This is a prototype implementation of Peritext, a CRDT for rich text with inline formatting. If you want to understand the algorithm, you should first read the online essay describing the approach:
Peritext: A CRDT for Rich Text Collaboration
This repo includes:
- A Typescript implementation of the core Peritext CRDT algorithm
- A prototype integration with the Prosemirror editor library
- An interactive demo UI where you can try out the editor
- A test suite
To see a basic interactive demo where you can type rich text into two editors and periodically sync them:
npm install
npm run start
Algorithm code: The main algorithm implementation is in src/micromerge.ts
. Because the goal of this work is to eventually implement a rich text type in Automerge, we implemented Peritext as an extension to a codebase called Micromerge
, which is a simplified implementation of Automerge that has mostly the same behavior but is less performance-optimized.
The most salient part of the code is the applyOp
function, which specifies what should happen when we apply an operation to the CRDT. It has cases for applying AddMarkOperation
and RemoveMarkOperation
ops, which describe the main behavior of the rich text CRDT.
Prosemirror integration: src/bridge.ts
contains the code for the integration between the CRDT and the Prosemirror library. There are two main pieces to the integration:
- Prosemirror to CRDT: when a change happens in the editor, Prosemirror emits a
Transaction
. We turn that transaction into a list ofInputOperation
commands for the CRDT, inside theapplyProsemirrorTransactionToMicromergeDoc
function. - CRDT to Prosemirror: when a change happens in the Micromerge CRDT, the CRDT emits a
Patch
object representing what changed. We turn this into a Prosemirror transaction with theextendProsemirrorTransactionWithMicromergePatch
function.
Each direction of this transformation is straightforward, because the external interface of InputOperation
s and Patch
es provided by the CRDT closesly matches the Prosemirror Transaction
format.
npm run test
will run the manual tests defined in test/micromerge.ts
. These tests correspond to many of the specific examples explained in the essay.
You can also run a generative fuzz tester using npm run fuzz
. This will randomly generate edit traces and check for convergence.
This repo also contains a UI that plays back a preset trace of edit actions, which is included in the Ink & Switch essay about Peritext.
To see that UI, you can run npm run start-essay-demo
.
To build an artifact for including in the essay, run npx parcel build src/essay-demo.ts
, and then copy the resulting ./dist/essay-demo.js
file to content/peritext/static/peritext-demo.js
in the essays repo. Also copy over any CSS changes from static/essay-demo.css
to content/peritext/static/peritext-styles.css
if needed.