The App module provides a function that does a pandoc conversion,
based on option settings. The program (pandoc.hs) now does nothing
more than parse options and pass them to this function, which can
easily be used by other applications (e.g. a GUI wrapper).
The Opt structure has been further simplified.
API changes:
* New exposed module Text.Pandoc.App
* Text.Pandoc.Highlighting has been exposed.
* highlightingStyles has been moved to Text.Pandoc.Highlighting.
Removed writerDocbookVersion in WriterOptions.
Renamed default.docbook template to default.docbook4.
Allow docbook4 as an output format.
But alias docbook = docbook4.
* Text.Pandoc.Writers.HTML: removed writeHtml, writeHtmlString,
added writeHtml4, writeHtml4String, writeHtml5, writeHtml5String.
* Removed writerHtml5 from WriterOptions.
* Renamed default.html template to default.html4.
* "html" now aliases to "html5"; to get the old HTML4 behavior,
you must now specify "-t html4".
The type is implemented in terms of an underlying bitset
which should be more efficient.
API change: from Text.Pandoc.Extensions export Extensions,
emptyExtensions, extensionsFromList, enableExtension, disableExtension,
extensionEnabled.
* Remove exported module `Text.Pandoc.Readers.TeXMath`
* Add exported module `Text.Pandoc.Writers.Math`
* The function `texMathToInlines` now lives in `Text.Pandoc.Writers.Math`
* Export helper function `convertMath` from `Text.Pandoc.Writers.Math`
* Use these functions in all writers that do math conversion.
This ensures that warnings will always be issued for failed
math conversions.
Introduce a new module, Text.Pandoc.Free, with pure versions, based on
the free monad, of numerous IO functions used in writers and
readers. These functions are in a pure
Monad (PandocAction). PandocAction takes as a parameter the type of
IORefs in it. It can be aliased in individual writers and readers to
avoid this parameter.
Note that this means that at the moment a reader can only use one type
of IORef. If possible, it would be nice to remove this limitation.
So far this just reproduces capacity.
Later we'll be able to add features like warning
messages, dynamic loading of xml syntax definitions,
and dynamic loading of themes.
+ Removed Text.Pandoc.Readers.Docx.Fonts
+ Moved its code to texmath; we now use (from texmath 0.9)
Text.TeXMath.Unicode.Fonts
+ Use texmath 0.9 (currently from git).
+ Updated epub tests because texmath now handles more mathml.
We already lower-bound tagsoup at 0.13.7, which means we were always
running the compatibility layer (it was conditional on min value
0.13). Better to just use `lookupEntity` from the library directly, and
convert a string to a char if need be.
Some code was duplicated (copy-pasted) or placed in an inappropriate
module during the modularization refactoring. Those functions are moved
into a `Shared` module, as was originally intended but forgotten.
Better documentation of the respective functions is a positive
side-effect.
Inline parsing code is moved to a separate module. Parsers for block
starts are extracted as well, as those are used in the `endline` parser.
This is part of the Org-mode reader cleanup effort.
The Org-mode reader uses many functions defined in the
`Text.Pandoc.Parsing` utility module. Some of the functions are
overwritten with versions adapted to Org-mode idiosyncrasies. These
special functions, as well as the normal Pandoc versions, are combined
in a single module to increase the ease of use.
This leads to decoupling of Org-mode and Pandoc and hence to slightly
cleaner code. The downside is code-bloat due to repeated import/export
statements.
Now instead of using `findExecutable`, which has limitations
on Windows, we just do `progname --version` and see if it
returns successfully. Closes#2903.
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.