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pandoc 3.1.7 → 3.1.8

raw patch · 64 files changed

+7816/−8451 lines, 64 filesdep ~texmathPVP ok

version bump matches the API change (PVP)

Dependency ranges changed: texmath

API changes (from Hackage documentation)

Files

AUTHORS.md view
@@ -44,6 +44,7 @@ - Ben Steinberg - Beni Cherniavsky-Paskin - Benjamin Bray+- Benjamin Esham - Benjamin Wuethrich - Benoit Schweblin - Benson Muite
MANUAL.txt view
@@ -1,7 +1,7 @@ --- title: Pandoc User's Guide author: John MacFarlane-date: August 31, 2023+date: September 08, 2023 ---  # Synopsis
changelog.md view
@@ -1,5 +1,54 @@ # Revision history for pandoc +## pandoc 3.1.8 (2023-09-08)++  * JATS reader:++    + Ignore `<processing-meta>` element (#9057, Julia Diaz).+    + Fix conversion of date to ISO 8601 format (#8865).++  * LaTeX template:++    + Add code allow `\cite` to break across lines (#9050).+    + Fix regression with CSL `display="block"` (#7363).+      This restores the line break before the block.+    + Rewrite `CSLReferences` environment to avoid depending on+	  `enumitem`, which plays badly with beamer.  Instead we use+	  a regular list environment. Thanks to @jpcirrus for the+	  concept (#9053).+    + Restore the pre-3.1.7 format of the `CSLReferences`+      environment, which again has two parameters. The first+      determines whether a hanging indent is used (1 = yes, 0 = no),+      and the second is the entry line spacing (0 = none).+    + Add a strut to avoid inconsistencies in spacing (#9058).+    - Remove a break at the end of `CSLRightInline` to avoid+      inconsistencies in spacing. It shouldn't be necessary+      because the paragraph should extend to the right margin (#9058).++  * LaTeX writer:++    + Fix regression with figure labels (#9045). In 3.1.7, pandoc+      added two labels to LaTeX figure environments, one with a+      phantomsection.+    + Fix default citeproc entry-spacing. According to the CSL manual,+      the default entry spacing is 1. We were treating it as 0 (#9058).++  * HTML writer:++    + Use the ID prefix in the ID for the footnotes section (#9044,+      Benjamin Esham).+    + Fix CSL entry-spacing default (#9058).++  * Text.Pandoc.Citeproc:  always include an `entry-spacing` attribute+    in the Div if the bibliography element contains an entry-spacing+    attribute (previously we omitted it when it was 0) (#9058).++  * Clean up pandoc's own man pages by regenerating with pandoc 3.1.7.++  * pandoc-lua-engine: bump lower bound for pandoc (#9046).++  * Depend on texmath 0.12.8.2, fixing binom in typst writer (#9063).+ ## pandoc 3.1.7 (2023-08-31)    * Org reader:
data/default.csl view
@@ -217,7 +217,7 @@     <choose>       <if variable="title" match="none">         <choose>-          <if type="personal_communication" match="none">+          <if type="personal_communication speech thesis" match="none">             <text variable="genre" text-case="capitalize-first"/>           </if>         </choose>
data/templates/default.latex view
@@ -339,8 +339,10 @@ \NewDocumentCommand\citeproctext{}{} \NewDocumentCommand\citeproc{mm}{%   \begingroup\def\citeproctext{#2}\cite{#1}\endgroup}-% avoid brackets around text for \cite: \makeatletter+ % allow citations to break across lines+ \let\@cite@ofmt\@firstofone+ % avoid brackets around text for \cite:  \def\@biblabel#1{}  \def\@cite#1#2{{#1\if@tempswa , #2\fi}} \makeatother@@ -348,19 +350,23 @@ \setlength{\cslhangindent}{1.5em} \newlength{\csllabelwidth} \setlength{\csllabelwidth}{3em}-\newlength{\cslentryspacing}-\setlength{\cslentryspacing}{0em}-\usepackage{enumitem}-\newlist{CSLReferences}{itemize}{1}-\setlist[CSLReferences]{label={},-  leftmargin=\cslhangindent,-  itemindent=-1\cslhangindent,-  parsep=\parskip,-  itemsep=\cslentryspacing}+\newenvironment{CSLReferences}[2] % #1 hanging-indent, #2 entry-spacing+ {\begin{list}{}{%+  \setlength{\itemindent}{0pt}+  \setlength{\leftmargin}{0pt}+  \setlength{\parsep}{0pt}+  % turn on hanging indent if param 1 is 1+  \ifodd #1+   \setlength{\leftmargin}{\cslhangindent}+   \setlength{\itemindent}{-1\cslhangindent}+  \fi+  % set entry spacing+  \setlength{\itemsep}{#2\baselineskip}}}+ {\end{list}} \usepackage{calc}-\newcommand{\CSLBlock}[1]{#1\hfill\break}-\newcommand{\CSLLeftMargin}[1]{\parbox[t]{\csllabelwidth}{#1}}-\newcommand{\CSLRightInline}[1]{\parbox[t]{\linewidth - \csllabelwidth}{#1}\break}+\newcommand{\CSLBlock}[1]{\hfill\break#1\hfill\break}+\newcommand{\CSLLeftMargin}[1]{\parbox[t]{\csllabelwidth}{\strut#1\strut}}+\newcommand{\CSLRightInline}[1]{\parbox[t]{\linewidth - \csllabelwidth}{\strut#1\strut}} \newcommand{\CSLIndent}[1]{\hspace{\cslhangindent}#1} $endif$ $if(lang)$
man/pandoc.1 view
@@ -1,8348 +1,7628 @@-.\" Automatically generated by Pandoc 3.1.6.2-.\"-.\" Define V font for inline verbatim, using C font in formats-.\" that render this, and otherwise B font.-.ie "\f[CB]x\f[]"x" \{\-. ftr V B-. ftr VI BI-. ftr VB B-. ftr VBI BI-.\}-.el \{\-. ftr V CR-. ftr VI CI-. ftr VB CB-. ftr VBI CBI-.\}-.TH "Pandoc User\[cq]s Guide" "" "August 31, 2023" "pandoc 3.1.7" ""-.hy-.SH NAME-pandoc - general markup converter-.SH SYNOPSIS-.PP-\f[V]pandoc\f[R] [\f[I]options\f[R]] [\f[I]input-file\f[R]]\&...-.SH DESCRIPTION-.PP-Pandoc is a Haskell library for converting from one markup format to-another, and a command-line tool that uses this library.-.PP-Pandoc can convert between numerous markup and word processing formats,-including, but not limited to, various flavors of Markdown, HTML, LaTeX-and Word docx.-For the full lists of input and output formats, see the \f[V]--from\f[R]-and \f[V]--to\f[R] options below.-Pandoc can also produce PDF output: see creating a PDF, below.-.PP-Pandoc\[cq]s enhanced version of Markdown includes syntax for tables,-definition lists, metadata blocks, footnotes, citations, math, and much-more.-See below under Pandoc\[cq]s Markdown.-.PP-Pandoc has a modular design: it consists of a set of readers, which-parse text in a given format and produce a native representation of the-document (an \f[I]abstract syntax tree\f[R] or AST), and a set of-writers, which convert this native representation into a target format.-Thus, adding an input or output format requires only adding a reader or-writer.-Users can also run custom pandoc filters to modify the intermediate AST.-.PP-Because pandoc\[cq]s intermediate representation of a document is less-expressive than many of the formats it converts between, one should not-expect perfect conversions between every format and every other.-Pandoc attempts to preserve the structural elements of a document, but-not formatting details such as margin size.-And some document elements, such as complex tables, may not fit into-pandoc\[cq]s simple document model.-While conversions from pandoc\[cq]s Markdown to all formats aspire to be-perfect, conversions from formats more expressive than pandoc\[cq]s-Markdown can be expected to be lossy.-.SS Using pandoc-.PP-If no \f[I]input-files\f[R] are specified, input is read from-\f[I]stdin\f[R].-Output goes to \f[I]stdout\f[R] by default.-For output to a file, use the \f[V]-o\f[R] option:-.IP-.nf-\f[C]-pandoc -o output.html input.txt-\f[R]-.fi-.PP-By default, pandoc produces a document fragment.-To produce a standalone document (e.g.\ a valid HTML file including-\f[V]<head>\f[R] and \f[V]<body>\f[R]), use the \f[V]-s\f[R] or-\f[V]--standalone\f[R] flag:-.IP-.nf-\f[C]-pandoc -s -o output.html input.txt-\f[R]-.fi-.PP-For more information on how standalone documents are produced, see-Templates below.-.PP-If multiple input files are given, pandoc will concatenate them all-(with blank lines between them) before parsing.-(Use \f[V]--file-scope\f[R] to parse files individually.)-.SS Specifying formats-.PP-The format of the input and output can be specified explicitly using-command-line options.-The input format can be specified using the \f[V]-f/--from\f[R] option,-the output format using the \f[V]-t/--to\f[R] option.-Thus, to convert \f[V]hello.txt\f[R] from Markdown to LaTeX, you could-type:-.IP-.nf-\f[C]-pandoc -f markdown -t latex hello.txt-\f[R]-.fi-.PP-To convert \f[V]hello.html\f[R] from HTML to Markdown:-.IP-.nf-\f[C]-pandoc -f html -t markdown hello.html-\f[R]-.fi-.PP-Supported input and output formats are listed below under Options (see-\f[V]-f\f[R] for input formats and \f[V]-t\f[R] for output formats).-You can also use \f[V]pandoc --list-input-formats\f[R] and-\f[V]pandoc --list-output-formats\f[R] to print lists of supported-formats.-.PP-If the input or output format is not specified explicitly, pandoc will-attempt to guess it from the extensions of the filenames.-Thus, for example,-.IP-.nf-\f[C]-pandoc -o hello.tex hello.txt-\f[R]-.fi-.PP-will convert \f[V]hello.txt\f[R] from Markdown to LaTeX.-If no output file is specified (so that output goes to-\f[I]stdout\f[R]), or if the output file\[cq]s extension is unknown, the-output format will default to HTML.-If no input file is specified (so that input comes from-\f[I]stdin\f[R]), or if the input files\[cq] extensions are unknown, the-input format will be assumed to be Markdown.-.SS Character encoding-.PP-Pandoc uses the UTF-8 character encoding for both input and output.-If your local character encoding is not UTF-8, you should pipe input and-output through \f[V]iconv\f[R]:-.IP-.nf-\f[C]-iconv -t utf-8 input.txt | pandoc | iconv -f utf-8-\f[R]-.fi-.PP-Note that in some output formats (such as HTML, LaTeX, ConTeXt, RTF,-OPML, DocBook, and Texinfo), information about the character encoding is-included in the document header, which will only be included if you use-the \f[V]-s/--standalone\f[R] option.-.SS Creating a PDF-.PP-To produce a PDF, specify an output file with a \f[V].pdf\f[R]-extension:-.IP-.nf-\f[C]-pandoc test.txt -o test.pdf-\f[R]-.fi-.PP-By default, pandoc will use LaTeX to create the PDF, which requires that-a LaTeX engine be installed (see \f[V]--pdf-engine\f[R] below).-Alternatively, pandoc can use ConTeXt, roff ms, or HTML as an-intermediate format.-To do this, specify an output file with a \f[V].pdf\f[R] extension, as-before, but add the \f[V]--pdf-engine\f[R] option or-\f[V]-t context\f[R], \f[V]-t html\f[R], or \f[V]-t ms\f[R] to the-command line.-The tool used to generate the PDF from the intermediate format may be-specified using \f[V]--pdf-engine\f[R].-.PP-You can control the PDF style using variables, depending on the-intermediate format used: see variables for LaTeX, variables for-ConTeXt, variables for \f[V]wkhtmltopdf\f[R], variables for ms.-When HTML is used as an intermediate format, the output can be styled-using \f[V]--css\f[R].-.PP-To debug the PDF creation, it can be useful to look at the intermediate-representation: instead of \f[V]-o test.pdf\f[R], use for example-\f[V]-s -o test.tex\f[R] to output the generated LaTeX.-You can then test it with \f[V]pdflatex test.tex\f[R].-.PP-When using LaTeX, the following packages need to be available (they are-included with all recent versions of TeX Live): \f[V]amsfonts\f[R],-\f[V]amsmath\f[R], \f[V]lm\f[R], \f[V]unicode-math\f[R],-\f[V]iftex\f[R], \f[V]listings\f[R] (if the \f[V]--listings\f[R] option-is used), \f[V]fancyvrb\f[R], \f[V]longtable\f[R], \f[V]booktabs\f[R],-\f[V]graphicx\f[R] (if the document contains images),-\f[V]hyperref\f[R], \f[V]xcolor\f[R], \f[V]soul\f[R], \f[V]geometry\f[R]-(with the \f[V]geometry\f[R] variable set), \f[V]setspace\f[R] (with-\f[V]linestretch\f[R]), and \f[V]babel\f[R] (with \f[V]lang\f[R]).-If \f[V]CJKmainfont\f[R] is set, \f[V]xeCJK\f[R] is needed.-The use of \f[V]xelatex\f[R] or \f[V]lualatex\f[R] as the PDF engine-requires \f[V]fontspec\f[R].-\f[V]lualatex\f[R] uses \f[V]selnolig\f[R].-\f[V]xelatex\f[R] uses \f[V]bidi\f[R] (with the \f[V]dir\f[R] variable-set).-If the \f[V]mathspec\f[R] variable is set, \f[V]xelatex\f[R] will use-\f[V]mathspec\f[R] instead of \f[V]unicode-math\f[R].-The \f[V]upquote\f[R] and \f[V]microtype\f[R] packages are used if-available, and \f[V]csquotes\f[R] will be used for typography if the-\f[V]csquotes\f[R] variable or metadata field is set to a true value.-The \f[V]natbib\f[R], \f[V]biblatex\f[R], \f[V]bibtex\f[R], and-\f[V]biber\f[R] packages can optionally be used for citation rendering.-The following packages will be used to improve output quality if-present, but pandoc does not require them to be present:-\f[V]upquote\f[R] (for straight quotes in verbatim environments),-\f[V]microtype\f[R] (for better spacing adjustments), \f[V]parskip\f[R]-(for better inter-paragraph spaces), \f[V]xurl\f[R] (for better line-breaks in URLs), \f[V]bookmark\f[R] (for better PDF bookmarks), and-\f[V]footnotehyper\f[R] or \f[V]footnote\f[R] (to allow footnotes in-tables).-.SS Reading from the Web-.PP-Instead of an input file, an absolute URI may be given.-In this case pandoc will fetch the content using HTTP:-.IP-.nf-\f[C]-pandoc -f html -t markdown https://www.fsf.org-\f[R]-.fi-.PP-It is possible to supply a custom User-Agent string or other header when-requesting a document from a URL:-.IP-.nf-\f[C]-pandoc -f html -t markdown --request-header User-Agent:\[dq]Mozilla/5.0\[dq] \[rs]-  https://www.fsf.org-\f[R]-.fi-.SH OPTIONS-.SS General options-.TP-\f[V]-f\f[R] \f[I]FORMAT\f[R], \f[V]-r\f[R] \f[I]FORMAT\f[R], \f[V]--from=\f[R]\f[I]FORMAT\f[R], \f[V]--read=\f[R]\f[I]FORMAT\f[R]-Specify input format.-\f[I]FORMAT\f[R] can be:-.RS-.IP \[bu] 2-\f[V]bibtex\f[R] (BibTeX bibliography)-.IP \[bu] 2-\f[V]biblatex\f[R] (BibLaTeX bibliography)-.IP \[bu] 2-\f[V]commonmark\f[R] (CommonMark Markdown)-.IP \[bu] 2-\f[V]commonmark_x\f[R] (CommonMark Markdown with extensions)-.IP \[bu] 2-\f[V]creole\f[R] (Creole 1.0)-.IP \[bu] 2-\f[V]csljson\f[R] (CSL JSON bibliography)-.IP \[bu] 2-\f[V]csv\f[R] (CSV table)-.IP \[bu] 2-\f[V]tsv\f[R] (TSV table)-.IP \[bu] 2-\f[V]docbook\f[R] (DocBook)-.IP \[bu] 2-\f[V]docx\f[R] (Word docx)-.IP \[bu] 2-\f[V]dokuwiki\f[R] (DokuWiki markup)-.IP \[bu] 2-\f[V]endnotexml\f[R] (EndNote XML bibliography)-.IP \[bu] 2-\f[V]epub\f[R] (EPUB)-.IP \[bu] 2-\f[V]fb2\f[R] (FictionBook2 e-book)-.IP \[bu] 2-\f[V]gfm\f[R] (GitHub-Flavored Markdown), or the deprecated and less-accurate \f[V]markdown_github\f[R]; use \f[V]markdown_github\f[R] only-if you need extensions not supported in \f[V]gfm\f[R].-.IP \[bu] 2-\f[V]haddock\f[R] (Haddock markup)-.IP \[bu] 2-\f[V]html\f[R] (HTML)-.IP \[bu] 2-\f[V]ipynb\f[R] (Jupyter notebook)-.IP \[bu] 2-\f[V]jats\f[R] (JATS XML)-.IP \[bu] 2-\f[V]jira\f[R] (Jira/Confluence wiki markup)-.IP \[bu] 2-\f[V]json\f[R] (JSON version of native AST)-.IP \[bu] 2-\f[V]latex\f[R] (LaTeX)-.IP \[bu] 2-\f[V]markdown\f[R] (Pandoc\[cq]s Markdown)-.IP \[bu] 2-\f[V]markdown_mmd\f[R] (MultiMarkdown)-.IP \[bu] 2-\f[V]markdown_phpextra\f[R] (PHP Markdown Extra)-.IP \[bu] 2-\f[V]markdown_strict\f[R] (original unextended Markdown)-.IP \[bu] 2-\f[V]mediawiki\f[R] (MediaWiki markup)-.IP \[bu] 2-\f[V]man\f[R] (roff man)-.IP \[bu] 2-\f[V]muse\f[R] (Muse)-.IP \[bu] 2-\f[V]native\f[R] (native Haskell)-.IP \[bu] 2-\f[V]odt\f[R] (ODT)-.IP \[bu] 2-\f[V]opml\f[R] (OPML)-.IP \[bu] 2-\f[V]org\f[R] (Emacs Org mode)-.IP \[bu] 2-\f[V]ris\f[R] (RIS bibliography)-.IP \[bu] 2-\f[V]rtf\f[R] (Rich Text Format)-.IP \[bu] 2-\f[V]rst\f[R] (reStructuredText)-.IP \[bu] 2-\f[V]t2t\f[R] (txt2tags)-.IP \[bu] 2-\f[V]textile\f[R] (Textile)-.IP \[bu] 2-\f[V]tikiwiki\f[R] (TikiWiki markup)-.IP \[bu] 2-\f[V]twiki\f[R] (TWiki markup)-.IP \[bu] 2-\f[V]typst\f[R] (typst)-.IP \[bu] 2-\f[V]vimwiki\f[R] (Vimwiki)-.IP \[bu] 2-the path of a custom Lua reader, see Custom readers and writers below-.PP-Extensions can be individually enabled or disabled by appending-\f[V]+EXTENSION\f[R] or \f[V]-EXTENSION\f[R] to the format name.-See Extensions below, for a list of extensions and their names.-See \f[V]--list-input-formats\f[R] and \f[V]--list-extensions\f[R],-below.