The characters allowed before and after emphasis can be configured via
`#+pandoc-emphasis-pre` and `#+pandoc-emphasis-post`, respectively. This
allows to change which strings are recognized as emphasized text on a
per-document or even per-paragraph basis. The allowed characters must be
given as (Haskell) string.
#+pandoc-emphasis-pre: "-\t ('\"{"
#+pandoc-emphasis-post: "-\t\n .,:!?;'\")}["
If the argument cannot be read as a string, the default value is
restored.
Closes: #4378
Internal change: when we take shapes from the layout for title,
content, etc, we should use the attributes of the "ph" (placeholder)
tag -- idx and name. This is what powerpoint uses internally, and
therefore seems more dependable across reference-docs than using the
shape names, as we had previously done.
There should be no output changes as a result of this commit.
Modify the PowerPoint tests to run all the tests with
template (--reference-doc) as well. Because there are so many
interlocking pieces, bugs can pop up in weird places when using
templates, since it changes how the writer builds its output
file.
For example, I recently discovered a bug in which speaker notes worked
fine and templating worked fine elsewhere, but templating with speaker
notes produced a file that would crash MS PowerPoint. That particular
bug was fixed, but this will forces us to check for that with each new
change.
In previous version, we only modified the notesMaster entry in the
presentation.xml file, and removed it if necessary. But if using a
template, it might not be available. So we always delete it, and then
add it back in if necessary.
We also have to make sure that we add it appropriately the .rels file
associated with presentation.xml.
MS PowerPoint does not offer a way to insert links into speaker notes
text, so we match that behavior, and make our lives easier.
As for (end)notes, there is no clear solution to the question of wat
that would *mean*. The default behavior would be to add it to the
endnote slide, but that would put speaker note content into the public
presentation. The best solution would be to put the content at the
bottom of the notes page, but that would take some doing, and can be
added to the speaker notes feature later.
Since the template changed, some small elements of these test files
changed as well.
All of these were checked with Powerpoint 2013 on Windows
10 (VirtualBox). All had expected outcomes and no corruption.
There are a number of interlocking parts here. The main thing to note
is that, to match the MSPowerPoint-generated pptx files, we only
include the notesMaster and notesSlide files if there are notes. This
means we have to be careful with the rIds, and build a number of files
conditionally.
Lists are parsed in linear instead of exponential time now.
Contents of block tags, such as <quote>, is parsed directly,
without storing it in a string and parsing with parseFromString.
Fixed a bug: headers did not terminate lists.
Muse allows indentation to indicate quotation or alignment,
but only on the top level, not within a <quote> or list.
This patch also simplifies the code by removing museInQuote
and museInList fields from the state structure.
Headers and indented paragraphs are attempted to be parsed
only at the topmost level, instead of aborting parsing with guards.
Text::Amuse already explicitly requires it anyway.
Supporting block tags on the same line as contents makes
it hard to combine closing tag parsers with indentation parsers.
Being able to combine parsers is required for no-reparsing refactoring
of Muse reader.