Age | Commit message (Collapse) | Author | Files | Lines |
|
Closes: #6040
|
|
Lists of Inline and Block elements can now be filtered via `Inlines` and
`Blocks` functions, respectively. This is helpful if a filter conversion
depends on the order of elements rather than a single element.
For example, the following filter can be used to remove all spaces
before a citation:
function isSpaceBeforeCite (spc, cite)
return spc and spc.t == 'Space'
and cite and cite.t == 'Cite'
end
function Inlines (inlines)
for i = #inlines-1,1,-1 do
if isSpaceBeforeCite(inlines[i], inlines[i+1]) then
inlines:remove(i)
end
end
return inlines
end
Closes: #6038
|
|
|
|
Remove example using pandoc API directly (we have other
docs for that and it was outdated).
Closes #6065.
|
|
This follows the advise on the Lua
website (https://www.lua.org/about.html#name):
> […] "Lua" is a name, the name of the Earth's moon and the name of the
> language. Like most names, it should be written in lower case with an
> initial capital, that is, "Lua".
|
|
Thanks to @bpj for the idea.
|
|
The functions `table.insert`, `table.remove`, and `table.sort` are added
to pandoc.List elements. They can be used as methods, e.g.
local numbers = pandoc.List {2, 3, 1}
numbers:sort() -- numbers is now {1, 2, 3}
|
|
|
|
Links and anchors now follow consistent conventions, like lowercase-only
anchor names.
This breaks some links to specific sections in the document, but will
make it much easier to link documentation in the future.
|
|
It is now possible to construct a new List via `pandoc.List()` instead of
`pandoc.List:new()`.
|
|
|
|
Metadata defaults can be given via the command line `--metadata-file`.
Adding raw format snippets is a common use case for Lua filters, so it
seems sensible to provide an example.
Thanks to @efx for proposing this filter.
Closes: pandoc/lua-filters#70
|
|
|
|
|
|
See: #5892
|
|
Closes #5851.
We avoid the failure with a boolean value by simply checking
to make sure we have a table before indexing.
|
|
|
|
See: #5851
|
|
Attr values can now be given as normal Lua tables; this can be used as a
convenient alternative to define Attr values, instead of constructing
values with `pandoc.Attr`. Identifiers are taken from the *id* field,
classes must be given as space separated words in the *class* field. All
remaining fields are included as misc attributes.
With this change, the following lines now create equal elements:
pandoc.Span('test', {id = 'test', class = 'a b', check = 1})
pandoc.Span('test', pandoc.Attr('test', {'a','b'}, {check = 1}))
This also works when using the *attr* setter:
local span = pandoc.Span 'text'
span.attr = {id = 'test', class = 'a b', check = 1}
Furthermore, the *attributes* field of AST elements can now be a plain
key-value table even when using the `attributes` accessor:
local span = pandoc.Span 'test'
span.attributes = {check = 1} -- works as expected now
Closes: #5744
|
|
Text.Pandoc.Shared:
+ Remove `Element` type [API change]
+ Remove `makeHierarchicalize` [API change]
+ Add `makeSections` [API change]
+ Export `deLink` [API change]
Now that we have Divs, we can use them to represent the structure
of sections, and we don't need a special Element type.
`makeSections` reorganizes a block list, adding Divs with
class `section` around sections, and adding numbering
if needed.
This change also fixes some longstanding issues recognizing
section structure when the document contains Divs.
Closes #3057, see also #997.
All writers have been changed to use `makeSections`.
Note that in the process we have reverted the change
c1d058aeb1c6a331a2cc22786ffaab17f7118ccd
made in response to #5168, which I'm not completely
sure was a good idea.
Lua modules have also been adjusted accordingly.
Existing lua filters that use `hierarchicalize` will
need to be rewritten to use `make_sections`.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Closes: #5568
|
|
Closes #5552.
|
|
|
|
Function `pandoc.mediabag.delete` allows to remove a single item of the given
name from the media bag.
|
|
Function `pandoc.mediabag.empty` was added. It allows to clean-out the media
bag, removing all entries.
|
|
A new function `pandoc.mediabag.items` was added to Lua module
pandoc.mediabag. This allows users to lazily iterate over all media bag
items, loading items into Lua one-by-one. Example:
for filename, mime_type, content in pandoc.mediabag.items() do
-- use media bag item.
end
This is a convenient alternative to using `mediabag.list` in combination
with `mediabag.lookup`.
|
|
|
|
Version specifiers like `PANDOC_VERSION` and `PANDOC_API_VERSION` are
turned into `Version` objects. The objects simplify version-appropriate
comparisons while maintaining backward-compatibility.
A function `pandoc.types.Version` is added as part of the newly
introduced module `pandoc.types`, allowing users to create version
objects in scripts.
|
|
The `system` Lua module provides utility functions to interact with the
operating- and file system. E.g.
print(pandoc.system.get_current_directory())
or
pandoc.system.with_temporary_directory('tikz', function (dir)
-- write and compile a TikZ file with pdflatex
end)
|
|
Fix broken links in doc/epub.md, doc/getting-started.md,
doc/customizing-pandoc.md, doc/using-the-pandoc-api.md.
Also, use absolute links to pandoc.org when possible, so that
the links can be followed by people viewing these documents
on GitHub.
|
|
There are three changes:
- It only processes elements which begin with \begin{tikzpicture}
- It uses pdf2svg instead of imagemagick to preserve fidelity
- The images produced have transparent backgrounds
|
|
|
|
The file `init.lua` in pandoc's data directory is run as part of
pandoc's Lua initialization process. Previously, the `pandoc` module was
loaded in `init.lua`, and the structure for marshaling was set-up after.
This allowed simple patching of element marshaling, but made using
`init.lua` more difficult:
- it encouraged mixing essential initialization with user-defined
customization;
- upstream changes to init.lua had to be merged manually;
- accidentally breaking marshaling by removing required modules was
possible;
Instead, all required modules are now loaded before calling `init.lua`.
The file can be used entirely for user customization. Patching
marshaling functions, while discouraged, is still possible via the
`debug` module.
|
|
All Lua modules bundled with pandoc, i.e., `pandoc.List`,
`pandoc.mediabag`, `pandoc.utils`, and `text` are re-exported from the
`pandoc` module. They are assigned to the fields `List`, `mediabag`,
`utils`, and `text`, respectively.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Equality of Lua objects representing pandoc AST elements is tested by
unmarshalling the objects and comparing the result in Haskell. A new
function `equals` which performs this test has been added to the
`pandoc.utils` module.
Closes: #5092
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
* Lua: allow access to pandoc state
Lua filters and custom writers now have read-only access to most fields
of pandoc's internal state via the global variable `PANDOC_STATE`.
* Lua: allow iterating through fields of PANDOC_STATE
* Lua filters doc: describe CommonState
* Lua filters doc: mention global variable PANDOC_STATE
* Lua: add access to logs
Log messages can currently only be printed, but not decomposed.
|