Pandoc Test Suite John MacFarlane; Anonymous July 17, 2006 This is a set of tests for pandoc. Most of them are adapted from John Gruber’s markdown test suite. ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ Headers Level 2 with an embedded link Level 3 with _emphasis_ Level 4 Level 5 Level 1 Level 2 with _emphasis_ Level 3 with no blank line Level 2 with no blank line ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 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 here. ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ Block Quotes E-mail style: This is a block quote. It is pretty short. Code in a block quote: sub status { print "working"; } A list: 1. item one 2. item two Nested block quotes: nested nested This should not be a block quote: 2 > 1. And a following paragraph. ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ Code Blocks Code: ---- (should be four hyphens) sub status { print "working"; } this code block is indented by one tab And: this code block is indented by two tabs These should not be escaped: \$ \\ \> \[ \{ ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ Lists Unordered Asterisks tight: - asterisk 1 - asterisk 2 - asterisk 3 Asterisks loose: - asterisk 1 - asterisk 2 - asterisk 3 Pluses tight: - Plus 1 - Plus 2 - Plus 3 Pluses loose: - Plus 1 - Plus 2 - Plus 3 Minuses tight: - Minus 1 - Minus 2 - Minus 3 Minuses loose: - Minus 1 - Minus 2 - Minus 3 Ordered Tight: 1. First 2. Second 3. Third and: 1. One 2. Two 3. Three Loose using tabs: 1. First 2. Second 3. Third and using spaces: 1. One 2. Two 3. Three Multiple paragraphs: 1. Item 1, graf one. Item 1. graf two. The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog’s back. 2. Item 2. 3. Item 3. Nested - Tab - Tab - Tab Here’s another: 1. First 2. Second: - Fee - Fie - Foe 3. Third Same thing but with paragraphs: 1. First 2. Second: - Fee - Fie - Foe 3. Third Tabs and spaces - this is a list item indented with tabs - this is a list item indented with spaces - this is an example list item indented with tabs - this is an example list item indented with spaces Fancy list markers (2) begins with 2 (3) and now 3 with a continuation iv. sublist with roman numerals, starting with 4 v. more items (A) a subsublist (B) a subsublist Nesting: A. Upper Alpha I. Upper Roman. (6) Decimal start with 6 c) Lower alpha with paren Autonumbering: 1. Autonumber. 2. More. 1. Nested. Should not be a list item: M.A. 2007 B. Williams ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ Definition Lists Tight using spaces: apple red fruit orange orange fruit banana yellow fruit Tight using tabs: apple red fruit orange orange fruit banana yellow fruit Loose: apple red fruit orange orange fruit banana yellow fruit Multiple blocks with italics: _apple_ red fruit contains seeds, crisp, pleasant to taste _orange_ orange fruit { orange code block } orange block quote Multiple definitions, tight: apple red fruit computer orange orange fruit bank Multiple definitions, loose: apple red fruit computer orange orange fruit bank Blank line after term, indented marker, alternate markers: apple red fruit computer orange orange fruit 1. sublist 2. sublist HTML Blocks Simple block on one line: foo And nested without indentation: foo bar Interpreted markdown in a table: This is _emphasized_ And this is STRONG Here’s a simple block: foo This should be a code block, though:
foo
As should this:
foo
Now, nested: foo This should just be an HTML comment: Multiline: Code block: Just plain comment, with trailing spaces on the line: Code:
Hr’s: ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ Inline Markup This is _emphasized_, and so _is this_. This is STRONG, and so IS THIS. An _emphasized link_. _THIS IS STRONG AND EM._ So is _THIS_ word. _THIS IS STRONG AND EM._ So is _THIS_ word. This is code: >, $, \, \$, . ~~This is _strikeout_.~~ Superscripts: a^bc^d a^_hello_^ a^hello there^. Subscripts: H~2~O, H~23~O, H~many of them~O. These should not be superscripts or subscripts, because of the unescaped spaces: a^b c^d, a~b c~d. ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ Smart quotes, ellipses, dashes “Hello,” said the spider. “‘Shelob’ is my name.” ‘A’, ‘B’, and ‘C’ are letters. ‘Oak,’ ‘elm,’ and ‘beech’ are names of trees. So is ‘pine.’ ‘He said, “I want to go.”’ Were you alive in the 70’s? Here is some quoted ‘code’ and a “quoted link”. Some dashes: one—two — three—four — five. Dashes between numbers: 5–7, 255–66, 1987–1999. Ellipses…and…and…. ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ LaTeX - \cite[22-23]{smith.1899} - 2 + 2 = 4 - x ∈ y - α ∧ ω - 223 - p-Tree - Here’s some display math: $$\frac{d}{dx}f(x)=\lim_{h\to 0}\frac{f(x+h)-f(x)}{h}$$ - Here’s one that has a line break in it: α + ω × x^2^. These shouldn’t be math: - To get the famous equation, write $e = mc^2$. - $22,000 is a _lot_ of money. So is $34,000. (It worked if “lot” is emphasized.) - Shoes ($20) and socks ($5). - Escaped $: $73 _this should be emphasized_ 23$. Here’s a LaTeX table: ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ Special Characters Here is some unicode: - I hat: Î - o umlaut: ö - section: § - set membership: ∈ - copyright: © AT&T has an ampersand in their name. AT&T is another way to write it. This & that. 4 < 5. 6 > 5. Backslash: \ Backtick: ` Asterisk: * Underscore: _ Left brace: { Right brace: } Left bracket: [ Right bracket: ] Left paren: ( Right paren: ) Greater-than: > Hash: # Period: . Bang: ! Plus: + Minus: - ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ Links Explicit Just a URL. URL and title. URL and title. URL and title. URL and title URL and title with_underscore Email link Empty. Reference Foo bar. Foo bar. Foo bar. With embedded [brackets]. b by itself should be a link. Indented once. Indented twice. Indented thrice. This should [not][] be a link. [not]: /url Foo bar. Foo biz. With ampersands Here’s a link with an ampersand in the URL. Here’s a link with an amersand in the link text: AT&T. Here’s an inline link. Here’s an inline link in pointy braces. Autolinks With an ampersand: http://example.com/?foo=1&bar=2 - In a list? - http://example.com/ - It should. An e-mail address: nobody@nowhere.net Blockquoted: http://example.com/ Auto-links should not occur here: or here: ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ Images From “Voyage dans la Lune” by Georges Melies (1902): [lalune] Here is a movie [movie] icon. ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ Footnotes Here is a footnote reference,[1] and another.[2] This should _not_ be a footnote reference, because it contains a space.[^my note] Here is an inline note.[3] Notes can go in quotes.[4] 1. And in list items.[5] This paragraph should not be part of the note, as it is not indented. [1] Here is the footnote. It can go anywhere after the footnote reference. It need not be placed at the end of the document. [2] 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). { } If you want, you can indent every line, but you can also be lazy and just indent the first line of each block. [3] This is _easier_ to type. Inline notes may contain links and ] verbatim characters, as well as [bracketed text]. [4] In quote. [5] In list.