Org-mode allows to skip the argument of a code block header argument if
it's toggling a value. Argument-less headers are now recognized,
avoiding weird parsing errors.
The fixes are not exactly pretty, but neither is the code that was
fixed. So I guess it's about par for the course. However, a rewrite of
the header parsing code wouldn't hurt in the long run.
Thanks to @jo-tham for filing the bug report.
This fixes#2269.
Paragraphs can be followed by lists, even if there is no blank line
between the two blocks. However, this should only be true if the
paragraph is not within a list, were the preceding block should be
parsed as a plain instead of paragraph (to allow for compact lists).
Thanks to @rgaiacs for bringing this up.
This fixes#2464.
Tightened up the inline HTML parser so it disallows
TagWarnings.
This only affects the markdown reader when the `markdown_in_html_blocks`
option is disabled.
Closes#2469.
This way we have uniform separators, whether on Windows or Linux.
This should solve a problem where on some Windows versions
the data files weren't being found.
Closes#2459.
- 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.
These changes are intended to make the writer more
useful to people who are processing small fragments,
which may for example look like this:
### third level header from previous section
## second level header
Previously such fragments got turned into two
headers of the same level. The new algorithm
avoids doing any normalization until we hit the
minimal-level header in the fragment (here, the
second level header).
Closes#2394.
Previously `<section>` tags were just parsed as raw HTML
blocks. With this change, section elements are parsed as
Div elements with the class "section". The HTML writer will
use `<section>` tags to render these Divs in HTML5; otherwise
they will be rendered as `<div class="section">`.
Closes#2438.
`src/Text/Pandoc/Shared.hs`, so that all Writers can access this variable
without importing `src/Text/Pandoc.hs`, preventing circular import.
* pandoc.hs: Import pandocVersion from `Text.Pandoc.Shared`.
* src/Text/Pandoc.hs: Remove the definition of pandocVersion
and relevant import.
* src/Text/Pandoc/Shared.hs: Add the definition of pandocVersion
and relevant import.
docbook-xsl, a set of XSLT scripts to generate HMTL out of DocBook,
tries harder to generate a nice xref text. Depending on the element
being linked to, it looks at the title or other descriptive child
elements. Let's do that, too.
'xref' is used to create cross references to other parts of the
document. It is an empty element - the cross reference text depends on
various attributes. Quoting 'DocBook: The Definitive Guide':
1. If the endterm attribute is specified on xref, the content of the
element pointed to by endterm will be used as the text of the
cross-reference.
2. Otherwise, if the object pointed to has a specified XRefLabel, the
content of that attribute will be used as the cross-reference text.