Age | Commit message (Collapse) | Author | Files | Lines |
|
Markua is a markdown variant used by Leanpub.
More information about Markua can be found at https://leanpub.com/markua/read.
Adds a new exported function `writeMarkua` from T.P.Writers.Markdown.
[API change]
Closes #1871.
Co-authored by Tim Wisotzki and Samuel Lemmenmeier.
|
|
- `rtf` is now supported as an input format as well as output.
- New module Text.Pandoc.Readers.RTF (exporting `readRTF`). [API change]
Closes #3982.
|
|
avoiding the need to depend on the executable-path package.
|
|
|
|
Mmny of our tests require running the pandoc
executable. This is problematic for a few different reasons.
First, cabal-install will sometimes run the test suite
after building the library but before building the executable,
which means the executable isn't in place for the tests.
One can work around that by first building, then building
and running the tests, but that's fragile. Second,
we have to find the executable. So far, we've done that
using a function findPandoc that attempts to locate it
relative to the test executable (which can be located
using findExecutablePath). But the logic here is delicate
and work with every combination of options.
To solve both problems, we add an `--emulate` option to
the `test-pandoc` executable. When `--emulate` occurs
as the first argument passed to `test-pandoc`, the
program simply emulates the regular pandoc executable,
using the rest of the arguments (after `--emulate`).
Thus,
test-pandoc --emulate -f markdown -t latex
is just like
pandoc -f markdown -t latex
Since all the work is done by library functions,
implementing this emulation just takes a couple lines
of code and should be entirely reliable.
With this change, we can test the pandoc executable
by running the test program itself (locatable using
findExecutablePath) with the `--emulate` option.
This removes the need for the fragile `findPandoc`
step, and it means we can run our integration tests
even when we're just building the library, not the
executable.
Part of this change involved simplifying some complex
handling to set environment variables for dynamic
library paths. I have tested a build with
`--enable-dynamic-executable`, and it works, but
further testing may be needed.
|
|
Writers.Tables is now Writers.AnnotatedTable. All of the types and
functions in it have had the "Ann" removed from them. Now it is
expected that the module be imported qualified.
|
|
Add Writers.Tables helper functions and types, add tests for those
The Writers.Tables module contains an AnnTable type that is a pandoc
Table with added inferred information that should be enough for
writers (in particular the HTML writer) to operate on without having
to lay out the table themselves.
The toAnnTable and fromAnnTable functions in that module convert
between AnnTable and Table. In addition to producing an AnnTable with
coherent and well-formed annotations, the toAnnTable function also
normalizes its input Table like the table builder does.
Various tests ensure that toAnnTable normalizes tables exactly like
the table builder, and that its annotations are coherent.
|
|
If a line of ms code block output starts with a period (.), it should
be prepended by '\&' so that it is not interpreted as a roff command.
Fixes #6505
|
|
- Writers.Native is now adapted to the new Table type.
- Inline captions should now be conditionally wrapped in a Plain, not
a Para block.
- The toLegacyTable function now lives in Writers.Shared.
|
|
Spans with class `underline` as converted into Jira text marked as
`+inserted+`, i.e. surrounded by plus-signs.
|
|
Closes #5556
|
|
This makes use of tasty-lua, a package to write tests in Lua
and integrate the results into Tasty output. Test output becomes
more informative: individual tests and test groups become visible
in test output. Failures are reported with helpful error messages.
|
|
|
|
Closes #1792
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
This seems to be necessary if we are to use our custom Prelude
with ghci.
Closes #4464.
|
|
|
|
This is the beginning of a test suite for the powerpoint
writer. Initial tests are for the number of slides.
Note that at the moment it does not test against corruption in
Microsoft PowerPoint; it just tests that certain outcomes work as
expected. More tests will be added.
This test framework uses the PandocPure monad introduced with Pandoc 2.0.
|
|
|
|
Support writing <fig> and <table-wrap> elements with <title> and
<caption> inside them by using Divs with class set to on of
fig, table-wrap or cation. The title is included as a Heading
so the constraint on where Heading can occur is also relaxed.
Also leaves out empty alt attributes on links.
|
|
|
|
|
|
This is feature complete but not very thoroughly tested yet.
|
|
|
|
* Add `--lua-filter` option. This works like `--filter` but takes pathnames of special lua filters and uses the lua interpreter baked into pandoc, so that no external interpreter is needed. Note that lua filters are all applied after regular filters, regardless of their position on the command line.
* Add Text.Pandoc.Lua, exporting `runLuaFilter`. Add `pandoc.lua` to data files.
* Add private module Text.Pandoc.Lua.PandocModule to supply the default lua module.
* Add Tests.Lua to tests.
* Add data/pandoc.lua, the lua module pandoc imports when processing its lua filters.
* Document in MANUAL.txt.
|
|
|
|
* Add Muse writer
* Advertise new Muse writer
* Muse writer: add regressions tests
|
|
|
|
|
|
Any files added under test/command will be treated as
shell tests (see smart.md for an example).
This makes it very easy to add regression tests etc.
|
|
|
|
|