-.RE-.TP-\f[V]-t\f[R] \f[I]FORMAT\f[R], \f[V]-w\f[R] \f[I]FORMAT\f[R], \f[V]--to=\f[R]\f[I]FORMAT\f[R], \f[V]--write=\f[R]\f[I]FORMAT\f[R]-Specify output format.-\f[I]FORMAT\f[R] can be:-.RS-.IP \[bu] 2-\f[V]asciidoc\f[R] (modern AsciiDoc as interpreted by AsciiDoctor)-.IP \[bu] 2-\f[V]asciidoc_legacy\f[R] (AsciiDoc as interpreted by-\f[V]asciidoc-py\f[R]).-.IP \[bu] 2-\f[V]asciidoctor\f[R] (deprecated synonym for \f[V]asciidoc\f[R])-.IP \[bu] 2-\f[V]beamer\f[R] (LaTeX beamer slide show)-.IP \[bu] 2-\f[V]bibtex\f[R] (BibTeX bibliography)-.IP \[bu] 2-\f[V]biblatex\f[R] (BibLaTeX bibliography)-.IP \[bu] 2-\f[V]chunkedhtml\f[R] (zip archive of multiple linked HTML files)-.IP \[bu] 2-\f[V]commonmark\f[R] (CommonMark Markdown)-.IP \[bu] 2-\f[V]commonmark_x\f[R] (CommonMark Markdown with extensions)-.IP \[bu] 2-\f[V]context\f[R] (ConTeXt)-.IP \[bu] 2-\f[V]csljson\f[R] (CSL JSON bibliography)-.IP \[bu] 2-\f[V]docbook\f[R] or \f[V]docbook4\f[R] (DocBook 4)-.IP \[bu] 2-\f[V]docbook5\f[R] (DocBook 5)-.IP \[bu] 2-\f[V]docx\f[R] (Word docx)-.IP \[bu] 2-\f[V]dokuwiki\f[R] (DokuWiki markup)-.IP \[bu] 2-\f[V]epub\f[R] or \f[V]epub3\f[R] (EPUB v3 book)-.IP \[bu] 2-\f[V]epub2\f[R] (EPUB v2)-.IP \[bu] 2-\f[V]fb2\f[R] (FictionBook2 e-book)-.IP \[bu] 2-\f[V]gfm\f[R] (GitHub-Flavored Markdown), or the deprecated and less-accurate \f[V]markdown_github\f[R]; use \f[V]markdown_github\f[R] only-if you need extensions not supported in \f[V]gfm\f[R].-.IP \[bu] 2-\f[V]haddock\f[R] (Haddock markup)-.IP \[bu] 2-\f[V]html\f[R] or \f[V]html5\f[R] (HTML, i.e.\ HTML5/XHTML polyglot-markup)-.IP \[bu] 2-\f[V]html4\f[R] (XHTML 1.0 Transitional)-.IP \[bu] 2-\f[V]icml\f[R] (InDesign ICML)-.IP \[bu] 2-\f[V]ipynb\f[R] (Jupyter notebook)-.IP \[bu] 2-\f[V]jats_archiving\f[R] (JATS XML, Archiving and Interchange Tag Set)-.IP \[bu] 2-\f[V]jats_articleauthoring\f[R] (JATS XML, Article Authoring Tag Set)-.IP \[bu] 2-\f[V]jats_publishing\f[R] (JATS XML, Journal Publishing Tag Set)-.IP \[bu] 2-\f[V]jats\f[R] (alias for \f[V]jats_archiving\f[R])-.IP \[bu] 2-\f[V]jira\f[R] (Jira/Confluence wiki markup)-.IP \[bu] 2-\f[V]json\f[R] (JSON version of native AST)-.IP \[bu] 2-\f[V]latex\f[R] (LaTeX)-.IP \[bu] 2-\f[V]man\f[R] (roff man)-.IP \[bu] 2-\f[V]markdown\f[R] (Pandoc\[cq]s Markdown)-.IP \[bu] 2-\f[V]markdown_mmd\f[R] (MultiMarkdown)-.IP \[bu] 2-\f[V]markdown_phpextra\f[R] (PHP Markdown Extra)-.IP \[bu] 2-\f[V]markdown_strict\f[R] (original unextended Markdown)-.IP \[bu] 2-\f[V]markua\f[R] (Markua)-.IP \[bu] 2-\f[V]mediawiki\f[R] (MediaWiki markup)-.IP \[bu] 2-\f[V]ms\f[R] (roff ms)-.IP \[bu] 2-\f[V]muse\f[R] (Muse)-.IP \[bu] 2-\f[V]native\f[R] (native Haskell)-.IP \[bu] 2-\f[V]odt\f[R] (OpenOffice text document)-.IP \[bu] 2-\f[V]opml\f[R] (OPML)-.IP \[bu] 2-\f[V]opendocument\f[R] (OpenDocument)-.IP \[bu] 2-\f[V]org\f[R] (Emacs Org mode)-.IP \[bu] 2-\f[V]pdf\f[R] (PDF)-.IP \[bu] 2-\f[V]plain\f[R] (plain text)-.IP \[bu] 2-\f[V]pptx\f[R] (PowerPoint slide show)-.IP \[bu] 2-\f[V]rst\f[R] (reStructuredText)-.IP \[bu] 2-\f[V]rtf\f[R] (Rich Text Format)-.IP \[bu] 2-\f[V]texinfo\f[R] (GNU Texinfo)-.IP \[bu] 2-\f[V]textile\f[R] (Textile)-.IP \[bu] 2-\f[V]slideous\f[R] (Slideous HTML and JavaScript slide show)-.IP \[bu] 2-\f[V]slidy\f[R] (Slidy HTML and JavaScript slide show)-.IP \[bu] 2-\f[V]dzslides\f[R] (DZSlides HTML5 + JavaScript slide show)-.IP \[bu] 2-\f[V]revealjs\f[R] (reveal.js HTML5 + JavaScript slide show)-.IP \[bu] 2-\f[V]s5\f[R] (S5 HTML and JavaScript slide show)-.IP \[bu] 2-\f[V]tei\f[R] (TEI Simple)-.IP \[bu] 2-\f[V]typst\f[R] (typst)-.IP \[bu] 2-\f[V]xwiki\f[R] (XWiki markup)-.IP \[bu] 2-\f[V]zimwiki\f[R] (ZimWiki markup)-.IP \[bu] 2-the path of a custom Lua writer, see Custom readers and writers below-.PP-Note that \f[V]odt\f[R], \f[V]docx\f[R], \f[V]epub\f[R], and-\f[V]pdf\f[R] output will not be directed to \f[I]stdout\f[R] unless-forced with \f[V]-o -\f[R].-.PP-Extensions can be individually enabled or disabled by appending-\f[V]+EXTENSION\f[R] or \f[V]-EXTENSION\f[R] to the format name.-See Extensions below, for a list of extensions and their names.-See \f[V]--list-output-formats\f[R] and \f[V]--list-extensions\f[R],-below.-.RE-.TP-\f[V]-o\f[R] \f[I]FILE\f[R], \f[V]--output=\f[R]\f[I]FILE\f[R]-Write output to \f[I]FILE\f[R] instead of \f[I]stdout\f[R].-If \f[I]FILE\f[R] is \f[V]-\f[R], output will go to \f[I]stdout\f[R],-even if a non-textual format (\f[V]docx\f[R], \f[V]odt\f[R],-\f[V]epub2\f[R], \f[V]epub3\f[R]) is specified.-If the output format is \f[V]chunkedhtml\f[R] and \f[I]FILE\f[R] has no-extension, then instead of producing a \f[V].zip\f[R] file pandoc will-create a directory \f[I]FILE\f[R] and unpack the zip archive there-(unless \f[I]FILE\f[R] already exists, in which case an error will be-raised).-.TP-\f[V]--data-dir=\f[R]\f[I]DIRECTORY\f[R]-Specify the user data directory to search for pandoc data files.-If this option is not specified, the default user data directory will be-used.-On *nix and macOS systems this will be the \f[V]pandoc\f[R] subdirectory-of the XDG data directory (by default, \f[V]$HOME/.local/share\f[R],-overridable by setting the \f[V]XDG_DATA_HOME\f[R] environment-variable).-If that directory does not exist and \f[V]$HOME/.pandoc\f[R] exists, it-will be used (for backwards compatibility).-On Windows the default user data directory is-\f[V]%APPDATA%\[rs]pandoc\f[R].-You can find the default user data directory on your system by looking-at the output of \f[V]pandoc --version\f[R].-Data files placed in this directory (for example,-\f[V]reference.odt\f[R], \f[V]reference.docx\f[R], \f[V]epub.css\f[R],-\f[V]templates\f[R]) will override pandoc\[cq]s normal defaults.-(Note that the user data directory is not created by pandoc, so you will-need to create it yourself if you want to make use of it.)-.TP-\f[V]-d\f[R] \f[I]FILE\f[R], \f[V]--defaults=\f[R]\f[I]FILE\f[R]-Specify a set of default option settings.-\f[I]FILE\f[R] is a YAML file whose fields correspond to command-line-option settings.-All options for document conversion, including input and output files,-can be set using a defaults file.-The file will be searched for first in the working directory, and then-in the \f[V]defaults\f[R] subdirectory of the user data directory (see-\f[V]--data-dir\f[R]).-The \f[V].yaml\f[R] extension may be omitted.-See the section Defaults files for more information on the file format.-Settings from the defaults file may be overridden or extended by-subsequent options on the command line.-.TP-\f[V]--bash-completion\f[R]-Generate a bash completion script.-To enable bash completion with pandoc, add this to your-\f[V].bashrc\f[R]:-.RS-.IP-.nf-\f[C]-eval \[dq]$(pandoc --bash-completion)\[dq]-\f[R]-.fi-.RE-.TP-\f[V]--verbose\f[R]-Give verbose debugging output.-.TP-\f[V]--quiet\f[R]-Suppress warning messages.-.TP-\f[V]--fail-if-warnings[=true|false]\f[R]-Exit with error status if there are any warnings.-.TP-\f[V]--log=\f[R]\f[I]FILE\f[R]-Write log messages in machine-readable JSON format to \f[I]FILE\f[R].-All messages above DEBUG level will be written, regardless of verbosity-settings (\f[V]--verbose\f[R], \f[V]--quiet\f[R]).-.TP-\f[V]--list-input-formats\f[R]-List supported input formats, one per line.-.TP-\f[V]--list-output-formats\f[R]-List supported output formats, one per line.-.TP-\f[V]--list-extensions\f[R][\f[V]=\f[R]\f[I]FORMAT\f[R]]-List supported extensions for \f[I]FORMAT\f[R], one per line, preceded-by a \f[V]+\f[R] or \f[V]-\f[R] indicating whether it is enabled by-default in \f[I]FORMAT\f[R].-If \f[I]FORMAT\f[R] is not specified, defaults for pandoc\[cq]s Markdown-are given.-.TP-\f[V]--list-highlight-languages\f[R]-List supported languages for syntax highlighting, one per line.-.TP-\f[V]--list-highlight-styles\f[R]-List supported styles for syntax highlighting, one per line.-See \f[V]--highlight-style\f[R].-.TP-\f[V]-v\f[R], \f[V]--version\f[R]-Print version.-.TP-\f[V]-h\f[R], \f[V]--help\f[R]-Show usage message.-.SS Reader options-.TP-\f[V]--shift-heading-level-by=\f[R]\f[I]NUMBER\f[R]-Shift heading levels by a positive or negative integer.-For example, with \f[V]--shift-heading-level-by=-1\f[R], level 2-headings become level 1 headings, and level 3 headings become level 2-headings.-Headings cannot have a level less than 1, so a heading that would be-shifted below level 1 becomes a regular paragraph.-Exception: with a shift of -N, a level-N heading at the beginning of the-document replaces the metadata title.-\f[V]--shift-heading-level-by=-1\f[R] is a good choice when converting-HTML or Markdown documents that use an initial level-1 heading for the-document title and level-2+ headings for sections.-\f[V]--shift-heading-level-by=1\f[R] may be a good choice for converting-Markdown documents that use level-1 headings for sections to HTML, since-pandoc uses a level-1 heading to render the document title.-.TP-\f[V]--base-header-level=\f[R]\f[I]NUMBER\f[R]-\f[I]Deprecated.-Use \f[VI]--shift-heading-level-by\f[I]=X instead, where X = NUMBER --1.\f[R] Specify the base level for headings (defaults to 1).-.TP-\f[V]--indented-code-classes=\f[R]\f[I]CLASSES\f[R]-Specify classes to use for indented code blocks\[en]for example,-\f[V]perl,numberLines\f[R] or \f[V]haskell\f[R].-Multiple classes may be separated by spaces or commas.-.TP-\f[V]--default-image-extension=\f[R]\f[I]EXTENSION\f[R]-Specify a default extension to use when image paths/URLs have no-extension.-This allows you to use the same source for formats that require-different kinds of images.-Currently this option only affects the Markdown and LaTeX readers.-.TP-\f[V]--file-scope[=true|false]\f[R]-Parse each file individually before combining for multifile documents.-This will allow footnotes in different files with the same identifiers-to work as expected.-If this option is set, footnotes and links will not work across files.-Reading binary files (docx, odt, epub) implies \f[V]--file-scope\f[R].-.RS-.PP-If two or more files are processed using \f[V]--file-scope\f[R],-prefixes based on the filenames will be added to identifiers in order to-disambiguate them, and internal links will be adjusted accordingly.-For example, a header with identifier \f[V]foo\f[R] in-\f[V]subdir/file1.txt\f[R] will have its identifier changed to-\f[V]subdir__file1.txt__foo\f[R].-.PP-In addition, a Div with an identifier based on the filename will be-added around the file\[cq]s content, so that internal links to the-filename will point to this Div\[cq]s identifier.-.RE-.TP-\f[V]-F\f[R] \f[I]PROGRAM\f[R], \f[V]--filter=\f[R]\f[I]PROGRAM\f[R]-Specify an executable to be used as a filter transforming the pandoc AST-after the input is parsed and before the output is written.-The executable should read JSON from stdin and write JSON to stdout.-The JSON must be formatted like pandoc\[cq]s own JSON input and output.-The name of the output format will be passed to the filter as the first-argument.-Hence,-.RS-.IP-.nf-\f[C]-pandoc --filter ./caps.py -t latex-\f[R]-.fi-.PP-is equivalent to-.IP-.nf-\f[C]-pandoc -t json | ./caps.py latex | pandoc -f json -t latex-\f[R]-.fi-.PP-The latter form may be useful for debugging filters.-.PP-Filters may be written in any language.-\f[V]Text.Pandoc.JSON\f[R] exports \f[V]toJSONFilter\f[R] to facilitate-writing filters in Haskell.-Those who would prefer to write filters in python can use the module-\f[V]pandocfilters\f[R], installable from PyPI.-There are also pandoc filter libraries in PHP, perl, and-JavaScript/node.js.-.PP-In order of preference, pandoc will look for filters in-.IP "1." 3-a specified full or relative path (executable or non-executable),-.IP "2." 3-\f[V]$DATADIR/filters\f[R] (executable or non-executable) where-\f[V]$DATADIR\f[R] is the user data directory (see \f[V]--data-dir\f[R],-above),-.IP "3." 3-\f[V]$PATH\f[R] (executable only).-.PP-Filters, Lua-filters, and citeproc processing are applied in the order-specified on the command line.-.RE-.TP-\f[V]-L\f[R] \f[I]SCRIPT\f[R], \f[V]--lua-filter=\f[R]\f[I]SCRIPT\f[R]-Transform the document in a similar fashion as JSON filters (see-\f[V]--filter\f[R]), but use pandoc\[cq]s built-in Lua filtering system.-The given Lua script is expected to return a list of Lua filters which-will be applied in order.-Each Lua filter must contain element-transforming functions indexed by-the name of the AST element on which the filter function should be-applied.-.RS-.PP-The \f[V]pandoc\f[R] Lua module provides helper functions for element-creation.-It is always loaded into the script\[cq]s Lua environment.-.PP-See the Lua filters documentation for further details.-.PP-In order of preference, pandoc will look for Lua filters in-.IP "1." 3-a specified full or relative path,-.IP "2." 3-\f[V]$DATADIR/filters\f[R] where \f[V]$DATADIR\f[R] is the user data-directory (see \f[V]--data-dir\f[R], above).-.PP-Filters, Lua filters, and citeproc processing are applied in the order-specified on the command line.-.RE-.TP-\f[V]-M\f[R] \f[I]KEY\f[R][\f[V]=\f[R]\f[I]VAL\f[R]], \f[V]--metadata=\f[R]\f[I]KEY\f[R][\f[V]:\f[R]\f[I]VAL\f[R]]-Set the metadata field \f[I]KEY\f[R] to the value \f[I]VAL\f[R].-A value specified on the command line overrides a value specified in the-document using YAML metadata blocks.-Values will be parsed as YAML boolean or string values.-If no value is specified, the value will be treated as Boolean true.-Like \f[V]--variable\f[R], \f[V]--metadata\f[R] causes template-variables to be set.-But unlike \f[V]--variable\f[R], \f[V]--metadata\f[R] affects the-metadata of the underlying document (which is accessible from filters-and may be printed in some output formats) and metadata values will be-escaped when inserted into the template.-.TP-\f[V]--metadata-file=\f[R]\f[I]FILE\f[R]-Read metadata from the supplied YAML (or JSON) file.-This option can be used with every input format, but string scalars in-the metadata file will always be parsed as Markdown.-(If the input format is Markdown or a Markdown variant, then the same-variant will be used to parse the metadata file; if it is a non-Markdown-format, pandoc\[cq]s default Markdown extensions will be used.)-This option can be used repeatedly to include multiple metadata files;-values in files specified later on the command line will be preferred-over those specified in earlier files.-Metadata values specified inside the document, or by using \f[V]-M\f[R],-overwrite values specified with this option.-The file will be searched for first in the working directory, and then-in the \f[V]metadata\f[R] subdirectory of the user data directory (see-\f[V]--data-dir\f[R]).-.TP-\f[V]-p\f[R], \f[V]--preserve-tabs[=true|false]\f[R]-Preserve tabs instead of converting them to spaces.-(By default, pandoc converts tabs to spaces before parsing its input.)-Note that this will only affect tabs in literal code spans and code-blocks.-Tabs in regular text are always treated as spaces.-.TP-\f[V]--tab-stop=\f[R]\f[I]NUMBER\f[R]-Specify the number of spaces per tab (default is 4).-.TP-\f[V]--track-changes=accept\f[R]|\f[V]reject\f[R]|\f[V]all\f[R]-Specifies what to do with insertions, deletions, and comments produced-by the MS Word \[lq]Track Changes\[rq] feature.-\f[V]accept\f[R] (the default) processes all the insertions and-deletions.-\f[V]reject\f[R] ignores them.-Both \f[V]accept\f[R] and \f[V]reject\f[R] ignore comments.-\f[V]all\f[R] includes all insertions, deletions, and comments, wrapped-in spans with \f[V]insertion\f[R], \f[V]deletion\f[R],-\f[V]comment-start\f[R], and \f[V]comment-end\f[R] classes,-respectively.-The author and time of change is included.-\f[V]all\f[R] is useful for scripting: only accepting changes from a-certain reviewer, say, or before a certain date.-If a paragraph is inserted or deleted, \f[V]track-changes=all\f[R]-produces a span with the class-\f[V]paragraph-insertion\f[R]/\f[V]paragraph-deletion\f[R] before the-affected paragraph break.