Inline parsing code is moved to a separate module. Parsers for block
starts are extracted as well, as those are used in the `endline` parser.
This is part of the Org-mode reader cleanup effort.
The Org-mode reader uses many functions defined in the
`Text.Pandoc.Parsing` utility module. Some of the functions are
overwritten with versions adapted to Org-mode idiosyncrasies. These
special functions, as well as the normal Pandoc versions, are combined
in a single module to increase the ease of use.
This leads to decoupling of Org-mode and Pandoc and hence to slightly
cleaner code. The downside is code-bloat due to repeated import/export
statements.
For the implementation of the Drawer element in the Org Writer, we make
use of a generic Block container with attributes. The presence of a
`drawer` class defines that the `Div` constructor is a drawer. The first
class defines the drawer name to use. The key-value list in the
attributes defines the keys to add inside the Drawer. Lastly, the list
of Block elements contains miscellaneous blocks elements to add inside
of the Drawer.
Signed-off-by: Albert Krewinkel <albert@zeitkraut.de>
The `ID` property is reserved for internal use by Org-mode and should
not be used. The `CUSTOM_ID` property is to be used instead, it is
converted to the `ID` property for certain export format.
The reader and writer erroneously used `ID`. This is corrected by using
`CUSTOM_ID` where appropriate.
This allows header attributes to be added to org documents in the form
of `:PROPERTIES:` drawers. All available attributes are stored as
key/value pairs. This reflects the way the org reader handles
`:PROPERTIES:` blocks.
This closes#1962.
Headers can have optional `:PROPERTIES:` drawers associated with them.
These drawers contain key/value pairs like the header's `id`. The
reader adds all listed pairs to the header's attributes; `id` and
`class` attributes are handled specially to match the way `Attr` are
defined.
This also changes behavior of how drawers of unknown type are handled.
Instead of including all unknown drawers, those are not read/exported,
thereby matching current Emacs behavior.
This closes#1877.
Needed for correct polyglossia operation with Cyrillic fonts and perhaps
can find some other usages. Example usage in YAML metadata:
```
fontfamilies:
- name: \cyrillicfont
font: Liberation Serif
- name: \cyrillicfonttt
options: Scale=MatchLowercase
font: Liberation
```
(vladipus)
Arbitrary key-value pairs can be added to some block types using a
`#+ATTR_HTML` line before the block. Emacs Org-mode only includes these
when exporting to HTML, but since we cannot make this distinction here,
the attributes are always added.
The functionality is now supported for figures.
This closes#1906.
Additional state changes need to be made after a newline is parsed,
otherwise markup may not be recognized correctly.
This fixes a bug where markup after certain block-types would not be
recognized. E.g. `/emph/` in the following snippet was not parsed as
emphasized.
foo
# comment
/emph/
A parser state attribute was used to keep track of block attributes
defined in meta-lines. Global state is undesirable, so block attributes
are no longer saved as part of the parser state. Old functions and the
respective part of the parser state are removed.
Org-mode allows to specify export settings via `#+OPTIONS` lines.
Disabling simple sub- and superscripts is one of these export options,
this options is now supported.
Now instead of using `findExecutable`, which has limitations
on Windows, we just do `progname --version` and see if it
returns successfully. Closes#2903.