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Document trees under a header starting with the word `COMMENT` are
comment trees and should not be exported. Those trees are dropped
silently.
This closes #1678.
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Things like `/hello,/` or `/hi'/` were falsy recognized as emphasised
strings. This is wrong, as `,` and `'` are forbidden border chars and
may not occur on the inner border of emphasized text. This patch
enables the reader to matches the reference implementation in that it
reads the above strings as plain text.
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Tidy up fix for #1650, #1698 as per comments in #1680.
Fix same issue for definition lists with the same method.
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Fixes issue with top-level bullet list parsing.
Previously we would use `many1 spaceChars` rather than respecting
the list's indent level. We also permitted `*` bullets on unindented
lists, which should unambiguously parse as `header 1`.
Combined, this meant headers at a different indent level were
being unwittingly slurped into preceding bullet lists, as per
Issue #1650.
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fix inDirectory to reset to the original directory in case an exception ...
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Now we outsource most of the work to `fetchItem'`.
Also, do not include queries in file extensions.
Improves fix to #1671.
It is possible that this will have some unexpected effects, so
further testing would be good.
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Closes #1669.
If there are further issues, please open a new, targeted issue on the
tracker. Some notes on the further issues you gestured at:
Data URIs are indeed dereferenced, but why is this a problem?
(The function being used to fetch from URLs is used for many different
formats. Preserving data URIs would make sense in EPUBs, but not
for e.g. PDF output. And by dereferencing we can get a smaller,
more efficient EPUB, with the data stored as bytes in a file rather
than encoded in textual representation.)
"absolute uris are not recognized" -- I assume that is the problem
just fixed. If not, please open a new issue.
"relative uris are resolved (wrongly) like file paths" -- can you
give an example?
`<base>` tag is ignored. Yes. I didn't know about the base tag. Could
you open a new issue just for this?
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Uses it to scale images that are too large.
When there is no reference files, default to a US letter portrait size
to scale the images
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Closes #1664.
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Adding inlineCommands
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Improves on fix to #1656.
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Closes #1656.
Fixing pandoc to wrap the lines but insert spaces would be much
more complicated. This at least makes the output semantically
correct.
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Fix path-slashes inside archive for windows
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Add function to sanitize ConTeXt labels
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Closes #1649
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* Fixes #1636.
* Adds a test.
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Closes #1620
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Closes #1625
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Closes #1626
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Closes #1635
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Changes the internal representation to fix the problem.
I haven't tested this on windows.
Closes #1597
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This function can be used to sanitize reference labels so that
they do not contain any of the illegal characters \#[]",{}%()|= .
Currently only Links have their labels sanitized, because they
are the only Elements that use passed labels.
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We previously took the old relationship names of the headers and footer in
secptr. That led to collisions. We now make a map of availabl names in the
relationships file, and then rename in secptr.
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Graphics in `\section`/`\subsection` etc titles need to be `\protect`ed.
This adds a state value and manually turns it on before every invocation
of `sectionHeader` and manually turns it off after. Using a writer value
and applying `local` would probably be cleaner, but this fits with the
current style.
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When we encounter one of the polyglot header styles, we want to remove
that from the par styles after we convert to a header. To do that, we
have to keep track of the style name, and remove it appropriately.
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We're just keeping a list of header formats that different languages use
as their default styles. At the moment, we have English, German, Danish,
and French. We can continue to add to this.
This is simpler than parsing the styles file, and perhaps less
error-prone, since there seems to be some variations, even within a
language, of how a style file will define headers.
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This allows us to emphasize at the beginning of a new paragraph (or, in
general, after blank lines).
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There could be new top-level headers after making lists, so we have to
rewrite links after that.
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When users number their headers, Word understands that as a single item
enumerated list. We make the assumption that such a list is, in fact, a header.
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Don't use os-sensitive "combine", since we always want the paths in our
zip-archive to use forward-slashes.
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Previously we included it in the spine with `linear="no"`, leading
to odd results in some readers.
Closes #1593.
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Closes #1595.
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Item fix
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Added docTitle'.
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Because of the built-in line skip, LaTeX can't handle a section header
as the first element in a list item. (To be precise, it can't handle it
if the list immediately follows a section header, but the instance is
rare enough that we can afford to be a bit more general). This puts a
non-breaking space before the header to solve this problem. We won't see
this space, since the header skips a line before printing anyway.
The output is ugly in LaTeX and this structure seems like it should
probably be avoided. But it is valid HTML and native pandoc, so we
should have some sort of typesettable representation in LaTeX.
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Previously text that ended a div would be parsed as Plain
unless there was a blank line before the closing div tag.
Test case:
<div class="first">
This is a paragraph.
This is another paragraph.
</div>
Closes #1591.
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It is not supported and epubcheck complains.
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Closes #1590.
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Also cleaned up crufty code and added tests.
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Closes #1566.
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We can now handle all different alignment types, for simple
tables only (no captions, no relative widths, cell contents just
plain inlines). Other tables are still handled using raw HTML.
Addresses #1585 as far as it can be addresssed, I believe.
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See #1582.
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