-This option only affects the docx reader.-.TP-\f[V]--extract-media=\f[R]\f[I]DIR\f[R]-Extract images and other media contained in or linked from the source-document to the path \f[I]DIR\f[R], creating it if necessary, and adjust-the images references in the document so they point to the extracted-files.-Media are downloaded, read from the file system, or extracted from a-binary container (e.g.\ docx), as needed.-The original file paths are used if they are relative paths not-containing \f[V]..\f[R].-Otherwise filenames are constructed from the SHA1 hash of the contents.-.TP-\f[V]--abbreviations=\f[R]\f[I]FILE\f[R]-Specifies a custom abbreviations file, with abbreviations one to a line.-If this option is not specified, pandoc will read the data file-\f[V]abbreviations\f[R] from the user data directory or fall back on a-system default.-To see the system default, use-\f[V]pandoc --print-default-data-file=abbreviations\f[R].-The only use pandoc makes of this list is in the Markdown reader.-Strings found in this list will be followed by a nonbreaking space, and-the period will not produce sentence-ending space in formats like LaTeX.-The strings may not contain spaces.-.TP-\f[V]--trace[=true|false]\f[R]-Print diagnostic output tracing parser progress to stderr.-This option is intended for use by developers in diagnosing performance-issues.-.SS General writer options-.TP-\f[V]-s\f[R], \f[V]--standalone\f[R]-Produce output with an appropriate header and footer (e.g.\ a standalone-HTML, LaTeX, TEI, or RTF file, not a fragment).-This option is set automatically for \f[V]pdf\f[R], \f[V]epub\f[R],-\f[V]epub3\f[R], \f[V]fb2\f[R], \f[V]docx\f[R], and \f[V]odt\f[R]-output.-For \f[V]native\f[R] output, this option causes metadata to be included;-otherwise, metadata is suppressed.-.TP-\f[V]--template=\f[R]\f[I]FILE\f[R]|\f[I]URL\f[R]-Use the specified file as a custom template for the generated document.-Implies \f[V]--standalone\f[R].-See Templates, below, for a description of template syntax.-If no extension is specified, an extension corresponding to the writer-will be added, so that \f[V]--template=special\f[R] looks for-\f[V]special.html\f[R] for HTML output.-If the template is not found, pandoc will search for it in the-\f[V]templates\f[R] subdirectory of the user data directory (see-\f[V]--data-dir\f[R]).-If this option is not used, a default template appropriate for the-output format will be used (see \f[V]-D/--print-default-template\f[R]).-.TP-\f[V]-V\f[R] \f[I]KEY\f[R][\f[V]=\f[R]\f[I]VAL\f[R]], \f[V]--variable=\f[R]\f[I]KEY\f[R][\f[V]:\f[R]\f[I]VAL\f[R]]-Set the template variable \f[I]KEY\f[R] to the value \f[I]VAL\f[R] when-rendering the document in standalone mode.-If no \f[I]VAL\f[R] is specified, the key will be given the value-\f[V]true\f[R].-.TP-\f[V]--sandbox[=true|false]\f[R]-Run pandoc in a sandbox, limiting IO operations in readers and writers-to reading the files specified on the command line.-Note that this option does not limit IO operations by filters or in the-production of PDF documents.-But it does offer security against, for example, disclosure of files-through the use of \f[V]include\f[R] directives.-Anyone using pandoc on untrusted user input should use this option.-.RS-.PP-Note: some readers and writers (e.g., \f[V]docx\f[R]) need access to-data files.-If these are stored on the file system, then pandoc will not be able to-find them when run in \f[V]--sandbox\f[R] mode and will raise an error.-For these applications, we recommend using a pandoc binary compiled with-the \f[V]embed_data_files\f[R] option, which causes the data files to be-baked into the binary instead of being stored on the file system.-.RE-.TP-\f[V]-D\f[R] \f[I]FORMAT\f[R], \f[V]--print-default-template=\f[R]\f[I]FORMAT\f[R]-Print the system default template for an output \f[I]FORMAT\f[R].-(See \f[V]-t\f[R] for a list of possible \f[I]FORMAT\f[R]s.)-Templates in the user data directory are ignored.-This option may be used with \f[V]-o\f[R]/\f[V]--output\f[R] to redirect-output to a file, but \f[V]-o\f[R]/\f[V]--output\f[R] must come before-\f[V]--print-default-template\f[R] on the command line.-.RS-.PP-Note that some of the default templates use partials, for example-\f[V]styles.html\f[R].-To print the partials, use \f[V]--print-default-data-file\f[R]: for-example, \f[V]--print-default-data-file=templates/styles.html\f[R].-.RE-.TP-\f[V]--print-default-data-file=\f[R]\f[I]FILE\f[R]-Print a system default data file.-Files in the user data directory are ignored.-This option may be used with \f[V]-o\f[R]/\f[V]--output\f[R] to redirect-output to a file, but \f[V]-o\f[R]/\f[V]--output\f[R] must come before-\f[V]--print-default-data-file\f[R] on the command line.-.TP-\f[V]--eol=crlf\f[R]|\f[V]lf\f[R]|\f[V]native\f[R]-Manually specify line endings: \f[V]crlf\f[R] (Windows), \f[V]lf\f[R]-(macOS/Linux/UNIX), or \f[V]native\f[R] (line endings appropriate to the-OS on which pandoc is being run).-The default is \f[V]native\f[R].-.TP-\f[V]--dpi\f[R]=\f[I]NUMBER\f[R]-Specify the default dpi (dots per inch) value for conversion from pixels-to inch/centimeters and vice versa.-(Technically, the correct term would be ppi: pixels per inch.)-The default is 96dpi.-When images contain information about dpi internally, the encoded value-is used instead of the default specified by this option.-.TP-\f[V]--wrap=auto\f[R]|\f[V]none\f[R]|\f[V]preserve\f[R]-Determine how text is wrapped in the output (the source code, not the-rendered version).-With \f[V]auto\f[R] (the default), pandoc will attempt to wrap lines to-the column width specified by \f[V]--columns\f[R] (default 72).-With \f[V]none\f[R], pandoc will not wrap lines at all.-With \f[V]preserve\f[R], pandoc will attempt to preserve the wrapping-from the source document (that is, where there are nonsemantic newlines-in the source, there will be nonsemantic newlines in the output as-well).-In \f[V]ipynb\f[R] output, this option affects wrapping of the contents-of markdown cells.-.TP-\f[V]--columns=\f[R]\f[I]NUMBER\f[R]-Specify length of lines in characters.-This affects text wrapping in the generated source code (see-\f[V]--wrap\f[R]).-It also affects calculation of column widths for plain text tables (see-Tables below).-.TP-\f[V]--toc[=true|false]\f[R], \f[V]--table-of-contents[=true|false]\f[R]-Include an automatically generated table of contents (or, in the case of-\f[V]latex\f[R], \f[V]context\f[R], \f[V]docx\f[R], \f[V]odt\f[R],-\f[V]opendocument\f[R], \f[V]rst\f[R], or \f[V]ms\f[R], an instruction-to create one) in the output document.-This option has no effect unless \f[V]-s/--standalone\f[R] is used, and-it has no effect on \f[V]man\f[R], \f[V]docbook4\f[R],-\f[V]docbook5\f[R], or \f[V]jats\f[R] output.-.RS-.PP-Note that if you are producing a PDF via \f[V]ms\f[R], the table of-contents will appear at the beginning of the document, before the title.-If you would prefer it to be at the end of the document, use the option-\f[V]--pdf-engine-opt=--no-toc-relocation\f[R].-.RE-.TP-\f[V]--toc-depth=\f[R]\f[I]NUMBER\f[R]-Specify the number of section levels to include in the table of-contents.-The default is 3 (which means that level-1, 2, and 3 headings will be-listed in the contents).-.TP-\f[V]--strip-comments[=true|false]\f[R]-Strip out HTML comments in the Markdown or Textile source, rather than-passing them on to Markdown, Textile or HTML output as raw HTML.-This does not apply to HTML comments inside raw HTML blocks when the-\f[V]markdown_in_html_blocks\f[R] extension is not set.-.TP-\f[V]--no-highlight\f[R]-Disables syntax highlighting for code blocks and inlines, even when a-language attribute is given.-.TP-\f[V]--highlight-style=\f[R]\f[I]STYLE\f[R]|\f[I]FILE\f[R]-Specifies the coloring style to be used in highlighted source code.-Options are \f[V]pygments\f[R] (the default), \f[V]kate\f[R],-\f[V]monochrome\f[R], \f[V]breezeDark\f[R], \f[V]espresso\f[R],-\f[V]zenburn\f[R], \f[V]haddock\f[R], and \f[V]tango\f[R].-For more information on syntax highlighting in pandoc, see Syntax-highlighting, below.-See also \f[V]--list-highlight-styles\f[R].-.RS-.PP-Instead of a \f[I]STYLE\f[R] name, a JSON file with extension-\f[V].theme\f[R] may be supplied.-This will be parsed as a KDE syntax highlighting theme and (if valid)-used as the highlighting style.-.PP-To generate the JSON version of an existing style, use-\f[V]--print-highlight-style\f[R].-.RE-.TP-\f[V]--print-highlight-style=\f[R]\f[I]STYLE\f[R]|\f[I]FILE\f[R]-Prints a JSON version of a highlighting style, which can be modified,-saved with a \f[V].theme\f[R] extension, and used with-\f[V]--highlight-style\f[R].-This option may be used with \f[V]-o\f[R]/\f[V]--output\f[R] to redirect-output to a file, but \f[V]-o\f[R]/\f[V]--output\f[R] must come before-\f[V]--print-highlight-style\f[R] on the command line.-.TP-\f[V]--syntax-definition=\f[R]\f[I]FILE\f[R]-Instructs pandoc to load a KDE XML syntax definition file, which will be-used for syntax highlighting of appropriately marked code blocks.-This can be used to add support for new languages or to use altered-syntax definitions for existing languages.-This option may be repeated to add multiple syntax definitions.-.TP-\f[V]-H\f[R] \f[I]FILE\f[R], \f[V]--include-in-header=\f[R]\f[I]FILE\f[R]|\f[I]URL\f[R]-Include contents of \f[I]FILE\f[R], verbatim, at the end of the header.-This can be used, for example, to include special CSS or JavaScript in-HTML documents.-This option can be used repeatedly to include multiple files in the-header.-They will be included in the order specified.-Implies \f[V]--standalone\f[R].-.TP-\f[V]-B\f[R] \f[I]FILE\f[R], \f[V]--include-before-body=\f[R]\f[I]FILE\f[R]|\f[I]URL\f[R]-Include contents of \f[I]FILE\f[R], verbatim, at the beginning of the-document body (e.g.\ after the \f[V]<body>\f[R] tag in HTML, or the-\f[V]\[rs]begin{document}\f[R] command in LaTeX).-This can be used to include navigation bars or banners in HTML-documents.-This option can be used repeatedly to include multiple files.-They will be included in the order specified.-Implies \f[V]--standalone\f[R].-.TP-\f[V]-A\f[R] \f[I]FILE\f[R], \f[V]--include-after-body=\f[R]\f[I]FILE\f[R]|\f[I]URL\f[R]-Include contents of \f[I]FILE\f[R], verbatim, at the end of the document-body (before the \f[V]</body>\f[R] tag in HTML, or the-\f[V]\[rs]end{document}\f[R] command in LaTeX).-This option can be used repeatedly to include multiple files.-They will be included in the order specified.-Implies \f[V]--standalone\f[R].-.TP-\f[V]--resource-path=\f[R]\f[I]SEARCHPATH\f[R]-List of paths to search for images and other resources.-The paths should be separated by \f[V]:\f[R] on Linux, UNIX, and macOS-systems, and by \f[V];\f[R] on Windows.-If \f[V]--resource-path\f[R] is not specified, the default resource path-is the working directory.-Note that, if \f[V]--resource-path\f[R] is specified, the working-directory must be explicitly listed or it will not be searched.-For example: \f[V]--resource-path=.:test\f[R] will search the working-directory and the \f[V]test\f[R] subdirectory, in that order.-This option can be used repeatedly.-Search path components that come later on the command line will be-searched before those that come earlier, so-\f[V]--resource-path foo:bar --resource-path baz:bim\f[R] is equivalent-to \f[V]--resource-path baz:bim:foo:bar\f[R].-.TP-\f[V]--request-header=\f[R]\f[I]NAME\f[R]\f[V]:\f[R]\f[I]VAL\f[R]-Set the request header \f[I]NAME\f[R] to the value \f[I]VAL\f[R] when-making HTTP requests (for example, when a URL is given on the command-line, or when resources used in a document must be downloaded).-If you\[cq]re behind a proxy, you also need to set the environment-variable \f[V]http_proxy\f[R] to \f[V]http://...\f[R].-.TP-\f[V]--no-check-certificate[=true|false]\f[R]-Disable the certificate verification to allow access to unsecure HTTP-resources (for example when the certificate is no longer valid or self-signed).-.SS Options affecting specific writers-.TP-\f[V]--self-contained[=true|false]\f[R]-\f[I]Deprecated synonym for-\f[VI]--embed-resources --standalone\f[I].\f[R]-.TP-\f[V]--embed-resources[=true|false]\f[R]-Produce a standalone HTML file with no external dependencies, using-\f[V]data:\f[R] URIs to incorporate the contents of linked scripts,-stylesheets, images, and videos.-The resulting file should be \[lq]self-contained,\[rq] in the sense that-it needs no external files and no net access to be displayed properly by-a browser.-This option works only with HTML output formats, including-\f[V]html4\f[R], \f[V]html5\f[R], \f[V]html+lhs\f[R],-\f[V]html5+lhs\f[R], \f[V]s5\f[R], \f[V]slidy\f[R], \f[V]slideous\f[R],-\f[V]dzslides\f[R], and \f[V]revealjs\f[R].-Scripts, images, and stylesheets at absolute URLs will be downloaded;-those at relative URLs will be sought relative to the working directory-(if the first source file is local) or relative to the base URL (if the-first source file is remote).-Elements with the attribute \f[V]data-external=\[dq]1\[dq]\f[R] will be-left alone; the documents they link to will not be incorporated in the-document.-Limitation: resources that are loaded dynamically through JavaScript-cannot be incorporated; as a result, fonts may be missing when-\f[V]--mathjax\f[R] is used, and some advanced features (e.g.\ zoom or-speaker notes) may not work in an offline \[lq]self-contained\[rq]-\f[V]reveal.js\f[R] slide show.-.TP-\f[V]--html-q-tags[=true|false]\f[R]-Use \f[V]<q>\f[R] tags for quotes in HTML.-(This option only has an effect if the \f[V]smart\f[R] extension is-enabled for the input format used.)-.TP-\f[V]--ascii[=true|false]\f[R]-Use only ASCII characters in output.-Currently supported for XML and HTML formats (which use entities instead-of UTF-8 when this option is selected), CommonMark, gfm, and Markdown-(which use entities), roff man and ms (which use hexadecimal escapes),-and to a limited degree LaTeX (which uses standard commands for accented-characters when possible).-.TP-\f[V]--reference-links[=true|false]\f[R]-Use reference-style links, rather than inline links, in writing Markdown-or reStructuredText.-By default inline links are used.-The placement of link references is affected by the-\f[V]--reference-location\f[R] option.-.TP-\f[V]--reference-location=block\f[R]|\f[V]section\f[R]|\f[V]document\f[R]-Specify whether footnotes (and references, if \f[V]reference-links\f[R]-is set) are placed at the end of the current (top-level) block, the-current section, or the document.-The default is \f[V]document\f[R].-Currently this option only affects the \f[V]markdown\f[R],-\f[V]muse\f[R], \f[V]html\f[R], \f[V]epub\f[R], \f[V]slidy\f[R],-\f[V]s5\f[R], \f[V]slideous\f[R], \f[V]dzslides\f[R], and-\f[V]revealjs\f[R] writers.-In slide formats, specifying \f[V]--reference-location=section\f[R] will-cause notes to be rendered at the bottom of a slide.-.TP-\f[V]--markdown-headings=setext\f[R]|\f[V]atx\f[R]-Specify whether to use ATX-style (\f[V]#\f[R]-prefixed) or Setext-style-(underlined) headings for level 1 and 2 headings in Markdown output.-(The default is \f[V]atx\f[R].)-ATX-style headings are always used for levels 3+.-This option also affects Markdown cells in \f[V]ipynb\f[R] output.-.TP-\f[V]--list-tables[=true|false]\f[R]-Render tables as list tables in RST output.-.TP-\f[V]--top-level-division=default\f[R]|\f[V]section\f[R]|\f[V]chapter\f[R]|\f[V]part\f[R]-Treat top-level headings as the given division type in LaTeX, ConTeXt,-DocBook, and TEI output.-The hierarchy order is part, chapter, then section; all headings are-shifted such that the top-level heading becomes the specified type.-The default behavior is to determine the best division type via-heuristics: unless other conditions apply, \f[V]section\f[R] is chosen.