vitepress-export-pdf
vitepress-export-pdf copied to clipboard
VitePress export PDF
vitepress-export-pdf
vitepress-export-pdf allows you to export your sites to a PDF file.
Related
Installation
npm install vitepress-export-pdf -D
then add script to your package.json:
{
"scripts": {
"export-pdf": "press-export-pdf export [path/to/your/docs]"
}
}
Then run:
npm run export-pdf
press-export-pdf Command Options
The package provides the press-export-pdf command with the following command line options:
export [sourceDir]: Export your site to a PDF file-c, --config <config>: Set path to config file--outFile <outFile>: Name of output file--outDir <outDir>: Directory of output files--pdfOutlines <pdfOutlines>: Keep PDF outlines/bookmarks(Node >= 18.5.0)--urlOrigin <urlOrigin>: Change the origin of the print url(OptiondisplayHeaderFooterofpdfOptionsis true)--debug: Enable debug mode
info: Display environment information--help: Display help information--version: Display version information
Config File Options
You can create a new config file, we support the following files:
vitepress-pdf.config.tsvitepress-pdf.config.jsvitepress-pdf.config.cjsvitepress-pdf.config.mjs.vitepress/vitepress-pdf.config.ts.vitepress/vitepress-pdf.config.js.vitepress/vitepress-pdf.config.cjs.vitepress/vitepress-pdf.config.mjs
In addition, you can also customize the configuration file through --config or -c.
It is recommended to use TS(.vitepress/vitepress-pdf.config.ts) files, which are easy to manage and have friendly code prompts.
ex:
// .vitepress/vitepress-pdf.config.ts
import { defineUserConfig } from 'vitepress-export-pdf'
export default defineUserConfig({
// ...
})
if you want to use JS files, you can leverage your IDE's intellisense with jsdoc type hints:
/**
* @type {import('vitepress-export-pdf').UserConfig}
*/
const config = {
// ...
}
export default config
config options:
sorter- function for changing pages order (defaultundefined)outFile- name of output file (defaultvitepress-YYMMDD-HHmmss.pdf)outDir- Directory of output files (defaultpackage.jsonfile exists in directory)routePatterns- Specify the patterns of files you want to be exported. The patterns are relative to the source directory (default["/**", "!/404.html"]).Patterns to match Route path using multimatchpuppeteerLaunchOptions- Puppeteer launch options objectpdfOptions- Valid options to configure PDF generation via Page.pdf() (default{ format: 'A4 }),pageNumberandtotalPagesofheaderTemplateandfooterTemplatecannot be used because of this reasonpdfOutlines- Keep PDF outlines/bookmarks(defaulttrue)urlOrigin: Change the origin of the print url(OptiondisplayHeaderFooterofpdfOptionsis true) - (How do I change the URL point to the localhost)outlineContainerSelector: Specify an outline container selector.
Examples
A usable example of quick start click here.
Refer to this example for more information,there is a very useful configuration file vitepress-pdf.config.ts
Order of PDF
console.log all the routes in the sort function and assign them to the variable routeOrder as a value. You can adjust the order of printing in the array routeOrder.
import { defineUserConfig } from 'vitepress-export-pdf'
const routeOrder = [
'/index.html',
'/guide/what-is-vitepress.html',
'/guide/getting-started.html',
'/guide/configuration.html',
// ...
]
export default defineUserConfig({
sorter: (pageA, pageB) => {
const aIndex = routeOrder.findIndex(route => route === pageA.path)
const bIndex = routeOrder.findIndex(route => route === pageB.path)
return aIndex - bIndex
},
})
In order to avoid maintaining two routes, you can read the link fields specified by Nav and Sidebar in the vitepress configuration file by coding, and then sort them. The outline of the code is as follows:
import vitepressConfig from './config'
function extractLinksFromConfig(config: DefaultTheme.Config) {
const links: string[] = []
// Some code logic
return links
}
const links = extractLinksFromConfig(vitepressConfig.themeConfig!)
const routeOrder = [
'/index.html',
...links,
]
Don't export homepage
.vitepress/vitepress-pdf.config.ts add routePatterns:
import { defineUserConfig } from 'vitepress-export-pdf'
export default defineUserConfig({
routePatterns: ['!/'],
})
Note:
!at the beginning of a pattern will negate the match
PDF print style
Unlike VuePress, VitePress has no customization global style(ex VuePress2.x .vuepress/styles/index.scss) function, but we can customize themes to achieve this.
create the .vitepress/theme/index.ts or .vitepress/theme/index.js file (the "theme entry file").
// .vitepress/theme/index.ts
import DefaultTheme from 'vitepress/theme'
// custom CSS
import './style/print.css'
export default {
// Extending the Default Theme
...DefaultTheme,
}
create /style/print.css:
@media print {
.VPNav,
.VPLocalNav,
.VPDocFooter {
display: none !important;
}
}

Contributing
- Fork it!
- Create your feature branch: git checkout -b my-new-feature
- Commit your changes: git commit -am 'Add some feature'
- Push to the branch: git push origin my-new-feature
- Submit a pull request :D
Report Bug
run press-export-pdf info Shows debugging information about the local environment.