Pandoc Lua Filters
Introduction
Pandoc has long supported filters, which allow the pandoc
abstract syntax tree (AST) to be manipulated between the parsing
and the writing phase. Traditional pandoc
filters accept a JSON representation of the pandoc AST and
produce an altered JSON representation of the AST. They may be
written in any programming language, and invoked from pandoc using
the --filter
option.
Although traditional filters are very flexible, they have a couple of disadvantages. First, there is some overhead in writing JSON to stdout and reading it from stdin (twice, once on each side of the filter). Second, whether a filter will work will depend on details of the user’s environment. A filter may require an interpreter for a certain programming language to be available, as well as a library for manipulating the pandoc AST in JSON form. One cannot simply provide a filter that can be used by anyone who has a certain version of the pandoc executable.
Starting with version 2.0, pandoc makes it possible to write filters in Lua without any external dependencies at all. A Lua interpreter (version 5.4) and a Lua library for creating pandoc filters is built into the pandoc executable. Pandoc data types are marshaled to Lua directly, avoiding the overhead of writing JSON to stdout and reading it from stdin.
Here is an example of a Lua filter that converts strong emphasis to small caps:
return {
Strong = function (elem)
return pandoc.SmallCaps(elem.content)
end,
}
or equivalently,
function Strong(elem)
return pandoc.SmallCaps(elem.content)
end
This says: walk the AST, and when you find a Strong element, replace it with a SmallCaps element with the same content.
To run it, save it in a file, say smallcaps.lua
, and invoke
pandoc with --lua-filter=smallcaps.lua
.
Here’s a quick performance comparison, converting the pandoc
manual (MANUAL.txt) to HTML, with versions of the same JSON filter
written in compiled Haskell (smallcaps
) and interpreted
Python (smallcaps.py
):
Command | Time |
---|---|
pandoc |
1.01s |
pandoc --filter ./smallcaps |
1.36s |
pandoc --filter ./smallcaps.py |
1.40s |
pandoc --lua-filter ./smallcaps.lua |
1.03s |
As you can see, the Lua filter avoids the substantial overhead associated with marshaling to and from JSON over a pipe.
Lua filter structure
Lua filters are tables with element names as keys and values consisting of functions acting on those elements.
Filters are expected to be put into separate files and are
passed via the --lua-filter
command-line
argument. For example, if a filter is defined in a file current-date.lua
, then it would
be applied like this:
pandoc --lua-filter=current-date.lua -f markdown MANUAL.txt
The --lua-filter
option may be supplied multiple times. Pandoc applies all filters
(including JSON filters specified via --filter
and Lua filters
specified via --lua-filter
) in the order they
appear on the command line.
Pandoc expects each Lua file to return a list of filters. The
filters in that list are called sequentially, each on the result
of the previous filter. If there is no value returned by the
filter script, then pandoc will try to generate a single filter by
collecting all top-level functions whose names correspond to those
of pandoc elements (e.g., Str
, Para
, Meta
, or Pandoc
). (That is why the two
examples above are equivalent.)
For each filter, the document is traversed and each element subjected to the filter. Elements for which the filter contains an entry (i.e. a function of the same name) are passed to Lua element filtering function. In other words, filter entries will be called for each corresponding element in the document, getting the respective element as input.
The return value of a filter function must be one of the following:
- nil: this means that the object should remain unchanged.
- a pandoc object: this must be of the same type as the input and will replace the original object.
- a list of pandoc objects: these will replace the original object; the list is merged with the neighbors of the original objects (spliced into the list the original object belongs to); returning an empty list deletes the object.
The function’s output must result in an element of the same type as the input. This means a filter function acting on an inline element must return either nil, an inline, or a list of inlines, and a function filtering a block element must return one of nil, a block, or a list of block elements. Pandoc will throw an error if this condition is violated.
If there is no function matching the element’s node type, then
the filtering system will look for a more general fallback
function. Two fallback functions are supported, Inline
and Block
. Each matches elements of
the respective type.
Elements without matching functions are left untouched.
See module documentation for a list of pandoc elements.
Filters on element sequences
For some filtering tasks, it is necessary to know the order in which elements occur in the document. It is not enough then to inspect a single element at a time.
There are two special function names, which can be used to define filters on lists of blocks or lists of inlines.
Inlines (inlines)
-
If present in a filter, this function will be called on all lists
of inline elements, like the content of a Para (paragraph) block, or the description
of an Image. The
inlines
argument passed to the function will be a List of Inline elements for each call. Blocks (blocks)
-
If present in a filter, this function will be called on all lists
of block elements, like the content of a MetaBlocks meta element block, on each
item of a list, and the main content of the Pandoc document. The
blocks
argument passed to the function will be a List of Block elements for each call.
These filter functions are special in that the result must either be nil, in which case the list is left unchanged, or must be a list of the correct type, i.e., the same type as the input argument. Single elements are not allowed as return values, as a single element in this context usually hints at a bug.
See “Remove spaces before normal citations” for an example.
This functionality has been added in pandoc 2.9.2.
Traversal order
The traversal order of filters can be selected by setting the
key traverse
to either
'topdown'
or 'typewise'
; the default is
'typewise'
.
Example:
local filter = {
traverse = 'topdown',
-- ... filter functions ...
}
return filter
Support for this was added in pandoc 2.17; previous versions
ignore the traverse
setting.
Typewise traversal
Element filter functions within a filter set are called in a fixed order, skipping any which are not present:
- functions for Inline elements,
- the
Inlines
filter function, - functions for Block elements ,
- the
Blocks
filter function, - the
Meta
filter function, and last - the
Pandoc
filter function.
It is still possible to force a different order by explicitly returning multiple filter sets. For example, if the filter for Meta is to be run before that for Str, one can write
-- ... filter definitions ...
return {
{ Meta = Meta }, -- (1)
{ Str = Str } -- (2)
}
Filter sets are applied in the order in which they are returned. All functions in set (1) are thus run before those in (2), causing the filter function for Meta to be run before the filtering of Str elements is started.
Topdown traversal
It is sometimes more natural to traverse the document tree depth-first from the root towards the leaves, and all in a single run.
For example, a block list [Plain [Str "a"], Para [Str "b"]]
will try the following filter functions, in order: Blocks
, Plain
, Inlines
, Str
, Para
, Inlines
, Str
.
Topdown traversals can be cut short by returning false
as a second value from
the filter function. No child-element of the returned element is
processed in that case.
For example, to exclude the contents of a footnote from being processed, one might write
traverse = 'topdown'
function Note (n)
return n, false
end
Global variables
Pandoc passes additional data to Lua filters by setting global variables.
FORMAT
-
The global
FORMAT
is set to the format of the pandoc writer being used (html5
,latex
, etc.), so the behavior of a filter can be made conditional on the eventual output format. PANDOC_READER_OPTIONS
- Table of the options which were provided to the parser. (ReaderOptions)
PANDOC_WRITER_OPTIONS
-
Table of the options that will be passed to the writer. While the object can be modified, the changes will not be picked up by pandoc. (WriterOptions)
Accessing this variable in custom writers is deprecated. Starting with pandoc 3.0, it is set to a placeholder value (the default options) in custom writers. Access to the actual writer options is provided via the
Writer
orByteStringWriter
function, to which the options are passed as the second function argument.Since: pandoc 2.17
PANDOC_VERSION
-
Contains the pandoc version as a Version object which behaves like a
numerically indexed table, most significant number first. E.g.,
for pandoc 2.7.3, the value of the variable is equivalent to a
table
{2, 7, 3}
. Usetostring(PANDOC_VERSION)
to produce a version string. This variable is also set in custom writers. PANDOC_API_VERSION
-
Contains the version of the pandoc-types API against which pandoc
was compiled. It is given as a numerically indexed table, most
significant number first. E.g., if pandoc was compiled against
pandoc-types 1.17.3, then the value of the variable will behave
like the table
{1, 17, 3}
. Usetostring(PANDOC_API_VERSION)
to produce a version string. This variable is also set in custom writers. PANDOC_SCRIPT_FILE
- The name used to involve the filter. This value can be used to find files relative to the script file. This variable is also set in custom writers.
PANDOC_STATE
- The state shared by all readers and writers. It is used by pandoc to collect and pass information. The value of this variable is of type CommonState and is read-only.
pandoc
-
The pandoc module, described in the next section, is
available through the global
pandoc
. The other modules described herein are loaded as subfields under their respective name. lpeg
-
This variable holds the
lpeg
module, a package based on Parsing Expression Grammars (PEG). It provides excellent parsing utilities and is documented on the official LPeg homepage. Pandoc uses a built-in version of the library, unless it has been configured by the package maintainer to rely on a system-wide installation.Note that the result of
require 'lpeg'
is not necessarily equal to this value; therequire
mechanism prefers the system’s lpeg library over the built-in version. re
-
Contains the LPeg.re module, which is built on top of LPeg and offers an implementation of a regex engine. Pandoc uses a built-in version of the library, unless it has been configured by the package maintainer to rely on a system-wide installation.
Note that the result of
require 're
is not necessarily equal to this value; therequire
mechanism prefers the system’s lpeg library over the built-in version.
Pandoc Module
The pandoc
Lua module
is loaded into the filter’s Lua environment and provides a set of
functions and constants to make creation and manipulation of
elements easier. The global variable pandoc
is bound to the module
and should generally not be overwritten for this reason.
Two major functionalities are provided by the module: element creator functions and access to some of pandoc’s main functionalities.
Element creation
Element creator functions like Str
, Para
, and Pandoc
are designed to allow
easy creation of new elements that are simple to use and can be
read back from the Lua environment. Internally, pandoc uses these
functions to create the Lua objects which are passed to element
filter functions. This means that elements created via this module
will behave exactly as those elements accessible through the
filter function parameter.
Exposed pandoc functionality
Some pandoc functions have been made available in Lua:
walk_block
andwalk_inline
allow filters to be applied inside specific block or inline elements;read
allows filters to parse strings into pandoc documents;pipe
runs an external command with input from and output to strings;- the
pandoc.mediabag
module allows access to the “mediabag,” which stores binary content such as images that may be included in the final document; - the
pandoc.utils
module contains various utility functions.
Lua interpreter initialization
Initialization of pandoc’s Lua interpreter can be controlled by
placing a file init.lua
in pandoc’s data directory. A common use-case would be to load
additional modules, or even to alter default modules.
The following snippet is an example of code that might be
useful when added to init.lua
. The snippet adds all
Unicode-aware functions defined in the text
module to the default string
module, prefixed with
the string uc_
.
for name, fn in pairs(require 'text') do
string['uc_' .. name] = fn
end
This makes it possible to apply these functions on strings
using colon syntax (mystring:uc_upper()
).
Debugging Lua filters
William Lupton has written a Lua module with some handy functions for debugging Lua filters, including functions that can pretty-print the Pandoc AST elements manipulated by the filters: it is available at https://github.com/wlupton/pandoc-lua-logging.
It is possible to use a debugging interface to halt execution
and step through a Lua filter line by line as it is run inside
Pandoc. This is accomplished using the remote-debugging interface
of the package mobdebug
. Although mobdebug
can be run from the terminal, it is more useful run within the
donation-ware Lua editor and IDE, ZeroBrane Studio.
ZeroBrane offers a REPL console and UI to step-through and view
all variables and state.
ZeroBrane doesn’t come with Lua 5.4 bundled, but it can debug
it, so you should install Lua 5.4, and then add mobdebug
and its dependency
luasocket
using luarocks
. ZeroBrane can use
your Lua 5.4 install by adding path.lua = "/path/to/your/lua"
in your ZeroBrane settings file. Next, open your Lua filter in
ZeroBrane, and add require('mobdebug').start()
at
the line where you want your breakpoint. Then make sure the
Project > Lua Intepreter is set to the “Lua” you added in
settings and enable “Start Debugger Server” see
detailed instructions here. Run Pandoc as you normally would,
and ZeroBrane should break at the correct line.
Common pitfalls
- AST elements not updated
-
A filtered element will only be updated if the filter function returns a new element to replace it. A function like the below has no effect, as the function returns no value:
function Str (str) str.text = string.upper(str.text) end
The correct version would be
function Str (str) str.text = string.upper(str.text) return str end
- Pattern behavior is locale dependent
-
The character classes in Lua’s pattern library depend on the current locale: E.g., the character
©
will be treated as punctuation, and matched by the pattern%p
, on CP-1252 locales, but not on systems using a UTF-8 locale.A reliable way to ensure unified handling of patterns and character classes is to use the “C” locale by adding
os.setlocale 'C'
to the top of the Lua script. - String library is not Unicode aware
-
Lua’s
string
library treats each byte as a single character. A function likestring.upper
will not have the intended effect when applied to words with non-ASCII characters. Similarly, a pattern like[☃]
will match any of the bytes\240
,\159
,\154
, and\178
, but won’t match the “snowman” Unicode character.Use the pandoc.text module for Unicode-aware transformation, and consider using using the lpeg or re library for pattern matching.
Examples
The following filters are presented as examples. A repository of useful Lua filters (which may also serve as good examples) is available at https://github.com/pandoc/lua-filters.
Macro substitution
The following filter converts the string {{helloworld}}
into emphasized
text “Hello, World”.
return {
{
Str = function (elem)
if elem.text == "{{helloworld}}" then
return pandoc.Emph {pandoc.Str "Hello, World"}
else
return elem
end
end,
}
}
Center images in LaTeX and HTML output
For LaTeX, wrap an image in LaTeX snippets which cause the image to be centered horizontally. In HTML, the image element’s style attribute is used to achieve centering.
