Age | Commit message (Collapse) | Author | Files | Lines |
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The table `#+NAME:` or `#+LABEL:` is added to the table's caption in the
form of an empty span with the label set as the span's ID.
Closes: #5984
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Closes #5967.
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With positive heading shifts, starting in 2.8 this option caused
metadata titles to be removed and changed to regular headings.
This behavior is incompatible with the old behavior of
`--base-header-level` and breaks old workflows, so with this
commit we are rolling back this change.
Now, there is an asymmetry in positive and negative heading
level shifts:
+ With positive shifts, the metadata title stays the same and
does not get changed to a heading in the body.
+ With negative shifts, a heading can be converted into the
metadata title.
I think this is a desirable combination of features, despite
the asymmetry. One might, e.g., want to have a document
with level-1 section headigs, but render it to HTML with
level-2 headings, retaining the metadata title (which pandoc
will render as a level-1 heading with the default template).
Closes #5957.
Revises #5615.
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This will allow styling unordered task lists in a way that omits
the bullet.
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With simple tables, we have a clash with heading syntax.
Closes #5936.
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Closes #5918.
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If a simple table would be too wide, we use a grid table.
The code for generating grid tables has been adjusted to
give more intelligent column widths when widths aren't
given. (This also affects the markdown writer.)
Closes #5899.
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`Nothing` means: nothing specified.
`Just []` means: an empty list specified (e.g. in defaults).
Potentially these could lead to different behavior: see #5888.
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Closes #5904.
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See #5904.
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Closes #5898.
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Superscripts and subscripts cannot contain spaces,
but newlines were previously allowed (unintentionally).
This led to bad interactions in some cases with footnotes.
E.g.
```
foo^[note]
bar^[note]
```
With this change newlines are also not allowed inside
super/subscripts.
Closes #5878.
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(#5882)
* Add HTML Reader support for `<dfn>`, parsing this as a Span with class `dfn`.
* Change `htmlSpanLikeElements` implementation to retain classes,
attributes and inline content.
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Closes #5885.
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Previously, if a document contained two YAML metadata blocks
that set the same field, the conflict would be resolved in favor
of the first. Now it is resolved in favor of the second (due to
a change in pandoc-types).
This makes the behavior more uniform with other things in pandoc
(such as reference links and `--metadata-file`).
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Closes #5681.
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...to ensure that space is left between a control seq and
a following word that would otherwise change its meaning.
Closes #5836.
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...keeping the widths of columns. See #4320.
Adjust test case for #4320.
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When a div surrounds multiple sections at the same level,
or a section of highre level followed by one of lower level,
then we just leave it as a div and create a new div for the
section.
Closes #5846, closes #5761.
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If a list has an empty item, this should not count against
its being a tight list.
Closes #5857.
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Parse <mark> elements from HTML as HTML span like elements, with a
single class matching the tag name `mark`. Mark elements are rendered to
HTML using the native <mark> element.
Fixes https://github.com/jgm/pandoc/issues/5797.
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* Text.Pandoc.Shared: export `htmlSpanLikeElements` [API change]
This commit also introduces a mapping of HTML span like elements that
are internally represented as a Span with a single class, but that are
converted back to the original element by the html writer. As of now,
only the kbd element is handled this way. Ideally these elements should
be handled as plain AST values, but since that would be a breaking
change with a large impact, we revert to this stop-gap solution.
Fixes https://github.com/jgm/pandoc/issues/5796.
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Closes #5813.
Note that we also now use emoji names for emojis
when `ascii_identifiers` is enabled.
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...even when we must lose width information.
All in all this seems to be people's preferred behavior, even though it
is slightly lossier.
Closes #2608.
Closes #4497.
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on conflicting fields. This changes earlier behavior (but not in
a release), where first took precedence.
Note that this may seem inconsistent with the behavior of
multiple YAML blocks within a document, where the first takes
precedence. Still, it is convenient to be able to override
defaults with options later on the command line.
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If this is present on a heading with the 'unnumbered' class,
the heading won't appear in the TOC. This class has no
effect if 'unnumbered' is not also specified.
