This post reviews several methods for converting a Markdown (.md) formatted file to PDF, from UNIX or Linux machines.
$ pandoc How_I_got_svg-resizer_working_on_Mac_OSX.md -s -o test1.pdf
http://superuser.com/questions/689056/how-can-i-convert-github-flavored-markdown-to-a-pdf I've had success using grip to display markdown in Chrome and then use Chrome's "Save as PDF" option in the Print dialog.
pip install grip
grip your_markdown.md
grip will render the markdown on localhost:5000 ... - just edit away and refresh the browser. Print when ready.
This gave a more reliable representation than pandoc and was lighter weight than installing LaTeX (required by pandoc for pdf generation).
The print is not command line in this answer, but still found this easier/more reliable (looked 100% like Github for a long document including relatively linked images and code highlighting).
http://superuser.com/questions/689056/how-can-i-convert-github-flavored-markdown-to-a-pdf You can also use Node.js based markdown-pdf
npm install -g markdown-pdf
markdown-pdf /path/to/markdown
The GRIP results look just like GitHub README pages. The Pandoc result looks like (is) LaTex format. And the Node.js result is the most original looking, but slightly harder to read than GRIP output PDF. Overall, I prefer GRIP output.
Late to this thread but wanted to add a browser-based option for anyone
who lands here not wanting to install anything.
mdtool.dev/markdown-to-pdf runs entirely client-side, so nothing gets
uploaded to a server. Supports GFM, fenced code blocks with syntax
highlighting (190+ languages via highlight.js), tables, images, and
Mermaid diagrams. Four themes to choose from. No signup, no watermark,
no file size limit.
Useful if you just need a quick conversion without setting up Pandoc or
dealing with the highlight.js EOL issue in older node packages.