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The depths of headlines can be modified using the `H` option. Deeper
headlines will be converted to lists.
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Export option parsing is distinct enough from general block parsing to
justify putting it into a separate module.
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Handling of archived trees can be modified using the `arch` option.
Archived trees are either dropped, exported completely, or collapsed to
include just the header when the `arch` option is nil, non-nil, or
`headline`, respectively.
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Comment trees were handled after parsing, as pattern matching on lists
is easier than matching on sequences. The new method of reading
documents as trees allows for more elegant subtree removal.
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Emacs org-mode is based on outline-mode, which treats documents as trees
with headlines are nodes. The reader is refactored to parse into a
similar tree structure. This simplifies transformations acting on
document (sub-)trees.
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Specific newtype definitions are used to replace stringly typing of tags
and properties. Type safety is increased while readability is improved.
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We treat display math like block quotes, and apply FirstParagraph style
to paragraphs that follow them. These can be styled as the user
wishes. (But, when the user is using indentation, this allows for
paragraphs to continue after display math without indentation.)
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In Writers.Shared, we strip leading and trailing spaces for display
math. Since SoftBreak's are treated as spaces, we should strip those
too.
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Org reader: support figure labels
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Figure labels given as `#+LABEL: thelabel` are used as the ID of the
respective image. This allows e.g. the LaTeX to add proper `\label`
markup.
This fixes half of #2496 and #2999.
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Spaces are not allowed in the image URL in textile.
Closes #2998.
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The link
`<foo>`_
should have `foo` as both its link text and its URL.
See RST spec at
<http://docutils.sourceforge.net/docs/ref/rst/restructuredtext.html#embedded-uris-and-aliases>
"The reference text may also be omitted, in which case the URI will be
duplicated for use as the reference text. This is useful for relative
URIs where the address or file name is also the desired reference text:
See `<a_named_relative_link>`_ or `<an_anonymous_relative_link>`__
for details."
Closes Debian #828167 -- reported by Christian Heller.
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Closes #1177. This is a convenient option for people using
websites whose Markdown flavors don't provide for math.
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Previously they were processed, very unintuitively, in R->L
order, so that `markdown-tex_math_dollars+tex_math_dollars`
had `tex_math_dollars` disabled.
Closes #2995.
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Attributes can't be followed by a space.
So,
_(class)emph_
but
_(noclass) emph_
Closes #2984.
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Markdown line breaks involve a newline, and simple and pipe
tables can't contain one.
Closes #2993.
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We can't guarantee we'll convert every comment correctly, though we'll
do the best we can. This warns if the comment includes something other
than Para or Plain.
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Previously we had only allowed for warnings in the parser. Now we allow
for them in the `Docx.hs` as well. The warnings are simply concatenated.
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This adds simple track-changes comment parsing to the docx reader. It is
turned on with `--track-changes=all`. All comments are converted to
inlines, which can list some information. In the future a warning will
be added for comments with formatting that seems like it will be
excessively denatured.
Note that comments can extend across blocks. For that reason there are
two spans: `comment-start` and `comment-end`. `comment-start` will
contain the comment. `comment-end` will always be empty. The two will be
associated by a numeric id.
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This is a lossy function for converting `[Block] -> [Inline]`. Its main
use, at the moment, is for docx comments, which can contain arbitrary
blocks (except for footnotes), but which will be converted to spans.
This is, at the moment, pretty useless for everything but the basic
`Para` and `Plain` comments. It can be improved, but the docx reader
should probably emit a warning if the comment contains more than this.
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Org reader: remove partial functions
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Previously we just passed all raw TeX through when MathJax
was used for HTML math. This passed through too much.
With this patch, only raw LaTeX environments that MathJax
can handle get passed through.
This patch also causes raw LaTeX environments to be treated
as math, when possible, with MathML and WebTeX output.
Closes #2758.
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Partial functions like `head` lead to avoidable errors and should be
avoided. They are replaced with total functions.
This fixes #2991.