-When the \f[V]documentclass\f[R] variable is set to \f[V]report\f[R],-\f[V]book\f[R], or \f[V]memoir\f[R] (unless the \f[V]article\f[R] option-is specified), \f[V]chapter\f[R] is implied as the setting for this-option.-If \f[V]beamer\f[R] is the output format, specifying either-\f[V]chapter\f[R] or \f[V]part\f[R] will cause top-level headings to-become \f[V]\[rs]part{..}\f[R], while second-level headings remain as-their default type.-.TP-\f[V]-N\f[R], \f[V]--number-sections\f[R]-Number section headings in LaTeX, ConTeXt, HTML, Docx, ms, or EPUB-output.-By default, sections are not numbered.-Sections with class \f[V]unnumbered\f[R] will never be numbered, even if-\f[V]--number-sections\f[R] is specified.-.TP-\f[V]--number-offset=\f[R]\f[I]NUMBER\f[R][\f[V],\f[R]\f[I]NUMBER\f[R]\f[V],\f[R]\f[I]\&...\f[R]]-Offset for section headings in HTML output (ignored in other output-formats).-The first number is added to the section number for top-level headings,-the second for second-level headings, and so on.-So, for example, if you want the first top-level heading in your-document to be numbered \[lq]6\[rq], specify-\f[V]--number-offset=5\f[R].-If your document starts with a level-2 heading which you want to be-numbered \[lq]1.5\[rq], specify \f[V]--number-offset=1,4\f[R].-Offsets are 0 by default.-Implies \f[V]--number-sections\f[R].-.TP-\f[V]--listings[=true|false]\f[R]-Use the \f[V]listings\f[R] package for LaTeX code blocks.-The package does not support multi-byte encoding for source code.-To handle UTF-8 you would need to use a custom template.-This issue is fully documented here: Encoding issue with the listings-package.-.TP-\f[V]-i\f[R], \f[V]--incremental[=true|false]\f[R]-Make list items in slide shows display incrementally (one by one).-The default is for lists to be displayed all at once.-.TP-\f[V]--slide-level=\f[R]\f[I]NUMBER\f[R]-Specifies that headings with the specified level create slides (for-\f[V]beamer\f[R], \f[V]s5\f[R], \f[V]slidy\f[R], \f[V]slideous\f[R],-\f[V]dzslides\f[R]).-Headings above this level in the hierarchy are used to divide the slide-show into sections; headings below this level create subheads within a-slide.-Valid values are 0-6.-If a slide level of 0 is specified, slides will not be split-automatically on headings, and horizontal rules must be used to indicate-slide boundaries.-If a slide level is not specified explicitly, the slide level will be-set automatically based on the contents of the document; see Structuring-the slide show.-.TP-\f[V]--section-divs[=true|false]\f[R]-Wrap sections in \f[V]<section>\f[R] tags (or \f[V]<div>\f[R] tags for-\f[V]html4\f[R]), and attach identifiers to the enclosing-\f[V]<section>\f[R] (or \f[V]<div>\f[R]) rather than the heading itself-(see Heading identifiers, below).-This option only affects HTML output (and does not affect HTML slide-formats).-.TP-\f[V]--email-obfuscation=none\f[R]|\f[V]javascript\f[R]|\f[V]references\f[R]-Specify a method for obfuscating \f[V]mailto:\f[R] links in HTML-documents.-\f[V]none\f[R] leaves \f[V]mailto:\f[R] links as they are.-\f[V]javascript\f[R] obfuscates them using JavaScript.-\f[V]references\f[R] obfuscates them by printing their letters as-decimal or hexadecimal character references.-The default is \f[V]none\f[R].-.TP-\f[V]--id-prefix=\f[R]\f[I]STRING\f[R]-Specify a prefix to be added to all identifiers and internal links in-HTML and DocBook output, and to footnote numbers in Markdown and Haddock-output.-This is useful for preventing duplicate identifiers when generating-fragments to be included in other pages.-.TP-\f[V]-T\f[R] \f[I]STRING\f[R], \f[V]--title-prefix=\f[R]\f[I]STRING\f[R]-Specify \f[I]STRING\f[R] as a prefix at the beginning of the title that-appears in the HTML header (but not in the title as it appears at the-beginning of the HTML body).-Implies \f[V]--standalone\f[R].-.TP-\f[V]-c\f[R] \f[I]URL\f[R], \f[V]--css=\f[R]\f[I]URL\f[R]-Link to a CSS style sheet.-This option can be used repeatedly to include multiple files.-They will be included in the order specified.-This option only affects HTML (including HTML slide shows) and EPUB-output.-It should be used together with \f[V]-s/--standalone\f[R], because the-link to the stylesheet goes in the document header.-.RS-.PP-A stylesheet is required for generating EPUB.-If none is provided using this option (or the \f[V]css\f[R] or-\f[V]stylesheet\f[R] metadata fields), pandoc will look for a file-\f[V]epub.css\f[R] in the user data directory (see-\f[V]--data-dir\f[R]).-If it is not found there, sensible defaults will be used.-.RE-.TP-\f[V]--reference-doc=\f[R]\f[I]FILE\f[R]|\f[I]URL\f[R]-Use the specified file as a style reference in producing a docx or ODT-file.-.RS-.TP-Docx-For best results, the reference docx should be a modified version of a-docx file produced using pandoc.-The contents of the reference docx are ignored, but its stylesheets and-document properties (including margins, page size, header, and footer)-are used in the new docx.-If no reference docx is specified on the command line, pandoc will look-for a file \f[V]reference.docx\f[R] in the user data directory (see-\f[V]--data-dir\f[R]).-If this is not found either, sensible defaults will be used.-.RS-.PP-To produce a custom \f[V]reference.docx\f[R], first get a copy of the-default \f[V]reference.docx\f[R]:-\f[V]pandoc -o custom-reference.docx --print-default-data-file reference.docx\f[R].-Then open \f[V]custom-reference.docx\f[R] in Word, modify the styles as-you wish, and save the file.-For best results, do not make changes to this file other than modifying-the styles used by pandoc:-.PP-Paragraph styles:-.IP \[bu] 2-Normal-.IP \[bu] 2-Body Text-.IP \[bu] 2-First Paragraph-.IP \[bu] 2-Compact-.IP \[bu] 2-Title-.IP \[bu] 2-Subtitle-.IP \[bu] 2-Author-.IP \[bu] 2-Date-.IP \[bu] 2-Abstract-.IP \[bu] 2-AbstractTitle-.IP \[bu] 2-Bibliography-.IP \[bu] 2-Heading 1-.IP \[bu] 2-Heading 2-.IP \[bu] 2-Heading 3-.IP \[bu] 2-Heading 4-.IP \[bu] 2-Heading 5-.IP \[bu] 2-Heading 6-.IP \[bu] 2-Heading 7-.IP \[bu] 2-Heading 8-.IP \[bu] 2-Heading 9-.IP \[bu] 2-Block Text-.IP \[bu] 2-Source Code-.IP \[bu] 2-Footnote Text-.IP \[bu] 2-Definition Term-.IP \[bu] 2-Definition-.IP \[bu] 2-Caption-.IP \[bu] 2-Table Caption-.IP \[bu] 2-Image Caption-.IP \[bu] 2-Figure-.IP \[bu] 2-Captioned Figure-.IP \[bu] 2-TOC Heading-.PP-Character styles:-.IP \[bu] 2-Default Paragraph Font-.IP \[bu] 2-Body Text Char-.IP \[bu] 2-Verbatim Char-.IP \[bu] 2-Footnote Reference-.IP \[bu] 2-Hyperlink-.IP \[bu] 2-Section Number-.PP-Table style:-.IP \[bu] 2-Table-.RE-.TP-ODT-For best results, the reference ODT should be a modified version of an-ODT produced using pandoc.-The contents of the reference ODT are ignored, but its stylesheets are-used in the new ODT.-If no reference ODT is specified on the command line, pandoc will look-for a file \f[V]reference.odt\f[R] in the user data directory (see-\f[V]--data-dir\f[R]).-If this is not found either, sensible defaults will be used.-.RS-.PP-To produce a custom \f[V]reference.odt\f[R], first get a copy of the-default \f[V]reference.odt\f[R]:-\f[V]pandoc -o custom-reference.odt --print-default-data-file reference.odt\f[R].-Then open \f[V]custom-reference.odt\f[R] in LibreOffice, modify the-styles as you wish, and save the file.-.RE-.TP-PowerPoint-Templates included with Microsoft PowerPoint 2013 (either with-\f[V].pptx\f[R] or \f[V].potx\f[R] extension) are known to work, as are-most templates derived from these.-.RS-.PP-The specific requirement is that the template should contain layouts-with the following names (as seen within PowerPoint):-.IP \[bu] 2-Title Slide-.IP \[bu] 2-Title and Content-.IP \[bu] 2-Section Header-.IP \[bu] 2-Two Content-.IP \[bu] 2-Comparison-.IP \[bu] 2-Content with Caption-.IP \[bu] 2-Blank-.PP-For each name, the first layout found with that name will be used.-If no layout is found with one of the names, pandoc will output a-warning and use the layout with that name from the default reference doc-instead.-(How these layouts are used is described in PowerPoint layout choice.)-.PP-All templates included with a recent version of MS PowerPoint will fit-these criteria.-(You can click on \f[V]Layout\f[R] under the \f[V]Home\f[R] menu to-check.)-.PP-You can also modify the default \f[V]reference.pptx\f[R]: first run-\f[V]pandoc -o custom-reference.pptx --print-default-data-file reference.pptx\f[R],-and then modify \f[V]custom-reference.pptx\f[R] in MS PowerPoint (pandoc-will use the layouts with the names listed above).-.RE-.RE-.TP-\f[V]--split-level=\f[R]\f[I]NUMBER\f[R]-Specify the heading level at which to split an EPUB or chunked HTML-document into separate files.-The default is to split into chapters at level-1 headings.-In the case of EPUB, this option only affects the internal composition-of the EPUB, not the way chapters and sections are displayed to users.-Some readers may be slow if the chapter files are too large, so for-large documents with few level-1 headings, one might want to use a-chapter level of 2 or 3.-For chunked HTML, this option determines how much content goes in each-\[lq]chunk.\[rq]-.TP-\f[V]--chunk-template=\f[R]\f[I]PATHTEMPLATE\f[R]-Specify a template for the filenames in a \f[V]chunkedhtml\f[R]-document.-In the template, \f[V]%n\f[R] will be replaced by the chunk number-(padded with leading 0s to 3 digits), \f[V]%s\f[R] with the section-number of the chunk, \f[V]%h\f[R] with the heading text (with formatting-removed), \f[V]%i\f[R] with the section identifier.-For example, \f[V]%section-%s-%i.html\f[R] might be resolved to-\f[V]section-1.1-introduction.html\f[R].-The characters \f[V]/\f[R] and \f[V]\[rs]\f[R] are not allowed in chunk-templates and will be ignored.-The default is \f[V]%s-%i.html\f[R].-.TP-\f[V]--epub-chapter-level=\f[R]\f[I]NUMBER\f[R]-\f[I]Deprecated synonym for \f[VI]--split-level\f[I].\f[R]-.TP-\f[V]--epub-cover-image=\f[R]\f[I]FILE\f[R]-Use the specified image as the EPUB cover.-It is recommended that the image be less than 1000px in width and-height.-Note that in a Markdown source document you can also specify-\f[V]cover-image\f[R] in a YAML metadata block (see EPUB Metadata,-below).-.TP-\f[V]--epub-title-page=true\f[R]|\f[V]false\f[R]-Determines whether a the title page is included in the EPUB (default is-\f[V]true\f[R]).-.TP-\f[V]--epub-metadata=\f[R]\f[I]FILE\f[R]-Look in the specified XML file for metadata for the EPUB.-The file should contain a series of Dublin Core elements.-For example:-.RS-.IP-.nf-\f[C]- <dc:rights>Creative Commons</dc:rights>- <dc:language>es-AR</dc:language>-\f[R]-.fi-.PP-By default, pandoc will include the following metadata elements:-\f[V]<dc:title>\f[R] (from the document title), \f[V]<dc:creator>\f[R]-(from the document authors), \f[V]<dc:date>\f[R] (from the document-date, which should be in ISO 8601 format), \f[V]<dc:language>\f[R] (from-the \f[V]lang\f[R] variable, or, if is not set, the locale), and-\f[V]<dc:identifier id=\[dq]BookId\[dq]>\f[R] (a randomly generated-UUID).-Any of these may be overridden by elements in the metadata file.-.PP-Note: if the source document is Markdown, a YAML metadata block in the-document can be used instead.-See below under EPUB Metadata.-.RE-.TP-\f[V]--epub-embed-font=\f[R]\f[I]FILE\f[R]-Embed the specified font in the EPUB.-This option can be repeated to embed multiple fonts.-Wildcards can also be used: for example, \f[V]DejaVuSans-*.ttf\f[R].-However, if you use wildcards on the command line, be sure to escape-them or put the whole filename in single quotes, to prevent them from-being interpreted by the shell.-To use the embedded fonts, you will need to add declarations like the-following to your CSS (see \f[V]--css\f[R]):-.RS-.IP-.nf-\f[C]-\[at]font-face {-   font-family: DejaVuSans;-   font-style: normal;-   font-weight: normal;-   src:url(\[dq]../fonts/DejaVuSans-Regular.ttf\[dq]);-}-\[at]font-face {-   font-family: DejaVuSans;-   font-style: normal;-   font-weight: bold;-   src:url(\[dq]../fonts/DejaVuSans-Bold.ttf\[dq]);-}-\[at]font-face {-   font-family: DejaVuSans;-   font-style: italic;-   font-weight: normal;-   src:url(\[dq]../fonts/DejaVuSans-Oblique.ttf\[dq]);-}-\[at]font-face {-   font-family: DejaVuSans;-   font-style: italic;-   font-weight: bold;-   src:url(\[dq]../fonts/DejaVuSans-BoldOblique.ttf\[dq]);-}-body { font-family: \[dq]DejaVuSans\[dq]; }-\f[R]-.fi-.RE-.TP-\f[V]--epub-subdirectory=\f[R]\f[I]DIRNAME\f[R]-Specify the subdirectory in the OCF container that is to hold the-EPUB-specific contents.-The default is \f[V]EPUB\f[R].-To put the EPUB contents in the top level, use an empty string.-.TP-\f[V]--ipynb-output=all|none|best\f[R]-Determines how ipynb output cells are treated.-\f[V]all\f[R] means that all of the data formats included in the-original are preserved.-\f[V]none\f[R] means that the contents of data cells are omitted.-\f[V]best\f[R] causes pandoc to try to pick the richest data block in-each output cell that is compatible with the output format.-The default is \f[V]best\f[R].-.TP-\f[V]--pdf-engine=\f[R]\f[I]PROGRAM\f[R]-Use the specified engine when producing PDF output.-Valid values are \f[V]pdflatex\f[R], \f[V]lualatex\f[R],-\f[V]xelatex\f[R], \f[V]latexmk\f[R], \f[V]tectonic\f[R],-\f[V]wkhtmltopdf\f[R], \f[V]weasyprint\f[R], \f[V]pagedjs-cli\f[R],-\f[V]prince\f[R], \f[V]context\f[R], \f[V]pdfroff\f[R], and-\f[V]typst\f[R].-If the engine is not in your PATH, the full path of the engine may be-specified here.-If this option is not specified, pandoc uses the following defaults-depending on the output format specified using \f[V]-t/--to\f[R]:-.RS-.IP \[bu] 2-\f[V]-t latex\f[R] or none: \f[V]pdflatex\f[R] (other options:-\f[V]xelatex\f[R], \f[V]lualatex\f[R], \f[V]tectonic\f[R],-\f[V]latexmk\f[R])-.IP \[bu] 2-\f[V]-t context\f[R]: \f[V]context\f[R]-.IP \[bu] 2-\f[V]-t html\f[R]: \f[V]wkhtmltopdf\f[R] (other options:-\f[V]prince\f[R], \f[V]weasyprint\f[R], \f[V]pagedjs-cli\f[R]; see-print-css.rocks for a good introduction to PDF generation from HTML/CSS)-.IP \[bu] 2-\f[V]-t ms\f[R]: \f[V]pdfroff\f[R]-.IP \[bu] 2-\f[V]-t typst\f[R]: \f[V]typst\f[R]-.RE-.TP-\f[V]--pdf-engine-opt=\f[R]\f[I]STRING\f[R]-Use the given string as a command-line argument to the-\f[V]pdf-engine\f[R].-For example, to use a persistent directory \f[V]foo\f[R] for-\f[V]latexmk\f[R]\[cq]s auxiliary files, use-\f[V]--pdf-engine-opt=-outdir=foo\f[R].-Note that no check for duplicate options is done.-.SS Citation rendering-.TP-\f[V]-C\f[R], \f[V]--citeproc\f[R]-Process the citations in the file, replacing them with rendered-citations and adding a bibliography.-Citation processing will not take place unless bibliographic data is-supplied, either through an external file specified using the-\f[V]--bibliography\f[R] option or the \f[V]bibliography\f[R] field in-metadata, or via a \f[V]references\f[R] section in metadata containing a-list of citations in CSL YAML format with Markdown formatting.-The style is controlled by a CSL stylesheet specified using the-\f[V]--csl\f[R] option or the \f[V]csl\f[R] field in metadata.-(If no stylesheet is specified, the \f[V]chicago-author-date\f[R] style-will be used by default.)-The citation processing transformation may be applied before or after-filters or Lua filters (see \f[V]--filter\f[R], \f[V]--lua-filter\f[R]):-these transformations are applied in the order they appear on the-command line.-For more information, see the section on Citations.-.TP-\f[V]--bibliography=\f[R]\f[I]FILE\f[R]-Set the \f[V]bibliography\f[R] field in the document\[cq]s metadata to-\f[I]FILE\f[R], overriding any value set in the metadata.-If you supply this argument multiple times, each \f[I]FILE\f[R] will be-added to bibliography.-If \f[I]FILE\f[R] is a URL, it will be fetched via HTTP.-If \f[I]FILE\f[R] is not found relative to the working directory, it-will be sought in the resource path (see \f[V]--resource-path\f[R]).