This supports rendering of whole files. If you want to render code blocks in markdown you would need to do something with javascript. See some examples on the [Customizing Gitea](../customizing-gitea) page.
If your external markup relies on additional classes and attributes on the generated HTML elements, you might need to enable custom sanitizer policies. Gitea uses the [`bluemonday`](https://godoc.org/github.com/microcosm-cc/bluemonday) package as our HTML sanitizier. The example below will support [KaTeX](https://katex.org/) output from [`pandoc`](https://pandoc.org/).
To apply a sanitisation rules only for a specify external renderer they must use the renderer name, e.g. `[markup.sanitizer.asciidoc.rule-1]`, `[markup.sanitizer.<renderer>.rule-1]`.
**Note**: If the rule is defined above the renderer ini section or the name does not match a renderer it is applied to every renderer.
The external renderer is specified in the .ini in the format `[markup.XXXXX]` and the HTML supplied by your external renderer will be wrapped in a `<div>` with classes `markup` and `XXXXX`. The `markup` class provides out of the box styling (as does `markdown` if `XXXXX` is `markdown`). Otherwise you can use these classes to specifically target the contents of your rendered HTML.
And so you could write some CSS:
```css
.markup.XXXXX html {
font-size: 100%;
overflow-y: scroll;
-webkit-text-size-adjust: 100%;
-ms-text-size-adjust: 100%;
}
.markup.XXXXX body {
color: #444;
font-family: Georgia, Palatino, 'Palatino Linotype', Times, 'Times New Roman', serif;
font-size: 12px;
line-height: 1.7;
padding: 1em;
margin: auto;
max-width: 42em;
background: #fefefe;
}
.markup.XXXXX p {
color: orangered;
}
```
Add your stylesheet to your custom directory e.g `custom/public/css/my-style-XXXXX.css` and import it using a custom header file `custom/templates/custom/header.tmpl`: