This is better as an example. And it is faster than pandoc's
regular creole parser, which shows that high-performance readers
can be developed this way.
New module Text.Pandoc.Readers.Custom, exporting
readCustom [API change].
Users can now do `-f myreader.lua` and pandoc will treat the
script myreader.lua as a custom reader, which parses an input
string to a pandoc AST, using the pandoc module defined for
Lua filters.
A sample custom reader can be found in data/reader.lua.
Closes#7669.
- Specify local scope for highlight_styles; prevents global namespace pollution when sourcing completion from a file rather than adding `eval "$(pandoc --bash-completion)"` to .bashrc
- Add argument completion for --print-highlight-style, --eol, and --markdown-headings
Properties of Block values are marshalled lazily, which generally
improves performance considerably. Script users may also notice the
following differences:
- Block element properties can no longer be accessed by numerical
indexing of the `.c` field. The `.c` property now serves as an alias
for `.content`, so some filter that used this undocumented method
for property access may continue to work, while others will need to
be updated and use proper property names.
- The marshalled Block elements now have a `show` method, and a
`__tostring` metamethod. Both return the Haskell string
representation of the element.
- Block values now have the Lua type `userdata` instead of `table`.
This includes the following user-facing changes:
- Deprecated inline constructors are removed. These are `DoubleQuoted`,
`SingleQuoted`, `DisplayMath`, and `InlineMath`.
- Attr values are no longer normalized when assigned to an Inline
element property.
- It's no longer possible to access parts of Inline elements via
numerical indexes. E.g., `pandoc.Span('test')[2]` used to give
`pandoc.Str 'test'`, but yields `nil` now. This was undocumented
behavior not intended to be used in user scripts. Use named properties
instead.
- Accessing `.c` to get a JSON-like tuple of all components no longer
works. This was undocumented behavior.
- Only known properties can be set on an element value. Trying to set a
different property will now raise an error.
- Adds a new `pandoc.AttributeList()` constructor, which creates the
associative attribute list that is used as the third component of
`Attr` values. Values of this type can often be passed to constructors
instead of `Attr` values.
- `AttributeList` values can no longer be indexed numerically.
We need "overflow: visible" for these to work, and reveal's
default css disables this. So this modifies the default
template to add this.
Closes#7634. Thanks to @cderv for diagnosing the issue.
This commit changes the `marL` and `indent` values used for plain
paragraphs and numbered lists, and changes the spacing defined in the
reference doc master for bulleted lists.
For paragraphs, there is now a left-indent taken from the `otherStyle`
in the master. For numbered lists, the number is positioned where the
text would be if this were a plain paragraph, and the text is indented
to the next level. This means that continuation paragraphs line up
nicely with numbered lists.
It also /mostly/ matches the observed PowerPoint behaviour when
inserting paragraphs and numbered lists: the only difference is that
PowerPoint was using a different margin value for the first level
numbered lists – I’ve changed this to match the other levels, as I don’t
think it makes the spacing unappealing and it allows continuation
paragraphs at any level to line up.
With bulleted lists, I’m keeping the observed PowerPoint behaviour of
specifying only a level, letting `marL` and `indent` be automatically
taken from `bodyStyle`. To that end, this commit changes the `bodyStyle`
spacing in the master of the default reference doc, to:
- line up the text of the first paragraph in each bullet with any
continuation paragraphs
- line up nested bullet markers in any continuation paragraphs with the
first paragraph, matching lists and plain paragraphs
This does mean the continuation paragraphs still won’t line up for
anyone using their own reference doc where they haven’t matched the
`otherStyle` and `bodyStyle` indent levels, but I think people in that
situation will be able to troubleshoot.
This fixes a regression in #7604, which modernized
babel usage but omitted to load babel for pdflatex,
with the result that even simple documents could no
longer be produced.
Closes#7627.
* Use `babel`'s bidi implementation
* Remove global `lang` option -- it broke eg hebrew
* Import babel languages individually instead of as package options --
was broken for greek, hebrew
* Move `header-includes` to after `babel` setup
Closes#7604
Previously polyglossia worked better with xelatex, but
that is no longer the case, so we simplify the code so that
babel is used with all latex engines.
This involves a change to the default LaTeX template.
ulem is conditionally included already when the `strikeout`
variable is set, so we set this when there is underlined text,
and use `\uline` instead of `\underline`.
This fixes wrapping for underlined text.
Closes#7351.
This reverts commit cc088687b4
and PR #7295.
This fixes issues people had when using LaTeX commands defined later
in the preamble (or in some cases UTF-8 text) in the title or author
fields. Closes#7422.
Previously it was impossible to specify false values for
options that default to true; setting the option to false
just caused the portion of the template setting the option
to be omitted.
Now we prepopulate all the variables with their default
values, including them unconditionally and allowing them
to be overridden.
Closes#5016
- change ordered list from itemize to enumerate
- adds new itemgroup for ordered lists
- add fontfeature for table figures
- remove width from itemize in context writer
Previously with the default template settings (`indent` variable
not set), we would get interparagraph spaces separating bib
entries even with `entry-spacing="0"`. On the other hand,
setting `entry-spacing="2"` gave ridiculously large spacing.
This change makes the spacing caused by `entry-spacing` a multiple
of `\parskip` by default, which gives aesthetically reasonable
output. Those who want a larger or smaller unit (e.g. because
they use `indent` which sets `\parskip` to 0) may
`\setlength{\cslentryspacingunit}{10pt}` in header-includes
to override the defaults.
Closes#7296.
Previously the nocite metadata field was ignored with
these formats. Now it populates a `nocite-ids` template
variable and causes a `\nocite` command to be issued.
Closes#4585.
As of now, the default style for ODT documents has a "First paragraph" style that inherits from "Standard" style and has no top or bottom margin. All subsequent paragraphs have "Text_20_body" style that inherits from "Standard" and add "0.0598in" margins on top and bottom. This makes the final document a bit ugly since the first paragraph has a small gap ("0.0598in") towards the second one, and all subsequent have double that.
The proposed fix makes "First paragraph" inherit from "Text_20_body" instead so that it also has a consistent margin.
Another approach would be to inherit "Text_20_body" and add a 0 margin on top.