-.TP-\f[V]--csl=\f[R]\f[I]FILE\f[R]-Set the \f[V]csl\f[R] field in the document\[cq]s metadata to-\f[I]FILE\f[R], overriding any value set in the metadata.-(This is equivalent to \f[V]--metadata csl=FILE\f[R].)-If \f[I]FILE\f[R] is a URL, it will be fetched via HTTP.-If \f[I]FILE\f[R] is not found relative to the working directory, it-will be sought in the resource path (see \f[V]--resource-path\f[R]) and-finally in the \f[V]csl\f[R] subdirectory of the pandoc user data-directory.-.TP-\f[V]--citation-abbreviations=\f[R]\f[I]FILE\f[R]-Set the \f[V]citation-abbreviations\f[R] field in the document\[cq]s-metadata to \f[I]FILE\f[R], overriding any value set in the metadata.-(This is equivalent to-\f[V]--metadata citation-abbreviations=FILE\f[R].)-If \f[I]FILE\f[R] is a URL, it will be fetched via HTTP.-If \f[I]FILE\f[R] is not found relative to the working directory, it-will be sought in the resource path (see \f[V]--resource-path\f[R]) and-finally in the \f[V]csl\f[R] subdirectory of the pandoc user data-directory.-.TP-\f[V]--natbib\f[R]-Use \f[V]natbib\f[R] for citations in LaTeX output.-This option is not for use with the \f[V]--citeproc\f[R] option or with-PDF output.-It is intended for use in producing a LaTeX file that can be processed-with \f[V]bibtex\f[R].-.TP-\f[V]--biblatex\f[R]-Use \f[V]biblatex\f[R] for citations in LaTeX output.-This option is not for use with the \f[V]--citeproc\f[R] option or with-PDF output.-It is intended for use in producing a LaTeX file that can be processed-with \f[V]bibtex\f[R] or \f[V]biber\f[R].-.SS Math rendering in HTML-.PP-The default is to render TeX math as far as possible using Unicode-characters.-Formulas are put inside a \f[V]span\f[R] with-\f[V]class=\[dq]math\[dq]\f[R], so that they may be styled differently-from the surrounding text if needed.-However, this gives acceptable results only for basic math, usually you-will want to use \f[V]--mathjax\f[R] or another of the following-options.-.TP-\f[V]--mathjax\f[R][\f[V]=\f[R]\f[I]URL\f[R]]-Use MathJax to display embedded TeX math in HTML output.-TeX math will be put between \f[V]\[rs](...\[rs])\f[R] (for inline math)-or \f[V]\[rs][...\[rs]]\f[R] (for display math) and wrapped in-\f[V]<span>\f[R] tags with class \f[V]math\f[R].-Then the MathJax JavaScript will render it.-The \f[I]URL\f[R] should point to the \f[V]MathJax.js\f[R] load script.-If a \f[I]URL\f[R] is not provided, a link to the Cloudflare CDN will be-inserted.-.TP-\f[V]--mathml\f[R]-Convert TeX math to MathML (in \f[V]epub3\f[R], \f[V]docbook4\f[R],-\f[V]docbook5\f[R], \f[V]jats\f[R], \f[V]html4\f[R] and-\f[V]html5\f[R]).-This is the default in \f[V]odt\f[R] output.-MathML is supported natively by the main web browsers and select e-book-readers.-.TP-\f[V]--webtex\f[R][\f[V]=\f[R]\f[I]URL\f[R]]-Convert TeX formulas to \f[V]<img>\f[R] tags that link to an external-script that converts formulas to images.-The formula will be URL-encoded and concatenated with the URL provided.-For SVG images you can for example use-\f[V]--webtex https://latex.codecogs.com/svg.latex?\f[R].-If no URL is specified, the CodeCogs URL generating PNGs will be used-(\f[V]https://latex.codecogs.com/png.latex?\f[R]).-Note: the \f[V]--webtex\f[R] option will affect Markdown output as well-as HTML, which is useful if you\[cq]re targeting a version of Markdown-without native math support.-.TP-\f[V]--katex\f[R][\f[V]=\f[R]\f[I]URL\f[R]]-Use KaTeX to display embedded TeX math in HTML output.-The \f[I]URL\f[R] is the base URL for the KaTeX library.-That directory should contain a \f[V]katex.min.js\f[R] and a-\f[V]katex.min.css\f[R] file.-If a \f[I]URL\f[R] is not provided, a link to the KaTeX CDN will be-inserted.-.TP-\f[V]--gladtex\f[R]-Enclose TeX math in \f[V]<eq>\f[R] tags in HTML output.-The resulting HTML can then be processed by GladTeX to produce SVG-images of the typeset formulas and an HTML file with these images-embedded.-.RS-.IP-.nf-\f[C]-pandoc -s --gladtex input.md -o myfile.htex-gladtex -d image_dir myfile.htex-# produces myfile.html and images in image_dir-\f[R]-.fi-.RE-.SS Options for wrapper scripts-.TP-\f[V]--dump-args[=true|false]\f[R]-Print information about command-line arguments to \f[I]stdout\f[R], then-exit.-This option is intended primarily for use in wrapper scripts.-The first line of output contains the name of the output file specified-with the \f[V]-o\f[R] option, or \f[V]-\f[R] (for \f[I]stdout\f[R]) if-no output file was specified.-The remaining lines contain the command-line arguments, one per line, in-the order they appear.-These do not include regular pandoc options and their arguments, but do-include any options appearing after a \f[V]--\f[R] separator at the end-of the line.-.TP-\f[V]--ignore-args[=true|false]\f[R]-Ignore command-line arguments (for use in wrapper scripts).-Regular pandoc options are not ignored.-Thus, for example,-.RS-.IP-.nf-\f[C]-pandoc --ignore-args -o foo.html -s foo.txt -- -e latin1-\f[R]-.fi-.PP-is equivalent to-.IP-.nf-\f[C]-pandoc -o foo.html -s-\f[R]-.fi-.RE-.SH EXIT CODES-.PP-If pandoc completes successfully, it will return exit code 0.-Nonzero exit codes have the following meanings:-.RS -14n-.IP-.nf-\f[C]-    Code Error-  ------ --------------------------------------       1 PandocIOError-       3 PandocFailOnWarningError-       4 PandocAppError-       5 PandocTemplateError-       6 PandocOptionError-      21 PandocUnknownReaderError-      22 PandocUnknownWriterError-      23 PandocUnsupportedExtensionError-      24 PandocCiteprocError-      25 PandocBibliographyError-      31 PandocEpubSubdirectoryError-      43 PandocPDFError-      44 PandocXMLError-      47 PandocPDFProgramNotFoundError-      61 PandocHttpError-      62 PandocShouldNeverHappenError-      63 PandocSomeError-      64 PandocParseError-      66 PandocMakePDFError-      67 PandocSyntaxMapError-      83 PandocFilterError-      84 PandocLuaError-      89 PandocNoScriptingEngine-      91 PandocMacroLoop-      92 PandocUTF8DecodingError-      93 PandocIpynbDecodingError-      94 PandocUnsupportedCharsetError-      97 PandocCouldNotFindDataFileError-      98 PandocCouldNotFindMetadataFileError-      99 PandocResourceNotFound-\f[R]-.fi-.RE-.SH DEFAULTS FILES-.PP-The \f[V]--defaults\f[R] option may be used to specify a package of-options, in the form of a YAML file.-.PP-Fields that are omitted will just have their regular default values.-So a defaults file can be as simple as one line:-.IP-.nf-\f[C]-verbosity: INFO-\f[R]-.fi-.PP-In fields that expect a file path (or list of file paths), the following-syntax may be used to interpolate environment variables:-.IP-.nf-\f[C]-csl:  ${HOME}/mycsldir/special.csl-\f[R]-.fi-.PP-\f[V]${USERDATA}\f[R] may also be used; this will always resolve to the-user data directory that is current when the defaults file is parsed,-regardless of the setting of the environment variable-\f[V]USERDATA\f[R].-.PP-\f[V]${.}\f[R] will resolve to the directory containing the defaults-file itself.-This allows you to refer to resources contained in that directory:-.IP-.nf-\f[C]-epub-cover-image: ${.}/cover.jpg-epub-metadata: ${.}/meta.xml-resource-path:-- .             # the working directory from which pandoc is run-- ${.}/images   # the images subdirectory of the directory-                # containing this defaults file-\f[R]-.fi-.PP-This environment variable interpolation syntax \f[I]only\f[R] works in-fields that expect file paths.-.PP-Defaults files can be placed in the \f[V]defaults\f[R] subdirectory of-the user data directory and used from any directory.-For example, one could create a file specifying defaults for writing-letters, save it as \f[V]letter.yaml\f[R] in the \f[V]defaults\f[R]-subdirectory of the user data directory, and then invoke these defaults-from any directory using \f[V]pandoc --defaults letter\f[R] or-\f[V]pandoc -dletter\f[R].-.PP-When multiple defaults are used, their contents will be combined.-.PP-Note that, where command-line arguments may be repeated-(\f[V]--metadata-file\f[R], \f[V]--css\f[R],-\f[V]--include-in-header\f[R], \f[V]--include-before-body\f[R],-\f[V]--include-after-body\f[R], \f[V]--variable\f[R],-\f[V]--metadata\f[R], \f[V]--syntax-definition\f[R]), the values-specified on the command line will combine with values specified in the-defaults file, rather than replacing them.-.PP-The following tables show the mapping between the command line and-defaults file entries.-.RS -14n-.IP-.nf-\f[C]-- command line                      defaults file                     - --------------------------------- ----------------------------------- foo.md                            input-file: foo.md            -- foo.md bar.md                     input-files:                  -                                     - foo.md                    -                                     - bar.md                    --\f[R]-.fi-.RE-.PP-The value of \f[V]input-files\f[R] may be left empty to indicate input-from stdin, and it can be an empty sequence \f[V][]\f[R] for no input.-.SS General options-.RS -14n-.IP-.nf-\f[C]-- command line                      defaults file                     - --------------------------------- ----------------------------------- --from markdown+emoji             from: markdown+emoji          -                                                                 -                                   reader: markdown+emoji        --                                   to: markdown+hard_line_breaks -   --to markdown+hard_line_breaks                                    -                                                                 -                               writer: markdown+hard_line_breaks -- --output foo.pdf                  output-file: foo.pdf          -- --output -                        output-file:                  -- --data-dir dir                    data-dir: dir                 -- --defaults file                   defaults:                     -                                   - file                        -- --verbose                         verbosity: INFO               -- --quiet                           verbosity: ERROR              -- --fail-if-warnings                fail-if-warnings: true        -- --sandbox                         sandbox: true                 -- --log=FILE                        log-file: FILE                --\f[R]-.fi-.RE-.PP-Options specified in a defaults file itself always have priority over-those in another file included with a \f[V]defaults:\f[R] entry.-.PP-\f[V]verbosity\f[R] can have the values \f[V]ERROR\f[R],-\f[V]WARNING\f[R], or \f[V]INFO\f[R].-.SS Reader options-.RS -14n-.IP-.nf-\f[C]-- command line                      defaults file                     - --------------------------------- ----------------------------------- --shift-heading-level-by -1       shift-heading-level-by: -1    --                                   indented-code-classes:        -   --indented-code-classes python        - python                    --                                                                 - --default-image-extension \[dq].jpg\[dq]    default-image-extension: \[aq].jpg\[aq] -- --file-scope                      file-scope: true              -- --filter pandoc-citeproc \[rs]        filters:                      -                                     - pandoc-citeproc           -   --lua-filter count-words.lua \[rs]        - count-words.lua           -  --filter special.lua               - type: json                -                                       path: special.lua         -- --metadata key=value \[rs]            metadata:                     -  --metadata key2                    key: value                  -                                     key2: true                  -- --metadata-file meta.yaml         metadata-files:               -                                     - meta.yaml                 -                                                                 -                                   metadata-file: meta.yaml      -- --preserve-tabs                   preserve-tabs: true           -- --tab-stop 8                      tab-stop: 8                   -- --track-changes accept            track-changes: accept         -- --extract-media dir               extract-media: dir            -- --abbreviations abbrevs.txt       abbreviations: abbrevs.txt    -- --trace                           trace: true                   --\f[R]-.fi-.RE-.PP-Metadata values specified in a defaults file are parsed as literal-string text, not Markdown.-.PP-Filters will be assumed to be Lua filters if they have the-\f[V].lua\f[R] extension, and JSON filters otherwise.-But the filter type can also be specified explicitly, as shown.-Filters are run in the order specified.-To include the built-in citeproc filter, use either \f[V]citeproc\f[R]-or \f[V]{type: citeproc}\f[R].-.SS General writer options-.RS -14n-.IP-.nf-\f[C]-- command line                      defaults file                     - --------------------------------- ----------------------------------- --standalone                      standalone: true              -- --template letter                 template: letter              -- --variable key=val \[rs]              variables:                    -   --variable key2                   key: val                    -                                     key2: true                  -- --eol nl                          eol: nl                       -- --dpi 300                         dpi: 300                      -- --wrap 60                         wrap: 60                      -- --columns 72                      columns: 72                   -- --table-of-contents               table-of-contents: true       -- --toc                             toc: true                     -- --toc-depth 3                     toc-depth: 3                  -- --strip-comments                  strip-comments: true          -- --no-highlight                    highlight-style: null         -- --highlight-style kate            highlight-style: kate         --                                   syntax-definitions:           -   --syntax-definition mylang.xml        - mylang.xml                -                                                                 -                                   syntax-definition: mylang.xml -- --include-in-header inc.tex       include-in-header:            -                                     - inc.tex                   --                                   include-before-body:          ---include-before-body inc.tex        - inc.tex                   -- --include-after-body inc.tex      include-after-body:           -                                     - inc.tex                   -- --resource-path .:foo             resource-path: [\[aq].