Table column properties can optionally specify a column's width with
which it is displayed in the buffer. Some exporters, notably the ODT
exporter in org-mode v9.0, use these values to calculate relative column
widths. The org reader now implements the same behavior.
Note that the org-mode LaTeX and HTML exporters in Emacs don't support
this feature yet, which should be kept in mind by users who use the
column widths parameters.
Closes: #3246
This also fixes excessive CPU and memory usage for tables
when --columns is set in such a way that cells must be very
tiny.
Now cells are guaranteed to be big enough so that single
words don't need to line break, even if this pushes the
line length above the column width.
Closes#1911.
We can now parse all of the tables emitted by pandoc in
our tests.
The only thing we don't get yet are alignments and
column widths in more complex tables.
See #2669.
Reader can now parse simple LaTeX tables such as those
generated by pandoc itself.
We still can't handle pandoc multiline tables which involve
minipages and column widths.
Partially addresses #2669.
* Markdown reader: modify bracketedSpan to check small caps
* MANUAL.txt: add description on the use of `bracketed_spans` in small cap
* Improve markdown readers: bracketedSpan function EXACTLY as spanHtml
Previously a tight bullet sublist got rendered with
a blank line after, while a tight ordered sublist did
not. Now we don't get the blank line in either case.
Closes#3232.
We wrap `[CHART]` in a `<span class="chart">`. Note that it maps to
inlines because, in docx, anything in a drawing tag can be part of a
larger paragraph.
We not only want "w:drawing", because that could also include
charts. Now we specify "w:drawing"//"pic:pic". This shouldn't change
behavior at all, but it's a first step toward allowing other sorts of
drawing data as well.
Images which are the only element in a paragraph can still be given HTML
attributes, even if the image does not have a caption and is hence not a figure.
The following will add set the `width` attribute of the image to `50%`:
#+ATTR_HTML: :width 50%
[[file:image.jpg]]
Closes: #3222
When a piece of text has a text 'Source_Text' then
we assume that this is a piece of the document
that represents a code that needs to be inlined.
Addapted an odt writer to also reflect that change;
previously it was just writing a 'preformatted' text using
a non-distinguishable font style.
Code blocks are still not recognized by the ODT reader.
That's a separate issue.
...if citations extension disabled. Example: in
[link text][@a]
[@a]: url
`link text` isn't hyperlinked because `[@a]` is parsed as a citation.
Previously this happened whether or not the `citations` extension was
enabled. Now it happens only if the `citations` extension is enabled.
Closes#3209.
Previously, if given an empty namespace:
(elemName ns "" "foo")
`elemName` would output a QName with a `Just ""` namespace. This is
never what we want. Now we output a `Nothing`. If someone *does* want a
`Just ""` in the namespace, they can enter the QName value explicitly.
unless something else is explicitly specified in xmlns.
Provided it parses as MathML, of course.
Also fixed default which should be to inline math if no
display attribute is used.
ODT reader simply provided an empty header list
which meant that the contents of the whole table,
even if not empty, was simply ignored.
While we still do not infer headers we at least have
to provide default properties of columns.
Special blocks (i.e. blocks with unrecognized names) can be prefixed
with an `ATTR_HTML` block attribute. The attributes defined in that
meta-directive are added to the `Div` which is used to represent the
special block.
Closes: #3182
The `todo` export option allows to toggle the inclusion of TODO keywords
in the output. Setting this to `nil` causes TODO keywords to be dropped
from headlines. The default is to include the keywords.
Headlines can have optional todo-markers which can be controlled via the
`#+TODO`, `#+SEQ_TODO`, or `#+TYP_TODO` meta directive. Multiple such
directives can be given, each adding a new set of recognized todo-markers.
If no custom todo-markers are defined, the default `TODO` and `DONE`
markers are used.
Todo-markers are conceptually separate from headline text and are hence
excluded when autogenerating headline IDs.
The markers are rendered as spans and labelled with two classes: One
class is the markers name, the other signals the todo-state of the
marker (either `todo` or `done`).
Technically `**@user` is a valid email address, but if we
allow things like this, we get bad results in markdown flavors
that autolink raw email addresses. (See #2940.)
So we exclude a few valid email addresses in order to
avoid these more common bad cases.
Closes#2940.
This is needed because github flavored Markdown has a slightly
different set of escapable symbols than original Markdown;
it includes angle brackets.
Closes#2846.