-- Filter images with this function if the target format is LaTeX.
if FORMAT:match 'latex' then
function Image (elem)
-- Surround all images with image-centering raw LaTeX.
return {
pandoc.RawInline('latex', '\\hfill\\break{\\centering'),
elem,
pandoc.RawInline('latex', '\\par}')
}
end
end
-- Filter images with this function if the target format is HTML
if FORMAT:match 'html' then
function Image (elem)
-- Use CSS style to center image
elem.attributes.style = 'margin:auto; display: block;'
return elem
end
end
Setting the date in the metadata
This filter sets the date in the document’s metadata to the current date, if a date isn’t already set:
function Meta(m)
if m.date == nil then
m.date = os.date("%B %e, %Y")
return m
end
end
Remove spaces before citations
This filter removes all spaces preceding an “author-in-text”
citation. In Markdown, author-in-text citations (e.g., @citekey
), must be preceded by
a space. If these spaces are undesired, they must be removed with
a filter.
local function is_space_before_author_in_text(spc, cite)
return spc and spc.t == 'Space'
and cite and cite.t == 'Cite'
-- there must be only a single citation, and it must have
-- mode 'AuthorInText'
and #cite.citations == 1
and cite.citations[1].mode == 'AuthorInText'
end
function Inlines (inlines)
-- Go from end to start to avoid problems with shifting indices.
for i = #inlines-1, 1, -1 do
if is_space_before_author_in_text(inlines[i], inlines[i+1]) then
inlines:remove(i)
end
end
return inlines
end
Replacing placeholders with their metadata value
Lua filter functions are run in the order
Inlines → Blocks → Meta → Pandoc.
Passing information from a higher level (e.g., metadata) to a lower level (e.g., inlines) is still possible by using two filters living in the same file:
local vars = {}
function get_vars (meta)
for k, v in pairs(meta) do
if pandoc.utils.type(v) == 'Inlines' then
vars["%" .. k .. "%"] = {table.unpack(v)}
end
end
end
function replace (el)
if vars[el.text] then
return pandoc.Span(vars[el.text])
else
return el
end
end
return {{Meta = get_vars}, {Str = replace}}
If the contents of file occupations.md
is
---
name: Samuel Q. Smith
occupation: Professor of Oenology
---
Name
: %name%
Occupation
: %occupation%
then running pandoc --lua-filter=meta-vars.lua occupations.md
will output:
<dl>
<dt>Name</dt>
<dd><p><span>Samuel Q. Smith</span></p>
</dd>
<dt>Occupation</dt>
<dd><p><span>Professor of Oenology</span></p>
</dd>
</dl>
MANUAL.txt
for man pages
Modifying pandoc’s This is the filter we use when converting MANUAL.txt
to man pages. It
converts level-1 headers to uppercase (using walk
to transform inline
elements inside headers), removes footnotes, and replaces links
with regular text.
-- we use pandoc.text to get a UTF-8 aware 'upper' function
local text = pandoc.text
function Header(el)
if el.level == 1 then
return el:walk {
Str = function(el)
return pandoc.Str(text.upper(el.text))
end
}
end
end
function Link(el)
return el.content
end
function Note(el)
return {}
end
Creating a handout from a paper
This filter extracts all the numbered examples, section
headers, block quotes, and figures from a document, in addition to
any divs with class handout
. (Note that only blocks
at the “outer level” are included; this ignores blocks inside
nested constructs, like list items.)
-- creates a handout from an article, using its headings,
-- blockquotes, numbered examples, figures, and any
-- Divs with class "handout"
function Pandoc(doc)
local hblocks = {}
for i,el in pairs(doc.blocks) do
if (el.t == "Div" and el.classes[1] == "handout") or
(el.t == "BlockQuote") or
(el.t == "OrderedList" and el.style == "Example") or
(el.t == "Para" and #el.c == 1 and el.c[1].t == "Image") or
(el.t == "Header") then
table.insert(hblocks, el)
end
end
return pandoc.Pandoc(hblocks, doc.meta)
end
Counting words in a document
This filter counts the words in the body of a document
(omitting metadata like titles and abstracts), including words in
code. It should be more accurate than wc -w
run directly on a
Markdown document, since the latter will count markup characters,
like the #
in front of an
ATX header, or tags in HTML documents, as words. To run it, pandoc --lua-filter wordcount.lua myfile.md
.
-- counts words in a document
words = 0
wordcount = {
Str = function(el)
-- we don't count a word if it's entirely punctuation:
if el.text:match("%P") then
words = words + 1
end
end,
Code = function(el)
_,n = el.text:gsub("%S+","")
words = words + n
end,
CodeBlock = function(el)
_,n = el.text:gsub("%S+","")
words = words + n
end
}
function Pandoc(el)
-- skip metadata, just count body:
el.blocks:walk(wordcount)
print(words .. " words in body")
os.exit(0)
end
Converting ABC code to music notation
This filter replaces code blocks with class abc
with images created by
running their contents through abcm2ps
and ImageMagick’s convert
. (For more on ABC
notation, see https://abcnotation.com.)
Images are added to the mediabag. For output to binary formats,
pandoc will use images in the mediabag. For textual formats, use
--extract-media
to
specify a directory where the files in the mediabag will be
written, or (for HTML only) use --embed-resources
.
-- Pandoc filter to process code blocks with class "abc" containing
-- ABC notation into images.
--
-- * Assumes that abcm2ps and ImageMagick's convert are in the path.
-- * For textual output formats, use --extract-media=abc-images
-- * For HTML formats, you may alternatively use --embed-resources
local filetypes = { html = {"png", "image/png"}
, latex = {"pdf", "application/pdf"}
}
local filetype = filetypes[FORMAT][1] or "png"
local mimetype = filetypes[FORMAT][2] or "image/png"
local function abc2eps(abc, filetype)
local eps = pandoc.pipe("abcm2ps", {"-q", "-O", "-", "-"}, abc)
local final = pandoc.pipe("convert", {"-", filetype .. ":-"}, eps)
return final
end
function CodeBlock(block)
if block.classes[1] == "abc" then
local img = abc2eps(block.text, filetype)
local fname = pandoc.sha1(img) .. "." .. filetype
pandoc.mediabag.insert(fname, mimetype, img)
return pandoc.Para{ pandoc.Image({pandoc.Str("abc tune")}, fname) }
end
end
Building images with TikZ
This filter converts raw LaTeX TikZ environments into
images. It works with both PDF and HTML output. The TikZ
code is compiled to an image using pdflatex
, and the image is
converted from pdf to svg format using pdf2svg
, so both of these
must be in the system path. Converted images are cached in the
working directory and given filenames based on a hash of the
source, so that they need not be regenerated each time the
document is built. (A more sophisticated version of this might put
these in a special cache directory.)
local system = require 'pandoc.system'
local tikz_doc_template = [[
\documentclass{standalone}
\usepackage{xcolor}
\usepackage{tikz}
\begin{document}
\nopagecolor
%s
\end{document}
]]
local function tikz2image(src, filetype, outfile)
system.with_temporary_directory('tikz2image', function (tmpdir)
system.with_working_directory(tmpdir, function()
local f = io.open('tikz.tex', 'w')
f:write(tikz_doc_template:format(src))
f:close()
os.execute('pdflatex tikz.tex')
if filetype == 'pdf' then
os.rename('tikz.pdf', outfile)
else
os.execute('pdf2svg tikz.pdf ' .. outfile)
end
end)
end)
end
extension_for = {
html = 'svg',
html4 = 'svg',
html5 = 'svg',
latex = 'pdf',
beamer = 'pdf' }
local function file_exists(name)
local f = io.open(name, 'r')
if f ~= nil then
io.close(f)
return true
else
return false
end
end
local function starts_with(start, str)
return str:sub(1, #start) == start
end
function RawBlock(el)
if starts_with('\\begin{tikzpicture}', el.text) then
local filetype = extension_for[FORMAT] or 'svg'
local fbasename = pandoc.sha1(el.text) .. '.' .. filetype
local fname = system.get_working_directory() .. '/' .. fbasename
if not file_exists(fname) then
(el.text, filetype, fname)
tikz2imageend
return pandoc.Para({pandoc.Image({}, fbasename)})
else
return el
end
end
Example of use:
pandoc --lua-filter tikz.lua -s -o cycle.html <<EOF
Here is a diagram of the cycle:
\begin{tikzpicture}
\def \n {5}
\def \radius {3cm}
\def \margin {8} % margin in angles, depends on the radius
\foreach \s in {1,...,\n}
{
\node[draw, circle] at ({360/\n * (\s - 1)}:\radius) {$\s$};
\draw[->, >=latex] ({360/\n * (\s - 1)+\margin}:\radius)
arc ({360/\n * (\s - 1)+\margin}:{360/\n * (\s)-\margin}:\radius);
}
\end{tikzpicture}
EOF
Lua type reference
This section describes the types of objects available to Lua filters. See the pandoc module for functions to create these objects.
Pandoc
Pandoc document
Values of this type can be created with the pandoc.Pandoc
constructor.
Pandoc values are equal in Lua if and only if they are equal in
Haskell.
walk
walk(self, lua_filter)
Applies a Lua filter to the Pandoc element. Just as for
full-document filters, the order in which elements are traversed
can be controlled by setting the traverse
field of the filter;
see the section on traversal order.
Returns a (deep) copy on which the filter has been applied: the
original element is left untouched.
Parameters:
self
- the element (Pandoc)
lua_filter
- map of filter functions (table)
Result:
- filtered document (Pandoc)
Usage:
-- returns `pandoc.Pandoc{pandoc.Para{pandoc.Str 'Bye'}}`
return pandoc.Pandoc{pandoc.Para('Hi')}:walk {
Str = function (_) return 'Bye' end,
}
Meta
Meta information on a document; string-indexed collection of MetaValues.
Values of this type can be created with the pandoc.Meta
constructor.
Meta values are equal in Lua if and only if they are equal in
Haskell.
MetaValue
Document meta information items. This is not a separate type, but describes a set of types that can be used in places were a MetaValue is expected. The types correspond to the following Haskell type constructors:
- boolean → MetaBool
- string or number → MetaString
- Inlines → MetaInlines
- Blocks → MetaBlocks
- List/integer indexed table → MetaList
- string-indexed table → MetaMap
The corresponding constructors pandoc.MetaBool
, pandoc.MetaString
, pandoc.MetaInlines
, pandoc.MetaBlocks
, pandoc.MetaList
, and pandoc.MetaMap
can be used
to ensure that a value is treated in the intended way. E.g., an
empty table is normally treated as a MetaMap
, but can be made into
an empty MetaList
by
calling pandoc.MetaList{}
. However, the
same can be accomplished by using the generic functions like pandoc.List
, pandoc.Inlines
, or pandoc.Blocks
.
Use the function pandoc.utils.type
to get
the type of a metadata value.
Block
Block values are equal in Lua if and only if they are equal in Haskell.
Common methods
walk
walk(self, lua_filter)
Applies a Lua filter to the block element. Just as for
full-document filters, the order in which elements are traversed
can be controlled by setting the traverse
field of the filter;
see the section on traversal order.
Returns a (deep) copy on which the filter has been applied: the
original element is left untouched.
Note that the filter is applied to the subtree, but not to the
self
block element. The
rationale is that otherwise the element could be deleted by the
filter, or replaced with multiple block elements, which might lead
to possibly unexpected results.
Parameters:
self
- the element (Block)
lua_filter
- map of filter functions (table)
Result:
- filtered block (Block)
Usage:
-- returns `pandoc.Para{pandoc.Str 'Bye'}`
return pandoc.Para('Hi'):walk {
Str = function (_) return 'Bye' end,
}
BlockQuote
A block quote element.
Values of this type can be created with the pandoc.BlockQuote
constructor.
Fields:
content
- block content (Blocks)
tag
,t
-
the literal
BlockQuote
(string)
BulletList
A bullet list.
Values of this type can be created with the pandoc.BulletList
constructor.
Fields:
CodeBlock
Block of code.
Values of this type can be created with the pandoc.CodeBlock
constructor.
Fields:
text
- code string (string)
attr
- element attributes (Attr)
identifier
-
alias for
attr.identifier
(string) classes
-
alias for
attr.classes
(List of strings) attributes
-
alias for
attr.attributes
(Attributes) tag
,t
-
the literal
CodeBlock
(string)
DefinitionList
Definition list, containing terms and their explanation.
Values of this type can be created with the pandoc.DefinitionList
constructor.
Fields:
content
- list of items
tag
,t
-
the literal
DefinitionList
(string)
Div
Generic block container with attributes.
Values of this type can be created with the pandoc.Div
constructor.
Fields:
content
- block content (Blocks)
attr
- element attributes (Attr)
identifier
-
alias for
attr.identifier
(string) classes
-
alias for
attr.classes
(List of strings) attributes
-
alias for
attr.attributes
(Attributes) tag
,t
-
the literal
Div
(string)
Figure
Figure with caption and arbitrary block contents.
Values of this type can be created with the pandoc.Figure
constructor.
Fields:
content
- block content (Blocks)
caption
- figure caption (Caption)
attr
- element attributes (Attr)
identifier
-
alias for
attr.identifier
(string) classes
-
alias for
attr.classes
(List of strings) attributes
-
alias for
attr.attributes
(Attributes) tag
,t
-
the literal
Figure
(string)
Header
Creates a header element.
Values of this type can be created with the pandoc.Header
constructor.
Fields:
level
- header level (integer)
content
- inline content (Inlines)
attr
- element attributes (Attr)
identifier
-
alias for
attr.identifier
(string) classes
-
alias for
attr.classes
(List of strings) attributes
-
alias for
attr.attributes
(Attributes) tag
,t
-
the literal
Header
(string)
HorizontalRule
A horizontal rule.
