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Update tests.
Reason: it turns out that the native output generated by
pretty-simple isn't always readable by the native reader.
According to https://github.com/cdepillabout/pretty-simple/issues/99
it is not a design goal of the library that the rendered values
be readable using 'read'. This makes it unsuitable for our
purposes.
pretty-show is a bit slower and it uses 4-space indents
(non-configurable), but it doesn't have this serious drawback.
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Previously we used our own homespun formatting. But this
produces over-long lines that aren't ideal for diffs in tests.
Easier to use something off-the-shelf and standard.
Closes #7580.
Performance is slower by about a factor of 10, but this isn't
really a problem because native isn't suitable as a serialization
format. (For serialization you should use json, because the reader
is so much faster than native.)
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* These were added by the RST reader and, for literate Haskell,
by the Markdown and LaTeX readers. There is no point to
this class, and it is not applied consistently by all readers.
See #5047.
* Reverse order of `literate` and `haskell` classes on code blocks
when parsing literate Haskell. Better if `haskell` comes first.
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* Use a Span with class "title-reference" for the default
title-reference role.
* Use B.text to split up contents into Spaces, SoftBreaks, and Strs
for title-reference.
* Use Code with class "interpreted-text" instead of Span and Str for
unknown roles. (The RST writer has also been modified to round-trip
this properly.)
* Disallow blank lines in interpreted text.
* Backslash-escape now works in interpreted text.
* Backticks followed by alphanumerics no longer end interpreted text.
Closes #4811.
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