Check that the commonmark reader handles the `ascii_identifiers` extension properly. ``` % pandoc -f commonmark+gfm_auto_identifiers+ascii_identifiers -t native # non ascii ⚠️ räksmörgås ^D [ Header 1 ( "non-ascii--raksmorgas", [], [] ) [ Str "non" , Space , Str "ascii" , Space , Str "\9888\65039" , Space , Str "r\228ksm\246rg\229s" ] ] ``` Note that the emoji here is actually a composite character, formed from \9888 and \65039. The latter is a combining mark, so it survives... ``` % pandoc -f commonmark+gfm_auto_identifiers-ascii_identifiers -t native # non ascii ⚠️ räksmörgås ^D [ Header 1 ( "non-ascii-\65039-r\228ksm\246rg\229s", [], [] ) [ Str "non" , Space , Str "ascii" , Space , Str "\9888\65039" , Space , Str "r\228ksm\246rg\229s" ] ] ``` `gfm` should have `ascii_identifiers` disabled by default. ``` % pandoc -f gfm -t native # non ascii ⚠️ räksmörgås ^D [ Header 1 ( "non-ascii-\65039-r\228ksm\246rg\229s", [], [] ) [ Str "non" , Space , Str "ascii" , Space , Str "\9888\65039" , Space , Str "r\228ksm\246rg\229s" ] ] ```