This commit adds the option `--no-check-certificate`, which disables certificate
checking when resources are fetched by HTTP.
Co-authored-by: Cécile Chemin <cecile.chemin@insee.fr>
Co-authored-by: Juliette Fourcot <juliette.fourcot@insee.fr>
This reverts commit 3493d6afaa.
This might be worth considering in the future, but let's not do
it yet...the additional complexity needs a better justification.
This is experimental. Normally metadata values are interpreted
as markdown, but if the !!literal tag is used they will be interpreted
as plain strings.
We need to consider whether this can still be implemented if
we switch back from HsYAML to yaml for performance reasons.
New formats:
- `jats_archiving` for the "Archiving and Interchange Tag Set",
- `jats_publishing` for the "Journal Publishing Tag Set", and
- `jats_articleauthoring` for the "Article Authoring Tag Set."
The "jats" output format is now an alias for "jats_archiving".
Closes: #6014
This follows the advise on the Lua
website (https://www.lua.org/about.html#name):
> […] "Lua" is a name, the name of the Earth's moon and the name of the
> language. Like most names, it should be written in lower case with an
> initial capital, that is, "Lua".
With positive heading shifts, starting in 2.8 this option caused
metadata titles to be removed and changed to regular headings.
This behavior is incompatible with the old behavior of
`--base-header-level` and breaks old workflows, so with this
commit we are rolling back this change.
Now, there is an asymmetry in positive and negative heading
level shifts:
+ With positive shifts, the metadata title stays the same and
does not get changed to a heading in the body.
+ With negative shifts, a heading can be converted into the
metadata title.
I think this is a desirable combination of features, despite
the asymmetry. One might, e.g., want to have a document
with level-1 section headigs, but render it to HTML with
level-2 headings, retaining the metadata title (which pandoc
will render as a level-1 heading with the default template).
Closes#5957.
Revises #5615.
Certain options (`--self-contained`, `--include-in-header`, etc.)
imply `--standalone`. We now handle this after option parsing
so that it affects options specified in defaults files too.
Behavior change: `--title-prefix` no longer implies `--standalone`.
Certain command-line arguments can be repeated:
`--metadata-file`, `--css`, `--include-in-header`,
`--include-before-body`, `--include-after-body`, `--variable`,
`--metadata`, `--syntax-definition`. In these cases, values
specified in default files should be added to the list rather
than replacing values specified earlier on the command line
(perhaps in other default files).
So, for example, if one does
pandoc --variable foo=3 --defaults d1 --defaults d2
and `d1` sets the variable `bar` and `d2` sets `baz`,
all three variables will be set.
Closes#5894.