The docx reader used to use a Modifiable typeclass to combine both
Blocks and Inlines. But all the work was in the inlines. So most of the
generality was wasted, at the expense of making the code harder to
understand. This gets rid of the generality, and adds functions for
Blocks and Inlines. It should be a bit easier to work with going forward.
* Bumped version to 1.16.
* Added Attr field to Link and Image.
* Added `common_link_attributes` extension.
* Updated readers for link attributes.
* Updated writers for link attributes.
* Updated tests
* Updated stack.yaml to build against unreleased versions of
pandoc-types and texmath.
* Fixed various compiler warnings.
Closes#261.
TODO:
* Relative (percentage) image widths in docx writer.
* ODT/OpenDocument writer (untested, same issue about percentage widths).
* Update pandoc-citeproc.
Don't use custom prelude for latest ghc.
This is a better approach to making 'stack ghci' and 'cabal repl'
work. Instead of using NoImplicitPrelude, we only use the custom
prelude for older ghc versions. The custom prelude presents a
uniform API that matches the current base version's prelude.
So, when developing (presumably with latest ghc), we don't
use a custom prelude at all and hence have no trouble with ghci.
The custom prelude no longer exports (<>): we now want to
match the base 4.8 prelude behavior.
- The (non-exported) prelude is in prelude/Prelude.hs.
- It exports Monoid and Applicative, like base 4.8 prelude,
but works with older base versions.
- It exports (<>) for mappend.
- It hides 'catch' on older base versions.
This allows us to remove many imports of Data.Monoid
and Control.Applicative, and remove Text.Pandoc.Compat.Monoid.
It should allow us to use -Wall again for ghc 7.10.
Autgenerated using make_travis_yml.hs.
This script has been modified to add GHCOPTS.
'make .travis.yml' regenerates it based on the tested-with
field of the cabal file.
'xref' is used to create cross references to other parts of the
document. It is an empty element - the cross reference text depends on
various attributes. Quoting 'DocBook: The Definitive Guide':
1. If the endterm attribute is specified on xref, the content of the
element pointed to by endterm will be used as the text of the
cross-reference.
2. Otherwise, if the object pointed to has a specified XRefLabel, the
content of that attribute will be used as the cross-reference text.
The process was too fragile. It made too many assumptions about
available libraries (which failed sometimes when sandboxes were
used). This is a low-tech solution. The only drawback is that
`man/pandoc.1` is a generated file in the repository. It will need
to be regenerated periodically when README changes.
The pandoc.1 man page is generated automatically after the cabal
build process. It goes in `data/pandoc.1`. It can be obtained
by the user who installs pandoc via cabal thus:
pandoc --print-default-data-file pandoc.1 > pandoc.1
+ Removed `--man1`, `--man5` options (breaking change).
+ Removed `Text.Pandoc.ManPages` module (breaking API change).
+ Version bump to 1.15 because of the breaking changes, even
though they involve features that have only been in pandoc
for a day.
+ Makefile target for `man/man1/pandoc.1`. This uses pandoc to
create the man page from README using a custom template and filters.
+ Added `man/` directory with template and filters needed to build
man page.
+ We no longer have two man pages: pandoc.1 and pandoc_markdown.5.
Now there is just pandoc.1, which has all the content from README.
This change was needed because of the extensive cross-references
between parts of the README.
+ Removed old `data/pandoc.1.template` and
`data/pandoc_markdown.5.template`.
This change adds `--man1` and `--man5` options to pandoc, so
pandoc can generate its own man pages.
It removes the old overly complex method of building a separate
executable (but not installing it) just to create the man pages.
The man pages are no longer automatically created in the build
process.
The man/ directory has been removed. The man page templates
have been moved to data/.
New unexported module: Text.Pandoc.ManPages.
Text.Pandoc.Data now exports readmeFile, and `readDataFile`
knows how to find README.
Closes#2190.
In 1b44acf0c5 we replaced some
hackish CSS parsing with css-text, which I thought was a complete
CSS parser. It turns out that it is very buggy, which results
in lots of things being silently dropped from CSS when
`--self-contained` is used (#2224).
This commit replaces the use of css-text with a small but
more principled css preprocessor, which only removes whitespace
and replaces URLs with base 64 data when possible.
Closes#2224.
* Reverted kludgy change to make-windows-installer.bat.
* Removed make-reference-fiels.hs.
* Moved the individual ingredients of reference.docx and
reference.odt to the data directory.
* Removed reference.docx and reference.odt from data directory.
* We now build the reference archives from their ingredient pieces
in the docx and odt writers, instead of having a reference.docx
or reference.odt intermediary.
This should fix#2187.
It also simplifies the bulid procedure.
The one thing users may notice is different is that you can
no longer get the reference.docx or reference.odt using
`--print-default-data-file`. Instead, simply generate a
docx or odt using pandoc with a blank or minimal input,
and use that (or a customized version) with `--reference-docx`
or `--reference-odt`.
We only support the href attribute, as there's no place for
"target" in the Pandoc document model for links.
Added HTML reader test module, with tests for this feature.
Closes#1751.
This ensures that all code blocks will be wrapped in a div
with class sourceCode. Also, the default highlighting CSS
now adds `div.sourceCode { x-overflow: auto; }`, which means
that code blocks (even with line numbers) will acquire a scroll
bar on screens too small to display them (e.g. mobile phones).
See #1903 and jgm/highlighting-kate#65.
- Added commonmark as an input format.
- Added `Text.Pandoc.Readers.CommonMark.readCommonMark`.
- For now, we use the markdown writer to generate benchmark
text for the CommonMark reader. We can change this when we
get a writer.
This allows the test suite to be run using "+RTS -N".
Doing so improves the performance of the test suite on my quad-core Mac laptop as follows:
Before: 8.2 seconds
After: 2.5 seconds
Build dependencies of the trypandoc executable are required, regardless of the
trypandoc flag was set to either True or False. Correct package description
to make them truly optional.
Renamed some tests, introducing subsidiary directories
for fb2, docx, epub.
Cleaned up tests in cabal file.
Combined dokuwiki-writer and dokuwiki_inline_formatting tests.
This was just too fragile and dependent on a changing Cabal API
(see #1526).
Instead of passing the bulid directory to the test program, we
now let the test program find itself (using executable-path)
and then find the pandoc executable relative to itself.