Tags: links
, url
Aliases: no-bare-urls
Fixable: Some violations can be fixed by tooling
This rule is triggered whenever a URL or email address appears without surrounding angle brackets:
For more info, visit https://www.example.com/ or email user@example.com.
To fix this, add angle brackets around the URL or email address:
For more info, visit <https://www.example.com/> or email <user@example.com>.
If a URL or email address contains non-ASCII characters, it may be not be handled as intended even when angle brackets are present. In such cases, percent-encoding can be used to comply with the required syntax for URL and email.
Note: To include a bare URL or email without it being converted into a link, wrap it in a code span:
Not a clickable link: `https://www.example.com`
Note: The following scenario does not trigger this rule because it could be a shortcut link:
[https://www.example.com]
Note: The following syntax triggers this rule because the nested link could be a shortcut link (which takes precedence):
[text [shortcut] text](https://example.com)
To avoid this, escape both inner brackets:
[link \[text\] link](https://example.com)
Rationale: Without angle brackets, a bare URL or email isn't converted into a link by some Markdown parsers.