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* Avoid fmapping when we're just binding right after anyway
* Clean up unnecessary fmaps in the LaTeX reader
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This should speed-up recompilation after changes in `Text.Pandoc.Class`,
as the number of modules affected by a change will be smaller in
general. It also offers faster insights into the parts of `T.P.Class`
used within a module.
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* Use implicit Prelude
The previous behavior was introduced as a fix for #4464. It seems that
this change alone did not fix the issue, and `stack ghci` and `cabal
repl` only work with GHC 8.4.1 or newer, as no custom Prelude is loaded
for these versions. Given this, it seems cleaner to revert to the
implicit Prelude.
* PandocMonad: remove outdated check for base version
Only base versions 4.9 and later are supported, the check for
`MIN_VERSION_base(4,8,0)` is therefore unnecessary.
* Always use custom prelude
Previously, the custom prelude was used only with older GHC versions, as
a workaround for problems with ghci. The ghci problems are resolved by
replacing package `base` with `base-noprelude`, allowing for consistent
use of the custom prelude across all GHC versions.
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* Update copyright year
* Copyright: add notes for Lua and Jira modules
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All warnings are either fixed or, if more appropriate, HLint is
configured to ignore them. HLint suggestions remain.
* Ignore "Use camelCase" warnings in Lua and legacy code
* Fix or ignore remaining HLint warnings
* Remove redundant brackets
* Remove redundant `return`s
* Remove redundant as-pattern
* Fuse mapM_/map
* Use `.` to shorten code
* Remove redundant `fmap`
* Remove unused LANGUAGE pragmas
* Hoist `not` in Text.Pandoc.App
* Use fewer imports for `Text.DocTemplates`
* Remove redundant `do`s
* Remove redundant `$`s
* Jira reader: remove unnecessary parentheses
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* Use concatMap instead of reimplementing it
* Replace an unnecessary multi-way if with a regular if
* Use sortOn instead of sortBy and comparing
* Use guards instead of lots of indents for if and else
* Remove redundant do blocks
* Extract common functions from both branches of maybe
Whenever both the Nothing and the Just branch of maybe do the same
function, do that function on the result of maybe instead.
* Use fmap instead of reimplementing it from maybe
* Use negative forms instead of negating the positive forms
* Use mapMaybe instead of mapping and then using catMaybes
* Use zipWith instead of mapping over the result of zip
* Use unwords instead of reimplementing it
* Use <$ instead of <$> and const
* Replace case of Bool with if and else
* Use find instead of listToMaybe and filter
* Use zipWithM instead of mapM and zip
* Inline lambda wrappers into the real functions
* We get zipWithM from Text.Pandoc.Writers.Shared
* Use maybe instead of fromMaybe and fmap
I'm not sure how this one slipped past me.
* Increase a bit of indentation
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PR #5884.
+ Use pandoc-types 1.20 and texmath 0.12.
+ Text is now used instead of String, with a few exceptions.
+ In the MediaBag module, some of the types using Strings
were switched to use FilePath instead (not Text).
+ In the Parsing module, new parsers `manyChar`, `many1Char`,
`manyTillChar`, `many1TillChar`, `many1Till`, `manyUntil`,
`mantyUntilChar` have been added: these are like their
unsuffixed counterparts but pack some or all of their output.
+ `glob` in Text.Pandoc.Class still takes String since it seems
to be intended as an interface to Glob, which uses strings.
It seems to be used only once in the package, in the EPUB writer,
so that is not hard to change.
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Closes #5885.
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* Set dbBook to true when traversing a chapter too.
Currently, a `<title/>` in a chapter and in a `<section/>` below that
chapter have the same level if they're not inside a `<book/>`.
This can happen in a multi-file book project. Also see the example at
https://tdg.docbook.org/tdg/4.5/chapter.html
Co-authored-by: Félix Baylac-Jacqué <felix@alternativebit.fr>
* Add docbook-chapter test
This tests nested `<section/>` and makes sure `<title/>` in the first
`<section/>` below `<chapter/>` is one level deeper than the `<chapter/>`'s
`<title/>`, also when not inside a `<book/>`.
Co-authored-by: Félix Baylac-Jacqué <felix@alternativebit.fr>
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Fixes #1234.
This parses admonitions not as a blockquote, but rather as a div with an
appropriate class. We also handle titles for admonitions as a nested div
with the "title" class.
(I followed the behaviour of other docbook-to-html converters in this -
there are clearly other ways you could encode it.)
