`file:filename` rather than `file://./filename`.
I think this is right; it matches what we had before
with people actually using the ICML writer, and seems
to match examples in the spec. I don't
have a copy of InDesign I can test on, though.
@DigitalPublishingToolkit and @mb21, can you have
a look?
This partially addresses jgm/pandoc-citeproc#143.
It does not use the native asciidoc syntax for citations,
but it does get the links to individual citations working.
Text.Pandoc.Options: Added `Ext_east_asian_line_breaks` constructor to
`Extension` (API change).
This extension is like `ignore_line_breaks`, but smarter -- it
only ignores line breaks between two East Asian wide characters.
This makes it better suited for writing with a mix of East Asian
and non-East Asian scripts.
Closes#2586.
Previously pipe table columns got relative widths (based
on the header underscore lines) when the source of one of the rows was
greater in width than the column width. This gave bad results in some
cases where much of the width of the row was due to nonprinting
material (e.g. link URLs). Now pandoc only looks at printable
width (the width of a plain string version of the source), which
should give better results.
Thanks to John Muccigrosso for bringing up the issue.
Previously we tried to get the image size from the image even
if an explicit size was specified. Since we still can't get
image size for PDFs, this made it impossible to use PDF images
in docx.
Now we don't try to get the image size when a size is already
explicitly specified.
This contains a JSON version of all the metadata, in the
format selected for the writer.
So, for example, to get just the YAML metadata, you can
run pandoc with the following custom template:
$meta-json$
Closes#2019. The intent is to make it easier for static
site generators and other tools to get at the metadata.
Change 5527465c introduced a `DummyListItem` type in Docx/Parse.hs. In
retrospect, this seems like it mixes parsing and iterpretation
excessively. What's *really* going on is that we have a list item
without and associate level or numeric info. We can decide what to do
what that in Docx.hs (treat it like a list paragraph), but the parser
shouldn't make that decision.
This commit makes what is going on a bit more explicit. `LevelInfo` is
now a Maybe value in the `ListItem` type. If it's a Nothing, we treat
it as a ListParagraph. If it's a Just, it's a normal list item.
* Old `link_attributes` -> `mmd_link_attributes`
* Recently added `common_link_attributes` -> `link_attributes`
Note: this change could break some existing workflows.
* 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.
This change makes `--no-tex-ligatures` affect the LaTeX reader
as well as the LaTeX and ConTeXt writers. If it is used,
the LaTeX reader will parse characters `` ` ``, `'`, and `-`
literally, rather than parsing ligatures for quotation marks
and dashes. And the LaTeX writer will print unicode quotation
mark and dash characters literally, rather than converting
them to the standard ASCII ligatures.
Note that `--smart` has no affect on the LaTeX reader.
`--smart` is still the default for all input formats when
LaTeX or ConTeXt is the output format, *unless* `--no-tex-ligatures`
is used.
Some examples to illustrate the logic:
```
% echo "'hi'" | pandoc -t latex
`hi'
% echo "'hi'" | pandoc -t latex --no-tex-ligatures
'hi'
% echo "'hi'" | pandoc -t latex --no-tex-ligatures --smart
‘hi’
% echo "'hi'" | pandoc -f latex --no-tex-ligatures
<p>'hi'</p>
% echo "'hi'" | pandoc -f latex
<p>’hi’</p>
```
Closes#2541.
These come up when people create a list item and then delete the
bullet. It doesn't refer to any real list item, and we used to ignore
it.
We handle it with a DummyListItem type, which, in Docx.hs, is turned
into a normal paragraph with a "ListParagraph" class. If it follow
another list item, it is folded as another paragraph into that item. If
it doesn't, it's just its own (usually indented, and therefore
block-quoted) paragraph.