Pandoc Test Suite
John
MacFarlane
Anonymous
July 17, 2006
This is a set of tests for pandoc. Most of them are adapted from
John Gruber's markdown test suite.
Level 1
Level 2 with emphasis
Level 3
with no blank line
Level 2
with no blank line
Paragraphs
Here's a regular paragraph.
In Markdown 1.0.0 and earlier. Version 8. This line turns into a
list item. Because a hard-wrapped line in the middle of a paragraph
looked like a list item.
Here's one with a bullet. * criminey.
There should be a hard line
breakhere.
Block Quotes
E-mail style:
This is a block quote. It is pretty short.
Code in a block quote:
sub status {
print "working";
}
A list:
item one
item two
Nested block quotes:
nested
nested
This should not be a block quote: 2 > 1.
And a following paragraph.
Code Blocks
Code:
---- (should be four hyphens)
sub status {
print "working";
}
this code block is indented by one tab
And:
this code block is indented by two tabs
These should not be escaped: \$ \\ \> \[ \{
Lists
Unordered
Asterisks tight:
asterisk 1
asterisk 2
asterisk 3
Asterisks loose:
asterisk 1
asterisk 2
asterisk 3
Pluses tight:
Plus 1
Plus 2
Plus 3
Pluses loose:
Plus 1
Plus 2
Plus 3
Minuses tight:
Minus 1
Minus 2
Minus 3
Minuses loose:
Minus 1
Minus 2
Minus 3
Ordered
Tight:
First
Second
Third
and:
One
Two
Three
Loose using tabs:
First
Second
Third
and using spaces:
One
Two
Three
Multiple paragraphs:
Item 1, graf one.
Item 1. graf two. The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog's
back.
Item 2.
Item 3.
Nested
Tab
Tab
Tab
Here's another:
First
Second:
Fee
Fie
Foe
Third
Same thing but with paragraphs:
First
Second:
Fee
Fie
Foe
Third
Tabs and spaces
this is a list item indented with tabs
this is a list item indented with spaces
this is an example list item indented with tabs
this is an example list item indented with spaces
Fancy list markers
begins with 2
and now 3
with a continuation
sublist with roman numerals, starting with 4
more items
a subsublist
a subsublist
Nesting:
Upper Alpha
Upper Roman.
Decimal start with 6
Lower alpha with paren
Autonumbering:
Autonumber.
More.
Nested.
Should not be a list item:
M.A. 2007
B. Williams
Definition Lists
Tight using spaces:
apple
red fruit
orange
orange fruit
banana
yellow fruit
Tight using tabs:
apple
red fruit
orange
orange fruit
banana
yellow fruit
Loose:
apple
red fruit
orange
orange fruit
banana
yellow fruit
Multiple blocks with italics:
apple
red fruit
contains seeds, crisp, pleasant to taste
orange
orange fruit
{ orange code block }
orange block quote
Multiple definitions, tight:
apple
red fruit
computer
orange
orange fruit
bank
Multiple definitions, loose:
apple
red fruit
computer
orange
orange fruit
bank
Blank line after term, indented marker, alternate markers:
apple
red fruit
computer
orange
orange fruit
sublist
sublist
HTML Blocks
Simple block on one line:
foo
And nested without indentation:
Interpreted markdown in a table:
This is emphasized
|
And this is strong
|
Here's a simple block:
foo
This should be a code block, though:
<div>
foo
</div>
As should this:
<div>foo</div>
Now, nested:
This should just be an HTML comment:
Multiline:
Code block:
<!-- Comment -->
Just plain comment, with trailing spaces on the line:
Code:
<hr />
Hr's:
Inline Markup
This is emphasized, and so
is this.
This is strong, and so
is this.
An emphasized link.
This is strong and em.
So is this
word.
This is strong and em.
So is this
word.
This is code: >, $,
\, \$,
<html>.
This is strikeout.
Superscripts: abcd
ahello
ahello there.
Subscripts: H2O,
H23O, Hmany of themO.
These should not be superscripts or subscripts, because of the
unescaped spaces: a^b c^d, a~b c~d.
Smart quotes, ellipses, dashes
Hello,
said the spider.
Shelob
is my name.
A
, B
, and C
are
letters.
Oak,
elm,
and beech
are names of trees. So is pine.
He said, I want to go.
Were you alive
in the 70's?
Here is some quoted code
and a
quoted link
.
Some dashes: one—two — three—four — five.
Dashes between numbers: 5–7, 255–66, 1987–1999.
Ellipses…and…and….
LaTeX
2+2=4
x ∈ y
α ∧ ω
223
p-Tree
Here's some display math:
\frac{d}{dx}f(x)=\limh → 0\frac{f(x+h)-f(x)}{h}
Here's one that has a line break in it:
α+ω × x2.
These shouldn't be math:
To get the famous equation, write $e = mc^2$.
$22,000 is a lot of money. So is $34,000. (It
worked if lot
is emphasized.)
Shoes ($20) and socks ($5).
Escaped $: $73
this should be emphasized 23$.
Here's a LaTeX table:
Special Characters
Here is some unicode:
I hat: Î
o umlaut: ö
section: §
set membership: ∈
copyright: ©
AT&T has an ampersand in their name.
AT&T is another way to write it.
This & that.
4 < 5.
6 > 5.
Backslash: \
Backtick: `
Asterisk: *
Underscore: _
Left brace: {
Right brace: }
Left bracket: [
Right bracket: ]
Left paren: (
Right paren: )
Greater-than: >
Hash: #
Period: .
Bang: !
Plus: +
Minus: -
Links
Explicit
Just a URL.
URL and title.
URL and title.
URL and title.
URL and title
URL and title
with_underscore
Email link (nobody@nowhere.net)
Empty.
Reference
Foo bar.
Foo bar.
Foo bar.
With embedded [brackets].
b by itself should be a link.
Indented once.
Indented twice.
Indented thrice.
This should [not][] be a link.
[not]: /url
Foo bar.
Foo biz.
With ampersands
Here's a
link with an ampersand in the URL.
Here's a link with an amersand in the link text:
AT&T.
Here's an inline link.
Here's an
inline link in pointy braces.
Autolinks
With an ampersand:
http://example.com/?foo=1&bar=2
In a list?
http://example.com/
It should.
An e-mail address: nobody@nowhere.net
Blockquoted:
http://example.com/
Auto-links should not occur here:
<http://example.com/>
or here: <http://example.com/>
Images
From Voyage dans la Lune
by Georges Melies (1902):
Voyage dans la Lune
Here is a movie
icon.