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author | fiddlosopher <fiddlosopher@788f1e2b-df1e-0410-8736-df70ead52e1b> | 2008-03-25 03:07:23 +0000 |
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committer | fiddlosopher <fiddlosopher@788f1e2b-df1e-0410-8736-df70ead52e1b> | 2008-03-25 03:07:23 +0000 |
commit | 5f5fb2e503832f3132cb7395cb9027ada35b32cd (patch) | |
tree | 44be4025e62d98feb92e03aa1e0ee4a9226d8798 | |
parent | 5593b8586099e9843b7261b9f6e4a67971ebbc66 (diff) | |
download | pandoc-5f5fb2e503832f3132cb7395cb9027ada35b32cd.tar.gz |
Additional README changes for OpenDocument writer.
git-svn-id: https://pandoc.googlecode.com/svn/trunk@1273 788f1e2b-df1e-0410-8736-df70ead52e1b
-rw-r--r-- | README | 39 |
1 files changed, 20 insertions, 19 deletions
@@ -72,16 +72,16 @@ To convert `hello.html` from html to markdown: Supported output formats include `markdown`, `latex`, `context` (ConTeXt), `html`, `rtf` (rich text format), `rst` (reStructuredText), -`docbook` (DocBook XML), `texinfo`, `man` (groff man), and `s5` (which -produces an HTML file that acts like powerpoint). Supported input -formats include `markdown`, `html`, `latex`, and `rst`. Note that the -`rst` reader only parses a subset of reStructuredText syntax. For -example, it doesn't handle tables, option lists, or footnotes. But for -simple documents it should be adequate. The `latex` and `html` readers -are also limited in what they can do. Because the `html` reader is picky -about the HTML it parses, it is recommended that you pipe HTML through -[HTML Tidy] before sending it to `pandoc`, or use the `html2markdown` -script described below. +`docbook` (DocBook XML), `opendocument` (OpenDocument XML), `texinfo`, +`man` (groff man), and `s5` (which produces an HTML file that acts +like powerpoint). Supported input formats include `markdown`, `html`, +`latex`, and `rst`. Note that the `rst` reader only parses a subset of +reStructuredText syntax. For example, it doesn't handle tables, option +lists, or footnotes. But for simple documents it should be adequate. The +`latex` and `html` readers are also limited in what they can do. Because +the `html` reader is picky about the HTML it parses, it is recommended +that you pipe HTML through [HTML Tidy] before sending it to `pandoc`, or +use the `html2markdown` script described below. If you don't specify a reader or writer explicitly, `pandoc` will try to determine the input and output format from the extensions of @@ -231,7 +231,8 @@ For further documentation, see the `pandoc(1)` man page. `-t`, `--to`, `-w`, or `--write` *format* : specifies the output format -- the format Pandoc will be converting *to*. *format* can be `native`, `html`, `s5`, - `docbook`, `latex`, `context`, `markdown`, `man`, `rst`, and `rtf`. + `docbook`, `opendocument`, `latex`, `context`, `markdown`, `man`, + `rst`, and `rtf`. `-s` or `--standalone` : indicates that a standalone document is to be produced (with @@ -922,19 +923,19 @@ In Texinfo output, it will be rendered inside a `@math` command. In groff man output, it will be rendered verbatim without $'s. -In RTF and Docbook output, it will be rendered, as far as possible, -using unicode characters, and will otherwise appear verbatim. Unknown -commands and symbols, and commands that cannot be dealt with this way -(like `\frac`), will be rendered verbatim. So the results may be a mix -of raw TeX code and properly rendered unicode math. +In RTF, Docbook, and OpenDocument output, it will be rendered, as far as +possible, using unicode characters, and will otherwise appear verbatim. +Unknown commands and symbols, and commands that cannot be dealt with +this way (like `\frac`), will be rendered verbatim. So the results may +be a mix of raw TeX code and properly rendered unicode math. In HTML and S5 output, the way math is rendered will depend on the command-line options selected: 1. The default is to render TeX math as far as possible using unicode - characters, as with RTF and Docbook output. Formulas are put inside - a `span` with `class="math"`, so that they may be styled differently - from the surrounding text if needed. + characters, as with RTF, Docbook, and OpenDocument output. Formulas + are put inside a `span` with `class="math"`, so that they may be + styled differently from the surrounding text if needed. 2. If the `--asciimathml` option is used, TeX math will be displayed between $ characters, as in LaTeX, and the [ASCIIMathML] script will |