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Markup as the very first item in a header wasn't recognized. This was
caused by an incorrect parser state: positions at which inline markup
can start need to be marked explicitly by changing the parser state.
This wasn't done for headers. The proper function to update the state
is now called at the beginning of the header parser, fixing this issue.
This fixes #2504.
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Org reader: allow toggling header args
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Org-mode allows to skip the argument of a code block header argument if
it's toggling a value. Argument-less headers are now recognized,
avoiding weird parsing errors.
The fixes are not exactly pretty, but neither is the code that was
fixed. So I guess it's about par for the course. However, a rewrite of
the header parsing code wouldn't hurt in the long run.
Thanks to @jo-tham for filing the bug report.
This fixes #2269.
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Paragraphs can be followed by lists, even if there is no blank line
between the two blocks. However, this should only be true if the
paragraph is not within a list, were the preceding block should be
parsed as a plain instead of paragraph (to allow for compact lists).
Thanks to @rgaiacs for bringing this up.
This fixes #2464.
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- The (non-exported) prelude is in prelude/Prelude.hs.
- It exports Monoid and Applicative, like base 4.8 prelude,
but works with older base versions.
- It exports (<>) for mappend.
- It hides 'catch' on older base versions.
This allows us to remove many imports of Data.Monoid
and Control.Applicative, and remove Text.Pandoc.Compat.Monoid.
It should allow us to use -Wall again for ghc 7.10.
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The previous verse parsing code made the faulty assumption that empty
strings are valid (and empty) inlines. This isn't the case, so lines
are changed to contain at least a newline.
It would generally be nicer and faster to keep the newlines while
splitting the string. However, this would require more code, which
seems unjustified for a simple (and fairly rare) block as *verse*.
This fixes #2402.
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Refs #2354
This should also fix the table of contents (--toc) when generating a html file
from org input
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Trees having a `:noexport:` tag set are not exported. This mirrors
default Emacs Org-Mode behavior.
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Org mode allows headers to be tagged:
``` org-mode
* Headline :TAG1:TAG2:
```
Instead of being interpreted as part of the headline, the tags are now
put into the attributes of empty spans. Spans without textual content
won't be visible by default, but they are detectable by filters. They
can also be styled using CSS when written as HTML.
This fixes #2160.
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rootzlevel-master
Conflicts:
src/Text/Pandoc/Readers/Org.hs
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mpickering-errortype
Conflicts:
benchmark/benchmark-pandoc.hs
src/Text/Pandoc/Readers/Markdown.hs
src/Text/Pandoc/Readers/Org.hs
src/Text/Pandoc/Readers/RST.hs
tests/Tests/Readers/LaTeX.hs
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Tests for image links with non-image targets, as introduced in
commit 2ca5101.
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Org links like `[[file:target][title]]` were not handled correctly,
parsing the link target verbatim. The org reader is changed such that
the leading `file:` is dropped from the link target.
This is related to issues #756 and #1812.
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- a
- b
* c
was being parsed as a list, even though an unindented `*`
should make a heading. See
<http://orgmode.org/manual/Plain-lists.html#fn-1>.
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While empty links are not allowed in Emacs org-mode, Pandoc org-mode
should support them: gitit relies on empty links as they are used to
create wiki links.
Fixes jgm/gitit#471
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The org reader was to restrictive when parsing links, some relative
links and links to files given as absolute paths were not recognized
correctly. The org reader's link parsing function was amended to handle
such cases properly.
This fixes #1741
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Org supports special symbols which can be included using LaTeX syntax,
but are actually MathML entities. Examples for this are
`\nbsp` (non-breaking space), `\Aacute` (the letter A with accent acute)
or `\copy` (the copyright sign ©).
This fixes #1657.
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Respect indent when parsing Org bullet lists
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Org reader: fix rules for emphasis recognition
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Document trees under a header starting with the word `COMMENT` are
comment trees and should not be exported. Those trees are dropped
silently.
This closes #1678.
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Things like `/hello,/` or `/hi'/` were falsy recognized as emphasised
strings. This is wrong, as `,` and `'` are forbidden border chars and
may not occur on the inner border of emphasized text. This patch
enables the reader to matches the reference implementation in that it
reads the above strings as plain text.
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Tidy up fix for #1650, #1698 as per comments in #1680.
Fix same issue for definition lists with the same method.
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Fixes issue with top-level bullet list parsing.
