Age | Commit message (Collapse) | Author | Files | Lines |
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Minor behavior change: plain strings nested in tables are now included
in the result string.
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The function is no longer required for element comparisons; it is now an
alias for the `==` operator.
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The function behaves like the default `type` function from Lua's
standard library, but is aware of pandoc userdata types. A typical
use-case would be to determine the type of a metadata value.
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Ensures the returned lists have the correct type (`Inlines` and
`Blocks`, respectively).
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Omit `false` boolean values, push integers as numbers.
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The default Pandoc object is now non-strict, i.e., only the parts of the
document that are accessed will be marshaled to Lua. A special type is
no longer necessary.
This change also makes it possible to use the global variable with
library functions such as `pandoc.utils.references`, or to inspect the
document contents with `walk()`.
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Markua is a markdown variant used by Leanpub.
More information about Markua can be found at https://leanpub.com/markua/read.
Adds a new exported function `writeMarkua` from T.P.Writers.Markdown.
[API change]
Closes #1871.
Co-authored by Tim Wisotzki and Samuel Lemmenmeier.
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The JATS writer was losing quotes in element-citations, as it uses the
`T.P.Citeproc.getReferences` function to get references. That function
replaces `Quoted` elements with spans. That transformation is required
in `T.P.Citeproc.processCitations`, so it has been moved there.
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...in a note if it begins with a title (no author).
Closes #7761.
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List with all cited references of a document.
Closes: #7752
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This commit undoes the API changes noted in
ea77f2e6f653d5b570109fa208dc427d99f95b51
They are no longer needed, and we should avoid unnecessary
API changes.
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which is not localized, instead of getting locators from the
localized CSL stylesheet as we did before.
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We also support the older org-ref style as a fallback.
We no longer support the "markdown-style" citations.
See #7329.
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if it already starts with a space.
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when an author-in-text citation has a locator and following
citations.
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See #7329.
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...after author-in-text citations.
Previously `@item [p. 12; @item2]` was incorrectly parsed as
three citations rather than two. This is now fixed by ensuring
that `prefix` doesn't gobble any semicolons.
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T.P.Citeproc exports `getCiteprocLang` and `getStyle` [API change].
T.P.Citeproc.Locator now exports `toLocatorMap`, `LocatorInfo`,
and `LocatorMap`. The type of `parseLocator` has changed, so
it now takes a `LocatorMap` rather than a `Locale` as parameter,
and returns a `LocatorInfo` instead of a tuple.
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See #7329.
This could use some tests.
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Previously, both `fmt == f` case and Image have a rank of 1.
In the end, e.g. from ipynb to html conversion,
if both html and image exists, it actually prefers the image.
This commit changes this, so that fmt == f is always highest rank,
and rank never collides.
This is achieved by keeping fmt == f case having rank 1,
and every other rank increased by 1.
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Retry conversion by passing a string instead of sources when the
`Reader` fails with a message that hints at an outdated function. A
deprecation notice is reported in that case.
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The first argument passed to Lua `Reader` functions is no longer a plain
string but a richer data structure. The structure can easily be
converted to a string by applying `tostring`, but is also a list with
elements that contain each the *text* and *name* of each input source as
a property of the respective name.
A small example is added to the custom reader documentation, showcasing
its use in a reader that creates a syntax-highlighted code block for
each source code file passed as input.
Existing readers must be updated.
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Cell values are now marshaled as userdata objects; a constructor
function for table cells is provided as `pandoc.Cell`.
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Write RawBlock of markdown in code-cell output.
#7561 makes the ipynb reader reads code-cell output with mime
"text/markdown" to a RawBlock of markdown
This commit makes the ipynb writer writes this RawBlock of markdown
back inside a code-cell output with the same mime, preserving this
information in round-trip
Add tests of ipynb reader (#7561) and ipynb writer (#7563)'s ability to
handle a "text/markdown" mime type in a code-cell output
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- `walk` methods are added to `Block` and `Inline` values; the methods
are similar to `pandoc.utils.walk_block` and
`pandoc.utils.walk_inline`, but apply to filter also to the element
itself, and therefore return a list of element instead of a single
element.