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- `writerEmailObfuscation` in `defaultWriterOptions` is now
`NoObfuscation`
- the default for the command-line `--email-obfuscation` option is
now `none`.
Closes #2988.
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Org mode allows arbitrary raw inlines ("export snippets" in Emacs
parlance) to be included as `@@format:raw foreign format text@@`.
Support for this features is added to the Org reader.
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Org mode allows arbitrary raw inlines ("export snippets" in Emacs
parlance) to be included as `@@format:raw foreign format text@@`.
Support for this features is added to the Org writer.
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A specification for an official Org-mode citation syntax was drafted by
Richard Lawrence and enhanced with the help of others on the orgmode
mailing list. Basic support for this citation style is added to the
reader.
This closes #1978.
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Semicolons are used as special characters in citations syntax. This
ensures the correct parsing of Pandoc-style citations:
[prefix; @key; suffix]
Previously, parsing would have failed unless there was a space or other
special character as the last <prefix> character.
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Parsing of special strings (like '...' as ellipsis or '--' as en dash)
can be toggled using the `-` option.
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Parsing of emphasized text can be toggled using the `*` option. This
influences parsing of text marked as emphasized, strong, strikeout, and
underline. Parsing of inline math, code, and verbatim text is not
affected by this option.
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Reading of smart quotes can be toggled using the `'` option.
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The `OrgParserState` contained both an `orgStateMeta` and
`orgStateMeta'` field, the former for plain meta information and the
latter for F-monad wrapped meta info. The plain meta info is only used
to make `OrgParserState` an instance of the `HasMeta` class, which in
turn is never used in the reader. The (F Meta) version is hence renamed
to the "un-primed" version while the other one is dropped.
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Some code was duplicated (copy-pasted) or placed in an inappropriate
module during the modularization refactoring. Those functions are moved
into a `Shared` module, as was originally intended but forgotten.
Better documentation of the respective functions is a positive
side-effect.
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Org reader: support org-ref style citations
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Org export blocks
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Closes #2953.
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Org-mode version 9 usees a new syntax for export blocks. Instead of
`#+BEGIN_<FORMAT>`, where `<FORMAT>` is the format of the block's
content, the new format uses `#+BEGIN_export <FORMAT>` instead. Both
types are supported.
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- Reorder functions, grouping related functions together.
- Demote simple functions to local functions if they are used just once.
- Rename and document functions to increase code readability.
- Fix handling of whitespace in blocks, allowing content to be indented
less then the block header.
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Having a function starting with `parse` in a parsing library is overly
redundant. Let's use a nicer, shorter name more in line with the rest
of the library.
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The *org-ref* package is an org-mode extension commonly used to manage
citations in org documents. Basic support for the `cite:citeKey` and
`[[cite:citeKey][prefix text::suffix text]]` syntax is added.
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Block parsing code is moved to a separate module.
This is part of the Org-mode reader cleanup effort.
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Inline parsing code is moved to a separate module. Parsers for block
starts are extracted as well, as those are used in the `endline` parser.
This is part of the Org-mode reader cleanup effort.
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The Org-mode reader uses many functions defined in the
`Text.Pandoc.Parsing` utility module. Some of the functions are
overwritten with versions adapted to Org-mode idiosyncrasies. These
special functions, as well as the normal Pandoc versions, are combined
in a single module to increase the ease of use.
This leads to decoupling of Org-mode and Pandoc and hence to slightly
cleaner code. The downside is code-bloat due to repeated import/export
statements.
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For the implementation of the Drawer element in the Org Writer, we make
use of a generic Block container with attributes. The presence of a
`drawer` class defines that the `Div` constructor is a drawer. The first
class defines the drawer name to use. The key-value list in the
attributes defines the keys to add inside the Drawer. Lastly, the list
of Block elements contains miscellaneous blocks elements to add inside
of the Drawer.
Signed-off-by: Albert Krewinkel <albert@zeitkraut.de>
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The `d` export option can be used to control which drawers are exported
and which are discarded. Basic support for this option is added here.
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