requests
- Reporting issues
All contributions must follow our code quality standards (enforced via pre-commit hooks):
- Proper test coverage (Rust 95%+, language bindings 80%+)
- Formatting and linting checks
- Documentation for public APIs
License
MIT License – see LICENSE.
Support
If you find this library useful, consider sponsoring the project.
Have questions or run into issues? We're here to help:
- GitHub Issues:github.com/kreuzberg-dev/html-to-markdown/issues
- Discussions:github.com/kreuzberg-dev/html-to-markdown/discussions
- Discord Community:discord.gg/pXxagNK2zN