\[aq],\[aq]foo\[aq]]    -- --request-header foo:bar          request-headers:              -                                                                 -                                 - [\[dq]User-Agent\[dq], \[dq]Mozilla/5.0\[dq]] -- --no-check-certificate            no-check-certificate: true    --\f[R]-.fi-.RE-.SS Options affecting specific writers-.RS -14n-.IP-.nf-\f[C]-- command line                      defaults file                     - --------------------------------- ----------------------------------- --self-contained                  self-contained: true          -- --html-q-tags                     html-q-tags: true             -- --ascii                           ascii: true                   -- --reference-links                 reference-links: true         -- --reference-location block        reference-location: block     -- --markdown-headings atx           markdown-headings: atx        -- --list-tables                     list-tables: true             -- --top-level-division chapter      top-level-division: chapter   -- --number-sections                 number-sections: true         -- --number-offset=1,4               number-offset: \[rs][1,4\[rs]]        -- --listings                        listings: true                -- --incremental                     incremental: true             -- --slide-level 2                   slide-level: 2                -- --section-divs                    section-divs: true            --                                   email-obfuscation: references -   --email-obfuscation references                                    -- --id-prefix ch1                   identifier-prefix: ch1        -- --title-prefix MySite             title-prefix: MySite          -- --css styles/screen.css  \[rs]        css:                          -   --css styles/special.css          - styles/screen.css         -                                     - styles/special.css        -- --reference-doc my.docx           reference-doc: my.docx        -- --epub-cover-image cover.jpg      epub-cover-image: cover.jpg   -- --epub-title-page=false           epub-title-page: false        -- --epub-metadata meta.xml          epub-metadata: meta.xml       --                                   epub-fonts:                   -  --epub-embed-font special.otf \[rs]        - special.otf               -                                     - headline.otf              -   --epub-embed-font headline.otf                                    -- --split-level 2                   split-level: 2                -- --chunk-template=\[dq]%i.html\[dq]        chunk-template: \[dq]%i.html\[dq]     -- --epub-subdirectory=\[dq]\[dq]            epub-subdirectory: \[aq]\[aq]         -- --ipynb-output best               ipynb-output: best            -- --pdf-engine xelatex              pdf-engine: xelatex           --                                   pdf-engine-opts:              -  --pdf-engine-opt=--shell-escape        - \[aq]-shell-escape\[aq]           -                                                                 -                                                                 -                                 pdf-engine-opt: \[aq]-shell-escape\[aq] --\f[R]-.fi-.RE-.SS Citation rendering-.RS -14n-.IP-.nf-\f[C]-- command line                      defaults file                     - --------------------------------- ----------------------------------- --citeproc                        citeproc: true                -- --bibliography logic.bib          metadata:                     -                                     bibliography: logic.bib     -- --csl ieee.csl                    metadata:                     -                                     csl: ieee.csl               --                                   metadata:                     - --citation-abbreviations ab.json                                    -                                 citation-abbreviations: ab.json -- --natbib                          cite-method: natbib           -- --biblatex                        cite-method: biblatex         --\f[R]-.fi-.RE-.PP-\f[V]cite-method\f[R] can be \f[V]citeproc\f[R], \f[V]natbib\f[R], or-\f[V]biblatex\f[R].-This only affects LaTeX output.-If you want to use citeproc to format citations, you should also set-`citeproc: true'.-.PP-If you need control over when the citeproc processing is done relative-to other filters, you should instead use \f[V]citeproc\f[R] in the list-of \f[V]filters\f[R] (see above).-.SS Math rendering in HTML-.RS -14n-.IP-.nf-\f[C]-- command line                      defaults file                     - --------------------------------- ----------------------------------- --mathjax                         html-math-method:             -                                     method: mathjax             -- --mathml                          html-math-method:             -                                     method: mathml              -- --webtex                          html-math-method:             -                                     method: webtex              -- --katex                           html-math-method:             -                                     method: katex               -- --gladtex                         html-math-method:             -                                     method: gladtex             --\f[R]-.fi-.RE-.PP-In addition to the values listed above, \f[V]method\f[R] can have the-value \f[V]plain\f[R].-.PP-If the command line option accepts a URL argument, an \f[V]url:\f[R]-field can be added to \f[V]html-math-method:\f[R].-.SS Options for wrapper scripts-.RS -14n-.IP-.nf-\f[C]-- command line                      defaults file                     - --------------------------------- ----------------------------------- --dump-args                       dump-args: true               -- --ignore-args                     ignore-args: true             --\f[R]-.fi-.RE-.SH TEMPLATES-.PP-When the \f[V]-s/--standalone\f[R] option is used, pandoc uses a-template to add header and footer material that is needed for a-self-standing document.-To see the default template that is used, just type-.IP-.nf-\f[C]-pandoc -D *FORMAT*-\f[R]-.fi-.PP-where \f[I]FORMAT\f[R] is the name of the output format.-A custom template can be specified using the \f[V]--template\f[R]-option.-You can also override the system default templates for a given output-format \f[I]FORMAT\f[R] by putting a file-\f[V]templates/default.*FORMAT*\f[R] in the user data directory (see-\f[V]--data-dir\f[R], above).-\f[I]Exceptions:\f[R]-.IP \[bu] 2-For \f[V]odt\f[R] output, customize the \f[V]default.opendocument\f[R]-template.-.IP \[bu] 2-For \f[V]pdf\f[R] output, customize the \f[V]default.latex\f[R] template-(or the \f[V]default.context\f[R] template, if you use-\f[V]-t context\f[R], or the \f[V]default.ms\f[R] template, if you use-\f[V]-t ms\f[R], or the \f[V]default.html\f[R] template, if you use-\f[V]-t html\f[R]).-.IP \[bu] 2-\f[V]docx\f[R] and \f[V]pptx\f[R] have no template (however, you can use-\f[V]--reference-doc\f[R] to customize the output).-.PP-Templates contain \f[I]variables\f[R], which allow for the inclusion of-arbitrary information at any point in the file.-They may be set at the command line using the \f[V]-V/--variable\f[R]-option.-If a variable is not set, pandoc will look for the key in the-document\[cq]s metadata, which can be set using either YAML metadata-blocks or with the \f[V]-M/--metadata\f[R] option.-In addition, some variables are given default values by pandoc.-See Variables below for a list of variables used in pandoc\[cq]s default-templates.-.PP-If you use custom templates, you may need to revise them as pandoc-changes.-We recommend tracking the changes in the default templates, and-modifying your custom templates accordingly.-An easy way to do this is to fork the pandoc-templates repository and-merge in changes after each pandoc release.-.SS Template syntax-.SS Comments-.PP-Anything between the sequence \f[V]$--\f[R] and the end of the line will-be treated as a comment and omitted from the output.-.SS Delimiters-.PP-To mark variables and control structures in the template, either-\f[V]$\f[R]\&...\f[V]$\f[R] or \f[V]${\f[R]\&...\f[V]}\f[R] may be used-as delimiters.-The styles may also be mixed in the same template, but the opening and-closing delimiter must match in each case.-The opening delimiter may be followed by one or more spaces or tabs,-which will be ignored.-The closing delimiter may be preceded by one or more spaces or tabs,-which will be ignored.-.PP-To include a literal \f[V]$\f[R] in the document, use \f[V]$$\f[R].-.SS Interpolated variables-.PP-A slot for an interpolated variable is a variable name surrounded by-matched delimiters.-Variable names must begin with a letter and can contain letters,-numbers, \f[V]_\f[R], \f[V]-\f[R], and \f[V].\f[R].-The keywords \f[V]it\f[R], \f[V]if\f[R], \f[V]else\f[R],-\f[V]endif\f[R], \f[V]for\f[R], \f[V]sep\f[R], and \f[V]endfor\f[R] may-not be used as variable names.-Examples:-.IP-.nf-\f[C]-$foo$-$foo.bar.baz$-$foo_bar.baz-bim$-$ foo $-${foo}-${foo.bar.baz}-${foo_bar.baz-bim}-${ foo }-\f[R]-.fi-.PP-Variable names with periods are used to get at structured variable-values.-So, for example, \f[V]employee.salary\f[R] will return the value of the-\f[V]salary\f[R] field of the object that is the value of the-\f[V]employee\f[R] field.-.IP \[bu] 2-If the value of the variable is a simple value, it will be rendered-verbatim.-(Note that no escaping is done; the assumption is that the calling-program will escape the strings appropriately for the output format.)-.IP \[bu] 2-If the value is a list, the values will be concatenated.-.IP \[bu] 2-If the value is a map, the string \f[V]true\f[R] will be rendered.-.IP \[bu] 2-Every other value will be rendered as the empty string.-.SS Conditionals-.PP-A conditional begins with \f[V]if(variable)\f[R] (enclosed in matched-delimiters) and ends with \f[V]endif\f[R] (enclosed in matched-delimiters).-It may optionally contain an \f[V]else\f[R] (enclosed in matched-delimiters).-The \f[V]if\f[R] section is used if \f[V]variable\f[R] has a non-empty-value, otherwise the \f[V]else\f[R] section is used (if present).-Examples:-.IP-.nf-\f[C]-$if(foo)$bar$endif$--$if(foo)$-  $foo$-$endif$--$if(foo)$-part one-$else$-part two-$endif$--${if(foo)}bar${endif}--${if(foo)}-  ${foo}-${endif}--${if(foo)}-${ foo.bar }-${else}-no foo!-${endif}-\f[R]-.fi-.PP-The keyword \f[V]elseif\f[R] may be used to simplify complex nested-conditionals:-.IP-.nf-\f[C]-$if(foo)$-XXX-$elseif(bar)$-YYY-$else$-ZZZ-$endif$-\f[R]-.fi-.SS For loops-.PP-A for loop begins with \f[V]for(variable)\f[R] (enclosed in matched-delimiters) and ends with \f[V]endfor\f[R] (enclosed in matched-delimiters).-.IP \[bu] 2-If \f[V]variable\f[R] is an array, the material inside the loop will be-evaluated repeatedly, with \f[V]variable\f[R] being set to each value of-the array in turn, and concatenated.-.IP \[bu] 2-If \f[V]variable\f[R] is a map, the material inside will be set to the-map.-.IP \[bu] 2-If the value of the associated variable is not an array or a map, a-single iteration will be performed on its value.-.PP-Examples:-.IP-.nf-\f[C]-$for(foo)$$foo$$sep$, $endfor$--$for(foo)$-  - $foo.last$, $foo.first$-$endfor$--${ for(foo.bar) }-  - ${ foo.bar.last }, ${ foo.bar.first }-${ endfor }--$for(mymap)$-$it.name$: $it.office$-$endfor$-\f[R]-.fi-.PP-You may optionally specify a separator between consecutive values using-\f[V]sep\f[R] (enclosed in matched delimiters).-The material between \f[V]sep\f[R] and the \f[V]endfor\f[R] is the-separator.-.IP-.nf-\f[C]-${ for(foo) }${ foo }${ sep }, ${ endfor }-\f[R]-.fi-.PP-Instead of using \f[V]variable\f[R] inside the loop, the special-anaphoric keyword \f[V]it\f[R] may be used.-.IP-.nf-\f[C]-${ for(foo.bar) }-  - ${ it.last }, ${ it.first }-${ endfor }-\f[R]-.fi-.SS Partials-.PP-Partials (subtemplates stored in different files) may be included by-using the name of the partial, followed by \f[V]()\f[R], for example:-.IP-.nf-\f[C]-${ styles() }-\f[R]-.fi-.PP-Partials will be sought in the directory containing the main template.-The file name will be assumed to have the same extension as the main-template if it lacks an extension.-When calling the partial, the full name including file extension can-also be used:-.IP-.nf-\f[C]-${ styles.html() }-\f[R]-.fi-.PP-(If a partial is not found in the directory of the template and the-template path is given as a relative path, it will also be sought in the-\f[V]templates\f[R] subdirectory of the user data directory.)-.PP-Partials may optionally be applied to variables using a colon:-.IP-.nf-\f[C]-${ date:fancy() }--${ articles:bibentry() }-\f[R]-.fi-.PP-If \f[V]articles\f[R] is an array, this will iterate over its values,-applying the partial \f[V]bibentry()\f[R] to each one.-So the second example above is equivalent to-.IP-.nf-\f[C]-${ for(articles) }-${ it:bibentry() }-${ endfor }-\f[R]-.fi-.PP-Note that the anaphoric keyword \f[V]it\f[R] must be used when iterating-over partials.-In the above examples, the \f[V]bibentry\f[R] partial should contain-\f[V]it.title\f[R] (and so on) instead of \f[V]articles.title\f[R].-.PP-Final newlines are omitted from included partials.-.PP-Partials may include other partials.-.PP-A separator between values of an array may be specified in square-brackets, immediately after the variable name or partial:-.IP-.nf-\f[C]-${months[, ]}$--${articles:bibentry()[; ]$-\f[R]-.fi-.PP-The separator in this case is literal and (unlike with \f[V]sep\f[R] in-an explicit \f[V]for\f[R] loop) cannot contain interpolated variables or-other template directives.-.SS Nesting-.PP-To ensure that content is \[lq]nested,\[rq] that is, subsequent lines-indented, use the \f[V]\[ha]\f[R] directive:-.IP-.nf-\f[C]-$item.number$  $\[ha]$$item.description$ ($item.price$)-\f[R]-.fi-.PP-In this example, if \f[V]item.description\f[R] has multiple lines, they-will all be indented to line up with the first line:-.IP-.nf-\f[C]-00123  A fine bottle of 18-year old-       Oban whiskey. ($148)-\f[R]-.fi-.PP-To nest multiple lines to the same level, align them with the-\f[V]\[ha]\f[R] directive in the template.-For example:-.IP-.nf-\f[C]-$item.number$  $\[ha]$$item.description$ ($item.price$)-               (Available til $item.sellby$.)-\f[R]-.fi-.PP-will produce-.IP-.nf-\f[C]-00123  A fine bottle of 18-year old-       Oban whiskey. ($148)-       (Available til March 30, 2020.)-\f[R]-.fi-.PP-If a variable occurs by itself on a line, preceded by whitespace and not-followed by further text or directives on the same line, and the-variable\[cq]s value contains multiple lines, it will be nested-automatically.-.SS Breakable spaces-.PP-Normally, spaces in the template itself (as opposed to values of the-interpolated variables) are not breakable, but they can be made-breakable in part of the template by using the \f[V]\[ti]\f[R] keyword-(ended with another \f[V]\[ti]\f[R]).-.IP-.nf-\f[C]-$\[ti]$This long line may break if the document is rendered-with a short line length.$\[ti]$-\f[R]-.fi-.SS Pipes-.PP-A pipe transforms the value of a variable or partial.-Pipes are specified using a slash (\f[V]/\f[R]) between the variable-name (or partial) and the pipe name.-Example:-.IP-.nf-\f[C]-$for(name)$-$name/uppercase$-$endfor$--$for(metadata/pairs)$-- $it.key$: $it.value$-$endfor$--$employee:name()/uppercase$-\f[R]-.fi-.PP-Pipes may be chained:-.IP-.nf-\f[C]-$for(employees/pairs)$-$it.key/alpha/uppercase$. $it.name$-$endfor$-\f[R]-.fi-.PP-Some pipes take parameters:-.IP-.nf-\f[C]-|----------------------|------------|-$for(employee)$-$it.name.first/uppercase/left 20 \[dq]| \[dq]$$it.name.salary/right 10 \[dq] | \[dq] \[dq] |\[dq]$-$endfor$-|----------------------|------------|-\f[R]-.fi-.PP-Currently the following pipes are predefined:-.IP \[bu] 2-\f[V]pairs\f[R]: Converts a map or array to an array of maps, each with-\f[V]key\f[R] and \f[V]value\f[R] fields.-If the original value was an array, the \f[V]key\f[R] will be the array-index, starting with 1.-.IP \[bu] 2-\f[V]uppercase\f[R]: Converts text to uppercase.-.IP \[bu] 2-\f[V]lowercase\f[R]: Converts text to lowercase.-.IP \[bu] 2-\f[V]length\f[R]: Returns the length of the value: number of characters-for a textual value, number of elements for a map or array.-.IP \[bu] 2-\f[V]reverse\f[R]: Reverses a textual value or array, and has no effect-on other values.-.IP \[bu] 2-\f[V]first\f[R]: Returns the first value of an array, if applied to a-non-empty array; otherwise returns the original value.-.IP \[bu] 2-\f[V]last\f[R]: Returns the last value of an array, if applied to a-non-empty array; otherwise returns the original value.-.IP \[bu] 2-\f[V]rest\f[R]: Returns all but the first value of an array, if applied-to a non-empty array; otherwise returns the original value.