Values of this type can be created with the pandoc.HorizontalRule
constructor.
Fields:
tag
,t
-
the literal
HorizontalRule
(string)
LineBlock
A line block, i.e. a list of lines, each separated from the next by a newline.
Values of this type can be created with the pandoc.LineBlock
constructor.
Fields:
OrderedList
An ordered list.
Values of this type can be created with the pandoc.OrderedList
constructor.
Fields:
content
- list items (List of items, i.e., List of Blocks)
listAttributes
- list parameters (ListAttributes)
start
-
alias for
listAttributes.start
(integer) style
-
alias for
listAttributes.style
(string) delimiter
-
alias for
listAttributes.delimiter
(string) tag
,t
-
the literal
OrderedList
(string)
Para
A paragraph.
Values of this type can be created with the pandoc.Para
constructor.
Fields:
content
- inline content (Inlines)
tag
,t
-
the literal
Para
(string)
Plain
Plain text, not a paragraph.
Values of this type can be created with the pandoc.Plain
constructor.
Fields:
content
- inline content (Inlines)
tag
,t
-
the literal
Plain
(string)
RawBlock
Raw content of a specified format.
Values of this type can be created with the pandoc.RawBlock
constructor.
Fields:
format
- format of content (string)
text
- raw content (string)
tag
,t
-
the literal
RawBlock
(string)
Table
A table.
Values of this type can be created with the pandoc.Table
constructor.
Fields:
attr
- table attributes (Attr)
caption
- table caption (Caption)
colspecs
- column specifications, i.e., alignments and widths (List of ColSpecs)
head
- table head (TableHead)
bodies
- table bodies (List of TableBodys)
foot
- table foot (TableFoot)
identifier
-
alias for
attr.identifier
(string) classes
-
alias for
attr.classes
(List of strings) attributes
-
alias for
attr.attributes
(Attributes) tag
,t
-
the literal
Table
(string)
A table cell is a list of blocks.
Alignment is a string
value indicating the horizontal alignment of a table column. AlignLeft
, AlignRight
, and AlignCenter
leads cell content
to be left-aligned, right-aligned, and centered, respectively. The
default alignment is AlignDefault
(often equivalent
to centered).
Blocks
List of Block elements, with the same methods as a generic List. It is usually not necessary to create values of this type in user scripts, as pandoc can convert other types into Blocks wherever a value of this type is expected:
- a list of Block (or Block-like) values is used directly;
- a single Inlines value is wrapped into a Plain element;
- string values are turned into an Inlines value by splitting the string into words (see Inlines), and then wrapping the result into a Plain singleton.
Methods
Lists of type Blocks
share all methods available in generic lists, see the pandoc.List
module.
Additionally, the following methods are available on Blocks values:
walk
walk(self, lua_filter)
Applies a Lua filter to the Blocks list. Just as for
full-document filters, the order in which elements are traversed
can be controlled by setting the traverse
field of the filter;
see the section on traversal order.
Returns a (deep) copy on which the filter has been applied: the
original list is left untouched.
Parameters:
self
- the list (Blocks)
lua_filter
- map of filter functions (table)
Result:
- filtered list (Blocks)
Usage:
-- returns `pandoc.Blocks{pandoc.Para('Salve!')}`
return pandoc.Blocks{pandoc.Plain('Salve!)}:walk {
Plain = function (p) return pandoc.Para(p.content) end,
}
Inline
Inline values are equal in Lua if and only if they are equal in Haskell.
Common methods
walk
walk(self, lua_filter)
Applies a Lua filter to the Inline element. Just as for
full-document filters, the order in which elements are traversed
can be controlled by setting the traverse
field of the filter;
see the section on traversal order.
Returns a (deep) copy on which the filter has been applied: the
original element is left untouched.
Note that the filter is applied to the subtree, but not to the
self
inline element. The
rationale is that otherwise the element could be deleted by the
filter, or replaced with multiple inline elements, which might
lead to possibly unexpected results.
Parameters:
self
- the element (Inline)
lua_filter
- map of filter functions (table)
Result:
- filtered inline element (Inline)
Usage:
-- returns `pandoc.SmallCaps('SPQR)`
return pandoc.SmallCaps('spqr'):walk {
Str = function (s) return string.upper(s.text) end,
}
Cite
Citation.
Values of this type can be created with the pandoc.Cite
constructor.
Fields:
Code
Inline code
Values of this type can be created with the pandoc.Code
constructor.
Fields:
text
- code string (string)
attr
- attributes (Attr)
identifier
-
alias for
attr.identifier
(string) classes
-
alias for
attr.classes
(List of strings) attributes
-
alias for
attr.attributes
(Attributes) tag
,t
-
the literal
Code
(string)
Emph
Emphasized text
Values of this type can be created with the pandoc.Emph
constructor.
Fields:
content
- inline content (Inlines)
tag
,t
-
the literal
Emph
(string)
Image
Image: alt text (list of inlines), target
Values of this type can be created with the pandoc.Image
constructor.
Fields:
caption
- text used to describe the image (Inlines)
src
- path to the image file (string)
title
- brief image description (string)
attr
- attributes (Attr)
identifier
-
alias for
attr.identifier
(string) classes
-
alias for
attr.classes
(List of strings) attributes
-
alias for
attr.attributes
(Attributes) tag
,t
-
the literal
Image
(string)
LineBreak
Hard line break
Values of this type can be created with the pandoc.LineBreak
constructor.
Fields:
tag
,t
-
the literal
LineBreak
(string)
Link
Hyperlink: alt text (list of inlines), target
Values of this type can be created with the pandoc.Link
constructor.
Fields:
attr
- attributes (Attr)
content
- text for this link (Inlines)
target
- the link target (string)
title
- brief link description
identifier
-
alias for
attr.identifier
(string) classes
-
alias for
attr.classes
(List of strings) attributes
-
alias for
attr.attributes
(Attributes) tag
,t
-
the literal
Link
(string)
Math
TeX math (literal)
Values of this type can be created with the pandoc.Math
constructor.
Fields:
mathtype
-
specifier determining whether the math content should be shown
inline (
InlineMath
) or on a separate line (DisplayMath
) (string) text
- math content (string)
tag
,t
-
the literal
Math
(string)
Note
Footnote or endnote
Values of this type can be created with the pandoc.Note
constructor.
Fields:
content
- (Blocks)
tag
,t
-
the literal
Note
(string)
Quoted
Quoted text
Values of this type can be created with the pandoc.Quoted
constructor.
Fields:
quotetype
-
type of quotes to be used; one of
SingleQuote
orDoubleQuote
(string) content
- quoted text (Inlines)
tag
,t
-
the literal
Quoted
(string)
RawInline
Raw inline
Values of this type can be created with the pandoc.RawInline
constructor.
Fields:
format
- the format of the content (string)
text
- raw content (string)
tag
,t
-
the literal
RawInline
(string)
SmallCaps
Small caps text
Values of this type can be created with the pandoc.SmallCaps
constructor.
Fields:
content
- (Inlines)
tag
,t
-
the literal
SmallCaps
(string)
SoftBreak
Soft line break
Values of this type can be created with the pandoc.SoftBreak
constructor.
Fields:
tag
,t
-
the literal
SoftBreak
(string)
Space
Inter-word space
Values of this type can be created with the pandoc.Space
constructor.
Fields:
tag
,t
-
the literal
Space
(string)
Span
Generic inline container with attributes
Values of this type can be created with the pandoc.Span
constructor.
Fields:
attr
- attributes (Attr)
content
- wrapped content (Inlines)
identifier
-
alias for
attr.identifier
(string) classes
-
alias for
attr.classes
(List of strings) attributes
-
alias for
attr.attributes
(Attributes) tag
,t
-
the literal
Span
(string)
Str
Text
Values of this type can be created with the pandoc.Str
constructor.
Fields:
text
- content (string)
tag
,t
-
the literal
Str
(string)
Strikeout
Strikeout text
Values of this type can be created with the pandoc.Strikeout
constructor.
Fields:
content
- inline content (Inlines)
tag
,t
-
the literal
Strikeout
(string)
Strong
Strongly emphasized text
Values of this type can be created with the pandoc.Strong
constructor.
Fields:
content
- inline content (Inlines)
tag
,t
-
the literal
Strong
(string)
Subscript
Subscripted text
Values of this type can be created with the pandoc.Subscript
constructor.
Fields:
content
- inline content (Inlines)
tag
,t
-
the literal
Subscript
(string)
Superscript
Superscripted text
Values of this type can be created with the pandoc.Superscript
constructor.
Fields:
content
- inline content (Inlines)
tag
,t
-
the literal
Superscript
(string)
Underline
Underlined text
Values of this type can be created with the pandoc.Underline
constructor.
Fields:
content
- inline content (Inlines)
tag
,t
-
the literal
Underline
(string)
Inlines
List of Inline elements, with the same methods as a generic List. It is usually not necessary to create values of this type in user scripts, as pandoc can convert other types into Inlines wherever a value of this type is expected:
- lists of Inline (or Inline-like) values are used directly;
- single Inline values are converted into a list containing just that element;
- String values are split into words, converting line breaks into SoftBreak elements, and other whitespace characters into Spaces.
Methods
Lists of type Inlines
share all methods available in generic lists, see the pandoc.List
module.
Additionally, the following methods are available on Inlines values:
walk
walk(self, lua_filter)
Applies a Lua filter to the Inlines list. Just as for full-document filters, the order in which elements are handled are Inline → Inlines → Block → Blocks. The filter is applied to all list items and to the list itself. Returns a (deep) copy on which the filter has been applied: the original list is left untouched.
Parameters:
self
- the list (Inlines)
lua_filter
- map of filter functions (table)
Result:
- filtered list (Inlines)
Usage:
-- returns `pandoc.Inlines{pandoc.SmallCaps('SPQR')}`
return pandoc.Inlines{pandoc.Emph('spqr')}:walk {
Str = function (s) return string.upper(s.text) end,
Emph = function (e) return pandoc.SmallCaps(e.content) end,
}
Element components
Attr
A set of element attributes. Values of this type can be created
with the pandoc.Attr
constructor.
For convenience, it is usually not necessary to construct the
value directly if it is part of an element, and it is sufficient
to pass an HTML-like table. E.g., to create a span with identifier
“text” and classes “a” and “b”, one can write:
local span = pandoc.Span('text', {id = 'text', class = 'a b'})
This also works when using the attr
setter:
local span = pandoc.Span 'text'
span.attr = {id = 'text', class = 'a b', other_attribute = '1'}
Attr values are equal in Lua if and only if they are equal in Haskell.
Fields:
identifier
- element identifier (string)
classes
- element classes (List of strings)
attributes
- collection of key/value pairs (Attributes)
Attributes
List of key/value pairs. Values can be accessed by using keys as indices to the list table.
Attributes values are equal in Lua if and only if they are equal in Haskell.
Cell
A table cell.
Fields:
attr
- cell attributes
alignment
- individual cell alignment (Alignment).
contents
- cell contents (Blocks).
col_span
- number of columns spanned by the cell; the width of the cell in columns (integer).
row_span
- number of rows spanned by the cell; the height of the cell in rows (integer).
identifier
-
alias for
attr.identifier
(string) classes
-
alias for
attr.classes
(List of strings) attributes
-
alias for
attr.attributes
(Attributes)
Citation
Single citation entry
Values of this type can be created with the pandoc.Citation
constructor.
Citation values are equal in Lua if and only if they are equal in Haskell.
Fields:
ColSpec
Column alignment and width specification for a single table column.
This is a pair, i.e., a plain table, with the following components:
- cell alignment (Alignment).
- table column width, as a fraction of the page width (number).
ListAttributes
List attributes
Values of this type can be created with the pandoc.ListAttributes
constructor.
Fields:
start
- number of the first list item (integer)
style
-
style used for list numbers; possible values are
DefaultStyle
,Example
,Decimal
,LowerRoman
,UpperRoman
,LowerAlpha
, andUpperAlpha
(string) delimiter
-
delimiter of list numbers; one of
DefaultDelim
,Period
,OneParen
, andTwoParens
(string)
Row
A table row.
Fields:
TableBody
A body of a table, with an intermediate head and the specified number of row header columns.
Fields:
TableFoot
The foot of a table.
Fields:
attr
- element attributes (Attr)
rows
- list of rows (List of Rows)
identifier
-
alias for
attr.identifier
(string) classes
-
alias for
attr.classes
(List of strings) attributes
-
alias for
attr.attributes
(Attributes)
TableHead
The head of a table.
