Age | Commit message (Collapse) | Author | Files | Lines |
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Now that `gfm` supports footnotes.
https://github.blog/changelog/2021-09-30-footnotes-now-supported-in-markdown-fields/
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This allows you to include a frontispiece using
```
![](yourimage.jpg)
etc.
```
Closes #7600.
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Update tests.
Reason: it turns out that the native output generated by
pretty-simple isn't always readable by the native reader.
According to https://github.com/cdepillabout/pretty-simple/issues/99
it is not a design goal of the library that the rendered values
be readable using 'read'. This makes it unsuitable for our
purposes.
pretty-show is a bit slower and it uses 4-space indents
(non-configurable), but it doesn't have this serious drawback.
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with spaces or leading underscore.
In this cases we need the quoted form, e.g.
```
.. _`foo bar`:
.. _`_foo`:
```
Side note: rST will "normalize" these identifiers anyway,
ignoring the underscore:
https://docutils.sourceforge.io/docs/ref/rst/directives.html#identifier-normalization
Closes #7593.
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e.g. `newseries` or `library`. Expansion should not happen
when these strings are protected in braces, or when they're
capitalized.
Closes #7591.
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Closes #7589.
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not display. See #7589.
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if MathJax is used.
Closes #7587.
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Previously we used our own homespun formatting. But this
produces over-long lines that aren't ideal for diffs in tests.
Easier to use something off-the-shelf and standard.
Closes #7580.
Performance is slower by about a factor of 10, but this isn't
really a problem because native isn't suitable as a serialization
format. (For serialization you should use json, because the reader
is so much faster than native.)
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Closes #7531.
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Otherwise we get the parameters as numbers in the output.
Closes #7531.
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Previously polyglossia worked better with xelatex, but
that is no longer the case, so we simplify the code so that
babel is used with all latex engines.
This involves a change to the default LaTeX template.
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This only affects output with bracketed_spans enabled.
The markdown reader parses spans with either `.ul` or `.underline` as
Underline elements, but we're moving towards preferring the latter.
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In PowerPoint, it’s possible to specify footers across all slides,
containing a date (optionally automatically updated to today’s date),
the slide number (optionally starting from a higher number than 1), and
static text. There’s also an option to hide the footer on the title
slide.
Before this commit, none of that footer content was pulled through from
the reference doc: this commit supports all the functionality listed
above.
There is one behaviour which may not be immediately obvious: if the
reference doc specifies a fixed date (i.e. not automatically updating),
and there’s a date specified in the metadata for the document, the
footer date is replaced by the metadata date.
- Include date, slide number, and static footer content from reference
doc
- Respect “slide number starts from” option
- Respect “Don’t show on title slide” option
- Add tests
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We previously indented them by two spaces, following a
common convention. Since the convention is fading, and
the indentation is inconvenient for copy/paste, we are
discontinuing this practice.
Closes #5440.
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See #5440.
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Previously they did not behave as the equivalent input
with spaces would. Closes #7573.
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In the reveal-js output, it’s possible to use reveal’s
`data-background-image` class on a slide’s title to specify a background
image for the slide.
With this commit, it’s possible to use `background-image` in the same
way for pptx output. Only the “stretch” mode is supported, and the
background image is centred around the slide in the image’s larger axis,
matching the observed default behaviour of PowerPoint.
- Support `background-image` per slide.
- Add tests.
- Update manual.
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Closes #7574.
See #6968 where the motivation for setting "hash" to True is
explained.
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- Support -i option
- Support incremental/noincremental divs
- Support older block quote syntax
- Add tests
One thing not clear from the manual is what should happen when the input
uses a combination of these things. For example, what should the
following produce?
```md
::: {.incremental .nonincremental}
- are
- these
- incremental?
:::
::: incremental
::::: nonincremental
- or
- these?
:::::
:::
::: nonincremental
> - how
> - about
> - these?
:::
```
In this commit I’ve taken the following approach, matching the observed
behaviour for beamer and reveal.js output:
- if a div with both classes, incremental wins
- the innermost incremental/nonincremental div is the one which takes
effect
- a block quote containing a list as its first element inverts whether
the list is incremental, whether or not the quote is inside an
incremental/non-incremental div
I’ve added some tests to verify this behaviour.
