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-rw-r--r-- | README | 27 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | man/man1/pandoc.1.md | 10 |
2 files changed, 19 insertions, 18 deletions
@@ -4,11 +4,11 @@ Pandoc is a [Haskell] library for converting from one markup format to another, and a command-line tool that uses this library. It can read -[markdown] and (subsets of) [reStructuredText], [HTML], and [LaTeX]; and -it can write plain text, [markdown], [reStructuredText], [HTML], [LaTeX], -[ConTeXt], [RTF], [DocBook XML], [OpenDocument XML], [ODT], [GNU Texinfo], -[MediaWiki markup], [EPUB], [Textile], [groff man] pages, and [Slidy] -or [S5] HTML slide shows. +[markdown] and (subsets of) [Textile], [reStructuredText], [HTML], +and [LaTeX]; and it can write plain text, [markdown], [reStructuredText], +[HTML], [LaTeX], [ConTeXt], [RTF], [DocBook XML], [OpenDocument XML], [ODT], +[GNU Texinfo], [MediaWiki markup], [EPUB], [Textile], [groff man] pages, +and [Slidy] or [S5] HTML slide shows. Pandoc's enhanced version of markdown includes syntax for footnotes, tables, flexible ordered lists, definition lists, delimited code blocks, @@ -79,11 +79,12 @@ Texinfo), `mediawiki` (MediaWiki markup), `textile` (Textile), `epub` (EPUB ebook), `man` (groff man), `slidy` (slidy HTML and javascript slide show), or `s5` (S5 HTML and javascript slide show). -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. +Supported input formats include `markdown`, `textile`, `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 `textile`, `latex`, and `html` readers are also limited in what they +can do. If you don't specify a reader or writer explicitly, `pandoc` will try to determine the input and output format from the extensions of @@ -168,8 +169,8 @@ For further documentation, see the `pandoc(1)` man page. `-f`, `--from`, `-r`, or `--read` *format* : specifies the input format (the format Pandoc will be converting - *from*). *format* can be `native`, `markdown`, `rst`, `html`, or - `latex`. (`+lhs` can be appended to indicate that the input should + *from*). *format* can be `native`, `markdown`, `textile`, `rst`, `html`, + or `latex`. (`+lhs` can be appended to indicate that the input should be treated as literate Haskell source. See [Literate Haskell support](#literate-haskell-support), below.) @@ -1314,7 +1315,7 @@ and ConTeXt. Citations --------- - +TODO Producing HTML slide shows with Pandoc ====================================== diff --git a/man/man1/pandoc.1.md b/man/man1/pandoc.1.md index f6cb7e3a6..88c072ccc 100644 --- a/man/man1/pandoc.1.md +++ b/man/man1/pandoc.1.md @@ -13,8 +13,8 @@ pandoc [*options*] [*input-file*]... # DESCRIPTION Pandoc converts files from one markup format to another. It can -read markdown and (subsets of) reStructuredText, HTML, and LaTeX, and -it can write plain text, markdown, reStructuredText, HTML, LaTeX, +read markdown and (subsets of) Textile, reStructuredText, HTML, and LaTeX, +and it can write plain text, markdown, reStructuredText, HTML, LaTeX, ConTeXt, Texinfo, groff man, MediaWiki markup, Textile, RTF, OpenDocument XML, ODT, DocBook XML, EPUB, and Slidy or S5 HTML slide shows. @@ -65,9 +65,9 @@ should pipe input and output through `iconv`: -f *FORMAT*, -r *FORMAT*, \--from=*FORMAT*, \--read=*FORMAT* : Specify input format. *FORMAT* can be `native` (native Haskell), `markdown` (markdown or plain text), - `rst` (reStructuredText), `html` (HTML), or `latex` (LaTeX). - If `+lhs` is appended to `markdown`, `rst`, or `latex`, the input - will be treated as literate Haskell source. + `textile` (Textile), `rst` (reStructuredText), `html` (HTML), + or `latex` (LaTeX). If `+lhs` is appended to `markdown`, `rst`, + or `latex`, the input will be treated as literate Haskell source. -t *FORMAT*, -w *FORMAT*, \--to=*FORMAT*, \--write=*FORMAT* : Specify output format. *FORMAT* can be `native` (native Haskell), |