A CLI tool which converts medium posts (html) into Jekyll/Hugo compatible markdown files. Also downloads images and adds yaml front matter to the converted markdown files. It works with both exported Medium posts (local files) and post urls; converts all exported posts (or a url) to markdown using a single command. It could be useful in scenarios when you want to migrate your blog away from Medium to Jekyll or Hugo (or something similar, which supports markdown content).
- Export and extract your Medium posts from your Medium account.
- Go to
https://medium.com/me/settings
and scroll toDownload your information
. Click the download button. This will give you amedium-export.zip
archive containing all your Medium content. - Extract the .zip archive downloaded in the previous step. It will have a sub-directory called
posts
. - Copy the path of this
posts
directory.
- Go to
- Install
node.js
andmedium-2-md
on your system.- Download and Install node.js - https://nodejs.org/en/download/.
- Install medium-2-md -
npm i -g medium-2-md
.
- Run the following command to convert all your Medium posts (html) to markdown files,
medium-2-md convertLocal '<path of the posts directory>' -dfi
That's it. The output markdown files will be stored in a sub-directory called md_<a big number>
in the input posts directory itself. (By the way, that big number is coming from the Date.now() JavaScript function added to differentiate the output folders in case we go crazy with it.)
The converted markdown files include front matter containing title, description, published date and canonical URL of the original Medium post/story. The images from the Medium posts are downloaded in a sub-directory called img
inside the output directory.
The CLI tool can also be used to convert a single Medium post from it's url. It requires an additional parameter -o
for output directory where the converted markdown file can be written. To convert a Medium post to markdown from it's url, run the following command after installing the npm package,
medium-2-md convertUrl '<url of the Medium post>' -o '<path of output directory>' -fi
The
convertUrl
function also supports parsing of tags. In the converted markdown file, thekeywords
field in the front matter contains the medium tags of the post.
The convertLocal
command supports the following optional flags,
-d
or--drafts
: Convert the drafts too.-f
or--frontMatter
: Add the front matter on top of the markdown file.-i
or--images
: Download images to a localimg
sub-directory.
The -f
and -i
flags are supported by the convertUrl
command also.
medium-2-md convertLocal E:\\path\\to\\posts\\dir -d
medium-2-md convertLocal E:\\path\\to\\posts\\dir -i
medium-2-md convertUrl https://medium.com/abcd/new-post-993fbe47 -o E:\\path\\to\\output\\dir -f
Note: The flags do not support any defaults. You need to add them in order to get the respective results (drafts, images and/or front matter inclusion).
When using the -i
or --images
flag, the images are downloaded into a sub-directory called img
inside the output directory. If this img
directory does not already exist, it is created. If it already exists, the downloaded images are saved inside the existing directory. The image elements in the converted markdown files link to their respective local paths from the img
sub-directory.
This package uses: