This post was originally published on https://tomekdev.com/posts/anchors-for-headings-in-mdx. What you see as GIF here is interactive there. ✌️
How to add anchors to headings in MDX? It's surprisingly easy to do. I assume you are already familiar with MDX so somewhere in your code you should have a blog page layout component that uses <MDXProvider>
, like that:
<MDXProvider>{children}</MDXProvider>
MDX consists of components itself. So if there is a code like this
then the interpreter changes the inner value (children) into the same content but wrapped with <code></code>
.
The same applies to all the headings, lists, paragraphs, etc. Our job is to override the headings. We can do it by passing components
hash and specifying a replacement.
import H2 from './MyCustomMDX/H2';
import H3 from './MyCustomMDX/H3';
import H4 from './MyCustomMDX/H4';
// ...
<MDXProvider
components={{
h2: H2,
h3: H3,
h4: H4,
}}
>
{children}
</MDXProvider>;
Please notice that we are not going to add an anchor to the <h1>
tag. It doesn't make sense in my opinion. <h1>
is like a summary of the whole page. The URL that links to it is the direct link to the post. Anchors should be used to specific parts of a post (to a section).
Override heading component
The override for <h2>
that shows an anchor when the mouse is over the text could look like this:
// ./MyCustomMDX/H2.js
function getAnchor(text) {
return text
.toLowerCase()
.replace(/[^a-z0-9]/g, '')
.replace(/[]/g, '-');
}
const H2 = ({ children }) => {
const anchor = getAnchor(children);
const link = `#${anchor}`;
return (
<h2 id={anchor}>
<a href={link} className="anchor-link">
§
</a>
{children}
</h2>
);
};
export default H2;
Below you'll see the demo. Please notice the hover state. On the left you should see §
sign that is also a link, representing our anchor:
Let's explain a few bits. The way we use headings in Markdown is by using #
sign, for example:
## I'm h2 with an anchor
Everything that goes after ##
is passed as a child to the H2
component.
So the next interesting bit is done in the getAnchor
function. Take a look at lines 3 to 8. This is what happens:
- line 5 - we convert the input to lower case → "i'm h2 with an anchor"
- line 6 - we remove all non-alphanumeric characters → "im h2 with an anchor"
- line 7 - we replace spaces with a hyphen → "im-h2-with-an-anchor"
... and voilà. We have a URL-friendly anchor 🎉
The styling
Another important thing here is the CSS. We want to show the anchor only on hover and somewhere next to the heading itself:
h2 {
position: relative;
}
.anchor-link {
color: #666;
opacity: 0;
position: absolute;
transform: translate(-1em, -2px);
width: 1em;
}
h2:hover .anchor-link {
opacity: 1;
}
Of course, you can go crazy with your anchors ;) That one is very basic.
Recommendation
One thing that is easy to overlook here (in my example) is using a character like §
inside of <h2>
tag. In this approach, the sign will become a part of the document outline. Which is not something we want. It's better to use an icon in SVG format but I didn't want to complicate the example.
If the simple sign is what you want then you should render <a>
tag before or after the <h2>
.
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