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Previously if a YAML block under `|-` contained
a blank line, pandoc would not parse it as metadata.
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This brings our handling of them into alignment with
CommonMark's.
Closes #??.
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Previously the following failed:
::: {.class}
1. one
2. two
:::
and you needed a blank line before the closing `:::`.
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Added test case.
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+ Added Ext_fenced_divs to Extensions (default for pandoc Markdown).
+ Document fenced_divs extension in manual.
+ Implemented fenced code divs in Markdown reader.
+ Added test.
Closes #168.
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Closes #3947.
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* Options: Added readerStripComments to ReaderOptions.
* Added `--strip-comments` command-line option.
* Made `htmlTag` from the HTML reader sensitive to this feature.
This affects Markdown and Textile input.
Closes #2552.
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Eventually we'll add `processEmphasis` and `processBracketed`
to this.
This will allow us to conform to CommonMark rules and
fix #3903 and #1735.
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Closes #3511.
Previously pandoc used the four-space rule: continuation paragraphs,
sublists, and other block level content had to be indented 4
spaces. Now the indentation required is determined by the
first line of the list item: to be included in the list item,
blocks must be indented to the level of the first non-space
content after the list marker. Exception: if are 5 or more spaces
after the list marker, then the content is interpreted as an
indented code block, and continuation paragraphs must be indented
two spaces beyond the end of the list marker. See the CommonMark
spec for more details and examples.
Documents that adhere to the four-space rule should, in most cases,
be parsed the same way by the new rules. Here are some examples
of texts that will be parsed differently:
- a
- b
will be parsed as a list item with a sublist; under the four-space
rule, it would be a list with two items.
- a
code
Here we have an indented code block under the list item, even though it
is only indented six spaces from the margin, because it is four spaces
past the point where a continuation paragraph could begin. With the
four-space rule, this would be a regular paragraph rather than a code
block.
- a
code
Here the code block will start with two spaces, whereas under
the four-space rule, it would start with `code`. With the four-space
rule, indented code under a list item always must be indented eight
spaces from the margin, while the new rules require only that it
be indented four spaces from the beginning of the first non-space
text after the list marker (here, `a`).
This change was motivated by a slew of bug reports from people
who expected lists to work differently (#3125, #2367, #2575, #2210,
#1990, #1137, #744, #172, #137, #128) and by the growing prevalance
of CommonMark (now used by GitHub, for example).
Users who want to use the old rules can select the `four_space_rule`
extension.
* Added `four_space_rule` extension.
* Added `Ext_four_space_rule` to `Extensions`.
* `Parsing` now exports `gobbleAtMostSpaces`, and the type
of `gobbleSpaces` has been changed so that a `ReaderOptions`
parameter is not needed.
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...when there is no intervening blank line.
Closes #3733.
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Previously only `[-@roe]` (with brackets) was recognized as
suppress-author, and `-@roe` was treated the same as `@roe`.
Closes jgm/pandoc-citeproc#237.
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We now disallow reference keys starting with `@` if the
`citations` extension is enabled. Closes #3840.
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It is no longer necessary, since the rawLaTeXBlock parser
will parse macro definitions.
This also avoids the need for a separate latexMacro parser
in the Markdown reader.
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This rewrite is primarily motivated by the need to
get macros working properly. A side benefit is that the
reader is significantly faster (27s -> 19s in one
benchmark, and there is a lot of room for further
optimization).
We now tokenize the input text, then parse the token stream.
Macros modify the token stream, so they should now be effective
in any context, including math. Thus, we no longer need the clunky
macro processing capacities of texmath.
A custom state LaTeXState is used instead of ParserState.
This, plus the tokenization, will require some rewriting
of the exported functions rawLaTeXInline, inlineCommand,
rawLaTeXBlock.
* Added Text.Pandoc.Readers.LaTeX.Types (new exported module).
Exports Macro, Tok, TokType, Line, Column. [API change]
* Text.Pandoc.Parsing: adjusted type of `insertIncludedFile`
so it can be used with token parser.
* Removed old texmath macro stuff from Parsing.
Use Macro from Text.Pandoc.Readers.LaTeX.Types instead.
* Removed texmath macro material from Markdown reader.
* Changed types for Text.Pandoc.Readers.LaTeX's
rawLaTeXInline and rawLaTeXBlock. (Both now return a String,
and they are polymorphic in state.)
* Added orgMacros field to OrgState. [API change]
* Removed readerApplyMacros from ReaderOptions.
Now we just check the `latex_macros` reader extension.
* Allow `\newcommand\foo{blah}` without braces.
Fixes #1390.
Fixes #2118.
Fixes #3236.