This affects HTML-based writers (including slide shows
and epub), LateX (including beamer), RTF, and PowerPoint.
Other writers do not yet support `unlisted`.
Closes #1762.
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When the image has the `align-right` (etc.) class, we now use
an `:align:` attribute.
Closes #4420.
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This adds an external options +native_numbering to the
ODT writer enabling enumeration of figures and tables in
ODT output.
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We were requiring consistent indentation, but this
isn't required by RST, as long as each nonblank
line of the block has *some* indentation.
Closes #5753.
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Previously we used the following Project Gutenberg conventions
for plain output:
- extra space before and after level 1 and 2 headings
- all-caps for strong emphasis `LIKE THIS`
- underscores surrounding regular emphasis `_like this_`
This commit makes `plain` output plainer. Strong and Emph
inlines are rendered without special formatting. Headings
are also rendered without special formatting, and with only
one blank line following.
To restore the former behavior, use `-t plain+gutenberg`.
API change: Add `Ext_gutenberg` constructor to `Extension`.
See #5741.
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Completes 8e01ccb41dde8a5e6123f5b0746c36f240576047
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Deprecate --base-heading-level.
The new option does everything the old one does, but also
allows negative shifts. It also promotes the document
metadata (if not null) to a level-1 heading with a +1 shift,
and demotes an initial level-1 heading to document metadata
with a -1 shift. This supports converting documents that
use an initial level-1 heading for the document title.
Closes #5615.
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Closes #5740.
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* Org reader: allow the `-i` switch to ignore leading spaces.
* Org reader: handle awkwardly-aligned code blocks within lists.
Code blocks in Org lists must have their #+BEGIN_ aligned in a
reasonable way, but their other components can be positioned otherwise.
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Text.Pandoc.Shared:
+ Remove `Element` type [API change]
+ Remove `makeHierarchicalize` [API change]
+ Add `makeSections` [API change]
+ Export `deLink` [API change]
Now that we have Divs, we can use them to represent the structure
of sections, and we don't need a special Element type.
`makeSections` reorganizes a block list, adding Divs with
class `section` around sections, and adding numbering
if needed.
This change also fixes some longstanding issues recognizing
section structure when the document contains Divs.
Closes #3057, see also #997.
All writers have been changed to use `makeSections`.
Note that in the process we have reverted the change
c1d058aeb1c6a331a2cc22786ffaab17f7118ccd
made in response to #5168, which I'm not completely
sure was a good idea.
Lua modules have also been adjusted accordingly.
Existing lua filters that use `hierarchicalize` will
need to be rewritten to use `make_sections`.
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Revert "hierarchicalize: ensure that sections get ids..."
This reverts commit 212406a61d027d85712705e626954e0486a2bc34.
Revert "Improve detection of headings in Divs by hierarchicalize."
This reverts commit 6e2cfd6c97b1b8657f1f3e2b66090a2c3ba8d887.
Revert "Shared.hierarchicalize: improve handling of div and section structure."
This reverts commit 345b33762eb4cc6d57d74c76c4757a6166ee5c13.
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even if they're in divs. Improves #3057.
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The structure
```
<h1>one</h1>
<div>
<h1>two</h1>
</div>
```
should create two coordinate sections, not a section with
a subsection. Now it does.
Extends #3057.
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Previously Divs were opaque to hierarchicalize, so headings
inside divs didn't get into the table of contents, for
example (#3057).
Now hierarchicalize treats Divs as sections when appropriate.
For example, these structures both yield a section and a
subsection:
``` html
<div>
<h1>one</h1>
<div>
<h2>two</h2>
</div>
</div>
```
``` html
<div>
<h1>one</h1>
<div>
<h1>two</h1>
</div>
</div>
```
Note that
``` html
<h1>one</h1>
<div>
<h2>two</h2>
</div>
<h1>three</h1>
```
gets parsed as the structure
one
two
three
which may not always be desirable.
Closes #3057.
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We now allow groups where the closing `\\}` isn't at the
beginning of a line.
Closes #5410.
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Previously decimal references were used.
But Polyglot Markup prefers hex. See #5718.
This affects the output of pandoc with `--ascii`.
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