The structure expected is:
<div class="columns">
<div class="column" width="40%">
contents...
</div>
<div class="column" width="60%">
contents...
</div>
</div>
Support has been added for beamer and all HTML slide formats.
Closes#1710.
Note: later we could add a more elegant way to create
this structure in Markdown than to use raw HTML div elements.
This would come for free with a "native div syntax" (#168).
Or we could devise something specific to slides
Previously we just tacked on a directory to the command
line, but that didn't work when we e.g. used a pipe for round tripping,
with two invocations of pandoc.
We assume that comments are defined as parsed by the
docx reader:
I want <span class="comment-start" id="0" author="Jesse Rosenthal"
date="2016-05-09T16:13:00Z">I left a comment.</span>some text to
have a comment <span class="comment-end" id="0"></span>on it.
We assume also that the id attributes are unique and properly
matched between comment-start and comment-end.
Closes#2994.
Previously they would be transmitted to the template without
any escaping.
Note that `--M title='*foo*'` yields a different result from
---
title: *foo*
---
In the latter case, we have emphasis; in the former case, just
a string with literal asterisks (which will be escaped
in formats, like Markdown, that require it).
Closes#3792.
Also, fix regular macros so they're expanded at the
point of use, and NOT also the point of definition.
`\let` macros, by contrast, are expanded at the
point of definition. Added an `ExpansionPoint`
field to `Macro` to track this difference.
We previously did this only with raw blocks, on the assumption
that math environments would always be raw blocks. This has changed
since we now parse them as inline environments.
Closes#3816.
Thus, a span with attribute 'foo' gets written to HTML5
with 'data-foo', so it is valid HTML5.
HTML4 is not affected.
This will allow us to use custom attributes in pandoc without
producing invalid HTML.
Fixed applyMacros so that it operates on the whole
string, not just the first token!
Don't remove macro definitions from the output,
even if Ext_latex_macros is set, so that macros will
be applied. Since they're only applied to math in
Markdown, removing the macros can have bad effects.
Even for math macros, keeping them should be harmless.
Added TikiWiki reader, including tests and documentation.
It's probably not *complete*, but it works pretty well, handles all
the basics (and some not-so-basics).