Previously we would use `many1 spaceChars` rather than respecting
the list's indent level. We also permitted `*` bullets on unindented
lists, which should unambiguously parse as `header 1`.
Combined, this meant headers at a different indent level were
being unwittingly slurped into preceding bullet lists, as per
Issue #1650.
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Test for markup after blank line.
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This gives better results for tight lists. Closes #1437.
An alternative solution would be to use Para everywhere, and
never Plain. I am not sufficiently familiar with org to know
which is best. Thoughts, @tarleb?
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Adds support to the org reader for conditionally exporting either the code block,
results block immediately following, both, or neither, depending on the value
of the `:exports` header argument. If no such argument is supplied, the default
org behavior (for most languages) of exporting code is used.
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Closes #1345. Also relabeled 'code' and 'verbatim' parsers
to accord with the org-mode manual.
I'm not sure what the distinction between code and verbatim
is supposed to be, but I'm pretty sure both should be represented
as Code inlines in pandoc. The previous behavior resulted in the
text not appearing in any output format.
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Inline LaTeX is now accepted and parsed by the org-mode reader. Both,
math symbols (like \tau) and LaTeX commands (like \cite{Coffee}), can be
used without any further escaping.
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Citations are defined via the "normal citation" syntax used in markdown,
with the sole difference that newlines are not allowed between "[...]".
This is for consistency, as org-mode generally disallows newlines
between square brackets.
The extension is turned on by default and can be turned off via the
default syntax-extension mechanism, i.e. by specifying "org-citation" as
the input format.
Move `citeKey` from Readers.Markdown into Parsing
The function can be used by other readers, so it is made accessible for
all parsers.
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The reader produced wrong results for block containing non-letter chars
in their parameter arguments. This patch relaxes constraints in that it
allows block header arguments to contain any non-space character (except
for ']' for inline blocks).
Thanks to Xiao Hanyu for noticing this.
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Blank lines were parsed as two newlines instead of just one.
Thanks to Xiao Hanyu (@xiaohanyu) for pointing this out.
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The general form of source block headers
(`#+BEGIN_SRC <language> <switches> <header arguments>`) was not
recognized by the reader. This patch adds support for the above form,
adds header arguments to the block's key-value pairs and marks the block
as a rundoc block if header arguments are present.
This closes #1286.
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Org's inline code blocks take forms like `src_haskell(print "hi")` and
are frequently used to include results from computations called from
within the document. The blocks are read as inline code and marked with
the special class `rundoc-block`. Proper handling and execution of
these blocks is the subject of a separate library, rundoc, which is
work in progress.
This closes #1278.
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Org allows users to define their own custom link types. E.g., in a
document with a lot of links to Wikipedia articles, one can define a
custom wikipedia link-type via
#+LINK: wp https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/
This allows to write [[wp:Org_mode][Org-mode]] instead of the
equivallent [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Org_mode][Org-mode]].
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Internal links in Org are possible by using an anchor-name as the target
of a link:
[[some-anchor][This]] is an internal link.
It links <<some-anchor>> here.
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This adds support for plain links (like http://zeitlens.com) and angle
links (like <http://moltkeplatz.de>).
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Use `Text.Pandoc.Shared.compactify'DL` to allow for compact definition
lists.
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Footnotes can consist of multiple blocks and end only at a header or at
the beginning of another footnote. This fixes the previous behavior,
which restricted notes to a single paragraph.
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The `Table` blocktype already takes the caption as an argument, while code
blocks are wrapped in a `Div` block together with a labelling `Span`.
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This adds support for LaTeX fragments like the following:
```
\begin{equation}
\int fg \mathrm{d}x
\end{equation}
```
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Loose lists (i.e. lists with blankline separated items), were parsed as
multiple lists, each containing a single item. This patch fixes this
issue.
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Support for standard org-blocks is improved. The parser now handles
"HTML", "LATEX", "ASCII", "EXAMPLE", "QUOTE" and "VERSE" blocks in a
sensible fashion.
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Org linebreaks
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Linebreaks are marked by the string `\\` at the end of a line.
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Support for figures (images with name and caption) is added.
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This fixes the org-reader's handling of sub- and superscript
expressions. Simple expressions (like `2^+10`), expressions in
parentheses (`a_(n+1)`) and nested sexp (like `a_(nested()parens)`) are
now read correctly.
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