Fix interaction of top-level divisions `part` or `chapter` with
unnumbered headers when emitting LaTeX. Headers are ensured to be
written using stared commands (like `\subsection*{}`).
Fixes: #3272
Previously setting writerStandalone = True did nothing unless
a template was provided in writerTemplate. Now a fragment
will be generated if writerTemplate is Nothing; otherwise,
the specified template will be used and standalone output
generated. [API change]
The "default" option is no longer represented as `Nothing` but via a new
type constructor, making the `Maybe` wrapper superfluous.
The default behavior of using heuristics can now be enabled explicitly
by setting `--top-level-division=default`.
API change (`Text.Pandoc.Options`): The `Division` type was renamed to
`TopLevelDivision`. The `Section`, `Chapter`, and `Part` constructors
were renamed to `TopLevelSection`, `TopLevelChapter`, and
`TopLevelPart`, respectively. An additional `TopLevelDefault`
constructor was added, which is now also the new default value of the
`writerTopLevelDivision` field in `WriterOptions`.
Pandoc uses heuristics to determine the most resonable top-level
division type when emitting LaTeX or Docbook markup. It is now possible
to overwrite this implicitly set top-level division via the
`top-level-division` command line parameter.
API change (`Text.Pandoc.Options`): the type of the
`writerTopLevelDivision` field in of the `WriterOptions` data type is
altered from `Division` to `Maybe Division`. The field's default value
is changed from `Section` to `Nothing`.
Closes: #3197
The `--chapters` option is replaced with `--top-level-division` which allows
users to specify the type as which top-level headers should be output. Possible
values are `section` (the default), `chapter`, or `part`.
The formats LaTeX, ConTeXt, and Docbook allow `part` as top-level division, TEI
only allows to set the `type` attribute on `div` containers. The writers are
altered to respect this option in a sensible way.
Backticks in verbatim environments are converted to
open-single-quotes. This change makes them appear as backticks. This
corresponds to how we treat `'' in verbatim environments (with
\textquotesingle{}).
This just tests whether a custom style with a recognizable
style (italic etc, defined in a reference.docx) will roundtrip back to
that format (i.e., whether `<span custom-style="Emphasized">` will
roundtrip to `Emph`). The custom styles are defined in the
`custom-style-reference.docx` included in the docx dir.
Sometimes we will want to get back something different than we started
with in a round-trip test. This allows for that, and makes the perfect
roundtrip a special case.
Change types of divs.
From Docbook "sect#" and "simplesect" to "level#" and
"section."
Add tests.
Add mention of TEI to README.
Small changes to TEI writer.
* 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.
- The (non-exported) prelude is in prelude/Prelude.hs.
- It exports Monoid and Applicative, like base 4.8 prelude,
but works with older base versions.
- It exports (<>) for mappend.
- It hides 'catch' on older base versions.
This allows us to remove many imports of Data.Monoid
and Control.Applicative, and remove Text.Pandoc.Compat.Monoid.
It should allow us to use -Wall again for ghc 7.10.
If we're producing a fragment, just skip normalization.
After all, the fragment might be somewhere in the middle
of the document. It's more important for fragments to
have consistency in rendering (so they can be pieced
together) than to normalize.
This closes#2394. It's simpler and more robust than
my earlier fix.
`<` should not be escaped as `\<`, for compatibility with
original Markdown. We now escape `<` and `>` with entities.
Also, we now backslash-escape square brackets.
Closes#2086.
Issue #1977
Most markdown processors support the [shortcut format] for reference links.
Pandoc's markdown reader parsed this shortcuts unoptionally.
Pandoc's markdown writer (with --reference-links option) never shortcutted links.
This commit adds an extension `shortcut_reference_links`. The extension is
enabled by default for those markdown flavors that support reading shortcut
reference links, namely:
- pandoc
- strict pandoc
- github flavoured
- PHPmarkdown
If extension is enabled, reader parses the shortcuts in the same way as
it preveously did. Otherwise it would parse them as normal text.
If extension is enabled, writer outputs shortcut reference links unless
doing so would cause problems (see test cases in `tests/Tests/Writers/Markdown.hs`).
Currently, pandoc has hard-coded the following in order to make tight lists in
LaTeX:
```hs
text "\\itemsep1pt\\parskip0pt\\parsep0pt"
```
Which is fine, but does not allow customizations. For example, the `memoir`
class already has a `\tightlist` declaration for this purpose:
```tex
\newcommand{\tightlist}{%
\setlength{\itemsep}{0pt}\setlength{\parskip}{0pt}}
```
I'm proposing to use a similar solution:
```diff
@@ In Writers/LaTeX.hs:
-then text "\\itemsep1pt\\parskip0pt\\parsep0pt"
+then text "\\tightlist"
@@ In templates/default.latex:
+\newcommand{\tightlist}{%
+ \setlength{\itemsep}{1pt}\setlength{\parskip}{0pt}\setlength{\parsep}{0pt}}
```
This allows us to customize the tightness to our needs.
Backward Compatibility
If a person is using a custom LaTeX template (not based upon the `memoir`
class), the `\tightlist` declaration must be added.
Using `map toUpper` to capitalise text is wrong, as e.g.
“Straße” should be converted to “STRASSE”, which is 1 character
longer. This commit adds a `capitalize` function and replaces
2 identical implementations in different modules (`toCaps` and
`capitalize`) with it.