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so that 0 means "not in a list," which is more what
one would expect.
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Closes #5285. Previously the algorithm allowed list items
with a mix of Para and Plain, which is never wanted.
compactify in T.P.Shared has been modified so that, if
a list's items contain (at the top level) Para elements
(aside from perhaps at the very end), ALL Plains are
converted to Paras.
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see #5272
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Some paths in archives are absolute (have an opening slash) which, for
reasons unknown, produces a failure in the test suite on MS
Windows. This fixes that by removing the leading slash if it exists.
Closes #5277 (previously closed with 4cce0ef but reopened due to this bug).
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This reverts commit 2142bbe572cea00b7bb5ad3e10a3afb26845a1f7.
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Try fixing a parsing error on windows by insisting that the parser use
a Posix filepath library for splitting doc paths in a zipfile. (It
might default on Windows to using a backslash as a separator, while
it's always a forward-slash in zip archives.)
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* clarify function name. We had previously used `getDocumentPath`,
but `Document` is an overdetermined term here. Use
`getDocumentXmlPath` to make clear what we're doing.
* Use field notation for setting ReaderEnv. As we've added (and
continue to add) fields, the assignment by position has gotten
harder to read.
* figure out document.xml path once at the beginning of parsing, and
add it to the environment, so we can avoid repeated lookups.
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Getting the location used to depend on a hard-coded .rels file based
on "word/document.xml". We now dynamically detect that file based on
the document.xml file specified in "_rels/.rels"
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The desktop Word program places the main document file in
"word/document.xml", but the online word places it in
"word/document2.xml". This file path is actually stated in the root
"_rels/.rels" file, in the "Relationship" element with an
"http://../officedocument" type.
Closes #5277
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It is broken, see https://github.com/haskell-foundation/foundation/issues/515
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For some reason, Word in Office 365 Online uses `document2.xml`
for the content, instead of `document.xml`. This causes pandoc
not to be able to parse docx.
This quick fix has the parser check for both `document.xml`
and `document2.xml`.
Addresses #5277, but a more robust solution would be to
get the name of the main document dynamically (who knows
whether it might change again?).
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Quite a few modules were missing copyright notices.
This commit adds copyright notices everywhere via haddock module
headers. The old license boilerplate comment is redundant with this and has
been removed.
Update copyright years to 2019.
Closes #4592.
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Otherwise last block gets parsed as a Plain rather than
a Para.
This is a regression in pandoc 2.x. This patch restores
pandoc 1.19 behavior.
Closes #5271.
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Previously we didn't strip off the attachment: prefix,
so even though the attachment is available in the mediabag,
pandoc couldn't find it.
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See #4213.
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See #4213.
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Add comment to remove it in next major release.
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Now, instead of always creating temp dirs in the home
directory on Windows, we only do it if the system tempdir
name contains tildes. (This will be the case for longer
usernames only.)
Closes #1192.
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Previously the temp directory was created inside the working
directory, so that programs like epstopdf.pl would be allowed
to run in restricted mode. However, setting TEXMFOUTPUT allows
these programs to run in the tmpdir inside the system temp
directory.
This is a better solution than cd51983. Using the system
temp dir prevents problems when pandoc is run inside a synced
directory (e.g. dropbox).
Partially addresses #1192.
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fixes #5267
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This is more elegant than the explicit recursive
we were using.
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When `native_divs` and `markdown_in_html_blocks` are disabled
but `raw_html` and `markdown_attribute` are enabled...
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`\ldots{}.` doesn't behave as well as `\ldots.` with the latex
ellipsis package. This patch causes pandoc to avoid emitting
the `{}` when it is not necessary. Now `\ldots` and other
control sequences used in escaping will be followed by either
a `{}`, a space, or nothing, depending on context.
Thanks to Elliott Slaughter for the suggestion.
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`braced` now actually requires nested braces.
Otherwise some legitimate command and environment
definitions can break (see test/command/tex-group.md).
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In HTML based formats the `date` metadata variable is converted to ISO 8601
and available as `$date-meta`, but it's not documented at the moment.
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