Age | Commit message (Collapse) | Author | Files | Lines |
|
Closes #1815.
|
|
Org links like `[[file:target][title]]` were not handled correctly,
parsing the link target verbatim. The org reader is changed such that
the leading `file:` is dropped from the link target.
This is related to issues #756 and #1812.
|
|
|
|
Move recursive role lookup from renderRole to addNewRole. The Attr value
will be the same for every occurance of this role, so there's no reason
to compute it every time. This allows simplifying the
stateRstCustomRoles map considerably.
We could go even further, and remove the fmt and attr arguments to
renderRole, which are null except for custom roles.
|
|
- Add "sourceCode" to classes for :code: role, and anything inheriting
from it.
- Add the name of the custom role to classes if the Inline constructor
supports Attr.
- If the custom role directive does not specify a parent role, inherit
from the :span: role.
This differs somewhat from the rst2xml.py behavior. If a custom role
inherits from another custom role, Pandoc will attach both roles' names
as classes. rst2xml.py will only use the class of the directly invoked
role (though in the case of inheriting from a :code: role with a
:language: defined, it will also provide the inherited language as a
class).
|
|
code role should have "code" class.
http://docutils.sourceforge.net/docs/ref/rst/roles.html says that
`text`:literal` is the same as ``text``. docutils outputs a <literal>
element in both cases, whereas for the code role, it outputs a <literal>
element with the "code" class.
|
|
This commit moves some code which was only used for the Markdown Reader
into a generic form which can be used for any Reader. Otherwise, it
takes naming and interface cues from the preexisting Markdown code.
|
|
|
|
|
|
We treat a calloutlist as a bulleted list. This works well in practice.
|
|
move `addWarning` to Parsing.hs, so it can be used by Markdown & RST readers.
|
|
The class directive accepts one or more class names, and creates a Div
value with those classes. If the directive has an indented body, the
body is parsed as the children of the Div. If not, the first block
folowing the directive is made a child of the Div.
This differs from the behavior of rst2xml, which does not create a Div
element. Instead, the specified classes are applied to each child of
the directive. However, most Pandoc Block constructors to not take an
Attr argument, so we can't duplicate this behavior.
|
|
closes #65
RST quoted literal blocks are the same as indented literal blocks (which
pandoc already supports) except that the quote character is preserved in
each line.
This includes test cases for the quoted literal block, as well as
additional tests for line blocks and indented literal blocks, to verify
that these are unaffected by the changes.
|
|
See jgm/pandoc-citeproc#26.
|
|
Closes #1756.
|
|
- a
- b
* c
was being parsed as a list, even though an unindented `*`
should make a heading. See
<http://orgmode.org/manual/Plain-lists.html#fn-1>.
|
|
Previously, if a URL had an anchor, such as
http://johnmacfarlane.net/pandoc/README.html#synopsis
the reader would incorrectly identify it as an internal link
and return "#synopsis" for the link in output.
|
|
Fix 'Ext_lists_without_preceding_blankline' bug.
|
|
While empty links are not allowed in Emacs org-mode, Pandoc org-mode
should support them: gitit relies on empty links as they are used to
create wiki links.
Fixes jgm/gitit#471
|
|
The org reader was to restrictive when parsing links, some relative
links and links to files given as absolute paths were not recognized
correctly. The org reader's link parsing function was amended to handle
such cases properly.
This fixes #1741
|
|
|
|
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.
|
|
Org supports special symbols which can be included using LaTeX syntax,
but are actually MathML entities. Examples for this are
`\nbsp` (non-breaking space), `\Aacute` (the letter A with accent acute)
or `\copy` (the copyright sign ©).
This fixes #1657.
|
|
Formerly `pandoc -f markdown-fancy_lists+startnum` did not work
properly.
|
|
Respect indent when parsing Org bullet lists
|
|
Org reader: fix rules for emphasis recognition
|
|
Document trees under a header starting with the word `COMMENT` are
comment trees and should not be exported. Those trees are dropped
silently.
This closes #1678.
|
|
Things like `/hello,/` or `/hi'/` were falsy recognized as emphasised
strings. This is wrong, as `,` and `'` are forbidden border chars and
may not occur on the inner border of emphasized text. This patch
enables the reader to matches the reference implementation in that it
reads the above strings as plain text.
|
|
Tidy up fix for #1650, #1698 as per comments in #1680.
Fix same issue for definition lists with the same method.
|
|
|
|
Fixes issue with top-level bullet list parsing.
Previously we would use `many1 spaceChars` rather than respecting
the list's indent level. We also permitted `*` bullets on unindented
lists, which should unambiguously parse as `header 1`.
Combined, this meant headers at a different indent level were
being unwittingly slurped into preceding bullet lists, as per
Issue #1650.
|
|
Adding inlineCommands
|
|
Fix path-slashes inside archive for windows
|
|
Closes #1649
|
|
* Fixes #1636.
* Adds a test.
|
|
Closes #1620
|
|
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.
|
|
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.
|
|
|
|
This allows us to emphasize at the beginning of a new paragraph (or, in
general, after blank lines).
|
|
There could be new top-level headers after making lists, so we have to
rewrite links after that.
|
|
When users number their headers, Word understands that as a single item
enumerated list. We make the assumption that such a list is, in fact, a header.
|
|
Don't use os-sensitive "combine", since we always want the paths in our
zip-archive to use forward-slashes.
|
|
Previously text that ended a div would be parsed as Plain
unless there was a blank line before the closing div tag.
Test case:
<div class="first">
This is a paragraph.
This is another paragraph.
</div>
Closes #1591.
|
|
Conflicts:
src/Text/Pandoc/Writers/Docx.hs
|
|
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).
|
|
the start of the line.
|
|
|
|
|
|
The header is now parsed as meta information. The first line is the
`title`, the second is the `author` and third line is the `date`.
|