Fields:
attr
- element attributes (Attr)
rows
- list of rows (List of Rows)
identifier
-
alias for
attr.identifier
(string) classes
-
alias for
attr.classes
(List of strings) attributes
-
alias for
attr.attributes
(Attributes)
ReaderOptions
Pandoc reader options
Fields:
abbreviations
- set of known abbreviations (set of strings)
columns
- number of columns in terminal (integer)
default_image_extension
- default extension for images (string)
extensions
- string representation of the syntax extensions bit field (sequence of strings)
indented_code_classes
- default classes for indented code blocks (list of strings)
standalone
- whether the input was a standalone document with header (boolean)
strip_comments
- HTML comments are stripped instead of parsed as raw HTML (boolean)
tab_stop
- width (i.e. equivalent number of spaces) of tab stops (integer)
track_changes
-
track changes setting for docx; one of
accept-changes
,reject-changes
, andall-changes
(string)
WriterOptions
Pandoc writer options
Fields:
chunk_template
- Template used to generate chunked HTML filenames (string)
cite_method
- How to print cites – one of ‘citeproc’, ‘natbib’, or ‘biblatex’ (string)
columns
- Characters in a line (for text wrapping) (integer)
dpi
- DPI for pixel to/from inch/cm conversions (integer)
email_obfuscation
- How to obfuscate emails – one of ‘none’, ‘references’, or ‘javascript’ (string)
epub_chapter_level
- Header level for chapters, i.e., how the document is split into separate files (integer)
epub_fonts
- Paths to fonts to embed (sequence of strings)
epub_metadata
- Metadata to include in EPUB (string|nil)
epub_subdirectory
- Subdir for epub in OCF (string)
extensions
- Markdown extensions that can be used (sequence of strings)
highlight_style
-
Style to use for highlighting; see the output of
pandoc --print-highlight-style=...
for an example structure. The valuenil
means that no highlighting is used. (table|nil) html_math_method
-
How to print math in HTML; one ‘plain’, ‘gladtex’, ‘webtex’,
‘mathml’, ‘mathjax’, or a table with keys
method
andurl
. (string|table) html_q_tags
-
Use
<q>
tags for quotes in HTML (boolean) identifier_prefix
- Prefix for section & note ids in HTML and for footnote marks in markdown (string)
incremental
- True if lists should be incremental (boolean)
listings
- Use listings package for code (boolean)
number_offset
- Starting number for section, subsection, … (sequence of integers)
number_sections
- Number sections in LaTeX (boolean)
prefer_ascii
- Prefer ASCII representations of characters when possible (boolean)
reference_doc
- Path to reference document if specified (string|nil)
reference_links
- Use reference links in writing markdown, rst (boolean)
reference_location
- Location of footnotes and references for writing markdown; one of ‘end-of-block’, ‘end-of-section’, ‘end-of-document’. The common prefix may be omitted when setting this value. (string)
section_divs
- Put sections in div tags in HTML (boolean)
setext_headers
- Use setext headers for levels 1-2 in markdown (boolean)
slide_level
- Force header level of slides (integer|nil)
tab_stop
- Tabstop for conversion btw spaces and tabs (integer)
table_of_contents
- Include table of contents (boolean)
template
- Template to use (Template|nil)
toc_depth
- Number of levels to include in TOC (integer)
top_level_division
-
Type of top-level divisions; one of ‘top-level-part’,
‘top-level-chapter’, ‘top-level-section’, or ‘top-level-default’.
The prefix
top-level
may be omitted when setting this value. (string) variables
- Variables to set in template; string-indexed table (table)
wrap_text
-
Option for wrapping text; one of ‘wrap-auto’, ‘wrap-none’, or
‘wrap-preserve’. The
wrap-
prefix may be omitted when setting this value. (string)
CommonState
The state used by pandoc to collect information and make it available to readers and writers.
Fields:
input_files
- List of input files from command line (List of strings)
output_file
- Output file from command line (string or nil)
log
- A list of log messages in reverse order (List of LogMessages)
request_headers
- Headers to add for HTTP requests; table with header names as keys and header contents as value (table)
resource_path
- Path to search for resources like included images (List of strings)
source_url
- Absolute URL or directory of first source file (string or nil)
user_data_dir
- Directory to search for data files (string or nil)
trace
- Whether tracing messages are issued (boolean)
verbosity
-
Verbosity level; one of
INFO
,WARNING
,ERROR
(string)
Doc
Reflowable plain-text document. A Doc value can be rendered and reflown to fit a given column width.
The pandoc.layout
module can be
used to create and modify Doc values. All functions in that module
that take a Doc value as their first argument are also available
as Doc methods. E.g., (pandoc.layout.literal 'text'):render()
.
If a string is passed to a function expecting a Doc, then the string is treated as a literal value. I.e., the following two lines are equivalent:
test = pandoc.layout.quotes(pandoc.layout.literal 'this')
test = pandoc.layout.quotes('this')
Operators
..
Concatenate two Doc
elements.
+
Concatenate two Doc
s,
inserting a reflowable space between them.
/
If a
and b
are Doc
elements, then a / b
puts a
above b
.
//
If a
and b
are Doc
elements, then a // b
puts a
above b
, inserting a blank line
between them.
List
A list is any Lua table with integer indices. Indices start at
one, so if alist = {'value'}
then alist[1] == 'value'
.
Lists, when part of an element, or when generated during
marshaling, are made instances of the pandoc.List
type for
convenience. The pandoc.List
type is defined in
the pandoc.List module.
See there for available methods.
Values of this type can be created with the pandoc.List
constructor,
turning a normal Lua table into a List.
LogMessage
A pandoc log message. Objects have no fields, but can be
converted to a string via tostring
.
SimpleTable
A simple table is a table structure which resembles the old
(pre pandoc 2.10) Table type. Bi-directional conversion from and
to Tables is possible with the pandoc.utils.to_simple_table
and pandoc.utils.from_simple_table
function, respectively. Instances of this type can also be created
directly with the pandoc.SimpleTable
constructor.
Fields:
Template
Opaque type holding a compiled template.
Version
A version object. This represents a software version like
“2.7.3”. The object behaves like a numerically indexed table,
i.e., if version
represents the version 2.7.3
, then
version[1] == 2
version[2] == 7
version[3] == 3
#version == 3 -- length
Comparisons are performed element-wise, i.e.
Version '1.12' > Version '1.9'
Values of this type can be created with the pandoc.types.Version
constructor.
must_be_at_least
must_be_at_least(actual, expected [, error_message])
Raise an error message if the actual version is older than the
expected version; does nothing if actual
is equal to or newer
than the expected version.
Parameters:
actual
- actual version specifier (Version)
expected
- minimum expected version (Version)
error_message
-
optional error message template. The string is used as format
string, with the expected and actual versions as arguments.
Defaults to
"expected version %s or newer, got %s"
.
Usage:
PANDOC_VERSION:must_be_at_least '2.7.3'
PANDOC_API_VERSION:must_be_at_least(
'1.17.4',
'pandoc-types is too old: expected version %s, got %s'
)
Chunk
Part of a document; usually chunks are each written to a separate file.
Fields:
heading
- heading text (Inlines)
id
- identifier (string)
level
- level of topmost heading in chunk (integer)
number
- chunk number (integer)
section_number
- hierarchical section number (string)
path
- target filepath for this chunk (string)
up
- link to the enclosing section, if any (Chunk|nil)
prev
- link to the previous section, if any (Chunk|nil)
next
- link to the next section, if any (Chunk|nil)
unlisted
- whether the section in this chunk should be listed in the TOC even if the chunk has no section number. (boolean)
contents
- the chunk’s block contents (Blocks)
ChunkedDoc
A Pandoc document divided into Chunks.
The table of contents info in field toc
is rose-tree structure
represented as a list. The node item is always placed at index
0
; subentries make up the
rest of the list. Each node item contains the fields title
(Inlines), number
(string|nil), id
(string), path
(string), and level
(integer).
Fields:
Module pandoc
Fields and functions for pandoc scripts; includes constructors for document tree elements, functions to parse text in a given format, and functions to filter and modify a subtree.
Fields
readers
Set of formats that pandoc can parse. All keys in this table
can be used as the format
value in pandoc.read
.
(table)
writers
Set of formats that pandoc can generate. All keys in this table
can be used as the format
value in pandoc.write
.
(table)
Functions
Pandoc
Pandoc (blocks[, meta])
Parameters:
Returns:
- new Pandoc document (Pandoc)
Meta
Meta (meta)
Parameters:
meta
- table containing meta information (table)
Returns:
- new Meta table (table)
MetaBlocks
MetaBlocks (content)
Creates a value to be used as a MetaBlocks value in meta data;
creates a copy of the input list via pandoc.Blocks
, discarding all
non-list keys.
Parameters:
content
- block content (Blocks)
Returns:
- list of Block elements (Blocks)
MetaBool
MetaBool (bool)
Parameters:
bool
- true or false (boolean)
Returns:
- input, unchanged (boolean)
MetaInlines
MetaInlines (inlines)
Creates a value to be used as a MetaInlines value in meta data;
creates a copy of the input list via pandoc.Inlines
, discarding all
non-list keys.
Parameters:
inlines
- inline elements (Inlines)
Returns:
- list of Inline elements (Inlines)
MetaList
MetaList (values)
Creates a value to be used as a MetaList in meta data; creates
a copy of the input list via pandoc.List
, discarding all
non-list keys.
Parameters:
Returns:
- list of meta values (List)
MetaMap
MetaMap (key_value_map)
Creates a value to be used as a MetaMap in meta data; creates a copy of the input table, keeping only pairs with string keys and discards all other keys.
Parameters:
key_value_map
- a string-indexed map of meta values (table)
Returns:
- map of meta values (table)
MetaString
MetaString (s)
Creates a value to be used as a MetaString in meta data; this is the identity function for boolean values and exists only for completeness.
Parameters:
s
- string value (string)
Returns:
- unchanged input (string)
BlockQuote
BlockQuote (content)
Creates a block quote element
Parameters:
content
- block content (Blocks)
Returns:
- BlockQuote element (Block)
BulletList
BulletList (items)
Creates a bullet list.
Parameters:
items
- list items ({Blocks,...})
Returns:
- BulletList element (Block)
CodeBlock
CodeBlock (text[, attr])
Creates a code block element.
Parameters:
text
- code string (string)
attr
- element attributes (Attr)
Returns:
- CodeBlock element (Block)
DefinitionList
DefinitionList (content)
Creates a definition list, containing terms and their explanation.
Parameters:
content
- definition items ({{Inlines, {Blocks,...}},...})
Returns:
- DefinitionList element (Block)
Div
Div (content[, attr])
Creates a div element
Parameters:
Returns:
- Div element (Block)
Figure
Figure (content[, caption[, attr]])
Creates a Figure element.
Parameters:
content
- figure block content (Blocks)
caption
- figure caption (Caption)
attr
- element attributes (Attr)
Returns:
- Figure object (Block)
Header
Header (level, content[, attr])
Creates a header element.
Parameters:
Returns:
- Header element (Block)
HorizontalRule
HorizontalRule ()
Creates a horizontal rule.
Returns:
- HorizontalRule element (Block)
LineBlock
LineBlock (content)
Creates a line block element.
Parameters:
content
- lines ({Inlines,...})
Returns:
- LineBlock element (Block)
OrderedList
OrderedList (items[, listAttributes])
Creates an ordered list.
Parameters:
items
- list items ({Blocks,...})
listAttributes
- list parameters (ListAttributes)
Returns:
- OrderedList element (Block)
Para
Para (content)
Creates a para element.
Parameters:
content
- inline content (Inlines)
Returns:
- Para element (Block)
Plain
Plain (content)
Creates a plain element.
Parameters:
content
- inline content (Inlines)
Returns:
- Plain element (Block)
RawBlock
RawBlock (format, text)
Creates a raw content block of the specified format.
Parameters:
format
- format of content (string)
text
- raw content (string)
Returns:
- RawBlock element (Block)
Table
Table (caption, colspecs, head, bodies, foot[, attr])
Creates a table element.
Parameters:
caption
- table caption (Caption)
colspecs
- column alignments and widths ({ColSpec,...})
head
- table head (TableHead)
bodies
- table bodies ({TableBody,...})
foot
- table foot (TableFoot)
attr
- element attributes (Attr)
Returns:
- Table element (Block)
Blocks
Blocks (block_like_elements)
Creates a Blocks list.
Parameters:
block_like_elements
- List where each element can be treated as a Block value, or a single such value. (Blocks)
Returns:
- list of block elements (Blocks)
Cite
Cite (Inlines, citations)
Creates a Cite inline element
Parameters:
Inlines
- placeholder content (content)
citations
- List of Citations ({Citation,...})
Returns:
- cite element (Inline)
Code
Code (code[, attr])
Creates a Code inline element
Parameters:
code
- code string (string)
attr
- additional attributes (Attr)
Returns:
- code element (Inline)
Emph
Emph (content)
Creates an inline element representing emphasized text.
Parameters:
content
- inline content (Inlines)
Returns:
- new object (Inline)
Image
Image (caption, src[, title[, attr]])
Creates an Image element
Parameters:
caption
- text used to describe the image (Inlines)
src
- path to the image file (string)
title
- brief image description (string)
attr
- image attributes (Attr)
Returns:
- Image element (Inline)
LineBreak
LineBreak ()
Create a LineBreak inline element
Returns:
- line break (Inline)
Link
Link (content, target[, title[, attr]])
Creates a link inline element, usually a hyperlink.
Parameters:
content
- text for this link (Inlines)
target
- the link target (string)
title
- brief link description (string)
attr
- link attributes (Attr)
Returns:
- link element (Inline)
Math
Math (mathtype, text)
Creates a Math element, either inline or displayed.
Parameters:
mathtype
- rendering specifier (MathType)
text
- math content (string)
Returns:
- math element (Inline)
Note
Note (content)
Creates a Note inline element
Parameters:
content
- footnote block content (Blocks)
Returns:
- note (Inline)
Quoted
Quoted (quotetype, content)
Creates a Quoted inline element given the quote type and quoted content.
Parameters:
quotetype
- type of quotes (QuoteType)
content
- inlines in quotes (Inlines)
Returns:
- quoted element (Inline)
RawInline
RawInline (format, text)
Creates a raw inline element
Parameters:
format
- format of content (string)
text
- string content (string)
Returns:
- raw inline element (Inline)
SmallCaps
SmallCaps (content)
Creates text rendered in small caps
Parameters:
content
- inline content (Inlines)
Returns:
- new object (Inline)
SoftBreak
SoftBreak ()
Creates a SoftBreak inline element.
Returns:
- soft break (Inline)
Space
Space ()
Create a Space inline element
Returns:
- new space (Inline)
Span
Span (content[, attr])
Creates a Span inline element
Parameters:
Returns:
Str
Str (text)
Creates a Str inline element
Parameters:
text
- (string)
Returns:
Strikeout
Strikeout (content)
Creates text which is struck out.
