Age | Commit message (Collapse) | Author | Files | Lines |
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This patch fixes some cases where the JATS writer was introducing
semantically significant whitespace by indenting and wrapping tags.
Note that the JATS spec has a content model for `<p>` tags of `(#PCDATA | ...`.
Any tag where `#PCDATA` children are possible should not have any
indentation. The same is true for `<th>`, `<td>`, `<term>`, `<label>`.
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Use "> " instead of <verse> tag
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Instead of writing my own.
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These were never added when the tests were first created.
Output files checked in MS PowerPoint 2013 (Windows 10, VBox). No
corruption, and output as expected.
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Make sure there are no empty slides in the pptx output. Because of the
way that slides were split, these could be accidentally produced by
comments after images.
When animations are added, there will be a way to add an empty slide
with either incremental lists or pauses.
Test outputs checked with MS PowerPoint (Office 2013, Windows 10,
VBox). Both files have expected output and are not corrupted.
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Modify the PowerPoint tests to run all the tests with
template (--reference-doc) as well. Because there are so many
interlocking pieces, bugs can pop up in weird places when using
templates, since it changes how the writer builds its output
file.
For example, I recently discovered a bug in which speaker notes worked
fine and templating worked fine elsewhere, but templating with speaker
notes produced a file that would crash MS PowerPoint. That particular
bug was fixed, but this will forces us to check for that with each new
change.
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<verse> is a block tag and displayMath is an inline element.
Writing <verse> around displayMath could result in nested
<verse> tags.
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These are based off the reader tests, with some removed (where the
reader output was identical, based on different docx inputs). There
are still more to be added. In particular, tests for custom-styles
need to be added.
All golden docx files have been checked in MS Word
2013 (windows). There is no corruption.
There is questionable output in the `tables` test: the three tables
seemed to be joined. This will be addressed in a future commit, and
the golden docx file will be changed.
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There is very little pptx-specific in these tests, so we abstract out
the basic testing function so it can be used for docx as well. This
should allow us to catch some errors in the docx writer that slipped
by the roundtrip testing.
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Fixes #2609.
This PR introduces the new-style section headings: `\section[my-header]{My Header}` -> `\section[title={My Header},reference={my-header}]`.
On top of this, the ConTeXt writer now supports the `--section-divs` option to write sections in the fenced style, with `\startsection` and `\stopsection`.
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Powerpoint output checked in MS PowerPoint 2013 (Windows)
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Tests added for:
- table of contents
- endnotes
- endnotes with table of contents
Powerpoint output checked in MS PowerPoint 2013 (Windows)
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We had previously re-read the native file and converted it to
Powerpoint. But we have already done that in constructing the test
archive. So now we just convert the archive back to a bytestring and
write it to disk.
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This will allow us to rebuild the pptx files in the test dir more
easily if we make a change in the writer.
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Previously we had tested certain properties of the output PowerPoint
slides. Corruption, though, comes as the result of a numebr of
interrelated issues in the output pptx archive. This is a new
approach, which compares the output of the Powerpoint writer with
files that we know to (a) not be corrupt, and (b) to show the desired
output behavior (details below). This commit introduces three tests
using the new framework. More will follow.
The test procedure: given a native file and a pptx file, we generate a
pptx archive from the native file, and then test:
1. Whether the same files are in the two archives
2. Whether each of the contained xml files is the same. (We skip time
entries in `docProps/core.xml`, since these are derived from IO. We
just check to make sure that they're there in the same way in both
files.)
3. Whether each of the media files is the same.
Note that steps 2 and 3, though they compare multiple files, are one
test each, since the number of files depends on the input file (if
there is a failure, it will only report the first failed file
comparison in the test failure).
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Muse reader does not support this syntax yet, but Emacs Muse parses
it correctly.
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- Default to xtables for context output.
- Added `ntb` extension (affecting context writer only) to use Natural Tables instead.
- Added `Ext_ntb` constructor to `Extension` (API change).
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We had previously defaulted to slideLevel 2. Now we use the correct
behavior of defaulting to the highest level header followed by
content. We change an expected test result to match this behavior.
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We want to make sure we always have an override for each xml file in
the content types file.
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Add test for custom slide-level header, and notes slides.
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Otherwise we can't find the data files when compiled
with -embed_data_files.
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This is the beginning of a test suite for the powerpoint
writer. Initial tests are for the number of slides.
Note that at the moment it does not test against corruption in
Microsoft PowerPoint; it just tests that certain outcomes work as
expected. More tests will be added.
This test framework uses the PandocPure monad introduced with Pandoc 2.0.
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Add Basic JATS reader based on DocBook reader
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Support writing <fig> and <table-wrap> elements with <title> and
<caption> inside them by using Divs with class set to on of
fig, table-wrap or cation. The title is included as a Heading
so the constraint on where Heading can occur is also relaxed.
Also leaves out empty alt attributes on links.
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Without normalization this test produced
<em>a</em><em>b</em><em>c</em>
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