In most cases it's better to preserve the content than
to emit it. This isn't guaranteed to have good results;
it will fail spectacularly for unknown raw or verbatim
directives.
See #3432.
This was failing because of a small discrepancy in markdown
table header line lengths on appveyor.
It's a minor issue, I can't see what is causing it, and
it's irrelevant to the issue this is testing, so we'll
just write native for this test.
* Use -split-objs (reduces executable size from ~50M to 32M), at
cost of much slower compilation.
* Moved building of prereqs from CMD to RUN, so they can be cached.
Doing 'make build' will fetch the latest from git and rebuild
pandoc, but dependencies needn't be rebuilt.
This provides a Makefile and Dockerfile sufficient for
producing a completely statically linked linux executable
for maximum portability.
If docker is installed, this should suffice:
make setup
make build
The binary will be placed in artifacts/.
This contains a list of strings that will be recognized by pandoc's
Markdown parser as abbreviations. (A nonbreaking space will
be inserted after the period, preventing a sentence space in
formats like LaTeX.)
Users can override the default by putting a file abbreviations
in their user data directory (`~/.pandoc` on *nix).
Previously you could link to a header above or below slide
level but not TO slide level. This commit changes that.
Hypertargets are inserted inside frame titles; technically
the reference is to just after the title, but in normal
use (where slides are viewed full screen in a slide show),
this does not matter.
Closes#3220.
Closes#1905.
Removed stateChapters from ParserState.
Now we parse chapters as level 0 headers, and parts as level -1 headers.
After parsing, we check for the lowest header level, and if it's
less than 1 we bump everything up so that 1 is the lowest header level.
So `\part` will always produce a header; no command-line options
are needed.
The values of the following meta variables are now interpreted using
org-markup instead of treating them as pure strings:
- *keywords*: comma-separated list of inlines
- *subtitle*: inline values
- *nocite*: inline values; using it multiple times accumulates the
values.