This commit closes issue #5689
(https://github.com/jgm/pandoc/issues/5689).
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Cloess #7568.
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There was a mistake in the logic used to choose between the Comparison
and Two Content layouts: if one column contained only non-text (an image
or a table) and the other contained only text, the Comparison layout was
chosen instead of the desired Two Content layout.
This commit fixes that logic:
> If either column contains text followed by non-text, use Comparison.
Otherwise, use Two Content.
It also adds a test asserting this behaviour.
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If the image has the id IMAGEID, then we use the id ref_IMAGEID
for the figure number. Closes #7551.
This allows one to create a filter that adds a figure number
with figure name, e.g.
<w:fldSimple w:instr=" REF ref_superfig "><w:r><w:t>Figure X</w:t></w:r></w:fldSimple>
For this to be possible it must be possible to predict the
figure number id from the image id.
If images lack an id, an id of the form `ref_fig1` is used.
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for raw cell output
BREAKING CHANGE:
The Jupyter ecosystem, including nbconvert, lab and notebook,
deviated from their own spec in nbformat,
where they used the key `raw_mimetype` instead of `format`.
Moreover, the mime-type of rst used in Jupyter
deviated from that suggested by
https://docutils.sourceforge.io/FAQ.html
and is defined as `text/restructuredtext`
when chosen from "Raw NBConvert Format" in Jupyter.
So while this is backward-compatible,
it should matches the real world usage better,
hence improving the round-trip "identity" in raw-cell.
See #229, jupyter/nbformat#229.
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Adds more formats that Jupyter's "Raw NBConvert Format" uses
natively (asciidoc),
and maps more formats to text/html whenever it makes sense.
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While the spec defined format, in practice raw_mimetype is used.
See jupyter/nbformat#229
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This adds most of the available formats selectable from
Jupyter's interface "Raw NBConvert Format".
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BREAKING CHANGE:
fix rst mime type according to
https://docutils.sourceforge.io/FAQ.html
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We already copy the relationships and elements in presentation.xml for
embedded fonts, so at the moment using a reference doc with embedded
fonts is broken, producing a pptx that PowerPoint says needs repairing.
This commit copies the fonts over, which I believe is all that’s needed
to work correctly with reference docs with embedded fonts.
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Before now, the numbering of rIds was inconsistent when making the
presentation XML and when making the presentation relationships XML.
For the relationships, the slides were inserted into the rId order after
the first master, and everything else was moved up out of the way.
However, this change was then missed in the presentation XML, I think
because `envSlideOffset` was never set. The result was that any slide
masters after the first would have the wrong rIds in the presentation
XML, clashing with the slides, which would lead PowerPoint to view
produced files as corrupt. As well, other relationships (like embedded
fonts) would have their rId changed in the relationships XML but not in
the presentation XML.
This commit:
- Removes `envSlideOffset` in favour of directly passed function
arguments
- Inserts the slides into the rId order after all masters rather than
after the first
- Updates any other rIds in presentation.xml that need to be changed
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- Accept test changes: they’re adding the second theme (for all tests
not containing speaker notes), or changing its position in the
XML (for the ones containing speaker notes).
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Before now, for any layouts added to the output from the default
reference doc, the relationships were unconditionally added to the
output. However, if there was already a layout in slideMaster1 at the
same index then that results in duplicate relationships.
This commit checks first, and only adds the relationship if it doesn’t
already exist.
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I don’t think this has caused any problems, but before now it’s been
"NotesMasterId", which is incorrect according to [ECMA-376].
[ECMA-376]: https://www.ecma-international.org/publications-and-standards/standards/ecma-376/
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Closes #7557.
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The HTML writer now supports `EndOfBlock`, `EndOfSection`, and
`EndOfDocument` for reference locations. EPUB and HTML slide
show formats are also affected by this change.
This works similarly to the markdown writer, but with special care
taken to skipping section divs with what regards to the block level.
The change also takes care to not modify the output if `EndOfDocument`
is used.
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`text/markdown` is now a supported mime type for raw output.
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[API change]
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We now ensure that groups starting with `\*` never cause
text to be added to the document.
In addition, bookmarks now create a span between the start
and end of the bookmark, rather than an empty span.
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Some documents seem to have non-RTF (e.g. XML) material after the
`{\rtf1 ... }` group.
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