title: Zettelmarkup: Attributes role: manual tags: #manual #zettelmarkup #zettelstore syntax: zmk back: 00001007000000 00001007010000 00001007030400 00001007030500 00001007030600 00001007030700 00001007030800 00001007030900 00001007031100 00001007031110 00001007031200 00001007031300 00001007031400 00001007040100 00001007040200 00001007040322 00001007800000 00001012931000 backward: 00001007000000 00001007010000 00001007030400 00001007030500 00001007030600 00001007030700 00001007030800 00001007030900 00001007031100 00001007031110 00001007031200 00001007031300 00001007031400 00001007040000 00001007040100 00001007040200 00001007040322 00001007050100 00001007800000 00001012931000 box-number: 1 copyright: (c) 2020-present by Detlef Stern created: 20210126175322 forward: 00001007030000 00001007040000 00001007050100 00001007050200 lang: en license: EUPL-1.2-or-later modified: 20220630194106 published: 20220630194106 visibility: public Attributes allows to modify the way how material is presented. Alternatively, they provide additional information to markup elements. To some degree, attributes are similar to [[HTML attributes|https://html.spec.whatwg.org/multipage/dom.html#global-attributes]]. Typical use cases for attributes are to specify the (natural) [[language|00001007050100]] for a text region, to specify the [[programming language|00001007050200]] for highlighting program code, or to make white space visible in plain text. Attributes are specified within curly brackets ``{...}``. Of course, more than one attribute can be specified. Attributes are separated by a sequence of space characters or by a comma character. An attribute normally consists of an optional key and an optional value. The key is a sequence of letters, digits, a hyphen-minus (""''-''"", U+002D, and a low line / underscore (""''_''"", U+005D). It can be empty. The value is a sequence of any character, except space and the right curly bracket (""''}''"", U+007D). If the value must contain a space or the right curly bracket, the value can be specified within two quotation marks (""''"''"", U+0022). Within the quotation marks, the backslash character functions as an escape character to specify the quotation mark (and the backslash character too). Some examples: * ``{key=value}`` sets the attribute __key__ to value __value__. * ``{key="value with space"}`` sets the attribute to the given value. * ``{key="value with quote \\" (and backslash \\\\)"}`` * ``{name}`` sets the attribute __name__. It has no corresponding value. It is equivalent to ``{name=}``. * ``{=key}`` sets the __generic attribute__ to the given value. It is mostly used for modifying behavior according to a programming language. * ``{.key}`` sets the __class attribute__ to the given value. It is equivalent to ``{class=key}``. In these examples, ``key`` must conform the the syntax of attribute keys, even if it is used as a value. If a key is given more than once in an attribute, the values are concatenated (and separated by a space). * ``{key=value1 key=value2}`` is the same as ``{key"value1 value2"}``. * ``{key key}`` is the same as ``{key}``. * ``{.class1 .class2}`` is equivalent to ``{class="class1 class2"}``. This is not true for the generic attribute. In ``{=key1 =key2}``, the first key is ignored. Therefore it is equivalent to ``{=key2}``. The key ""''-''"" (just hyphen-minus) is special. It is called __default attribute__ and has a markup specific meaning. For example, when used for plain text, it replaces the non-visible space with a visible representation: * ''``Hello, world``{-}'' produces ==Hello, world=={-}. * ''``Hello, world``'' produces ==Hello, world==. Attributes may be continued on the next line when a space or line ending character is possible. In case of a quoted attribute value, the line ending character will be part of the attribute value. For example: ``` {key="quoted value"} ``` will produce a value ''quoted\\nvalue'' (where \\n denotes a line ending character). ``` ::GREEN::{class=example background=grey} ``` is allowed, but not ``` ::GREEN::{background=color: green} ``` However, ``` ::GREEN::{background=color:" green"} ``` is allowed, because line endings are allowed within quotes. For [[block-structured elements|00001007030000]], there is a syntax variant if you only want to specify a generic attribute. For all line-range blocks you can specify the generic attributes directly in the first line, after the three (or more) characters starting the block. ``` :::attr ... ::: ``` is equivalent to ``` :::{=attr} ... ::: ``` For block-structured elements, spaces are allowed between the blocks characters and the attributes. ``` === Heading {example} ``` is allowed and equivalent to ``` === Heading{example} ``` For [[inline-structured elements|00001007040000]], the attributes must immediately follow the inline markup. ``::GREEN::{example}`` is allowed, but not ``::GREEN:: {example}``. === Reference material * [[Supported attribute values for natural languages|00001007050100]] * [[Supported attribute values for programming languages|00001007050200]]