Attr values can now be given as normal Lua tables; this can be used as a
convenient alternative to define Attr values, instead of constructing
values with `pandoc.Attr`. Identifiers are taken from the *id* field,
classes must be given as space separated words in the *class* field. All
remaining fields are included as misc attributes.
With this change, the following lines now create equal elements:
pandoc.Span('test', {id = 'test', class = 'a b', check = 1})
pandoc.Span('test', pandoc.Attr('test', {'a','b'}, {check = 1}))
This also works when using the *attr* setter:
local span = pandoc.Span 'text'
span.attr = {id = 'test', class = 'a b', check = 1}
Furthermore, the *attributes* field of AST elements can now be a plain
key-value table even when using the `attributes` accessor:
local span = pandoc.Span 'test'
span.attributes = {check = 1} -- works as expected now
Closes: #5744
This ensures that the golden files in `test/fb2/reader/` don't
have newlines converted. This should fix a test failure on
GitHub CI with Windows.
Closes#5747.
It's good practice not to use codes 1-2 for user errors.
Also, we used 65 for two different errors.
- PandocAppError was 1, is now 4
- PandocOptionError was 2, is now 6
- PandocMakePDFError was 65, is now 66
Deprecate --base-heading-level.
The new option does everything the old one does, but also
allows negative shifts. It also promotes the document
metadata (if not null) to a level-1 heading with a +1 shift,
and demotes an initial level-1 heading to document metadata
with a -1 shift. This supports converting documents that
use an initial level-1 heading for the document title.
Closes#5615.
* Org reader: allow the `-i` switch to ignore leading spaces.
* Org reader: handle awkwardly-aligned code blocks within lists.
Code blocks in Org lists must have their #+BEGIN_ aligned in a
reasonable way, but their other components can be positioned otherwise.