-.IP \[bu] 2-\f[V]allbutlast\f[R]: Returns all but the last value of an array, if-applied to a non-empty array; otherwise returns the original value.-.IP \[bu] 2-\f[V]chomp\f[R]: Removes trailing newlines (and breakable space).-.IP \[bu] 2-\f[V]nowrap\f[R]: Disables line wrapping on breakable spaces.-.IP \[bu] 2-\f[V]alpha\f[R]: Converts textual values that can be read as an integer-into lowercase alphabetic characters \f[V]a..z\f[R] (mod 26).-This can be used to get lettered enumeration from array indices.-To get uppercase letters, chain with \f[V]uppercase\f[R].-.IP \[bu] 2-\f[V]roman\f[R]: Converts textual values that can be read as an integer-into lowercase roman numerals.-This can be used to get lettered enumeration from array indices.-To get uppercase roman, chain with \f[V]uppercase\f[R].-.IP \[bu] 2-\f[V]left n \[dq]leftborder\[dq] \[dq]rightborder\[dq]\f[R]: Renders a-textual value in a block of width \f[V]n\f[R], aligned to the left, with-an optional left and right border.-Has no effect on other values.-This can be used to align material in tables.-Widths are positive integers indicating the number of characters.-Borders are strings inside double quotes; literal \f[V]\[dq]\f[R] and-\f[V]\[rs]\f[R] characters must be backslash-escaped.-.IP \[bu] 2-\f[V]right n \[dq]leftborder\[dq] \[dq]rightborder\[dq]\f[R]: Renders a-textual value in a block of width \f[V]n\f[R], aligned to the right, and-has no effect on other values.-.IP \[bu] 2-\f[V]center n \[dq]leftborder\[dq] \[dq]rightborder\[dq]\f[R]: Renders a-textual value in a block of width \f[V]n\f[R], aligned to the center,-and has no effect on other values.-.SS Variables-.SS Metadata variables-.TP-\f[V]title\f[R], \f[V]author\f[R], \f[V]date\f[R]-allow identification of basic aspects of the document.-Included in PDF metadata through LaTeX and ConTeXt.-These can be set through a pandoc title block, which allows for multiple-authors, or through a YAML metadata block:-.RS-.IP-.nf-\f[C]-----author:-- Aristotle-- Peter Abelard-\&...-\f[R]-.fi-.PP-Note that if you just want to set PDF or HTML metadata, without-including a title block in the document itself, you can set the-\f[V]title-meta\f[R], \f[V]author-meta\f[R], and \f[V]date-meta\f[R]-variables.-(By default these are set automatically, based on \f[V]title\f[R],-\f[V]author\f[R], and \f[V]date\f[R].)-The page title in HTML is set by \f[V]pagetitle\f[R], which is equal to-\f[V]title\f[R] by default.-.RE-.TP-\f[V]subtitle\f[R]-document subtitle, included in HTML, EPUB, LaTeX, ConTeXt, and docx-documents-.TP-\f[V]abstract\f[R]-document summary, included in HTML, LaTeX, ConTeXt, AsciiDoc, and docx-documents-.TP-\f[V]abstract-title\f[R]-title of abstract, currently used only in HTML, EPUB, and docx.-This will be set automatically to a localized value, depending on-\f[V]lang\f[R], but can be manually overridden.-.TP-\f[V]keywords\f[R]-list of keywords to be included in HTML, PDF, ODT, pptx, docx and-AsciiDoc metadata; repeat as for \f[V]author\f[R], above-.TP-\f[V]subject\f[R]-document subject, included in ODT, PDF, docx, EPUB, and pptx metadata-.TP-\f[V]description\f[R]-document description, included in ODT, docx and pptx metadata.-Some applications show this as \f[V]Comments\f[R] metadata.-.TP-\f[V]category\f[R]-document category, included in docx and pptx metadata-.PP-Additionally, any root-level string metadata, not included in ODT, docx-or pptx metadata is added as a \f[I]custom property\f[R].-The following YAML metadata block for instance:-.IP-.nf-\f[C]-----title:  \[aq]This is the title\[aq]-subtitle: \[dq]This is the subtitle\[dq]-author:-- Author One-- Author Two-description: |-    This is a long-    description.--    It consists of two paragraphs-\&...-\f[R]-.fi-.PP-will include \f[V]title\f[R], \f[V]author\f[R] and \f[V]description\f[R]-as standard document properties and \f[V]subtitle\f[R] as a custom-property when converting to docx, ODT or pptx.-.SS Language variables-.TP-\f[V]lang\f[R]-identifies the main language of the document using IETF language tags-(following the BCP 47 standard), such as \f[V]en\f[R] or-\f[V]en-GB\f[R].-The Language subtag lookup tool can look up or verify these tags.-This affects most formats, and controls hyphenation in PDF output when-using LaTeX (through \f[V]babel\f[R] and \f[V]polyglossia\f[R]) or-ConTeXt.-.RS-.PP-Use native pandoc Divs and Spans with the \f[V]lang\f[R] attribute to-switch the language:-.IP-.nf-\f[C]-----lang: en-GB-\&...--Text in the main document language (British English).--::: {lang=fr-CA}-> Cette citation est écrite en français canadien.-:::--More text in English. [\[aq]Zitat auf Deutsch.\[aq]]{lang=de}-\f[R]-.fi-.RE-.TP-\f[V]dir\f[R]-the base script direction, either \f[V]rtl\f[R] (right-to-left) or-\f[V]ltr\f[R] (left-to-right).-.RS-.PP-For bidirectional documents, native pandoc \f[V]span\f[R]s and-\f[V]div\f[R]s with the \f[V]dir\f[R] attribute (value \f[V]rtl\f[R] or-\f[V]ltr\f[R]) can be used to override the base direction in some output-formats.-This may not always be necessary if the final renderer (e.g.\ the-browser, when generating HTML) supports the Unicode Bidirectional-Algorithm.-.PP-When using LaTeX for bidirectional documents, only the \f[V]xelatex\f[R]-engine is fully supported (use \f[V]--pdf-engine=xelatex\f[R]).-.RE-.SS Variables for HTML-.TP-\f[V]document-css\f[R]-Enables inclusion of most of the CSS in the \f[V]styles.html\f[R]-partial (have a look with-\f[V]pandoc --print-default-data-file=templates/styles.html\f[R]).-Unless you use \f[V]--css\f[R], this variable is set to \f[V]true\f[R]-by default.-You can disable it with e.g.\ \f[V]pandoc -M document-css=false\f[R].-.TP-\f[V]mainfont\f[R]-sets the CSS \f[V]font-family\f[R] property on the \f[V]html\f[R]-element.-.TP-\f[V]fontsize\f[R]-sets the base CSS \f[V]font-size\f[R], which you\[cq]d usually set to-e.g.\ \f[V]20px\f[R], but it also accepts \f[V]pt\f[R] (12pt = 16px in-most browsers).-.TP-\f[V]fontcolor\f[R]-sets the CSS \f[V]color\f[R] property on the \f[V]html\f[R] element.-.TP-\f[V]linkcolor\f[R]-sets the CSS \f[V]color\f[R] property on all links.-.TP-\f[V]monofont\f[R]-sets the CSS \f[V]font-family\f[R] property on \f[V]code\f[R] elements.-.TP-\f[V]monobackgroundcolor\f[R]-sets the CSS \f[V]background-color\f[R] property on \f[V]code\f[R]-elements and adds extra padding.-.TP-\f[V]linestretch\f[R]-sets the CSS \f[V]line-height\f[R] property on the \f[V]html\f[R]-element, which is preferred to be unitless.-.TP-\f[V]maxwidth\f[R]-sets the CSS \f[V]max-width\f[R] property (default is 32em).-.TP-\f[V]backgroundcolor\f[R]-sets the CSS \f[V]background-color\f[R] property on the \f[V]html\f[R]-element.-.TP-\f[V]margin-left\f[R], \f[V]margin-right\f[R], \f[V]margin-top\f[R], \f[V]margin-bottom\f[R]-sets the corresponding CSS \f[V]padding\f[R] properties on the-\f[V]body\f[R] element.-.PP-To override or extend some CSS for just one document, include for-example:-.IP-.nf-\f[C]-----header-includes: |-  <style>-  blockquote {-    font-style: italic;-  }-  tr.even {-    background-color: #f0f0f0;-  }-  td, th {-    padding: 0.5em 2em 0.5em 0.5em;-  }-  tbody {-    border-bottom: none;-  }-  </style>-----\f[R]-.fi-.SS Variables for HTML math-.TP-\f[V]classoption\f[R]-when using KaTeX, you can render display math equations flush left using-YAML metadata or with \f[V]-M classoption=fleqn\f[R].-.SS Variables for HTML slides-.PP-These affect HTML output when producing slide shows with pandoc.-.TP-\f[V]institute\f[R]-author affiliations: can be a list when there are multiple authors-.TP-\f[V]revealjs-url\f[R]-base URL for reveal.js documents (defaults to-\f[V]https://unpkg.com/reveal.js\[at]\[ha]4/\f[R])-.TP-\f[V]s5-url\f[R]-base URL for S5 documents (defaults to \f[V]s5/default\f[R])-.TP-\f[V]slidy-url\f[R]-base URL for Slidy documents (defaults to-\f[V]https://www.w3.org/Talks/Tools/Slidy2\f[R])-.TP-\f[V]slideous-url\f[R]-base URL for Slideous documents (defaults to \f[V]slideous\f[R])-.TP-\f[V]title-slide-attributes\f[R]-additional attributes for the title slide of reveal.js slide shows.-See background in reveal.js, beamer, and pptx for an example.-.PP-All reveal.js configuration options are available as variables.-To turn off boolean flags that default to true in reveal.js, use-\f[V]0\f[R].-.SS Variables for Beamer slides-.PP-These variables change the appearance of PDF slides using-\f[V]beamer\f[R].-.TP-\f[V]aspectratio\f[R]-slide aspect ratio (\f[V]43\f[R] for 4:3 [default], \f[V]169\f[R] for-16:9, \f[V]1610\f[R] for 16:10, \f[V]149\f[R] for 14:9, \f[V]141\f[R]-for 1.41:1, \f[V]54\f[R] for 5:4, \f[V]32\f[R] for 3:2)-.TP-\f[V]beameroption\f[R]-add extra beamer option with \f[V]\[rs]setbeameroption{}\f[R]-.TP-\f[V]institute\f[R]-author affiliations: can be a list when there are multiple authors-.TP-\f[V]logo\f[R]-logo image for slides-.TP-\f[V]navigation\f[R]-controls navigation symbols (default is \f[V]empty\f[R] for no-navigation symbols; other valid values are \f[V]frame\f[R],-\f[V]vertical\f[R], and \f[V]horizontal\f[R])-.TP-\f[V]section-titles\f[R]-enables \[lq]title pages\[rq] for new sections (default is true)-.TP-\f[V]theme\f[R], \f[V]colortheme\f[R], \f[V]fonttheme\f[R], \f[V]innertheme\f[R], \f[V]outertheme\f[R]-beamer themes-.TP-\f[V]themeoptions\f[R]-options for LaTeX beamer themes (a list).-.TP-\f[V]titlegraphic\f[R]-image for title slide-.SS Variables for PowerPoint-.PP-These variables control the visual aspects of a slide show that are not-easily controlled via templates.-.TP-\f[V]monofont\f[R]-font to use for code.-.SS Variables for LaTeX-.PP-Pandoc uses these variables when creating a PDF with a LaTeX engine.-.SS Layout-.TP-\f[V]block-headings\f[R]-make \f[V]\[rs]paragraph\f[R] and \f[V]\[rs]subparagraph\f[R] (fourth--and fifth-level headings, or fifth- and sixth-level with book classes)-free-standing rather than run-in; requires further formatting to-distinguish from \f[V]\[rs]subsubsection\f[R] (third- or fourth-level-headings).-Instead of using this option, KOMA-Script can adjust headings more-extensively:-.RS-.IP-.nf-\f[C]-----documentclass: scrartcl-header-includes: |-  \[rs]RedeclareSectionCommand[-    beforeskip=-10pt plus -2pt minus -1pt,-    afterskip=1sp plus -1sp minus 1sp,-    font=\[rs]normalfont\[rs]itshape]{paragraph}-  \[rs]RedeclareSectionCommand[-    beforeskip=-10pt plus -2pt minus -1pt,-    afterskip=1sp plus -1sp minus 1sp,-    font=\[rs]normalfont\[rs]scshape,-    indent=0pt]{subparagraph}-\&...-\f[R]-.fi-.RE-.TP-\f[V]classoption\f[R]-option for document class, e.g.\ \f[V]oneside\f[R]; repeat for multiple-options:-.RS-.IP-.nf-\f[C]-----classoption:-- twocolumn-- landscape-\&...-\f[R]-.fi-.RE-.TP-\f[V]documentclass\f[R]-document class: usually one of the standard classes, \f[V]article\f[R],-\f[V]book\f[R], and \f[V]report\f[R]; the KOMA-Script equivalents,-\f[V]scrartcl\f[R], \f[V]scrbook\f[R], and \f[V]scrreprt\f[R], which-default to smaller margins; or \f[V]memoir\f[R]-.TP-\f[V]geometry\f[R]-option for \f[V]geometry\f[R] package, e.g.\ \f[V]margin=1in\f[R];-repeat for multiple options:-.RS-.IP-.nf-\f[C]-----geometry:-- top=30mm-- left=20mm-- heightrounded-\&...-\f[R]-.fi-.RE-.TP-\f[V]hyperrefoptions\f[R]-option for \f[V]hyperref\f[R] package, e.g.\ \f[V]linktoc=all\f[R];-repeat for multiple options:-.RS-.IP-.nf-\f[C]-----hyperrefoptions:-- linktoc=all-- pdfwindowui-- pdfpagemode=FullScreen-\&...-\f[R]-.fi-.RE-.TP-\f[V]indent\f[R]-if true, pandoc will use document class settings for indentation (the-default LaTeX template otherwise removes indentation and adds space-between paragraphs)-.TP-\f[V]linestretch\f[R]-adjusts line spacing using the \f[V]setspace\f[R] package,-e.g.\ \f[V]1.25\f[R], \f[V]1.5\f[R]-.TP-\f[V]margin-left\f[R], \f[V]margin-right\f[R], \f[V]margin-top\f[R], \f[V]margin-bottom\f[R]-sets margins if \f[V]geometry\f[R] is not used (otherwise-\f[V]geometry\f[R] overrides these)-.TP-\f[V]pagestyle\f[R]-control \f[V]\[rs]pagestyle{}\f[R]: the default article class supports-\f[V]plain\f[R] (default), \f[V]empty\f[R] (no running heads or page-numbers), and \f[V]headings\f[R] (section titles in running heads)-.TP-\f[V]papersize\f[R]-paper size, e.g.\ \f[V]letter\f[R], \f[V]a4\f[R]-.TP-\f[V]secnumdepth\f[R]-numbering depth for sections (with \f[V]--number-sections\f[R] option or-\f[V]numbersections\f[R] variable)-.TP-\f[V]beamerarticle\f[R]-produce an article from Beamer slides-.SS Fonts-.TP-\f[V]fontenc\f[R]-allows font encoding to be specified through \f[V]fontenc\f[R] package-(with \f[V]pdflatex\f[R]); default is \f[V]T1\f[R] (see LaTeX font-encodings guide)-.TP-\f[V]fontfamily\f[R]-font package for use with \f[V]pdflatex\f[R]: TeX Live includes many-options, documented in the LaTeX Font Catalogue.-The default is Latin Modern.-.TP-\f[V]fontfamilyoptions\f[R]-options for package used as \f[V]fontfamily\f[R]; repeat for multiple-options.-For example, to use the Libertine font with proportional lowercase-(old-style) figures through the \f[V]libertinus\f[R] package:-.RS-.IP-.nf-\f[C]-----fontfamily: libertinus-fontfamilyoptions:-- osf-- p-\&...-\f[R]-.fi-.RE-.TP-\f[V]fontsize\f[R]-font size for body text.-The standard classes allow 10pt, 11pt, and 12pt.-To use another size, set \f[V]documentclass\f[R] to one of the-KOMA-Script classes, such as \f[V]scrartcl\f[R] or \f[V]scrbook\f[R].-.TP-\f[V]mainfont\f[R], \f[V]sansfont\f[R], \f[V]monofont\f[R], \f[V]mathfont\f[R], \f[V]CJKmainfont\f[R], \f[V]CJKsansfont\f[R], \f[V]CJKmonofont\f[R]-font families for use with \f[V]xelatex\f[R] or \f[V]lualatex\f[R]: take-the name of any system font, using the \f[V]fontspec\f[R] package.-\f[V]CJKmainfont\f[R] uses the \f[V]xecjk\f[R] package.-.TP-\f[V]mainfontoptions\f[R], \f[V]sansfontoptions\f[R], \f[V]monofontoptions\f[R], \f[V]mathfontoptions\f[R], \f[V]CJKoptions\f[R]-options to use with \f[V]mainfont\f[R], \f[V]sansfont\f[R],-\f[V]monofont\f[R], \f[V]mathfont\f[R], \f[V]CJKmainfont\f[R] in-\f[V]xelatex\f[R] and \f[V]lualatex\f[R].-Allow for any choices available through \f[V]fontspec\f[R]; repeat for-multiple options.-For example, to use the TeX Gyre version of Palatino with lowercase-figures:-.RS-.IP-.nf-\f[C]-----mainfont: TeX Gyre Pagella-mainfontoptions:-- Numbers=Lowercase-- Numbers=Proportional-\&...-\f[R]-.fi-.RE-.TP-\f[V]babelfonts\f[R]-a map of Babel language names (e.g.\ \f[V]chinese\f[R]) to the font to-be used with the language:-.RS-.PP-   *   *   *   *   *-.PP-babelfonts: chinese-hant: \[lq]Noto Serif CJK TC\[rq] russian: \[lq]Noto-Serif\[rq] \&...-.RE-.TP-\f[V]microtypeoptions\f[R]-options to pass to the microtype package-.SS Links-.TP-\f[V]colorlinks\f[R]-add color to link text; automatically enabled if any of-\f[V]linkcolor\f[R], \f[V]filecolor\f[R], \f[V]citecolor\f[R],-\f[V]urlcolor\f[R], or \f[V]toccolor\f[R] are set-.TP-\f[V]boxlinks\f[R]-add visible box around links (has no effect if \f[V]colorlinks\f[R] is-set)-.TP-\f[V]linkcolor\f[R], \f[V]filecolor\f[R], \f[V]citecolor\f[R], \f[V]urlcolor\f[R], \f[V]toccolor\f[R]-color for internal links, external links, citation links, linked URLs,-and links in table of contents, respectively: uses options allowed by-\f[V]xcolor\f[R], including the \f[V]dvipsnames\f[R],-\f[V]svgnames\f[R], and \f[V]x11names\f[R] lists-.TP-\f[V]links-as-notes\f[R]-causes links to be printed as footnotes-.TP-\f[V]urlstyle\f[R]-style for URLs (e.g., \f[V]tt\f[R], \f[V]rm\f[R], \f[V]sf\f[R], and, the-default, \f[V]same\f[R])-.SS Front matter-.TP-\f[V]lof\f[R], \f[V]lot\f[R]-include list of figures, list of tables-.TP-\f[V]thanks\f[R]-contents of acknowledgments footnote after document title-.TP-\f[V]toc\f[R]-include table of contents (can also be set using-\f[V]--toc/--table-of-contents\f[R])-.TP-\f[V]toc-depth\f[R]-level of section to include in table of contents-.SS BibLaTeX Bibliographies-.PP-These variables function when using BibLaTeX for citation rendering.