In general, the handling of elements with nested title elements is very
inconsistent. I think we should make it consistent, but I'm leaivng that
for later to make this a small change.
Example:
```docbook
<warning xml:id="someId">
<title>My title</title>
<simpara>An admonition block</simpara>
</warning>
```
goes to
```html
<div id="someId" class="warning">
<div class="title">My title</div>
<p>An admonition block</p>
</div>
```
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The haddock module header contains essentially the
same information, so the boilerplate is redundant and
just one more thing to get out of sync.
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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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Now we properly parse title and subtitle elements that are
direct children of book and article (as well as children of
bookinfo, articleinfo, or info).
We also now use the "subtitle" metadata field for subtitles,
rather than tacking the subtitle on to the title.
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See #4592.
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Previously we just got `section_title` for section (though sect1, sect2,
etc. were handled properly). Closes #4526.
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This seems to be necessary if we are to use our custom Prelude
with ghci.
Closes #4464.
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The readers previously assumed that CRs had been filtered
from the input. Now we strip the CRs in the readers themselves,
before parsing. (The point of this is just to simplify the
parsers.)
Shared now exports a new function `crFilter`. [API change]
And `tabFilter` no longer filters CRs.
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This gives 20-30% speedup and reduction of memory
usage in most of the writers.
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Readers: Renamed StringReader -> TextReader.
Updated tests.
API change.
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It previously only worked when the qnames lacked the docbook
namespace URI.
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Markup-features focusing on lines as distinctive part of the markup are read
into `LineBlock` elements. This currently means line blocks in reStructuredText
and Markdown (the latter only if the `line_block` extension is enabled), the
`linegroup`/`line` combination from the Docbook 5.1 working draft, and Org-mode
`VERSE` blocks.
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We already lower-bound tagsoup at 0.13.7, which means we were always
running the compatibility layer (it was conditional on min value
0.13). Better to just use `lookupEntity` from the library directly, and
convert a string to a char if need be.
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mb21-new-image-attributes
* Bumped version to 1.16.
* Added Attr field to Link and Image.
* Added `common_link_attributes` extension.
* Updated readers for link attributes.
* Updated writers for link attributes.
* Updated tests
* Updated stack.yaml to build against unreleased versions of
pandoc-types and texmath.
* Fixed various compiler warnings.
Closes #261.
TODO:
* Relative (percentage) image widths in docx writer.
* ODT/OpenDocument writer (untested, same issue about percentage widths).
* Update pandoc-citeproc.
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This reverts commit c423dbb5a34c2d1195020e0f0ca3aae883d0749b.
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This is needed for ghci to work with pandoc, given that we
now use a custom prelude.
Closes #2503.
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- The (non-exported) prelude is in prelude/Prelude.hs.
- It exports Monoid and Applicative, like base 4.8 prelude,
but works with older base versions.
- It exports (<>) for mappend.
- It hides 'catch' on older base versions.
This allows us to remove many imports of Data.Monoid
and Control.Applicative, and remove Text.Pandoc.Compat.Monoid.
It should allow us to use -Wall again for ghc 7.10.
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docbook-xsl, a set of XSLT scripts to generate HMTL out of DocBook,
tries harder to generate a nice xref text. Depending on the element
being linked to, it looks at the title or other descriptive child
elements. Let's do that, too.
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'xref' is used to create cross references to other parts of the
document. It is an empty element - the cross reference text depends on
various attributes. Quoting 'DocBook: The Definitive Guide':
1. If the endterm attribute is specified on xref, the content of the
element pointed to by endterm will be used as the text of the
cross-reference.
2. Otherwise, if the object pointed to has a specified XRefLabel, the
content of that attribute will be used as the cross-reference text.
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Having access to the entire document will be needed when handling
elements which refer to other elements. This is needed for e.g. <xref>
or <link>, both of which reference other elements (by the 'id'
attribute) for the label text.
I suppose that in practice, the [Content] returned by parseXML always
only contains one 'Elem' value -- the document element. However, I'm not
totally sure about it, so let's just pass all the Content along.
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I plan to use the parsed and normalized XML tree read in readDocBook in
other places - prepare that commit by factoring this code out into a
separate, shared, definition.
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It is parsed into a Div with class `informalexample`.
Closes #2319.
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(mb21)
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Closes #1931.
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Closes #1818.
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They are now rendered with a `>` between them.
Closes #1817.
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Closes #1816.
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Closes #1815.
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