Age | Commit message (Collapse) | Author | Files | Lines |
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Omit `false` boolean values, push integers as numbers.
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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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Single elements should always be treated as singleton lists in the Lua
subsystem.
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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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This restores the old behavior; argument order had been switched
accidentally in pandoc 2.15.
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Reader options can now be passed as an optional third argument to
`pandoc.read`. The object can either be a table or a ReaderOptions value
like `PANDOC_READER_OPTIONS`. Creating new ReaderOptions objects is
possible through the new constructor `pandoc.ReaderOptions`.
Closes: #7656
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Fixes a regression introduced in 2.15.
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Fixes a regression introduced in 2.15.
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Fixes a regression introduced in 2.15 which required users to always
specify an Attr value when constructing a Code element.
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Comparisons of Citation values are performed in Haskell; values are
equal if they represent the same Haskell value. Converting a Citation
value to a string now yields its native Haskell string representation.
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Fixes a regression introduced in 2.16 which had MetaList elements loose
the `pandoc.List` properties.
Fixes #7650
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This was a regression introduced in version 2.15.
Fixes: #7647
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This will make it easier to generate module documentation in the future.
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Removal of these properties from Attr values was a regression.
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Properties of Block values are marshalled lazily, which generally
improves performance considerably. Script users may also notice the
following differences:
- Block element properties can no longer be accessed by numerical
indexing of the `.c` field. The `.c` property now serves as an alias
for `.content`, so some filter that used this undocumented method
for property access may continue to work, while others will need to
be updated and use proper property names.
- The marshalled Block elements now have a `show` method, and a
`__tostring` metamethod. Both return the Haskell string
representation of the element.
- Block values now have the Lua type `userdata` instead of `table`.
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- Adds a new `pandoc.AttributeList()` constructor, which creates the
associative attribute list that is used as the third component of
`Attr` values. Values of this type can often be passed to constructors
instead of `Attr` values.
- `AttributeList` values can no longer be indexed numerically.
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The new HsLua version takes a somewhat different approach to marshalling
and unmarshalling, relying less on typeclasses and more on specialized
types. This allows for better performance and improved error messages.
Furthermore, new abstractions allow to document the code and exposed
functions.
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Rely on tests in the module package to check the correctness of each
function.
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The module allows to work with file paths in a convenient and
platform-independent manner.
Closes: #6001
Closes: #6565
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A new type `SimpleTable` is made available to Lua filters. It is
similar to the `Table` type in pandoc versions before 2.10;
conversion functions from and to the new Table type are provided.
Old filters using tables now require minimal changes and can use,
e.g.,
if PANDOC_VERSION > {2,10,1} then
pandoc.Table = pandoc.SimpleTable
end
and
function Table (tbl)
tbl = pandoc.utils.to_simple_table(tbl)
…
return pandoc.utils.from_simple_table(tbl)
end
to work with the current pandoc version.
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The PandocError type is used throughout the Lua subsystem, all Lua
functions throw an exception of this type if an error occurs. The
`LuaException` type is removed and no longer exported from
`Text.Pandoc.Lua`. In its place, a new constructor `PandocLuaError` is
added to PandocError.
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The functions `table.insert`, `table.remove`, and `table.sort` are added
to pandoc.List elements. They can be used as methods, e.g.
local numbers = pandoc.List {2, 3, 1}
numbers:sort() -- numbers is now {1, 2, 3}
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It is now possible to construct a new List via `pandoc.List()` instead of
`pandoc.List:new()`.
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Attr values can now be given as normal Lua tables; this can be used as a
convenient alternative to define Attr values, instead of constructing
values with `pandoc.Attr`. Identifiers are taken from the *id* field,
classes must be given as space separated words in the *class* field. All
remaining fields are included as misc attributes.
With this change, the following lines now create equal elements:
pandoc.Span('test', {id = 'test', class = 'a b', check = 1})
pandoc.Span('test', pandoc.Attr('test', {'a','b'}, {check = 1}))
This also works when using the *attr* setter:
local span = pandoc.Span 'text'
span.attr = {id = 'test', class = 'a b', check = 1}
Furthermore, the *attributes* field of AST elements can now be a plain
key-value table even when using the `attributes` accessor:
local span = pandoc.Span 'test'
span.attributes = {check = 1} -- works as expected now
Closes: #5744
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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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Traversal methods are updated to use the new Walk module such that
sequences with nested Inline (or Block) elements are traversed in the
order in which they appear in the linearized document.
Fixes: #5667
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Closes: #5568
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Fixes: #5569
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Version specifiers like `PANDOC_VERSION` and `PANDOC_API_VERSION` are
turned into `Version` objects. The objects simplify version-appropriate
comparisons while maintaining backward-compatibility.
A function `pandoc.types.Version` is added as part of the newly
introduced module `pandoc.types`, allowing users to create version
objects in scripts.
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This makes use of tasty-lua, a package to write tests in Lua
and integrate the results into Tasty output. Test output becomes
more informative: individual tests and test groups become visible
in test output. Failures are reported with helpful error messages.
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