This fixes a regression in 2.2.3, which cause boolean values to
be parsed as MetaInlines instead of MetaBool.
Note also an undocumented (but desirable) change in 2.2.3:
numbers are now parsed as MetaInlines rather than MetaString.
Closes#4819.
* Use a Span with class "title-reference" for the default
title-reference role.
* Use B.text to split up contents into Spaces, SoftBreaks, and Strs
for title-reference.
* Use Code with class "interpreted-text" instead of Span and Str for
unknown roles. (The RST writer has also been modified to round-trip
this properly.)
* Disallow blank lines in interpreted text.
* Backslash-escape now works in interpreted text.
* Backticks followed by alphanumerics no longer end interpreted text.
Closes#4811.
RST does not allow nested emphasis, links, or other inline
constructs.
Closes#4581, double parsing of links with URLs as
link text. This supersedes the earlier fix for #4581
in 6419819b46.
Fixes#4561, a bug parsing with URLs inside emphasis.
Closes#4792.
Starting in 2.2.2, everything after an `\input` (or `\include`)
in a markdown file would be parsed as raw LaTeX.
This commit fixes the issue and adds a regression test.
Closes#4781.
Text.Pandoc.Emoji now exports `emojiToInline`, which returns a Span inline containing the emoji character and some attributes with metadata (class `emoji`, attribute `data-emoji` with emoji name). Previously, emojis (as supported in Markdown and CommonMark readers, e.g "😄")
were simply translated into the corresponding unicode code point. By wrapping them in Span
nodes, we make it possible to do special handling such as giving them a special font
in HTML output. We also open up the possibility of treating them differently when the
`--ascii` option is selected (though that is not part of this commit).
Closes#4743.
Non-ascii characters were not stripped from identifiers even if the
`ascii_identifiers` extension was enabled (which is is by default for
gfm).
Closes#4742
* Markdown writer now includes a blank line at the end
of the row in a single-row multiline table, to prevent it from being
interpreted as a simple table. Closes#4578.
* Markdown reader does a better job computing the relative width of
the last column in a multiline table, so we can round-trip tables
without constantly shrinking the last column.
Previously we used an odd mix of 3- and 4-space indentation.
Now we use 3-space indentation, except for ordered lists,
where indentation must depend on the width of the list marker.
Closes#4563.
* Annotate gridTable code with comments and abstract small functions
* Don't wrap lines in tables when `--wrap=none`. Instead, expand cells, even if
it results in cells that don't respect relative widths or surpass page column width.
* This change affects RST, Markdown, and Haddock writers.
and not in the title. If it's in the title, then we get
a titlebar on slides with the `plain` attribute, when
the id is non-null. This fixes a regression from 1.9.x.
Closes#4307.
Fixes#2609.
This PR introduces the new-style section headings: `\section[my-header]{My Header}` -> `\section[title={My Header},reference={my-header}]`.
On top of this, the ConTeXt writer now supports the `--section-divs` option to write sections in the fenced style, with `\startsection` and `\stopsection`.
Closes#4281.
Previously we allowed "nonindent spaces" before the
opening and closing `:::`, but this interfered with
list parsing, so now we require the fences to be
flush with the margin of the containing block.
rst2latex.py uses an align* environment for math in
`.. math::` blocks, so this math may contain line breaks.
If it does, we put the math in an `aligned` environment
to simulate rst2latex.py's behavior.
Closes#4254.
The change both improves performance and fixes a
regression whereby normal citations inside inline notes
were not parsed correctly.
Closesjgm/pandoc-citeproc#315.