\enableregime[utf] % use UTF-8 \setupcolors[state=start] \setupinteraction[state=start, color=middlered] % needed for hyperlinks \setuppapersize[letter][letter] % use letter paper \setuplayout[width=middle, backspace=1.5in, cutspace=1.5in, height=middle, header=0.75in, footer=0.75in] % page layout \setuppagenumbering[location={footer,center}] % number pages \setupbodyfont[11pt] % 11pt font \setupwhitespace[medium] % inter-paragraph spacing \setuphead[section][style=\tfc] \setuphead[subsection][style=\tfb] \setuphead[subsubsection][style=\bf] % define title block commands \unprotect \def\doctitle#1{\gdef\@title{#1}} \def\author#1{\gdef\@author{#1}} \def\date#1{\gdef\@date{#1}} \date{\currentdate} % Default to today unless specified otherwise. \def\maketitle{% \startalignment[center] \blank[2*big] {\tfd \@title} \blank[3*medium] {\tfa \@author} \blank[2*medium] {\tfa \@date} \blank[3*medium] \stopalignment} \protect % define descr (for definition lists) \definedescription[descr][ headstyle=bold,style=normal,align=left,location=hanging, width=broad,margin=1cm] % define ltxitem (for bulleted lists) \defineitemgroup[ltxitem][levels=4] \setupitemgroup[ltxitem][1][1] \setupitemgroup[ltxitem][2][2] \setupitemgroup[ltxitem][3][3] \setupitemgroup[ltxitem][4][4,packed] % define ltxenum (for enumerated lists) \defineitemgroup[ltxenum][levels=4] \setupitemgroup[ltxenum][1][n] \setupitemgroup[ltxenum][2][a] \setupitemgroup[ltxenum][3][r] \setupitemgroup[ltxenum][4][A,packed] \setupthinrules[width=15em] % width of horizontal rules % for block quotations \definestartstop [blockquote] [before={\startnarrower\switchtobodyfont[11pt] \whitespace\setupindenting[no]}, after={\stopnarrower\whitespace}] \doctitle{Pandoc Test Suite} \author{John MacFarlane \& Anonymous} \date{July 17, 2006} \starttext \maketitle This is a set of tests for pandoc. Most of them are adapted from John Gruber's markdown test suite. \thinrule \subject{Headers} \subsubject{Level 2 with an \useurl[1][/url][][embedded link]\from[1]} \subsubsubject{Level 3 with {\em emphasis}} Level 4 Level 5 \subject{Level 1} \subsubject{Level 2 with {\em emphasis}} \subsubsubject{Level 3} with no blank line \subsubject{Level 2} with no blank line \thinrule \subject{Paragraphs} Here's a regular paragraph. In Markdown 1.0.0 and earlier. Version 8. This line turns into a list item. Because a hard-wrapped line in the middle of a paragraph looked like a list item. Here's one with a bullet. * criminey. There should be a hard line break\crlf here. \thinrule \subject{Block Quotes} E-mail style: \startblockquote This is a block quote. It is pretty short. \stopblockquote \startblockquote Code in a block quote: \starttyping sub status { print "working"; } \stoptyping A list: \startitemize \sym{1.} item one \sym{2.} item two \stopitemize Nested block quotes: \startblockquote nested \stopblockquote \startblockquote nested \stopblockquote \stopblockquote This should not be a block quote: 2 \lettermore{} 1. Box-style: \startblockquote Example: \starttyping sub status { print "working"; } \stoptyping \stopblockquote \startblockquote \startitemize \sym{1.} do laundry \sym{2.} take out the trash \stopitemize \stopblockquote Here's a nested one: \startblockquote Joe said: \startblockquote Don't quote me. \stopblockquote \stopblockquote And a following paragraph. \thinrule \subject{Code Blocks} Code: \starttyping ---- (should be four hyphens) sub status { print "working"; } this code block is indented by one tab \stoptyping And: \starttyping this code block is indented by two tabs These should not be escaped: \$ \\ \> \[ \{ \stoptyping \thinrule \subject{Lists} \subsubject{Unordered} Asterisks tight: \startltxitem \item asterisk 1 \item asterisk 2 \item asterisk 3 \stopltxitem Asterisks loose: \startltxitem \item asterisk 1 \item asterisk 2 \item asterisk 3 \stopltxitem Pluses tight: \startltxitem \item Plus 1 \item Plus 2 \item Plus 3 \stopltxitem Pluses loose: \startltxitem \item Plus 1 \item Plus 2 \item Plus 3 \stopltxitem Minuses tight: \startltxitem \item Minus 1 \item Minus 2 \item Minus 3 \stopltxitem Minuses loose: \startltxitem \item Minus 1 \item Minus 2 \item Minus 3 \stopltxitem \subsubject{Ordered} Tight: \startitemize \sym{1.