This package generates HTML from Portable Text.
For the most part, it mirrors Sanity's own block-content-to-html NPM library.
pip install portabletext-html
Instantiate the PortableTextRenderer class with your content and call the render method.
The following content
from portabletext_html import PortableTextRenderer
renderer = PortableTextRenderer({
    "_key": "R5FvMrjo",
    "_type": "block",
    "children": [
        {"_key": "cZUQGmh4", "_type": "span", "marks": ["strong"], "text": "A word of"},
        {"_key": "toaiCqIK", "_type": "span", "marks": ["strong"], "text": " warning;"},
        {"_key": "gaZingsA", "_type": "span", "marks": [], "text": " Sanity is addictive."}
    ],
    "markDefs": [],
    "style": "normal"
})
renderer.render()Generates this HTML
<p><strong>A word of warning;</strong> Sanity is addictive.</p>The block and span types are supported out of the box.
Beyond the built-in types, you have the freedom to provide
your own serializers to render any custom _type the way you
would like to.
To illustrate, if you passed this data to the renderer class:
from portabletext_html import PortableTextRenderer
renderer = PortableTextRenderer({
    "_type": "block",
    "_key": "foo",
    "style": "normal",
    "children": [
        {
            "_type": "span",
            "text": "Press, "
        },
        {
            "_type": "button",
            "text": "here"
        },
        {
            "_type": "span",
            "text": ", now!"
        }
    ]
})
renderer.render()The renderer would actually throw an error here, since button
does not have a corresponding built-in type serializer by default.
To render this text you must provide your own serializer, like this:
from portabletext_html import PortableTextRenderer
def button_serializer(node: dict, context: Optional[Block], list_item: bool):
    return f'<button>{node["text"]}</button>'
renderer = PortableTextRenderer(
    ...,
    custom_serializers={'button': button_serializer}
)
output = renderer.render()With the custom serializer provided, the renderer would now successfully output the following HTML:
<p>Press <button>here</button>, now!</p>The package provides several built-in marker definitions and styles:
decorator marker definitions
- em
- strong
- code
- underline
- strike-through
annotation marker definitions
- link
- comment
Like with custom type serializers, additional serializers for marker definitions and styles can be passed in like this:
from portabletext_html import PortableTextRenderer
renderer = PortableTextRenderer(
    ...,
    custom_marker_definitions={'em': ComicSansEmphasis}
)
renderer.render()The primary difference between a type serializer and a mark definition serializer is that the latter uses a class structure, and has three required methods.
Here's an example of a custom style, adding an extra font to the built-in equivalent serializer:
from portabletext_html.marker_definitions import MarkerDefinition
class ComicSansEmphasis(MarkerDefinition):
    tag = 'em'
    @classmethod
    def render_prefix(cls, span: Span, marker: str, context: Block) -> str:
        return f'<{cls.tag} style="font-family: "Comic Sans MS", "Comic Sans", cursive;">'
    @classmethod
    def render_suffix(cls, span: Span, marker: str, context: Block) -> str:
        return f'</{cls.tag}>'
    @classmethod
    def render_text(cls, span: Span, marker: str, context: Block) -> str:
        # custom rendering logic can be placed here
        return str(span.text)
    @classmethod
    def render(cls, span: Span, marker: str, context: Block) -> str:
        result = cls.render_prefix(span, marker, context)
        result += str(span.text)
        result += cls.render_suffix(span, marker, context)
        return resultSince the render_suffix and render methods here are actually identical to the base class,
they do not need to be specified, and the whole example can be reduced to:
from portabletext_html.marker_definitions import MarkerDefinition  # base
from portabletext_html import PortableTextRenderer
class ComicSansEmphasis(MarkerDefinition):
    tag = 'em'
    @classmethod
    def render_prefix(cls, span: Span, marker: str, context: Block) -> str:
        return f'<{cls.tag} style="font-family: "Comic Sans MS", "Comic Sans", cursive;">'
renderer = PortableTextRenderer(
    ...,
    custom_marker_definitions={'em': ComicSansEmphasis}
)
renderer.render()Blocks can optionally define a style tag. These styles are supported:
- h1
- h2
- h3
- h4
- h5
- h6
- blockquote
- normal
For anyone interested, we would be happy to see a
default built-in serializer for the image type added.
In the meantime, users should be able to serialize image types by passing a custom serializer.
Contributions are always appreciated 👏
For details, see the CONTRIBUTING.md.