Fixes #3779.
Fixes #934.
Fixes #982.
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Closes #3703.
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A figure with an empty caption doesn't make sense.
Closes #2844.
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If the metadata field is all on one line, we try to interpret
it as Inlines, and only try parsing as Blocks if that fails.
If it extends over one line (including possibly the `|` or
`>` character signaling an indented block), then we parse as
Blocks.
This was motivated by some German users finding that
date: '22. Juin 2017'
got parsed as an ordered list.
Closes #3755.
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Documented in MANUAL.txt.
This is enabled by default in pandoc markdown and multimarkdown.
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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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Formerly tracing was just log messages with a DEBUG log
level. We now make these things independent. Tracing
can be turned on or off in PandocMonad using `setTrace`;
it is independent of logging.
* Removed `DEBUG` from `Verbosity`.
* Removed `ParserTrace` from `LogMessage`.
* Added `trace`, `setTrace` to `PandocMonad`.
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Note that as a result of this change, the following,
which formerly produced a header with two lines separated
by a line break, will now produce a header followed by a
paragraph:
# Hi\
there
This may affect some existing documents that relied on
this undocumented and unintended behavior.
This change makes pandoc more consistent with other
Markdown implementations, and with itself (since the two-space
version of a line break doesn't work inside ATX headers, and
neither version works inside Setext headers).
Closes #3730.
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Readers: Renamed StringReader -> TextReader.
Updated tests.
API change.
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This used to live in the Markdown reader.
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With `--reference-location` of `section` or `block`, pandoc
will now repeat references that have been used in earlier
sections.
The Markdown reader has also been modified, so that *exactly*
repeated references do not generate a warning, only
references with the same label but different targets.
The idea is that, with references after every block,
one might want to repeat references sometimes.
Closes #3701.
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This is now the default for pandoc's Markdown.
It allows whitespace between the two parts of a
reference link: e.g.
[a] [b]
[b]: url
This is now forbidden by default.
Closes #2602.
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Closes #1718.
Parsing.ParserState: Make stateNotes' a Map, add stateNoteRefs.
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E.g. in
*foo*'s 'foo'
Closes #2228.
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This is a verison of parseFromString specialied to
ParserState, which resets stateLastStrPos at the end.
This is almost always what we want.
This fixes a bug where `_hi_` wasn't treated as emphasis in
the following, because pandoc got confused about the
position of the last word:
- [o] _hi_
Closes #3690.
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This addresses a subsidiary issue in #3674.
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This follows the suggestions given by the FSF for GPL licensed software.
<https://www.gnu.org/prep/maintain/html_node/Copyright-Notices.html>
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The grid table parsers for markdown and rst was combined into one single
parser, slightly changing parsing behavior of both parsers:
- The markdown parser now compactifies block content cell-wise: pure
text blocks in cells are now treated as paragraphs only if the cell
contains multiple paragraphs, and as plain blocks otherwise. Before,
this was true only for single-column tables.
- The rst parser now accepts newlines and multiple blocks in header
cells.
Closes: #3638
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Previously we inadvertently interpreted indented HTML as
code blocks. This was a regression.
We now seek to determine the indentation level of the contents
of an HTML block, and (optionally) skip that much indentation.
As a side effect, indentation may be stripped off of raw
HTML blocks, if `markdown_in_html_blocks` is used. This
is better than having things interpreted as indented code
blocks.
Closes #1841.
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The `F` monads used for delayed evaluation of certain values in the
Markdown and Org readers are based on a shared data type capturing the
common pattern of both `F` types.
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Previously these weren't allowed because they were interpreted
as starting ConTeXt environments, even without a corresponding
\stop...
Closes #3558.
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Previously they only worked if nonindented.
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This is enabled by default in pandoc and GitHub markdown but not the
other flavors.
This requirse a space between the opening #'s and the header
text in ATX headers (as CommonMark does but many other implementations
do not). This is desirable to avoid falsely capturing things ilke
#hashtag
or
#5
Closes #3512.
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Makes the benchmark go from 40 to 36 ms.
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Closes #2397.
This patch also adds `shortcut_reference_links` to the list
of mmd extensions.
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Markdown reader now consults this to determine what is an
abbreviation.
Eventually it will be possible to specify a custom list
(see #256).
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When multiple YAML metadata blocks are used, and two define
the same field, the value defined first takes precedence,
according to the manual. This was changed briefly in
ba3ee62323644134f2a5dd3277e3349d3681111a. This commit
reverts to the original behavior and adds a test case.
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defined in the body of the document.
Closes #1279.
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This allows users to specify small caps in Markdown this way:
[my text]{.smallcaps}
See #1592.
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