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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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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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We can't always tell if it's LaTeX, ConTeXt, or plain TeX.
Better just to use "tex" always.
Also changed:
ConTeXt writer: now outputs raw "tex" blocks as well as "context".
(Closes #969).
RST writer: uses ".. raw:: latex" for "tex" content.
(RST doesn't support raw context anyway.)
Note that if "context" or "latex" specifically is desired,
you can still force that in a markdown document by using
the raw attribute (see MANUAL.txt):
```{=latex}
\foo
```
Note that this change may affect some filters, if they assume that raw
tex parsed by the Markdown reader will be RawBlock (Format "latex").
In most cases it should be trivial to modify the filters to accept
"tex" as well.
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Starting in 2.2.2, everything after an `\input` (or `\include`)
in a markdown file would be parsed as raw LaTeX.
This commit fixes the issue and adds a regression test.
Closes #4781.
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