Parameters:
content
- inline content (Inlines)
Returns:
- new object (Inline)
Strong
Strong (content)
Creates a Strong element, whose text is usually displayed in a bold font.
Parameters:
content
- inline content (Inlines)
Returns:
- new object (Inline)
Subscript
Subscript (content)
Creates a Subscript inline element
Parameters:
content
- inline content (Inlines)
Returns:
- new object (Inline)
Superscript
Superscript (content)
Creates a Superscript inline element
Parameters:
content
- inline content (Inlines)
Returns:
- new object (Inline)
Underline
Underline (content)
Creates an Underline inline element
Parameters:
content
- inline content (Inlines)
Returns:
- new object (Inline)
Inlines
Inlines (inline_like_elements)
Converts its argument into an Inlines list:
- copies a list of Inline elements
into a fresh list; any string
s
within the list is treated aspandoc.Str(s)
; - turns a single Inline into a singleton list;
- splits a string into
Str
-wrapped words, treating interword spaces asSpace
s orSoftBreak
s.
Parameters:
inline_like_elements
- List where each element can be treated as an Inline value, or just a single such value. (Inlines)
Returns:
- list of inline elements (Inlines)
Attr
Attr ([identifier[, classes[, attributes]]])
Create a new set of attributes
Parameters:
identifier
- element identifier (string|table|Attr)
classes
- element classes ({string,...})
attributes
- table containing string keys and values (table|AttributeList)
Returns:
- new Attr object (Attr)
Cell
Cell (blocks[, align[, rowspan[, colspan[, attr]]]])
Create a new table cell.
Parameters:
blocks
- cell contents (Blocks)
align
-
text alignment; defaults to
AlignDefault
(Alignment) rowspan
-
number of rows occupied by the cell; defaults to
1
(integer) colspan
-
number of columns occupied by the cell; defaults to
1
(integer) attr
- cell attributes (Attr)
Returns:
- new Cell object (Cell)
AttributeList
AttributeList (attribs)
Parameters:
attribs
- an attribute list (table|AttributeList)
Returns:
- new AttributeList object (AttributeList)
Citation
Citation (id, mode[, prefix[, suffix[, note_num[, hash]]]])
Creates a single citation.
Parameters:
id
- citation ID (e.g. BibTeX key) (string)
mode
- citation rendering mode (CitationMode)
prefix
- (Inlines)
suffix
- (Inlines)
note_num
- note number (integer)
hash
- hash number (integer)
Returns:
- new citation object (Citation)
ListAttributes
ListAttributes ([start[, style[, delimiter]]])
Creates a new ListAttributes object.
Parameters:
start
- number of the first list item (integer)
style
- style used for list numbering (string)
delimiter
- delimiter of list numbers (string)
Returns:
- new ListAttributes object (ListAttributes)
Row
Row ([cells[, attr]])
Creates a table row.
Parameters:
Returns:
- new Row object (Row)
TableFoot
TableFoot ([rows[, attr]])
Creates a table foot.
Parameters:
Returns:
- new TableFoot object (TableFoot)
TableHead
TableHead ([rows[, attr]])
Creates a table head.
Parameters:
Returns:
- new TableHead object (TableHead)
SimpleTable
SimpleTable (caption, align, widths, header, rows)
Usage:
local caption = "Overview"
local aligns = {pandoc.AlignDefault, pandoc.AlignDefault}
local widths = {0, 0} -- let pandoc determine col widths
local headers = {{pandoc.Plain({pandoc.Str "Language"})},
{pandoc.Plain({pandoc.Str "Typing"})}}
local rows = {
{{pandoc.Plain "Haskell"}, {pandoc.Plain "static"}},
{{pandoc.Plain "Lua"}, {pandoc.Plain "Dynamic"}},
}
simple_table = pandoc.SimpleTable(
caption,
aligns,
widths,
headers,
rows
)
Parameters:
caption
- table caption (Inlines)
align
- column alignments ({Alignment,...})
widths
- relative column widths ({number,...})
header
- table header row ({Blocks,...})
rows
- table rows ({{Blocks,...},...})
Returns:
- new SimpleTable object (SimpleTable)
Constants
-
Author name is mentioned in the text.
See also: Citation
-
Author name is suppressed.
See also: Citation
NormalCitation
-
Default citation style is used.
See also: Citation
DisplayMath
-
Math style identifier, marking that the formula should be show in “display” style, i.e., on a separate line.
See also: Math
InlineMath
-
Math style identifier, marking that the formula should be show inline.
See also: Math
SingleQuote
-
Quote type used with Quoted, indicating that the string is enclosed in single quotes.
See also: Quoted
DoubleQuote
-
Quote type used with Quoted, indicating that the string is enclosed in double quotes.
See also: Quoted
AlignLeft
-
Table cells aligned left.
See also: Table
AlignRight
-
Table cells right-aligned.
See also: Table
AlignCenter
-
Table cell content is centered.
See also: Table
AlignDefault
-
Table cells are alignment is unaltered.
See also: Table
DefaultDelim
-
Default list number delimiters are used.
See also: ListAttributes
Period
-
List numbers are delimited by a period.
See also: ListAttributes
OneParen
-
List numbers are delimited by a single parenthesis.
See also: ListAttributes
TwoParens
-
List numbers are delimited by a double parentheses.
See also: ListAttributes
DefaultStyle
-
List are numbered in the default style
See also: ListAttributes
Example
-
List items are numbered as examples.
See also: ListAttributes
Decimal
-
List are numbered using decimal integers.
See also: ListAttributes
LowerRoman
-
List are numbered using lower-case roman numerals.
See also: ListAttributes
UpperRoman
-
List are numbered using upper-case roman numerals
See also: ListAttributes
LowerAlpha
-
List are numbered using lower-case alphabetic characters.
See also: ListAttributes
UpperAlpha
-
List are numbered using upper-case alphabetic characters.
See also: ListAttributes
sha1
-
Alias for
pandoc.utils.sha1
(DEPRECATED, usepandoc.utils.sha1
instead).
Other constructors
ReaderOptions (opts)
Creates a new ReaderOptions value.
Parameters
opts
- Either a table with a subset of the properties of a ReaderOptions object, or another ReaderOptions object. Uses the defaults specified in the manual for all properties that are not explicitly specified. Throws an error if a table contains properties which are not present in a ReaderOptions object. (ReaderOptions|table)
Returns: new ReaderOptions object
Usage:
-- copy of the reader options that were defined on the command line.
local cli_opts = pandoc.ReaderOptions(PANDOC_READER_OPTIONS)
-- default reader options, but columns set to 66.
local short_colums_opts = pandoc.ReaderOptions {columns = 66}
WriterOptions (opts)
Creates a new WriterOptions value.
Parameters
opts
- Either a table with a subset of the properties of a WriterOptions object, or another WriterOptions object. Uses the defaults specified in the manual for all properties that are not explicitly specified. Throws an error if a table contains properties which are not present in a WriterOptions object. (WriterOptions|table)
Returns: new WriterOptions object
Usage:
-- copy of the writer options that were defined on the command line.
local cli_opts = pandoc.WriterOptions(PANDOC_WRITER_OPTIONS)
-- default writer options, but DPI set to 300.
local short_colums_opts = pandoc.WriterOptions {dpi = 300}
Helper functions
pipe (command, args, input)
Runs command with arguments, passing it some input, and returns the output.
Parameters:
command
- program to run; the executable will be resolved using default system methods (string).
args
- list of arguments to pass to the program (list of strings).
input
- data which is piped into the program via stdin (string).
Returns:
- Output of command, i.e. data printed to stdout (string)
Raises:
- A table containing the keys
command
,error_code
, andoutput
is thrown if the command exits with a non-zero error code.
Usage:
local output = pandoc.pipe("sed", {"-e","s/a/b/"}, "abc")
walk_block (element, filter)
Apply a filter inside a block element, walking its contents. Returns a (deep) copy on which the filter has been applied: the original element is left untouched.
Parameters:
element
- the block element
filter
- a Lua filter (table of functions) to be applied within the block element
Returns: the transformed block element
walk_inline (element, filter)
Apply a filter inside an inline element, walking its contents. Returns a (deep) copy on which the filter has been applied: the original element is left untouched.
Parameters:
element
- the inline element
filter
- a Lua filter (table of functions) to be applied within the inline element
Returns: the transformed inline element
read (markup[, format[, reader_options]])
Parse the given string into a Pandoc document.
The parser is run in the same environment that was used to read the main input files; it has full access to the file-system and the mediabag. This means that if the document specifies files to be included, as is possible in formats like LaTeX, reStructuredText, and Org, then these will be included in the resulting document. Any media elements are added to those retrieved from the other parsed input files.
The format
parameter
defines the format flavor that will be parsed. This can be either
a string, using +
and
-
to enable and disable
extensions, or a table with fields format
(string) and extensions
(table). The extensions
table can be a list
of all enabled extensions, or a table with extensions as keys and
their activation status as values (true
or 'enable'
to enable an
extension, false
or 'disable'
to disable it).
Parameters:
markup
- the markup to be parsed (string|Sources)
format
-
format specification; defaults to
"markdown"
. See the description above for a complete description of this parameter. (string|table) reader_options
- options passed to the reader; may be a ReaderOptions object or a table with a subset of the keys and values of a ReaderOptions object; defaults to the default values documented in the manual. (ReaderOptions|table)
Returns: pandoc document (Pandoc)
Usage:
local org_markup = "/emphasis/" -- Input to be read
local document = pandoc.read(org_markup, "org")
-- Get the first block of the document
local block = document.blocks[1]
-- The inline element in that block is an `Emph`
assert(block.content[1].t == "Emph")
write (doc[, format[, writer_options]])
Converts a document to the given target format.
Parameters:
doc
- document to convert (Pandoc)
format
-
format specification; defaults to
"html"
. See the documentation ofpandoc.read
for a complete description of this parameter. (string|table) writer_options
- options passed to the writer; may be a WriterOptions object or a table with a subset of the keys and values of a WriterOptions object; defaults to the default values documented in the manual. (WriterOptions|table)
Returns: - converted document (string)
Usage:
local doc = pandoc.Pandoc(
{pandoc.Para {pandoc.Strong 'Tea'}}
)
local html = pandoc.write(doc, 'html')
assert(html == "<p><strong>Tea</strong></p>")
write_classic (doc[, writer_options])
Runs a classic custom Lua writer, using the functions defined in the current environment.
Parameters:
doc
- document to convert (Pandoc)
writer_options
- options passed to the writer; may be a WriterOptions object or a table with a subset of the keys and values of a WriterOptions object; defaults to the default values documented in the manual. (WriterOptions|table)
Returns: - converted document (string)
Usage:
-- Adding this function converts a classic writer into a
-- new-style custom writer.
function Writer (doc, opts)
PANDOC_DOCUMENT = doc
PANDOC_WRITER_OPTIONS = opts
loadfile(PANDOC_SCRIPT_FILE)()
return pandoc.write_classic(doc, opts)
end
Module pandoc.cli
Command line options and argument parsing.
Fields
default_options
Default CLI options, using a JSON-like representation. (table)
Functions
parse_options
parse_options (args)
Parses command line arguments into pandoc options. Typically
this function will be used in stand-alone pandoc Lua scripts,
taking the list of arguments from the global arg
.
Parameters:
args
- list of command line arguments ({string,...})
Returns:
- parsed options, using their JSON-like representation. (table)
Since: 3.0
repl
repl ([env])
Starts a read-eval-print loop (REPL). The function returns all
values of the last evaluated input. Exit the REPL by pressing
ctrl-d
or ctrl-c
; press F1
to get a list of all key
bindings.
The REPL is started in the global namespace, unless the env
parameter is specified. In
that case, the global namespace is merged into the given table and
the result is used as _ENV
value for the repl.
Specifically, local variables cannot be accessed,
unless they are explicitly passed via the env
parameter; e.g.
function Pandoc (doc)
-- start repl, allow to access the `doc` parameter
-- in the repl
return pandoc.cli.repl{ doc = doc }
end
Note: it seems that the function exits immediately on Windows, without prompting for user input.
Parameters:
env
- Extra environment; the global environment is merged into this table. (table)
Returns:
The result(s) of the last evaluated input, or nothing if the last input resulted in an error.
Since: 3.1.2
Module pandoc.utils
This module exposes internal pandoc functions and utility functions.
Functions
blocks_to_inlines
blocks_to_inlines (blocks[, sep])
Squash a list of blocks into a list of inlines.
Usage
local blocks = {
pandoc.Para{ pandoc.Str 'Paragraph1' },
pandoc.Para{ pandoc.Emph 'Paragraph2' }
}
local inlines = pandoc.utils.blocks_to_inlines(blocks)
assert(
inlines == pandoc.Inlines {
pandoc.Str 'Paragraph1',
pandoc.Linebreak(),
pandoc.Emph{ pandoc.Str 'Paragraph2' }
}
)
Parameters:
blocks
- List of Block elements to be flattened. (Blocks)
sep
-
List of Inline elements inserted as
separator between two consecutive blocks; defaults to
{pandoc.LineBreak()}
. (Inlines)
Returns:
- (Inlines)
Since: 2.2.3
citeproc
citeproc (doc)
Process the citations in the file, replacing them with rendered citations and adding a bibliography. See the manual section on citation rendering for details.
Usage:
-- Lua filter that behaves like `--citeproc`
function Pandoc (doc)
return pandoc.utils.citeproc(doc)
end
Parameters:
doc
- document (Pandoc)
Returns:
- processed document (Pandoc)
Since: 2.19.1
equals
equals (element1, element2)
Test equality of AST elements. Elements in Lua are considered equal if and only if the objects obtained by unmarshaling are equal.
