This modifies the Docx type in the parser to avoid all the extra files
(Notes, numbering, etc). A reader monad keeps track of these, and applies
them at the end. The reader monad is stacked with ErrorT to enable better
error-handling than the old Maybes. (Note that the better error handling
isn't really there yet, but it is now possible.)
One long-term goal of these changes is to make it easier to write the Docx
type. This should make it easier to develop a standalone docx package in the
future.
Removed `Ext_fenced_code_attributes` from `markdown_github`
extensions.
If this extension is not set, the first class attribute will
be printed after the opening fence as a bare word.
Closes#1416.
This function is equivalent to the more general (<*) which is defined in
Control.Applicative. This change makes pandoc code easier to understand for
those not familar with the codebase.
This sets `stateInHtmlBlock` to `Just "div"` when we're parsing
an HTML div.
Without this fix, a closing `</div>` tag could be parsed as part
of a list item rather than after the list.
- We no longer include trailing spaces and newlines in the
raw blocks.
- We look for closing tags for elements (but without backtracking).
- Each block-level tag is its own RawBlock; we no longer try to
consolidate them (though `--normalize` will do so).
Closes#1330.
- Added `audio` and `source` in `eitherBlockOrInline`.
- Moved `video`, `svg`, `progress`, `script`, `noscript`, `svg` from
`blockTags` to `eitherBlockOrInline`.
- `map` and `object` were mistakenly in both lists; they have been removed
from `blockTags`.
This doesn't change the testsuite behaviour, but it does mean that
all the testsuite output files are exactly identical to the
output obtained by running the current pandoc.
This is a first stab at writing out equations in LaTeX based on
omml equations in Word. There are some glitches: unicode chars not known to
LaTeX are silently skipped, and functions (such as `\oiiint`) not in the
standard LaTeX packages are inserted, which can lead to pdf compilation
errors (depending, of course, on your preamble).
Adding, for example, `\usepackage[charter]{mathdesign}` to the preamble will
allow you to use most of the more esoteric functions.