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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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Incorrect types to pandoc element constructors are automatically
converted to the correct types when possible. This was already done for
most constructors, but conversions are now also done for nested
types (like lists of lists).
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Exposes a function converting which flattenes a list of blocks into a
list of inlines. An example use case would be the conversion of Note
elements into other inlines.
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We need to find something that will work on windows.
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It should be installed on all *nix systems.
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Previously it was assumed that the system would have `/bin/false`
and `/bin/sed`, and these tests were skipped otherwise.
On MacOS, these utilities are located in `/usr/bin`.
Fixed by just using `sed` and `false` -- these should always be
in the path. Removed the "skipping" behavior, replaced with a
check for Windows. On Windowns, we use `echo` and `cd`, which
should always exist.
Not yet checked on Windows.
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The name of the Lua script which is executed is made available in the
global Lua variable `PANDOC_SCRIPT_FILE`, both for Lua filters and
custom writers.
Closes: #4393
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Convert list of Pandoc blocks into (hierarchical) list of Elements.
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The function parses a date and converts it (if possible) to "YYYY-MM-DD"
format.
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The function allows conversion of numbers below 4000 into roman
numerals.
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The new function `pandoc.utils.stringify` converts any AST element to a
string with formatting removed.
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The functions `sha1`, `read`, and `pipe` are now tested.
Change: minor
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Attribute lists are represented as associative lists in Lua. Pure
associative lists are awkward to work with. A metatable is attached to
attribute lists, allowing to access and use the associative list as if
the attributes were stored in as normal key-value pair in table.
Note that this changes the way `pairs` works on attribute lists. Instead
of producing integer keys and two-element tables, the resulting iterator
function now returns the key and value of those pairs. Use `ipairs` to
get the old behavior.
Warning: the new iteration mechanism only works if pandoc has been
compiled with Lua 5.2 or later (current default: 5.3).
The `pandoc.Attr` function is altered to allow passing attributes as
key-values in a normal table. This is more convenient than having to
construct the associative list which is used internally.
Closes #4071
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The `text` module is preloaded in lua. The module contains some UTF-8
aware string functions, implemented in Haskell. The module is loaded on
request only, e.g.:
text = require 'text'
function Str (s)
s.text = text.upper(s.text)
return s
end
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Closes: #3918
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Try function `Inline`/`Block` if no other filter function of the
respective type matches an element.
Closes: #3859
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This change makes it possible to define a catch-all function using lua's
metatable lookup functionality.
function catch_all(el)
…
end
return {
setmetatable({}, {__index = function(_) return catch_all end})
}
A further effect of this change is that the map with filter functions
now only contains functions corresponding to AST element constructors.
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We now use Pandoc instead of Doc (though Doc remains a deprecated
Synonym), and we deprecate DoubleQuoted, SingleQuoted,
InlineMath, and DisplayMath.
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No more SingleQuoted, DoubleQuoted, InlineMath, DisplayMath.
This makes everything uniform and predictable, though it does
open up a difference btw lua filters and custom writers.
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The implicitly defined global filter (i.e. all element filtering
functions defined in the global lua environment) is used if no filter is
returned from a lua script. This allows to just write top-level
functions in order to define a lua filter. E.g
function Emph(elem) return pandoc.Strong(elem.content) end
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A single `read` function parsing pandoc-supported formats is added to
the module. This is simpler and more convenient than the previous method
of exposing all reader functions individually.
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We want to provide an interface familiar to users of other filtering
libraries.
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Allow to use functions named `SingleQuoted`, `DoubleQuoted`,
`DisplayMath`, and `InlineMath` in filters.
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Filtering functions take element components as arguments instead of the
whole block elements. This resembles the way elements are handled in
custom writers.
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Instead of taking the whole inline element, forcing users to destructure it
themselves, the components of the elements are passed to the filtering
functions.
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Plain text readers are exposed to lua scripts via the `pandoc.reader`
submodule, which is further subdivided by format. Converting e.g. a
markdown string into a pandoc document is possible from within lua:
doc = pandoc.reader.markdown.read_doc("Hello, World!")
A `read_block` convenience function is provided for all formats,
although it will still parse the whole string but return only the first
block as the result.
Custom reader options are not supported yet, default options are used
for all parsing operations.
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* Add `--lua-filter` option. This works like `--filter` but takes pathnames of special lua filters and uses the lua interpreter baked into pandoc, so that no external interpreter is needed. Note that lua filters are all applied after regular filters, regardless of their position on the command line.
* Add Text.Pandoc.Lua, exporting `runLuaFilter`. Add `pandoc.lua` to data files.
* Add private module Text.Pandoc.Lua.PandocModule to supply the default lua module.
* Add Tests.Lua to tests.
* Add data/pandoc.lua, the lua module pandoc imports when processing its lua filters.
* Document in MANUAL.txt.
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