} First \sym{2.} Second \sym{3.} Third \stopitemize and: \startitemize \sym{1.} One \sym{2.} Two \sym{3.} Three \stopitemize Loose using tabs: \startitemize \sym{1.} First \sym{2.} Second \sym{3.} Third \stopitemize and using spaces: \startitemize \sym{1.} One \sym{2.} Two \sym{3.} Three \stopitemize Multiple paragraphs: \startitemize \sym{1.} Item 1, graf one. Item 1. graf two. The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog's back. \sym{2.} Item 2. \sym{3.} Item 3. \stopitemize \subsubject{Nested} \startltxitem \item Tab \startltxitem \item Tab \startltxitem \item Tab \stopltxitem \stopltxitem \stopltxitem Here's another: \startitemize \sym{1.} First \sym{2.} Second: \startltxitem \item Fee \item Fie \item Foe \stopltxitem \sym{3.} Third \stopitemize Same thing but with paragraphs: \startitemize \sym{1.} First \sym{2.} Second: \startltxitem \item Fee \item Fie \item Foe \stopltxitem \sym{3.} Third \stopitemize \subsubject{Tabs and spaces} \startltxitem \item this is a list item indented with tabs \item this is a list item indented with spaces \startltxitem \item this is an example list item indented with tabs \item this is an example list item indented with spaces \stopltxitem \stopltxitem \subsubject{Fancy list markers} \startitemize[width=2em] \sym{(2)} begins with 2 \sym{(3)} and now 3 with a continuation \startitemize[width=2em] \sym{iv.} sublist with roman numerals, starting with 4 \sym{v.} more items \startitemize[width=2em] \sym{(A)} a subsublist \sym{(B)} a subsublist \stopitemize \stopitemize \stopitemize Nesting: \startitemize \sym{A.} Upper Alpha \startitemize \sym{I.} Upper Roman. \startitemize[width=2em] \sym{(6)} Decimal start with 6 \startitemize \sym{c)} Lower alpha with paren \stopitemize \stopitemize \stopitemize \stopitemize Autonumbering: \startltxenum \item Autonumber. \item More. \startltxenum \item Nested. \stopltxenum \stopltxenum Should not be a list item: M.A. 2007 B. Williams \thinrule \subject{Definition Lists} Tight using spaces: \startdescr{apple} red fruit \stopdescr \startdescr{orange} orange fruit \stopdescr \startdescr{banana} yellow fruit \stopdescr Tight using tabs: \startdescr{apple} red fruit \stopdescr \startdescr{orange} orange fruit \stopdescr \startdescr{banana} yellow fruit \stopdescr Loose: \startdescr{apple} red fruit \stopdescr \startdescr{orange} orange fruit \stopdescr \startdescr{banana} yellow fruit \stopdescr Multiple blocks with italics: \startdescr{{\em apple}} red fruit contains seeds, crisp, pleasant to taste \stopdescr \startdescr{{\em orange}} orange fruit \starttyping { orange code block } \stoptyping \startblockquote orange block quote \stopblockquote \stopdescr \subject{HTML Blocks} Simple block on one line: foo And nested without indentation: foo bar Interpreted markdown in a table: This is {\em emphasized} And this is {\bf strong} Here's a simple block: foo This should be a code block, though: \starttyping
foo
\stoptyping As should this: \starttyping
foo
\stoptyping Now, nested: foo This should just be an HTML comment: Multiline: Code block: \starttyping \stoptyping Just plain comment, with trailing spaces on the line: Code: \starttyping
\stoptyping Hr's: \thinrule \subject{Inline Markup} This is {\em emphasized}, and so {\em is this}. This is {\bf strong}, and so {\bf is this}. An {\em \useurl[2][/url][][emphasized link]\from[2]}. {\bf {\em This is strong and em.}} So is {\bf {\em this}} word. {\bf {\em This is strong and em.}} So is {\bf {\em this}} word. This is code: \type{>}, \type{$}, \type{\}, \type{\$}, \type{}. \overstrikes{This is {\em strikeout}.} Superscripts: a\high{bc}d a\high{{\em hello}} a\high{hello there}. Subscripts: H\low{2}O, H\low{23}O, H\low{many of them}O. These should not be superscripts or subscripts, because of the unescaped spaces: a\letterhat{}b c\letterhat{}d, a\lettertilde{}b c\lettertilde{}d. \thinrule \subject{Smart quotes, ellipses, dashes} \quotation{Hello,} said the spider. \quotation{\quote{Shelob} is my name.} \quote{A}, \quote{B}, and \quote{C} are letters. \quote{Oak,} \quote{elm,} and \quote{beech} are names of trees. So is \quote{pine.