This function is deprecated. Use the normal
Lua ==
equality operator
instead.
Parameters:
element1
- (any)
element2
- (any)
Returns:
- Whether the two objects represent the same element (boolean)
Since: 2.5
from_simple_table
from_simple_table (simple_tbl)
Creates a Table block element from a SimpleTable. This is useful for dealing with legacy code which was written for pandoc versions older than 2.10.
Usage:
local simple = pandoc.SimpleTable(table)
-- modify, using pre pandoc 2.10 methods
simple.caption = pandoc.SmallCaps(simple.caption)
-- create normal table block again
table = pandoc.utils.from_simple_table(simple)
Parameters:
simple_tbl
- (SimpleTable)
Returns:
- table block element (Block)
Since: 2.11
make_sections
make_sections (number_sections, baselevel, blocks)
Converts a list of Block elements
into sections. Div
s will
be created beginning at each Header
and containing following
content until the next Header
of comparable level. If
number_sections
is true,
a number
attribute will
be added to each Header
containing the section number. If base_level
is non-null, Header
levels will be
reorganized so that there are no gaps, and so that the base level
is the level specified.
Parameters:
number_sections
-
whether section divs should get an additional
number
attribute containing the section number. (boolean) baselevel
- shift top-level headings to this level (integer|nil)
blocks
- list of blocks to process (Blocks)
Returns:
- blocks with sections (Blocks)
Since: 2.8
normalize_date
normalize_date (date)
Parse a date and convert (if possible) to “YYYY-MM-DD” format. We limit years to the range 1601-9999 (ISO 8601 accepts greater than or equal to 1583, but MS Word only accepts dates starting 1601). Returns nil instead of a string if the conversion failed.
Parameters:
date
- the date string (string)
Returns:
- normalized date, or nil if normalization failed. (string or nil)
Since: 2.0.6
references
references (doc)
Get references defined inline in the metadata and via an
external bibliography. Only references that are actually cited in
the document (either with a genuine citation or with nocite
) are returned. URL
variables are converted to links.
The structure used represent reference values corresponds to
that used in CSL JSON; the return value can be use as references
metadata, which is
one of the values used by pandoc and citeproc when generating
bibliographies.
Usage:
-- Include all cited references in document
function Pandoc (doc)
doc.meta.references = pandoc.utils.references(doc)
doc.meta.bibliography = nil
return doc
end
Parameters:
doc
- document (Pandoc)
Returns:
- lift of references. (table)
Since: 2.17
run_json_filter
run_json_filter (doc, filter[, args])
Filter the given doc by passing it through a JSON filter.
Parameters:
doc
- the Pandoc document to filter (Pandoc)
filter
- filter to run (string)
args
-
list of arguments passed to the filter. Defaults to
{FORMAT}
. ({string,...})
Returns:
- filtered document (Pandoc)
Since: 2.1.1
run_lua_filter
run_lua_filter (doc, filter[, env])
Filter the given doc by passing it through a Lua filter.
The filter will be run in the current Lua process.
Parameters:
doc
- the Pandoc document to filter (Pandoc)
filter
- filepath of the filter to run (string)
env
- environment to load and run the filter in (table)
Returns:
- filtered document (Pandoc)
Since: 3.2.1
sha1
sha1 (input)
Computes the SHA1 hash of the given string input.
Parameters:
input
- (string)
Returns:
- hexadecimal hash value (string)
Since: 2.0.6
stringify
stringify (element)
Converts the given element (Pandoc, Meta, Block, or Inline) into a string with all formatting removed.
Parameters:
element
- some pandoc AST element (AST element)
Returns:
- A plain string representation of the given element. (string)
Since: 2.0.6
to_roman_numeral
to_roman_numeral (n)
Converts an integer < 4000 to uppercase roman numeral.
Usage:
local to_roman_numeral = pandoc.utils.to_roman_numeral
local pandoc_birth_year = to_roman_numeral(2006)
-- pandoc_birth_year == 'MMVI'
Parameters:
n
- positive integer below 4000 (integer)
Returns:
- A roman numeral. (string)
Since: 2.0.6
to_simple_table
to_simple_table (tbl)
Converts a table into an old/simple table.
Usage:
local simple = pandoc.utils.to_simple_table(table)
-- modify, using pre pandoc 2.10 methods
simple.caption = pandoc.SmallCaps(simple.caption)
-- create normal table block again
table = pandoc.utils.from_simple_table(simple)
Parameters:
tbl
- a table (Block)
Returns:
- SimpleTable object (SimpleTable)
Since: 2.11
type
type (value)
Pandoc-friendly version of Lua’s default type
function, returning type
information similar to what is presented in the manual.
The function works by checking the metafield __name
. If the argument has a
string-valued metafield __name
, then it returns that
string. Otherwise it behaves just like the normal type
function.
Usage:
-- Prints one of 'string', 'boolean', 'Inlines', 'Blocks',
-- 'table', and 'nil', corresponding to the Haskell constructors
-- MetaString, MetaBool, MetaInlines, MetaBlocks, MetaMap,
-- and an unset value, respectively.
function Meta (meta)
print('type of metavalue `author`:', pandoc.utils.type(meta.author))
end
Parameters:
value
- any Lua value (any)
Returns:
- type of the given value (string)
Since: 2.17
Version
Version (v)
Creates a Version object.
Parameters:
v
- version description (version string, list of integers, or integer)
Returns:
- new Version object (Version)
Module pandoc.mediabag
The pandoc.mediabag
module allows accessing pandoc’s media storage. The “media bag” is
used when pandoc is called with the --extract-media
or (for HTML
only) --embed-resources
option.
The module is loaded as part of module pandoc
and can either be
accessed via the pandoc.mediabag
field, or
explicitly required, e.g.:
local mb = require 'pandoc.mediabag'
Functions
delete
delete (filepath)
Removes a single entry from the media bag.
Parameters:
filepath
- Filename of the item to deleted. The media bag will be left unchanged if no entry with the given filename exists. (string)
Since: 2.7.3
empty
empty ()
Clear-out the media bag, deleting all items.
Since: 2.7.3
fetch
fetch (source)
Fetches the given source from a URL or local file. Returns two values: the contents of the file and the MIME type (or an empty string).
The function will first try to retrieve source
from the mediabag; if
that fails, it will try to download it or read it from the local
file system while respecting pandoc’s “resource path” setting.
Usage:
local diagram_url = 'https://pandoc.org/diagram.jpg'
local mt, contents = pandoc.mediabag.fetch(diagram_url)
Parameters:
source
- path to a resource; either a local file path or URI (string)
Returns:
- The entry’s MIME type, or
nil
if the file was not found. (string) - Contents of the file, or
nil
if the file was not found. (string)
Since: 2.0
fill
fill (doc)
Fills the mediabag with the images in the given document. An image that cannot be retrieved will be replaced with a Span of class “image” that contains the image description.
Images for which the mediabag already contains an item will not be processed again.
Parameters:
doc
- document from which to fill the mediabag (Pandoc)
Returns:
- modified document (Pandoc)
Since: 2.19
insert
insert (filepath, mimetype, contents)
Adds a new entry to pandoc’s media bag. Replaces any existing
media bag entry the same filepath
.
Usage:
local fp = 'media/hello.txt'
local mt = 'text/plain'
local contents = 'Hello, World!'
pandoc.mediabag.insert(fp, mt, contents)
Parameters:
filepath
- filename and path relative to the output folder. (string)
mimetype
- the item’s MIME type; omit if unknown or unavailable. (string)
contents
- the binary contents of the file. (string)
Since: 2.0
items
items ()
Returns an iterator triple to be used with Lua’s generic for
statement. The iterator
returns the filepath, MIME type, and content of a media bag item
on each invocation. Items are processed one-by-one to avoid
excessive memory use.
This function should be used only when full access to all
items, including their contents, is required. For all other cases,
list
should be
preferred.
Usage:
for fp, mt, contents in pandoc.mediabag.items() do
-- print(fp, mt, contents)
end
Returns:
Iterator triple:
- The iterator function; must be called with the iterator state and the current iterator value.
- Iterator state – an opaque value to be passed to the iterator function.
- Initial iterator value.
Since: 2.7.3
list
list ()
Get a summary of the current media bag contents.
Usage:
-- calculate the size of the media bag.
local mb_items = pandoc.mediabag.list()
local sum = 0
for i = 1, #mb_items do
sum = sum + mb_items[i].length
end
print(sum)
Returns:
- A list of elements summarizing each entry in the media bag.
The summary item contains the keys
path
,type
, andlength
, giving the filepath, MIME type, and length of contents in bytes, respectively. (table)
Since: 2.0
lookup
lookup (filepath)
Lookup a media item in the media bag, and return its MIME type and contents.
Usage:
local filename = 'media/diagram.png'
local mt, contents = pandoc.mediabag.lookup(filename)
Parameters:
filepath
- name of the file to look up. (string)
Returns:
- The entry’s MIME type, or nil if the file was not found. (string)
- Contents of the file, or nil if the file was not found. (string)
Since: 2.0
write
write (dir[, fp])
Writes the contents of mediabag to the given target directory.
If fp
is given, then only
the resource with the given name will be extracted. Omitting that
parameter means that the whole mediabag gets extracted. An error
is thrown if fp
is given
but cannot be found in the mediabag.
Parameters:
dir
- path of the target directory (string)
fp
- canonical name (relative path) of resource (string)
Since: 3.0
Module pandoc.List
This module defines pandoc’s list type. It comes with useful methods and convenience functions.
Constructor
pandoc.List([table])
-
Create a new List. If the optional argument
table
is given, set the metatable of that value topandoc.List
. This is an alias forpandoc.List:new([table])
.
Metamethods
pandoc.List:__concat (list)
Concatenates two lists.
Parameters:
list
- second list concatenated to the first
Returns: a new list containing all elements from list1 and list2
pandoc.List:__eq (a, b)
Compares two lists for equality. The lists are taken as equal if and only if they are of the same type (i.e., have the same non-nil metatable), have the same length, and if all elements are equal.
Parameters:
a
,b
- any Lua object
Returns:
true
if the two lists are equal,false
otherwise.
Methods
pandoc.List:at
:at (index[, default])
Returns the element at the given index, or default
if the list contains no
item at the given position.
Negative integers count back from the last item in the list.
Parameters:
index
- element position (integer)
default
- the default value that is returned if the index is out of range (any)
Returns:
- the list item at
index
, ordefault
.
pandoc.List:clone ()
Returns a (shallow) copy of the list. (To get a deep copy of
the list, use walk
with
an empty filter.)
pandoc.List:extend (list)
Adds the given list to the end of this list.
Parameters:
list
- list to appended
pandoc.List:find (needle, init)
Returns the value and index of the first occurrence of the given item.
Parameters:
needle
- item to search for
init
- index at which the search is started
Returns: first item equal to the needle, or nil if no such item exists.
pandoc.List:find_if (pred, init)
Returns the value and index of the first element for which the predicate holds true.
Parameters:
pred
- the predicate function
init
- index at which the search is started
Returns: first item for which `test` succeeds, or nil if no such item exists.
pandoc.List:filter (pred)
Returns a new list containing all items satisfying a given condition.
Parameters:
pred
- condition items must satisfy.
Returns: a new list containing all items for which `test` was true.
pandoc.List:includes (needle, init)
Checks if the list has an item equal to the given needle.
Parameters:
needle
- item to search for
init
- index at which the search is started
Returns: true if a list item is equal to the needle, false otherwise
pandoc.List:insert ([pos], value)
Inserts element value
at position pos
in list,
shifting elements to the next-greater index if necessary.
This function is identical to table.insert
.
Parameters:
pos
- index of the new value; defaults to length of the list + 1
value
- value to insert into the list
pandoc.List:map (fn)
Returns a copy of the current list by applying the given function to all elements.
Parameters:
fn
- function which is applied to all list items.
pandoc.List:new([table])
Create a new List. If the optional argument table
is given, set the
metatable of that value to pandoc.List
.
The function also accepts an iterator, in which case it creates a new list from the return values of the iterator function.
Parameters:
table
- table which should be treatable as a list; defaults to an empty table
Returns: the updated input value
pandoc.List:remove ([pos])
Removes the element at position pos
, returning the value of the
removed element.
This function is identical to table.remove
.
Parameters:
pos
- position of the list value that will be removed; defaults to the index of the last element
Returns: the removed element
pandoc.List:sort ([comp])
Sorts list elements in a given order, in-place. If comp
is given, then it must be
a function that receives two list elements and returns true when
the first element must come before the second in the final order
(so that, after the sort, i < j
implies not comp(list[j],list[i]))
. If
comp is not given, then the standard Lua operator <
is used instead.
Note that the comp function must define a strict partial order over the elements in the list; that is, it must be asymmetric and transitive. Otherwise, no valid sort may be possible.
The sort algorithm is not stable: elements considered equal by the given order may have their relative positions changed by the sort.
This function is identical to table.sort
.
Parameters:
comp
- Comparison function as described above.
Module pandoc.format
Information about the formats supported by pandoc.
Functions
all_extensions
all_extensions (format)
Returns the list of all valid extensions for a format. No distinction is made between input and output; an extension can have an effect when reading a format but not when writing it, or vice versa.
Parameters:
format
- format name (string)
Returns:
- all extensions supported for
format
(FormatExtensions)
Since: 3.0
default_extensions
default_extensions (format)
Returns the list of default extensions of the given format; this function does not check if the format is supported, it will return a fallback list of extensions even for unknown formats.
