53 lines
1.6 KiB
Markdown
53 lines
1.6 KiB
Markdown
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% MARKDOWN2ODT(1) Pandoc User Manuals
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% John MacFarlane and Recai Oktas
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% March 14, 2008
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# NAME
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markdown2odt - converts markdown-formatted text to ODT
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# SYNOPSIS
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markdown2odt [*options*] [*input-file*]...
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# DESCRIPTION
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`markdown2odt` converts *input-file* (or text from standard
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input) from markdown-formatted plain text to ODT (OpenDocument
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Text) format. If no output filename is specified (using the `-o`
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option), the name of the output file is derived from the input file;
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thus, for example, if the input file is *hello.txt*, the output file
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will be *hello.odt*. If the input is read from STDIN and no output
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filename is specified, the output file will be named *stdin.odt*. If
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multiple input files are specified, they will be concatenated before
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conversion, and the name of the output file will be derived from the
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first input file.
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Input is assumed to be in the UTF-8 character encoding. If your
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local character encoding is not UTF-8, you should pipe input
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through `iconv`:
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iconv -t utf-8 input.txt | markdown2odt
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# OPTIONS
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`markdown2odt` is a wrapper around `pandoc`, so all of
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`pandoc`'s options can be used with `markdown2odt` as well.
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See `pandoc`(1) for a complete list.
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The following options are most relevant:
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-o *FILE*, \--output=*FILE*
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: Write output to *FILE*.
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\--strict
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: Use strict markdown syntax, with no extensions or variants.
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-S, \--smart
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: Use smart quotes, dashes, and ellipses. (This option is significant
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only when the input format is `markdown`. It is selected automatically
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when the output format is `latex` or `context`.)
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# SEE ALSO
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`pandoc`(1)
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