- Functions of name `Doc` are no longer accepted as alternatives for
`Pandoc` filter functions. This functionality was undocumented.
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This reverts commit fa83246d7de8527bbf59dfac9636a42ede185194.
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This is passed through if it exists (in Nb4); otherwise
the writer will add a random one so that cells all have
an "id".
Closes #7728.
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Closes #7731.
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This fixes escaping for '#' in particular.
Closes #7726.
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This is reserved for footnotes.
Fixes a regression introduced by 0a93acf.
Closes #7723.
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The new `pandoc.Inlines` function behaves identical on string input, but
allows other Inlines-like arguments as well.
The `pandoc.utils.text` function could be written as
function pandoc.utils.text (x)
assert(type(x) == 'string')
return pandoc.Inlines(x)
end
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The functions convert their argument into a list of Block and Inline
values, respectively.
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The marshaling functions for pandoc's AST are extracted into a separate
package. The package comes with a number of changes:
- Pandoc's List module was rewritten in C, thereby improving error
messages.
- Lists of `Block` and `Inline` elements are marshaled using the new
list types `Blocks` and `Inlines`, respectively. These types
currently behave identical to the generic List type, but give better
error messages. This also opens up the possibility of adding
element-specific methods to these lists in the future.
- Elements of type `MetaValue` are no longer pushed as values which
have `.t` and `.tag` properties. This was already true for
`MetaString` and `MetaBool` values, which are still marshaled as Lua
strings and booleans, respectively. Affected values:
+ `MetaBlocks` values are marshaled as a `Blocks` list;
+ `MetaInlines` values are marshaled as a `Inlines` list;
+ `MetaList` values are marshaled as a generic pandoc `List`s.
+ `MetaMap` values are marshaled as plain tables and no longer
given any metatable.
- The test suite for marshaled objects and their constructors has
been extended and improved.
- A bug in Citation objects, where setting a citation's suffix
modified it's prefix, has been fixed.
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We were including the ams environment type in addition
to the number. This is proper behavior for `\cref` but
not for `\ref`. To support `\cref` we need to store
the environment label separately.
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- Resolve references to theorem environments.
- Remove Span caused by "label" in figure, table, and theorem
environments; this had an id that duplicated the environments' id.
See #813.
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Previously we included the text of the label in square brackets,
but this is undesirable in many cases.
See discussion in
<https://github.com/jgm/pandoc/issues/813#issuecomment-978232426>.
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Closes #6970.
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Single elements should always be treated as singleton lists in the Lua
subsystem.
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Fixed calculation of maximum column widths in pipe tables.
It is now based on the length of the markdown line, rather
than a "stringified" version of the parsed line. This should
be more predictable for users. In addition, we take into account
double-wide characters such as emojis.
Closes #7713.
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The function converts a string to `Inlines`, treating interword spaces
as `Space`s or `SoftBreak`s. If you want a `Str` with literal spaces,
use `pandoc.Str`.
Closes: #7709
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Using a Lua string where a list of inlines is expected will cause the
string to be split into words, replacing spaces and tabs into
`pandoc.Space()` elements and newlines into `pandoc.SoftBreak()`.
The previous behavior was to treat the string `s` as `{pandoc.Str(s)}`.
The old behavior can be recovered by wrapping the string into a table
`{s}`.
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Make Citeproc recognize files with .yml extension (in addition to .yaml)
as YAML bibliographies.
Closes #7707.
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Some people use `---` as the end delimiter in YAML
bibliography files, which causes the `yaml` library
to emit an error unless we explicitly allow multiple
YAML documents (and just consider the first).
In T.P.Readers.Metadata
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Co-authored-by: Aner Lucero <4rgento@gmail.com>
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