Parameters:
format
- format name (string)
Returns:
- default extensions enabled for
format
(FormatExtensions)
Since: 3.0
extensions
extensions (format)
Returns the extension configuration for the given format. The
configuration is represented as a table with all supported
extensions as keys and their default status as value, with true
indicating that the
extension is enabled by default, while false
marks a supported
extension that’s disabled.
This function can be used to assign a value to the Extensions
global in custom
readers and writers.
Parameters:
format
- format identifier (string)
Returns:
- extensions config (table)
Since: 3.0
from_path
from_path (path)
Parameters:
path
- file path, or list of paths (string|{string,...})
Returns:
- format determined by heuristic (string|nil)
Since: 3.1.2
Module pandoc.image
Basic image querying functions.
Functions
size
size (image[, opts])
Returns a table containing the size and resolution of an image; throws an error if the given string is not an image, or if the size of the image cannot be determined.
The resulting table has four entires: width, height, dpi_horz, and dpi_vert.
The opts
parameter,
when given, should be either a WriterOptions object such as PANDOC_WRITER_OPTIONS
, or a
table with a dpi
entry.
It affects the calculation for vector image formats such as
SVG.
Parameters:
image
- image data (string)
opts
- writer options (WriterOptions|table)
Returns:
- image size information or error message (table)
Since: 3.1.13
format
format (image)
Returns the format of an image as a lowercase string.
Formats recognized by pandoc include png, gif, tiff, jpeg, pdf, svg, eps, and emf.
Parameters:
image
- binary image data (string)
Returns:
- image format, or nil if the format cannot be determined (string|nil)
Since: 3.1.13
Module pandoc.json
JSON module to work with JSON; based on the Aeson Haskell package.
Fields
null
Value used to represent the null
JSON value. (light
userdata)
Functions
decode
decode (str[, pandoc_types])
Creates a Lua object from a JSON string. If the input can be
decoded as representing an Inline, Block, Pandoc,
Inlines, or Blocks element the function will return an
object of the appropriate type. Otherwise, if the input does not
represent any of the AST types, the default decoding is applied:
Objects and arrays are represented as tables, the JSON null
value becomes null, and JSON booleans, strings, and
numbers are converted using the Lua types of the same name.
The special handling of AST elements can be disabled by setting
pandoc_types
to false
.
Parameters:
str
- JSON string (string)
pandoc_types
- whether to use pandoc types when possible. (boolean)
Returns:
- decoded object (any)
Since: 3.1.1
encode
encode (object)
Encodes a Lua object as JSON string.
If the object has a metamethod with name __tojson
, then the result is
that of a call to that method with object
passed as the sole
argument. The result of that call is expected to be a valid JSON
string, but this is not checked.
Parameters:
object
- object to convert (any)
Returns:
- JSON encoding of the given
object
(string)
Since: 3.1.1
Module pandoc.log
Access to pandoc’s logging system.
Functions
info
info (message)
Reports a ScriptingInfo message to pandoc’s logging system.
Parameters:
message
- the info message (string)
Since: 3.2
silence
silence (fn)
Applies the function to the given arguments while preventing log messages from being added to the log. The warnings and info messages reported during the function call are returned as the first return value, with the results of the function call following thereafter.
Parameters:
fn
- function to be silenced (function)
Returns:
List of log messages triggered during the function call, and any value returned by the function.
Since: 3.2
warn
warn (message)
Reports a ScriptingWarning to pandoc’s logging system. The warning will be printed to stderr unless logging verbosity has been set to ERROR.
Parameters:
message
- the warning message (string)
Since: 3.2
Module pandoc.path
Module for file path manipulations.
Fields
separator
The character that separates directories. (string)
search_path_separator
The character that is used to separate the entries in the PATH
environment variable.
(string)
Functions
directory
directory (filepath)
Gets the directory name, i.e., removes the last directory separator and everything after from the given path.
Parameters:
filepath
- path (string)
Returns:
- The filepath up to the last directory separator. (string)
Since: 2.12
filename
filename (filepath)
Get the file name.
Parameters:
filepath
- path (string)
Returns:
- File name part of the input path. (string)
Since: 2.12
is_absolute
is_absolute (filepath)
Checks whether a path is absolute, i.e. not fixed to a root.
Parameters:
filepath
- path (string)
Returns:
true
ifffilepath
is an absolute path,false
otherwise. (boolean)
Since: 2.12
is_relative
is_relative (filepath)
Checks whether a path is relative or fixed to a root.
Parameters:
filepath
- path (string)
Returns:
true
ifffilepath
is a relative path,false
otherwise. (boolean)
Since: 2.12
join
join (filepaths)
Join path elements back together by the directory separator.
Parameters:
filepaths
- path components ({string,...})
Returns:
- The joined path. (string)
Since: 2.12
make_relative
make_relative (path, root[, unsafe])
Contract a filename, based on a relative path. Note that the
resulting path will never introduce ..
paths, as the presence of
symlinks means ../b
may
not reach a/b
if it
starts from a/c
. For a
worked example see this
blog post.
Parameters:
path
- path to be made relative (string)
root
- root path (string)
unsafe
-
whether to allow
..
in the result. (boolean)
Returns:
- contracted filename (string)
Since: 2.12
normalize
normalize (filepath)
Normalizes a path.
//
makes sense only as part of a (Windows) network drive; elsewhere, multiple slashes are reduced to a singlepath.separator
(platform dependent)./
becomespath.separator
(platform dependent)../
is removed.- an empty path becomes
.
Parameters:
filepath
- path (string)
Returns:
- The normalized path. (string)
Since: 2.12
split
split (filepath)
Splits a path by the directory separator.
Parameters:
filepath
- path (string)
Returns:
- List of all path components. ({string,...})
Since: 2.12
split_extension
split_extension (filepath)
Splits the last extension from a file path and returns the parts. The extension, if present, includes the leading separator; if the path has no extension, then the empty string is returned as the extension.
Parameters:
filepath
- path (string)
Returns:
- filepath without extension (string)
- extension or empty string (string)
Since: 2.12
split_search_path
split_search_path (search_path)
Takes a string and splits it on the search_path_separator
character. Blank items are ignored on Windows, and converted to
.
on Posix. On Windows
path elements are stripped of quotes.
Parameters:
search_path
- platform-specific search path (string)
Returns:
- list of directories in search path ({string,...})
Since: 2.12
treat_strings_as_paths
treat_strings_as_paths ()
Augment the string module such that strings can be used as path objects.
Since: 2.12
Module pandoc.structure
Access to the higher-level document structure, including hierarchical sections and the table of contents.
Functions
make_sections
make_sections (blocks[, opts])
Puts Blocks into a hierarchical structure: a list of sections (each a Div with class “section” and first element a Header).
The optional opts
argument can be a table; two settings are recognized: If number_sections
is true, a
number
attribute
containing the section number will be added to each Header
. If base_level
is an integer, then
Header
levels will be
reorganized so that there are no gaps, with numbering levels
shifted by the given value. Finally, an integer slide_level
value triggers the
creation of slides at that heading level.
Note that a WriterOptions
object can be passed as the opts table; this will set the number_section
and slide_level
values to those
defined on the command line.
Usage:
local blocks = {
pandoc.Header(2, pandoc.Str 'first'),
pandoc.Header(2, pandoc.Str 'second'),
}
local opts = PANDOC_WRITER_OPTIONS
local newblocks = pandoc.structure.make_sections(blocks, opts)
Parameters:
Returns:
- processed blocks (Blocks)
Since: 3.0
slide_level
slide_level (blocks)
Find level of header that starts slides (defined as the least header level that occurs before a non-header/non-hrule in the blocks).
Parameters:
Returns:
- slide level (integer)
Since: 3.0
split_into_chunks
split_into_chunks (doc[, opts])
Converts a Pandoc document into a ChunkedDoc.
Parameters:
doc
- document to split (Pandoc)
opts
-
Splitting options.
The following options are supported:
`path_template` : template used to generate the chunks' filepaths `%n` will be replaced with the chunk number (padded with leading 0s to 3 digits), `%s` with the section number of the heading, `%h` with the (stringified) heading text, `%i` with the section identifier. For example, `"section-%s-%i.html"` might be resolved to `"section-1.2-introduction.html"`. Default is `"chunk-%n"` (string) `number_sections` : whether sections should be numbered; default is `false` (boolean) `chunk_level` : The heading level the document should be split into chunks. The default is to split at the top-level, i.e., `1`. (integer) `base_heading_level` : The base level to be used for numbering. Default is `nil` (integer|nil)
(table)
Returns:
Since: 3.0
table_of_contents
table_of_contents (toc_source[, opts])
Generates a table of contents for the given object.
Parameters:
toc_source
- list of command line arguments (Blocks|Pandoc|ChunkedDoc)
opts
- options (WriterOptions)
Returns:
- Table of contents as a BulletList object (Block)
Since: 3.0
Module pandoc.system
Access to the system’s information and file functionality.
Fields
arch
The machine architecture on which the program is running. (string)
os
The operating system on which the program is running. (string)
Functions
cputime
cputime ()
Returns the number of picoseconds CPU time used by the current program. The precision of this result may vary in different versions and on different platforms.
Returns:
- CPU time in picoseconds (integer)
Since: 3.1.1
environment
environment ()
Retrieves the entire environment as a string-indexed table.
Returns:
- A table mapping environment variable names to their value. (table)
Since: 2.7.3
get_working_directory
get_working_directory ()
Obtain the current working directory as an absolute path.
Returns:
- The current working directory. (string)
Since: 2.8
list_directory
list_directory ([directory])
List the contents of a directory.
Parameters:
directory
-
Path of the directory whose contents should be listed. Defaults to
.
. (string)
Returns:
- A table of all entries in
directory
, except for the special entries (.
and..
). (table)
Since: 2.19
make_directory
make_directory (dirname[, create_parent])
Create a new directory which is initially empty, or as near to empty as the operating system allows. The function throws an error if the directory cannot be created, e.g., if the parent directory does not exist or if a directory of the same name is already present.
If the optional second parameter is provided and truthy, then all directories, including parent directories, are created as necessary.
Parameters:
dirname
- name of the new directory (string)
create_parent
- create parent directory if necessary (boolean)
Since: 2.19
remove_directory
remove_directory (dirname[, recursive])
Remove an existing, empty directory. If recursive
is given, then delete
the directory and its contents recursively.
Parameters:
dirname
- name of the directory to delete (string)
recursive
- delete content recursively (boolean)
Since: 2.19
with_environment
with_environment (environment, callback)
Run an action within a custom environment. Only the environment
variables given by environment
will be set, when
callback
is called. The
original environment is restored after this function finishes,
even if an error occurs while running the callback action.
Parameters:
environment
-
Environment variables and their values to be set before running
callback
(table) callback
- Action to execute in the custom environment (function)
Returns:
The results of the call to callback
.
Since: 2.7.3
with_temporary_directory
with_temporary_directory (parent_dir, templ, callback)
Create and use a temporary directory inside the given directory. The directory is deleted after the callback returns.
Parameters:
parent_dir
- Parent directory to create the directory in. If this parameter is omitted, the system’s canonical temporary directory is used. (string)
templ
- Directory name template. (string)
callback
- Function which takes the name of the temporary directory as its first argument. (function)
Returns:
The results of the call to callback
.
Since: 2.8
with_working_directory
with_working_directory (directory, callback)
Run an action within a different directory. This function will
change the working directory to directory
, execute callback
, then switch back to
the original working directory, even if an error occurs while
running the callback action.
Parameters:
directory
-
Directory in which the given
callback
should be executed (string) callback
- Action to execute in the given directory (function)
Returns:
The results of the call to callback
.
Since: 2.7.3
Module pandoc.layout
Plain-text document layouting.
Fields
blankline
Inserts a blank line unless one exists already. (Doc)
cr
A carriage return. Does nothing if we’re at the beginning of a line; otherwise inserts a newline. (Doc)
empty
The empty document. (Doc)
space
A breaking (reflowable) space. (Doc)
Functions
after_break
after_break (text)
Creates a Doc which is conditionally included only if it comes at the beginning of a line.
An example where this is useful is for escaping line-initial
.
in roff man.
Parameters:
text
- content to include when placed after a break (string)
Returns:
- new doc (Doc)
Since: 2.18
before_non_blank
before_non_blank (doc)
Conditionally includes the given doc
unless it is followed by a
blank space.
Parameters:
doc
- document (Doc)
Returns:
- conditional doc (Doc)
Since: 2.18
blanklines
blanklines (n)
Inserts blank lines unless they exist already.
Parameters:
n
- number of blank lines (integer)
Returns:
- conditional blank lines (Doc)
Since: 2.18
braces
braces (doc)
Puts the doc
in curly
braces.
Parameters:
doc
- document (Doc)
Returns:
doc
enclosed by {}. (Doc)
Since: 2.18
brackets
brackets (doc)
Puts the doc
in square
brackets
Parameters:
doc
- document (Doc)
Returns:
- doc enclosed by []. (Doc)
Since: 2.18
cblock
cblock (doc, width)
Creates a block with the given width and content, aligned centered.
Parameters:
doc
- document (Doc)
width
- block width in chars (integer)
Returns:
- doc, aligned centered in a block with max
width
chars per line. (Doc)
Since: 2.18
chomp
chomp (doc)
Chomps trailing blank space off of the doc
.
Parameters:
doc
- document (Doc)
Returns:
doc
without trailing blanks (Doc)
Since: 2.18
concat
concat (docs[, sep])
Concatenates a list of Doc
s.
Parameters:
docs
- list of Docs (`{Doc,...}`)
sep
- separator (default: none) (Doc)
Returns:
- concatenated doc (Doc)
Since: 2.18
double_quotes
double_quotes (doc)
Wraps a Doc
in double
quotes.
