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authorJesse Rosenthal <jrosenthal@jhu.edu>2018-10-20 08:22:35 -0400
committerJesse Rosenthal <jrosenthal@jhu.edu>2018-10-20 08:43:50 -0400
commit5547cd6000a061a74aee22ec41b238b9a6c0f920 (patch)
treeac15fca379829d638cd137cc96b0dfa8e46a41b3 /data/templates/default.epub2
parent0c419a01f7c554e7ad5f26a035db0cc63b72fedb (diff)
downloadpandoc-5547cd6000a061a74aee22ec41b238b9a6c0f920.tar.gz
Powerpoint: Support raw openxml in pptx writer.
This allows raw openxml blocks and inlines to be used in the pptx writer. A few caveats: 1. It's up to the user to write well-formed openxml. The chances for corruption, especially with such a brittle format as pptx, is pretty high. 2. Because of the tricky way that blocks map onto shapes, if you are using a raw block, it should be the only block on a slide (otherwise other text might end up overlapping it). 3. The pptx ooxml namespace abbreviations are different from the docx ooxml namespaces. Again, it's up to the user to get it right. Unzipped document and ooxml specification should be consulted. Closes: #4976
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