} \quote{He said, \quotation{I want to go.}} Were you alive in the 70's? Here is some quoted \quote{\type{code}} and a \quotation{\useurl[3][http://example.com/?foo=1&bar=2][][quoted link]\from[3]}. Some dashes: one---two---three---four---five. Dashes between numbers: 5--7, 255--66, 1987--1999. Ellipses\ldots{}and\ldots{}and\ldots{}. \thinrule \subject{Special Characters} Here is some unicode: \startltxitem \item I hat: Î \item o umlaut: ö \item section: § \item set membership: ∈ \item copyright: © \stopltxitem AT\&T has an ampersand in their name. AT\&T is another way to write it. This \& that. 4 \letterless{} 5. 6 \lettermore{} 5. Backslash: \letterbackslash{} Backtick: ` Asterisk: * Underscore: \letterunderscore{} Left brace: \letteropenbrace{} Right brace: \letterclosebrace{} Left bracket: [ Right bracket: ] Left paren: ( Right paren: ) Greater-than: \lettermore{} Hash: \# Period: . Bang: ! Plus: + Minus: - \thinrule \subject{Links} \subsubject{Explicit} Just a \useurl[4][/url/][][URL]\from[4]. \useurl[5][/url/][][URL and title]\from[5]. \useurl[6][/url/][][URL and title]\from[6]. \useurl[7][/url/][][URL and title]\from[7]. \useurl[8][/url/][][URL and title]\from[8] \useurl[9][/url/][][URL and title]\from[9] \useurl[10][/url/with_underscore][][with\letterunderscore{}underscore]\from[10] \useurl[11][mailto:nobody@nowhere.net][][Email link]\from[11] \useurl[12][][][Empty]\from[12]. \subsubject{Reference} Foo \useurl[13][/url/][][bar]\from[13]. Foo \useurl[14][/url/][][bar]\from[14]. Foo \useurl[15][/url/][][bar]\from[15]. With \useurl[16][/url/][][embedded [brackets]]\from[16]. \useurl[17][/url/][][b]\from[17] by itself should be a link. Indented \useurl[18][/url][][once]\from[18]. Indented \useurl[19][/url][][twice]\from[19]. Indented \useurl[20][/url][][thrice]\from[20]. This should [not][] be a link. \starttyping [not]: /url \stoptyping Foo \useurl[21][/url/][][bar]\from[21]. Foo \useurl[22][/url/][][biz]\from[22]. \subsubject{With ampersands} Here's a \useurl[23][http://example.com/?foo=1&bar=2][][link with an ampersand in the URL]\from[23]. Here's a link with an amersand in the link text: \useurl[24][http://att.com/][][AT\&T]\from[24]. Here's an \useurl[25][/script?foo=1&bar=2][][inline link]\from[25]. Here's an \useurl[26][/script?foo=1&bar=2][][inline link in pointy braces]\from[26]. \subsubject{Autolinks} With an ampersand: \useurl[27][http://example.com/?foo=1&bar=2][][http://example.com/?foo=1\&bar=2]\from[27] \startltxitem \item In a list? \item \useurl[28][http://example.com/][][http://example.com/]\from[28] \item It should. \stopltxitem An e-mail address: \useurl[29][mailto:nobody@nowhere.net][][nobody@nowhere.net]\from[29] \startblockquote Blockquoted: \useurl[30][http://example.com/][][http://example.com/]\from[30] \stopblockquote Auto-links should not occur here: \type{} \starttyping or here: \stoptyping \thinrule \subject{Images} From \quotation{Voyage dans la Lune} by Georges Melies (1902): \placefigure [] [fig:lalune] {Voyage dans la Lune} {\externalfigure[lalune.jpg]} Here is a movie \placefigure [] [fig:movie] {} {\externalfigure[movie.jpg]} icon. \thinrule \subject{Footnotes} Here is a footnote reference,% \footnote{Here is the footnote. It can go anywhere after the footnote reference. It need not be placed at the end of the document.} and another.% \footnote{Here's the long note. This one contains multiple blocks. Subsequent blocks are indented to show that they belong to the footnote (as with list items). \starttyping { } \stoptyping If you want, you can indent every line, but you can also be lazy and just indent the first line of each block.} This should {\em not} be a footnote reference, because it contains a space.[\letterhat{}my note] Here is an inline note.% \footnote{This is {\em easier} to type. Inline notes may contain \useurl[31][http://google.com][][links]\from[31] and \type{]} verbatim characters, as well as [bracketed text].} \startblockquote Notes can go in quotes.% \footnote{In quote.} \stopblockquote \startitemize \sym{1.} And in list items.% \footnote{In list.} \stopitemize This paragraph should not be part of the note, as it is not indented. \stoptext