# `MD051` - Link fragments should be valid Tags: `links` Aliases: `link-fragments` Parameters: - `ignore_case`: Ignore case of fragments (`boolean`, default `false`) Fixable: Some violations can be fixed by tooling This rule is triggered when a link fragment does not match any of the fragments that are automatically generated for headings in a document: ```markdown # Heading Name [Link](#fragment) ``` To fix this issue, change the link fragment to reference an existing heading's generated name (see below): ```markdown # Heading Name [Link](#heading-name) ``` For consistency, this rule requires fragments to exactly match the [GitHub heading algorithm][github-heading-algorithm] which converts letters to lowercase. Therefore, the following example is reported as a violation: ```markdown # Heading Name [Link](#Heading-Name) ``` To ignore case when comparing fragments with heading names, the `ignore_case` parameter can be set to `true`. In this configuration, the previous example is not reported as a violation. Alternatively, some platforms allow the syntax `{#named-anchor}` to be used within a heading to provide a specific name (consisting of only lower-case letters, numbers, `-`, and `_`): ```markdown # Heading Name {#custom-name} [Link](#custom-name) ``` Alternatively, any HTML tag with an `id` attribute or an `a` tag with a `name` attribute can be used to define a fragment: ```markdown [Link](#bookmark) ``` An `a` tag can be useful in scenarios where a heading is not appropriate or for control over the text of the fragment identifier. [HTML links to `#top` scroll to the top of a document][html-top-fragment]. This rule allows that syntax (using lower-case for consistency): ```markdown [Link](#top) ``` This rule also recognizes the custom fragment syntax used by GitHub to highlight [specific content in a document][github-linking-to-content]. For example, this link to line 20: ```markdown [Link](#L20) ``` And this link to content starting within line 19 running into line 21: ```markdown [Link](#L19C5-L21C11) ``` Rationale: [GitHub section links][github-section-links] are created automatically for every heading when Markdown content is displayed on GitHub. This makes it easy to link directly to different sections within a document. However, section links change if headings are renamed or removed. This rule helps identify broken section links within a document. Section links are **not** part of the CommonMark specification. This rule enforces the [GitHub heading algorithm][github-heading-algorithm] which is: convert heading to lowercase, remove punctuation, convert spaces to dashes, append an incrementing integer as needed for uniqueness. [github-section-links]: https://docs.github.com/en/get-started/writing-on-github/getting-started-with-writing-and-formatting-on-github/basic-writing-and-formatting-syntax#section-links [github-heading-algorithm]: https://github.com/gjtorikian/html-pipeline/blob/f13a1534cb650ba17af400d1acd3a22c28004c09/lib/html/pipeline/toc_filter.rb [github-linking-to-content]: https://docs.github.com/en/get-started/writing-on-github/working-with-advanced-formatting/creating-a-permanent-link-to-a-code-snippet#linking-to-markdown#linking-to-markdown [html-top-fragment]: https://html.spec.whatwg.org/multipage/browsing-the-web.html#scrolling-to-a-fragment