Parameters:
doc
- document (Doc)
Returns:
doc
enclosed by"
chars (Doc)
Since: 2.18
flush
flush (doc)
Makes a Doc
flush
against the left margin.
Parameters:
doc
- document (Doc)
Returns:
- flushed
doc
(Doc)
Since: 2.18
hang
hang (doc, ind, start)
Creates a hanging indent.
Parameters:
Returns:
doc
prefixed bystart
on the first line, subsequent lines indented byind
spaces. (Doc)
Since: 2.18
inside
inside (contents, start, end)
Encloses a Doc inside a start and end Doc.
Parameters:
Returns:
- enclosed contents (Doc)
Since: 2.18
lblock
lblock (doc, width)
Creates a block with the given width and content, aligned to the left.
Parameters:
doc
- document (Doc)
width
- block width in chars (integer)
Returns:
- doc put into block with max
width
chars per line. (Doc)
Since: 2.18
literal
literal (text)
Creates a Doc
from a
string.
Parameters:
text
- literal value (string)
Returns:
- doc contatining just the literal string (Doc)
Since: 2.18
nest
nest (doc, ind)
Indents a Doc
by the
specified number of spaces.
Parameters:
doc
- document (Doc)
ind
- indentation size (integer)
Returns:
doc
indented byind
spaces (Doc)
Since: 2.18
nestle
nestle (doc)
Removes leading blank lines from a Doc
.
Parameters:
doc
- document (Doc)
Returns:
doc
with leading blanks removed (Doc)
Since: 2.18
nowrap
nowrap (doc)
Makes a Doc
non-reflowable.
Parameters:
doc
- document (Doc)
Returns:
- same as input, but non-reflowable (Doc)
Since: 2.18
parens
parens (doc)
Puts the doc
in
parentheses.
Parameters:
doc
- document (Doc)
Returns:
- doc enclosed by (). (Doc)
Since: 2.18
prefixed
prefixed (doc, prefix)
Uses the specified string as a prefix for every line of the inside document (except the first, if not at the beginning of the line).
Parameters:
doc
- document (Doc)
prefix
- prefix for each line (string)
Returns:
- prefixed
doc
(Doc)
Since: 2.18
quotes
quotes (doc)
Wraps a Doc
in single
quotes.
Parameters:
doc
- document (Doc)
Returns:
- doc enclosed in
'
. (Doc)
Since: 2.18
rblock
rblock (doc, width)
Creates a block with the given width and content, aligned to the right.
Parameters:
doc
- document (Doc)
width
- block width in chars (integer)
Returns:
- doc, right aligned in a block with max
width
chars per line. (Doc)
Since: 2.18
vfill
vfill (border)
An expandable border that, when placed next to a box, expands to the height of the box. Strings cycle through the list provided.
Parameters:
border
- vertically expanded characters (string)
Returns:
- automatically expanding border Doc (Doc)
Since: 2.18
render
render (doc[, colwidth[, style]])
Render a Doc. The text is reflowed on breakable spaces to match the given line length. Text is not reflowed if the line line length parameter is omitted or nil.
Parameters:
doc
- document (Doc)
colwidth
-
Maximum number of characters per line. A value of
nil
, the default, means that the text is not reflown. (integer) style
-
Whether to generate plain text or ANSI terminal output. Must be
either
'plain'
or'ansi'
. Defaults to'plain'
. (string)
Returns:
- rendered doc (string)
Since: 2.18
is_empty
is_empty (doc)
Checks whether a doc is empty.
Parameters:
doc
- document (Doc)
Returns:
true
iffdoc
is the empty document,false
otherwise. (boolean)
Since: 2.18
height
height (doc)
Returns the height of a block or other Doc.
Parameters:
doc
- document (Doc)
Returns:
- doc height (integer|string)
Since: 2.18
min_offset
min_offset (doc)
Returns the minimal width of a Doc when reflowed at breakable spaces.
Parameters:
doc
- document (Doc)
Returns:
- minimal possible width (integer|string)
Since: 2.18
offset
offset (doc)
Returns the width of a Doc as number of characters.
Parameters:
doc
- document (Doc)
Returns:
- doc width (integer|string)
Since: 2.18
real_length
real_length (str)
Returns the real length of a string in a monospace font: 0 for a combining character, 1 for a regular character, 2 for an East Asian wide character.
Parameters:
str
- UTF-8 string to measure (string)
Returns:
- text length (integer|string)
Since: 2.18
update_column
update_column (doc, i)
Returns the column that would be occupied by the last laid out character.
Parameters:
doc
- document (Doc)
i
- start column (integer)
Returns:
- column number (integer|string)
Since: 2.18
bold
bold (doc)
Puts a Doc in boldface.
Parameters:
doc
- document (Doc)
Returns:
- bolded Doc (Doc)
Since: 3.4.1
italic
italic (doc)
Puts a Doc in italics.
Parameters:
doc
- document (Doc)
Returns:
- styled Doc (Doc)
Since: 3.4.1
underlined
underlined (doc)
Underlines a Doc.
Parameters:
doc
- document (Doc)
Returns:
- styled Doc (Doc)
Since: 3.4.1
strikeout
strikeout (doc)
Puts a line through the Doc.
Parameters:
doc
- document (Doc)
Returns:
- styled Doc (Doc)
Since: 3.4.1
fg
fg (doc, color)
Set the foreground color.
Parameters:
doc
- document (Doc)
color
- One of ‘black’, ‘red’, ‘green’, ‘yellow’, ‘blue’, ‘magenta’ ‘cyan’, or ‘white’. (string)
Returns:
- styled Doc (Doc)
Since: 3.4.1
bg
bg (doc, color)
Set the background color.
Parameters:
doc
- document (Doc)
color
- One of ‘black’, ‘red’, ‘green’, ‘yellow’, ‘blue’, ‘magenta’ ‘cyan’, or ‘white’. (string)
Returns:
- styled Doc (Doc)
Since: 3.4.1
Types
Doc
See the description above.
Module pandoc.scaffolding
Scaffolding for custom writers.
Fields
Writer
An object to be used as a Writer
function; the construct
handles most of the boilerplate, expecting only render functions
for all AST elements (table)
Module pandoc.text
UTF-8 aware text manipulation functions, implemented in Haskell.
The text module can also be loaded under the name text
, although this is
discouraged and deprecated.
-- uppercase all regular text in a document:
function Str (s)
s.text = pandoc.text.upper(s.text)
return s
end
Functions
fromencoding
fromencoding (s[, encoding])
Converts a string to UTF-8. The encoding
parameter specifies
the encoding of the input string. On Windows, that parameter
defaults to the current ANSI code page; on other platforms the
function will try to use the file system’s encoding.
The set of known encodings is system dependent, but includes at
least UTF-8
, UTF-16BE
, UTF-16LE
, UTF-32BE
, and UTF-32LE
. Note that the default
code page on Windows is available through CP0
.
Parameters:
s
- string to be converted (string)
encoding
- target encoding (string)
Returns:
- UTF-8 string (string)
Since: 3.0
len
len (s)
Returns the length of a UTF-8 string, i.e., the number of characters.
Parameters:
s
- UTF-8 encoded string (string)
Returns:
- length (integer|string)
Since: 2.0.3
lower
lower (s)
Returns a copy of a UTF-8 string, converted to lowercase.
Parameters:
s
- UTF-8 string to convert to lowercase (string)
Returns:
- Lowercase copy of
s
(string)
Since: 2.0.3
reverse
reverse (s)
Returns a copy of a UTF-8 string, with characters reversed.
Parameters:
s
- UTF-8 string to revert (string)
Returns:
- Reversed
s
(string)
Since: 2.0.3
sub
sub (s, i[, j])
Returns a substring of a UTF-8 string, using Lua’s string indexing rules.
Parameters:
s
- UTF-8 string (string)
i
- substring start position (integer)
j
- substring end position (integer)
Returns:
- text substring (string)
Since: 2.0.3
toencoding
toencoding (s[, enc])
Converts a UTF-8 string to a different encoding. The encoding
parameter defaults to
the current ANSI code page on Windows; on other platforms it will
try to guess the file system’s encoding.
The set of known encodings is system dependent, but includes at
least UTF-8
, UTF-16BE
, UTF-16LE
, UTF-32BE
, and UTF-32LE
. Note that the default
code page on Windows is available through CP0
.
Parameters:
s
- UTF-8 string (string)
enc
- target encoding (string)
Returns:
- re-encoded string (string)
Since: 3.0
upper
upper (s)
Returns a copy of a UTF-8 string, converted to uppercase.
Parameters:
s
- UTF-8 string to convert to uppercase (string)
Returns:
- Uppercase copy of
s
(string)
Since: 2.0.3
Module pandoc.template
Handle pandoc templates.
Functions
apply
apply (template, context)
Applies a context with variable assignments to a template,
returning the rendered template. The context
parameter must be a
table with variable names as keys and Doc,
string, boolean, or table as values, where the table can be either
be a list of the aforementioned types, or a nested context.
Parameters:
template
- template to apply (Template)
context
- variable values (table)
Returns:
- rendered template (Doc)
Since: 3.0
compile
compile (template[, templates_path])
Compiles a template string into a Template object usable by pandoc.
If the templates_path
parameter is specified, then it should be the file path associated
with the template. It is used when checking for partials. Partials
will be taken only from the default data files if this parameter
is omitted.
An error is raised if compilation fails.
Parameters:
template
- template string (string)
templates_path
- parameter to determine a default path and extension for partials; uses the data files templates path by default. (string)
Returns:
- compiled template (Template)
Since: 2.17
default
default ([writer])
Returns the default template for a given writer as a string. An error is thrown if no such template can be found.
Parameters:
writer
-
name of the writer for which the template should be retrieved;
defaults to the global
FORMAT
. (string)
Returns:
- raw template (string)
Since: 2.17
get
get (filename)
Retrieve text for a template.
This function first checks the resource paths for a file of
this name; if none is found, the templates
directory in the user
data directory is checked. Returns the content of the file, or
throws an error if no file is found.
Parameters:
filename
- name of the template (string)
Returns:
- content of template file (string)
Since: 3.2.1
meta_to_context
meta_to_context (meta, blocks_writer, inlines_writer)
Creates template context from the document’s Meta data, using the given functions to convert Blocks and Inlines to Doc values.
Parameters:
meta
- document metadata (Meta)
blocks_writer
- converter from Blocks to Doc values (function)
inlines_writer
- converter from Inlines to Doc values (function)
Returns:
- template context (table)
Since: 3.0
Module pandoc.types
Constructors for types that are not part of the pandoc AST.
Functions
Version
Version (version_specifier)
Parameters:
version_specifier
-
A version string like
'2.7.3'
, a Lua number like2.0
, a list of integers like{2,7,3}
, or a Version object. (string|number|{integer,...}|Version)
Returns:
- New Version object. (Version)
Since: 2.7.3
Module pandoc.zip
Functions to create, modify, and extract files from zip archives.
The module can be called as a function, in which case it
behaves like the zip
function described below.
Zip options are optional; when defined, they must be a table with any of the following keys:
recursive
: recurse directories when set totrue
;verbose
: print info messages to stdout;destination
: the value specifies the directory in which to extract;location
: value is used as path name, defining where files are placed.preserve_symlinks
: Boolean value, controlling whether symbolic links are preserved as such. This option is ignored on Windows.
Functions
Archive
Archive ([bytestring_or_entries])
Reads an Archive structure from a raw zip archive or a list of Entry items; throws an error if the given string cannot be decoded into an archive.
Parameters:
bytestring_or_entries
- binary archive data or list of entries; defaults to an empty list (string|{zip.Entry,...})
Returns:
- new Archive (zip.Archive)
Since: 3.0
Entry
Entry (path, contents[, modtime])
Generates a ZipEntry from a filepath, uncompressed content, and the file’s modification time.
Parameters:
path
- file path in archive (string)
contents
- uncompressed contents (string)
modtime
- modification time (integer)
Returns:
- a new zip archive entry (zip.Entry)
Since: 3.0
read_entry
read_entry (filepath[, opts])
Generates a ZipEntry from a file or directory.
Parameters:
filepath
- (string)
opts
- zip options (table)
Returns:
- a new zip archive entry (zip.Entry)
Since: 3.0
zip
zip (filepaths[, opts])
Package and compress the given files into a new Archive.
Parameters:
filepaths
- list of files from which the archive is created. ({string,...})
opts
- zip options (table)
Returns:
- a new archive (zip.Archive)
Since: 3.0
Types
zip.Archive
Properties
entries
Files in this zip archive ({zip.Entry,...})
Methods
bytestring
bytestring (self)
Returns the raw binary string representation of the archive.
Parameters:
self
- (zip.Archive)
Returns:
- bytes of the archive (string)
extract
extract (self[, opts])
Extract all files from this archive, creating directories as needed. Note that the last-modified time is set correctly only in POSIX, not in Windows. This function fails if encrypted entries are present.
Parameters:
self
- (zip.Archive)
opts
- zip options (table)
zip.Entry
Properties
modtime
Modification time (seconds since unix epoch) (integer)
path
Relative path, using /
as separator (zip.Entry)
Methods
contents
contents (self[, password])
Get the uncompressed contents of a zip entry. If password
is given, then that
password is used to decrypt the contents. An error is throws if
decrypting fails.
Parameters:
self
- (zip.Entry)
password
- password for entry (string)
Returns:
- binary contents (string)
symlink
symlink (self)
Returns the target if the Entry represents a symbolic link, and
nil
otherwise. Always
returns nil
on
Windows.
Parameters:
self
- (zip.Entry)
Returns:
- link target if entry represents a symbolic link (string|nil)