It's good practice not to use codes 1-2 for user errors.
Also, we used 65 for two different errors.
- PandocAppError was 1, is now 4
- PandocOptionError was 2, is now 6
- PandocMakePDFError was 65, is now 66
Deprecate --base-heading-level.
The new option does everything the old one does, but also
allows negative shifts. It also promotes the document
metadata (if not null) to a level-1 heading with a +1 shift,
and demotes an initial level-1 heading to document metadata
with a -1 shift. This supports converting documents that
use an initial level-1 heading for the document title.
Closes#5615.
* Org reader: allow the `-i` switch to ignore leading spaces.
* Org reader: handle awkwardly-aligned code blocks within lists.
Code blocks in Org lists must have their #+BEGIN_ aligned in a
reasonable way, but their other components can be positioned otherwise.
Text.Pandoc.Shared:
+ Remove `Element` type [API change]
+ Remove `makeHierarchicalize` [API change]
+ Add `makeSections` [API change]
+ Export `deLink` [API change]
Now that we have Divs, we can use them to represent the structure
of sections, and we don't need a special Element type.
`makeSections` reorganizes a block list, adding Divs with
class `section` around sections, and adding numbering
if needed.
This change also fixes some longstanding issues recognizing
section structure when the document contains Divs.
Closes#3057, see also #997.
All writers have been changed to use `makeSections`.
Note that in the process we have reverted the change
c1d058aeb1
made in response to #5168, which I'm not completely
sure was a good idea.
Lua modules have also been adjusted accordingly.
Existing lua filters that use `hierarchicalize` will
need to be rewritten to use `make_sections`.
Revert "hierarchicalize: ensure that sections get ids..."
This reverts commit 212406a61d.
Revert "Improve detection of headings in Divs by hierarchicalize."
This reverts commit 6e2cfd6c97.
Revert "Shared.hierarchicalize: improve handling of div and section structure."
This reverts commit 345b33762e.
The structure
```
<h1>one</h1>
<div>
<h1>two</h1>
</div>
```
should create two coordinate sections, not a section with
a subsection. Now it does.
Extends #3057.
Previously Divs were opaque to hierarchicalize, so headings
inside divs didn't get into the table of contents, for
example (#3057).
Now hierarchicalize treats Divs as sections when appropriate.
For example, these structures both yield a section and a
subsection:
``` html
<div>
<h1>one</h1>
<div>
<h2>two</h2>
</div>
</div>
```
``` html
<div>
<h1>one</h1>
<div>
<h1>two</h1>
</div>
</div>
```
Note that
``` html
<h1>one</h1>
<div>
<h2>two</h2>
</div>
<h1>three</h1>
```
gets parsed as the structure
one
two
three
which may not always be desirable.
Closes#3057.
this allows bibliographies to receive special formatting.
The template now contains definition of this environment (enabled
only when CSL is used).
It also defines a `\cslhangindent` length. This is set to
2em by default when the bibliography style specifies
a hanging indent. To override the length, you can
use e.g.
\setlength{\cslhangindent}{7em}
in header-includes.
Closesjgm/pandoc-citeproc#410.
Previously we used named character references with html5 output.
But these aren't valid XML, and we aim to produce html5 that is
also valid XHTML (polyglot markup). (This is also needed for
epub3.)
Closes#5718.