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Previously, readDocx would error out if zip-archive failed. We change
the archive extraction step from `toArchive` to `toArchiveOrFail`, which
returns an Either value.
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The regular readDocx just becomes a special case.
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The feature checklist in the source code was out of date. Update.
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The docx reader used to use a Modifiable typeclass to combine both
Blocks and Inlines. But all the work was in the inlines. So most of the
generality was wasted, at the expense of making the code harder to
understand. This gets rid of the generality, and adds functions for
Blocks and Inlines. It should be a bit easier to work with going forward.
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This avoids performance problems in documents with many identically
named headers.
Closes #2671.
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Change 5527465c introduced a `DummyListItem` type in Docx/Parse.hs. In
retrospect, this seems like it mixes parsing and iterpretation
excessively. What's *really* going on is that we have a list item
without and associate level or numeric info. We can decide what to do
what that in Docx.hs (treat it like a list paragraph), but the parser
shouldn't make that decision.
This commit makes what is going on a bit more explicit. `LevelInfo` is
now a Maybe value in the `ListItem` type. If it's a Nothing, we treat
it as a ListParagraph. If it's a Just, it's a normal list item.
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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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These come up when people create a list item and then delete the
bullet. It doesn't refer to any real list item, and we used to ignore
it.
We handle it with a DummyListItem type, which, in Docx.hs, is turned
into a normal paragraph with a "ListParagraph" class. If it follow
another list item, it is folded as another paragraph into that item. If
it doesn't, it's just its own (usually indented, and therefore
block-quoted) paragraph.
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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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mpickering-errortype
Conflicts:
benchmark/benchmark-pandoc.hs
src/Text/Pandoc/Readers/Markdown.hs
src/Text/Pandoc/Readers/Org.hs
src/Text/Pandoc/Readers/RST.hs
tests/Tests/Readers/LaTeX.hs
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The previous commits had some code repetition. This just makes it a bit
easier to read.
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Verbatim usually shuts off all other run styles, but we don't want it to
shut off sub/superscript.
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Previously we didn't transform lists inside table cells.
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This patch builds paragraph styles tree, then checks if paragraph has
style.styleId or style/name.val matching predetermined patterns.
Works with "Heading#" (name.val="heading #") for headings and
"Quote"|"BlockQuote"|"BlockQuotation" (name.val="Quote"|"Block Text")
for block quotes.
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When we encounter one of the polyglot header styles, we want to remove
that from the par styles after we convert to a header. To do that, we
have to keep track of the style name, and remove it appropriately.
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We're just keeping a list of header formats that different languages use
as their default styles. At the moment, we have English, German, Danish,
and French. We can continue to add to this.
This is simpler than parsing the styles file, and perhaps less
error-prone, since there seems to be some variations, even within a
language, of how a style file will define headers.
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There could be new top-level headers after making lists, so we have to
rewrite links after that.
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This makes to docx reader's native output fit with the way the markdown
reader understands its markdown output. Ie, as far as table cells go:
docx -> native == docx -> native -> markdown -> native
(This identity isn't true for other things outside of table cells, of
course).
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We no longer need the explicit lists since we're deriving them from the
ground up.
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This is the only one so far. We'll add others as they show up.
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We now no longer check against explicit styles.
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We always favor an explicit positive or negative in a style in a
descendent, and only turn to the ancestor if nothing is set.
We also introduce an (empty) list of styles that are black-listed. We
won't check them. (Think underlines in hyperlinks).
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Just discards info at the moment, so at least it works the same.
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In docx, super- and subscript are attributes of Vertalign. It makes more
sense to follow this, and have different possible values of Vertalign in
runStyle. This is mainly a preparatory step for real style parsing,
since it can distinguish between vertical align being explicitly turned
off and it not being set.
In addition, it makes parsing a bit clearer, and makes sure we don't do
docx-impossible things like being simultaneously super and sub.
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functions like runElemsToInlines and parPartsToInlines are just defined
in terms of concatting and mapping their singular
version (e.g. `runElemToInlines`). Having two functions with almost
identical names makes it easier to introduce errors. It's easy enough to
just concat and map inline, and it makes it clearer what is going on in
the code.
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Style handling has been cleaned up, but introduced a bug here. There
wasn't previously a test to catch it.
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The big news here is a rewrite of Docx to use the builder
functions. As opposed to previous attempts, we now see a significant
speedup -- times are cut in half (or more) in a few informal tests.
Reducible has also been rewritten. It can doubtless be simplified and
clarified further. We can consider this, at the moment, a reference for
correct behavior.
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Headers.
We might also want to do this elsewhere (for pars, for example).
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Otherwise they get left dangling in the document.
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Note that "Italic" can be on, and, from the last commit, `<w:i>` can be
present, but be turned off. In that case, the turned-off tag takes
precedence. So, we have to distinguish between something being off and
something not being there. Hence, isItalic, isBold, isStrike, and
isSmallCaps have become Maybes.
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Introduces a new function in Reducibles, concatR. The idea is that if we
have two list of Reducibles (blocks or inlines), we can combine them and
just perform the reduction on the joining parts (the last element of the
first list, the first element of the second list). This is useful in cases
where the two lists are already reduced, and we're only worried about the
joining elements.
This actually improves the efficiency a bit further, because concatR can be
smart about empty lists.
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Before, we had to run reduceList on the whole combined paragraph, which
was redundant, and could take some time for long paragraphs. We only
need to combine the drop cap with the first inline of the next
paragraph.
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Make sure that adjacent inlines are combined properly in dropcaps. This
updates the test results as well.
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If we get to a dropcap, we keep hold the inlines until the next
paragraph, and combine it there.
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This changes the signature of the exported `readOMML` to `String ->
Either String [Exp]`, so it can now, in theory, be slotted into
TeXMath. It doesn't have any real error reporting yet, but that might
make more sense once I put it in a branch, and understand how it works
in the other readers.
It also now reads strings that parse to either oMath or oMathPara
elements. Note that the distinction is lost in the output. It's up to
the caller to remember the display type.
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Math module
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Previous drawings that were under some other toplevel run (i.e., a
hyperlink) wouldn't be properly handled. This should fix that.
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Could use some cleanup, but this is the first step for getting
an OMML reader into TeXMath.
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Signed-off-by: Jesse Rosenthal <jrosenthal@jhu.edu>
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