-.TP-\f[V]biblatexoptions\f[R]-list of options for biblatex-.TP-\f[V]biblio-style\f[R]-bibliography style, when used with \f[V]--natbib\f[R] and-\f[V]--biblatex\f[R]-.TP-\f[V]biblio-title\f[R]-bibliography title, when used with \f[V]--natbib\f[R] and-\f[V]--biblatex\f[R]-.TP-\f[V]bibliography\f[R]-bibliography to use for resolving references-.TP-\f[V]natbiboptions\f[R]-list of options for natbib-.SS Variables for ConTeXt-.PP-Pandoc uses these variables when creating a PDF with ConTeXt.-.TP-\f[V]fontsize\f[R]-font size for body text (e.g.\ \f[V]10pt\f[R], \f[V]12pt\f[R])-.TP-\f[V]headertext\f[R], \f[V]footertext\f[R]-text to be placed in running header or footer (see ConTeXt Headers and-Footers); repeat up to four times for different placement-.TP-\f[V]indenting\f[R]-controls indentation of paragraphs, e.g.\ \f[V]yes,small,next\f[R] (see-ConTeXt Indentation); repeat for multiple options-.TP-\f[V]interlinespace\f[R]-adjusts line spacing, e.g.\ \f[V]4ex\f[R] (using-\f[V]setupinterlinespace\f[R]); repeat for multiple options-.TP-\f[V]layout\f[R]-options for page margins and text arrangement (see ConTeXt Layout);-repeat for multiple options-.TP-\f[V]linkcolor\f[R], \f[V]contrastcolor\f[R]-color for links outside and inside a page, e.g.\ \f[V]red\f[R],-\f[V]blue\f[R] (see ConTeXt Color)-.TP-\f[V]linkstyle\f[R]-typeface style for links, e.g.\ \f[V]normal\f[R], \f[V]bold\f[R],-\f[V]slanted\f[R], \f[V]boldslanted\f[R], \f[V]type\f[R], \f[V]cap\f[R],-\f[V]small\f[R]-.TP-\f[V]lof\f[R], \f[V]lot\f[R]-include list of figures, list of tables-.TP-\f[V]mainfont\f[R], \f[V]sansfont\f[R], \f[V]monofont\f[R], \f[V]mathfont\f[R]-font families: take the name of any system font (see ConTeXt Font-Switching)-.TP-\f[V]margin-left\f[R], \f[V]margin-right\f[R], \f[V]margin-top\f[R], \f[V]margin-bottom\f[R]-sets margins, if \f[V]layout\f[R] is not used (otherwise-\f[V]layout\f[R] overrides these)-.TP-\f[V]pagenumbering\f[R]-page number style and location (using \f[V]setuppagenumbering\f[R]);-repeat for multiple options-.TP-\f[V]papersize\f[R]-paper size, e.g.\ \f[V]letter\f[R], \f[V]A4\f[R], \f[V]landscape\f[R]-(see ConTeXt Paper Setup); repeat for multiple options-.TP-\f[V]pdfa\f[R]-adds to the preamble the setup necessary to generate PDF/A of the type-specified, e.g.\ \f[V]1a:2005\f[R], \f[V]2a\f[R].-If no type is specified (i.e.\ the value is set to True, by e.g.-\f[V]--metadata=pdfa\f[R] or \f[V]pdfa: true\f[R] in a YAML metadata-block), \f[V]1b:2005\f[R] will be used as default, for reasons of-backwards compatibility.-Using \f[V]--variable=pdfa\f[R] without specified value is not-supported.-To successfully generate PDF/A the required ICC color profiles have to-be available and the content and all included files (such as images)-have to be standard-conforming.-The ICC profiles and output intent may be specified using the variables-\f[V]pdfaiccprofile\f[R] and \f[V]pdfaintent\f[R].-See also ConTeXt PDFA for more details.-.TP-\f[V]pdfaiccprofile\f[R]-when used in conjunction with \f[V]pdfa\f[R], specifies the ICC profile-to use in the PDF, e.g.\ \f[V]default.cmyk\f[R].-If left unspecified, \f[V]sRGB.icc\f[R] is used as default.-May be repeated to include multiple profiles.-Note that the profiles have to be available on the system.-They can be obtained from ConTeXt ICC Profiles.-.TP-\f[V]pdfaintent\f[R]-when used in conjunction with \f[V]pdfa\f[R], specifies the output-intent for the colors,-e.g.\ \f[V]ISO coated v2 300\[rs]letterpercent\[rs]space (ECI)\f[R] If-left unspecified, \f[V]sRGB IEC61966-2.1\f[R] is used as default.-.TP-\f[V]toc\f[R]-include table of contents (can also be set using-\f[V]--toc/--table-of-contents\f[R])-.TP-\f[V]urlstyle\f[R]-typeface style for links without link text, e.g.\ \f[V]normal\f[R],-\f[V]bold\f[R], \f[V]slanted\f[R], \f[V]boldslanted\f[R],-\f[V]type\f[R], \f[V]cap\f[R], \f[V]small\f[R]-.TP-\f[V]whitespace\f[R]-spacing between paragraphs, e.g.\ \f[V]none\f[R], \f[V]small\f[R] (using-\f[V]setupwhitespace\f[R])-.TP-\f[V]includesource\f[R]-include all source documents as file attachments in the PDF file-.SS Variables for \f[V]wkhtmltopdf\f[R]-.PP-Pandoc uses these variables when creating a PDF with-\f[V]wkhtmltopdf\f[R].-The \f[V]--css\f[R] option also affects the output.-.TP-\f[V]footer-html\f[R], \f[V]header-html\f[R]-add information to the header and footer-.TP-\f[V]margin-left\f[R], \f[V]margin-right\f[R], \f[V]margin-top\f[R], \f[V]margin-bottom\f[R]-set the page margins-.TP-\f[V]papersize\f[R]-sets the PDF paper size-.SS Variables for man pages-.TP-\f[V]adjusting\f[R]-adjusts text to left (\f[V]l\f[R]), right (\f[V]r\f[R]), center-(\f[V]c\f[R]), or both (\f[V]b\f[R]) margins-.TP-\f[V]footer\f[R]-footer in man pages-.TP-\f[V]header\f[R]-header in man pages-.TP-\f[V]section\f[R]-section number in man pages-.SS Variables for Typst-.TP-\f[V]margin\f[R]-A dictionary with the fields defined in the Typst documentation:-\f[V]x\f[R], \f[V]y\f[R], \f[V]top\f[R], \f[V]bottom\f[R],-\f[V]left\f[R], \f[V]right\f[R].-.TP-\f[V]papersize\f[R]-Paper size: \f[V]a4\f[R], \f[V]us-letter\f[R], etc.-.TP-\f[V]mainfont\f[R]-Name of system font to use for the main font.-.TP-\f[V]fontsize\f[R]-Font size (e.g., \f[V]12pt\f[R]).-.TP-\f[V]section-numbering\f[R]-Schema to use for numbering sections, e.g.\ \f[V]1.A.1\f[R].-.TP-\f[V]columns\f[R]-Number of columns for body text.-.SS Variables for ms-.TP-\f[V]fontfamily\f[R]-\f[V]A\f[R] (Avant Garde), \f[V]B\f[R] (Bookman), \f[V]C\f[R]-(Helvetica), \f[V]HN\f[R] (Helvetica Narrow), \f[V]P\f[R] (Palatino), or-\f[V]T\f[R] (Times New Roman).-This setting does not affect source code, which is always displayed-using monospace Courier.-These built-in fonts are limited in their coverage of characters.-Additional fonts may be installed using the script-\f[V]install-font.sh\f[R] provided by Peter Schaffter and documented in-detail on his web site.-.TP-\f[V]indent\f[R]-paragraph indent (e.g.\ \f[V]2m\f[R])-.TP-\f[V]lineheight\f[R]-line height (e.g.\ \f[V]12p\f[R])-.TP-\f[V]pointsize\f[R]-point size (e.g.\ \f[V]10p\f[R])-.SS Variables set automatically-.PP-Pandoc sets these variables automatically in response to options or-document contents; users can also modify them.-These vary depending on the output format, and include the following:-.TP-\f[V]body\f[R]-body of document-.TP-\f[V]date-meta\f[R]-the \f[V]date\f[R] variable converted to ISO 8601 YYYY-MM-DD, included-in all HTML based formats (dzslides, epub, html, html4, html5, revealjs,-s5, slideous, slidy).-The recognized formats for \f[V]date\f[R] are: \f[V]mm/dd/yyyy\f[R],-\f[V]mm/dd/yy\f[R], \f[V]yyyy-mm-dd\f[R] (ISO 8601),-\f[V]dd MM yyyy\f[R] (e.g.\ either \f[V]02 Apr 2018\f[R] or-\f[V]02 April 2018\f[R]), \f[V]MM dd, yyyy\f[R]-(e.g.\ \f[V]Apr. 02, 2018\f[R] or-\f[V]April 02, 2018),\f[R]yyyy[mm[dd]]\f[V](e.g.\f[R]20180402,-\f[V]201804\f[R] or \f[V]2018\f[R]).-.TP-\f[V]header-includes\f[R]-contents specified by \f[V]-H/--include-in-header\f[R] (may have-multiple values)-.TP-\f[V]include-before\f[R]-contents specified by \f[V]-B/--include-before-body\f[R] (may have-multiple values)-.TP-\f[V]include-after\f[R]-contents specified by \f[V]-A/--include-after-body\f[R] (may have-multiple values)-.TP-\f[V]meta-json\f[R]-JSON representation of all of the document\[cq]s metadata.-Field values are transformed to the selected output format.-.TP-\f[V]numbersections\f[R]-non-null value if \f[V]-N/--number-sections\f[R] was specified-.TP-\f[V]sourcefile\f[R], \f[V]outputfile\f[R]-source and destination filenames, as given on the command line.-\f[V]sourcefile\f[R] can also be a list if input comes from multiple-files, or empty if input is from stdin.-You can use the following snippet in your template to distinguish them:-.RS-.IP-.nf-\f[C]-$if(sourcefile)$-$for(sourcefile)$-$sourcefile$-$endfor$-$else$-(stdin)-$endif$-\f[R]-.fi-.PP-Similarly, \f[V]outputfile\f[R] can be \f[V]-\f[R] if output goes to the-terminal.-.PP-If you need absolute paths, use e.g.\ \f[V]$curdir$/$sourcefile$\f[R].-.RE-.TP-\f[V]curdir\f[R]-working directory from which pandoc is run.-.TP-\f[V]pandoc-version\f[R]-pandoc version.-.TP-\f[V]toc\f[R]-non-null value if \f[V]--toc/--table-of-contents\f[R] was specified-.TP-\f[V]toc-title\f[R]-title of table of contents (works only with EPUB, HTML, revealjs,-opendocument, odt, docx, pptx, beamer, LaTeX)-.SH EXTENSIONS-.PP-The behavior of some of the readers and writers can be adjusted by-enabling or disabling various extensions.-.PP-An extension can be enabled by adding \f[V]+EXTENSION\f[R] to the format-name and disabled by adding \f[V]-EXTENSION\f[R].-For example, \f[V]--from markdown_strict+footnotes\f[R] is strict-Markdown with footnotes enabled, while-\f[V]--from markdown-footnotes-pipe_tables\f[R] is pandoc\[cq]s Markdown-without footnotes or pipe tables.-.PP-The markdown reader and writer make by far the most use of extensions.-Extensions only used by them are therefore covered in the section-Pandoc\[cq]s Markdown below (see Markdown variants for-\f[V]commonmark\f[R] and \f[V]gfm\f[R]).-In the following, extensions that also work for other formats are-covered.-.PP-Note that markdown extensions added to the \f[V]ipynb\f[R] format affect-Markdown cells in Jupyter notebooks (as do command-line options like-\f[V]--markdown-headings\f[R]).-.SS Typography-.SS Extension: \f[V]smart\f[R]-.PP-Interpret straight quotes as curly quotes, \f[V]---\f[R] as em-dashes,-\f[V]--\f[R] as en-dashes, and \f[V]...\f[R] as ellipses.-Nonbreaking spaces are inserted after certain abbreviations, such as-\[lq]Mr.\[rq]-.PP-This extension can be enabled/disabled for the following formats:-.TP-input formats-\f[V]markdown\f[R], \f[V]commonmark\f[R], \f[V]latex\f[R],-\f[V]mediawiki\f[R], \f[V]org\f[R], \f[V]rst\f[R], \f[V]twiki\f[R],-\f[V]html\f[R]-.TP-output formats-\f[V]markdown\f[R], \f[V]latex\f[R], \f[V]context\f[R], \f[V]rst\f[R]-.TP-enabled by default in-\f[V]markdown\f[R], \f[V]latex\f[R], \f[V]context\f[R] (both input and-output)-.PP-Note: If you are \f[I]writing\f[R] Markdown, then the \f[V]smart\f[R]-extension has the reverse effect: what would have been curly quotes-comes out straight.-.PP-In LaTeX, \f[V]smart\f[R] means to use the standard TeX ligatures for-quotation marks (\f[V]\[ga]\[ga]\f[R] and \f[V]\[aq]\[aq]\f[R] for-double quotes, \f[V]\[ga]\f[R] and \f[V]\[aq]\f[R] for single quotes)-and dashes (\f[V]--\f[R] for en-dash and \f[V]---\f[R] for em-dash).-If \f[V]smart\f[R] is disabled, then in reading LaTeX pandoc will parse-these characters literally.-In writing LaTeX, enabling \f[V]smart\f[R] tells pandoc to use the-ligatures when possible; if \f[V]smart\f[R] is disabled pandoc will use-unicode quotation mark and dash characters.-.SS Headings and sections-.SS Extension: \f[V]auto_identifiers\f[R]-.PP-A heading without an explicitly specified identifier will be-automatically assigned a unique identifier based on the heading text.-.PP-This extension can be enabled/disabled for the following formats:-.TP-input formats-\f[V]markdown\f[R], \f[V]latex\f[R], \f[V]rst\f[R], \f[V]mediawiki\f[R],-\f[V]textile\f[R]-.TP-output formats-\f[V]markdown\f[R], \f[V]muse\f[R]-.TP-enabled by default in-\f[V]markdown\f[R], \f[V]muse\f[R]-.PP-The default algorithm used to derive the identifier from the heading-text is:-.IP \[bu] 2-Remove all formatting, links, etc.-.IP \[bu] 2-Remove all footnotes.-.IP \[bu] 2-Remove all non-alphanumeric characters, except underscores, hyphens, and-periods.-.IP \[bu] 2-Replace all spaces and newlines with hyphens.-.IP \[bu] 2-Convert all alphabetic characters to lowercase.-.IP \[bu] 2-Remove everything up to the first letter (identifiers may not begin with-a number or punctuation mark).-.IP \[bu] 2-If nothing is left after this, use the identifier \f[V]section\f[R].-.PP-Thus, for example,-.RS -14n-.IP-.nf-\f[C]-  Heading                       Identifier-  ----------------------------- ------------------------------  Heading identifiers in HTML   heading-identifiers-in-html-  Maître d\[aq]hôtel                maître-dhôtel-  *Dogs*?--in *my* house?       dogs--in-my-house-  [HTML], [S5], or [RTF]?       html-s5-or-rtf-  3. Applications               applications-  33                            section-\f[R]-.fi-.RE-.PP-These rules should, in most cases, allow one to determine the identifier-from the heading text.-The exception is when several headings have the same text; in this case,-the first will get an identifier as described above; the second will get-the same identifier with \f[V]-1\f[R] appended; the third with-\f[V]-2\f[R]; and so on.-.PP-(However, a different algorithm is used if-\f[V]gfm_auto_identifiers\f[R] is enabled; see below.)-.PP-These identifiers are used to provide link targets in the table of-contents generated by the \f[V]--toc|--table-of-contents\f[R] option.-They also make it easy to provide links from one section of a document-to another.-A link to this section, for example, might look like this:-.IP-.nf-\f[C]-See the section on-[heading identifiers](#heading-identifiers-in-html-latex-and-context).-\f[R]-.fi-.PP-Note, however, that this method of providing links to sections works-only in HTML, LaTeX, and ConTeXt formats.-.PP-If the \f[V]--section-divs\f[R] option is specified, then each section-will be wrapped in a \f[V]section\f[R] (or a \f[V]div\f[R], if-\f[V]html4\f[R] was specified), and the identifier will be attached to-the enclosing \f[V]<section>\f[R] (or \f[V]<div>\f[R]) tag rather than-the heading itself.-This allows entire sections to be manipulated using JavaScript or-treated differently in CSS.-.SS Extension: \f[V]ascii_identifiers\f[R]-.PP-Causes the identifiers produced by \f[V]auto_identifiers\f[R] to be pure-ASCII.-Accents are stripped off of accented Latin letters, and non-Latin-letters are omitted.-.SS Extension: \f[V]gfm_auto_identifiers\f[R]-.PP-Changes the algorithm used by \f[V]auto_identifiers\f[R] to conform to-GitHub\[cq]s method.-Spaces are converted to dashes (\f[V]-\f[R]), uppercase characters to-lowercase characters, and punctuation characters other than \f[V]-\f[R]-and \f[V]_\f[R] are removed.-Emojis are replaced by their names.-.SS Math Input-.PP-The extensions \f[V]tex_math_dollars\f[R],-\f[V]tex_math_single_backslash\f[R], and-\f[V]tex_math_double_backslash\f[R] are described in the section about-Pandoc\[cq]s Markdown.-.PP-However, they can also be used with HTML input.-This is handy for reading web pages formatted using MathJax, for-example.-.SS Raw HTML/TeX-.PP-The following extensions are described in more detail in their-respective sections of Pandoc\[cq]s Markdown:-.IP \[bu] 2-\f[V]raw_html\f[R] allows HTML elements which are not representable in-pandoc\[cq]s AST to be parsed as raw HTML.-By default, this is disabled for HTML input.-.IP \[bu] 2-\f[V]raw_tex\f[R] allows raw LaTeX, TeX, and ConTeXt to be included in a-document.-This extension can be enabled/disabled for the following formats (in-addition to \f[V]markdown\f[R]):-.RS 2-.TP-input formats-\f[V]latex\f[R], \f[V]textile\f[R], \f[V]html\f[R] (environments,-\f[V]\[rs]ref\f[R], and \f[V]\[rs]eqref\f[R] only), \f[V]ipynb\f[R]-.TP-output formats-\f[V]textile\f[R], \f[V]commonmark\f[R]-.PP-Note: as applied to \f[V]ipynb\f[R], \f[V]raw_html\f[R] and-\f[V]raw_tex\f[R] affect not only raw TeX in markdown cells, but data-with mime type \f[V]text/html\f[R] in output cells.-Since the \f[V]ipynb\f[R] reader attempts to preserve the richest-possible outputs when several options are given, you will get best-results if you disable \f[V]raw_html\f[R] and \f[V]raw_tex\f[R] when-converting to formats like \f[V]docx\f[R] which don\[cq]t allow raw-\f[V]html\f[R] or \f[V]tex\f[R].-.RE-.IP \[bu] 2-\f[V]native_divs\f[R] causes HTML \f[V]div\f[R] elements to be parsed as-native pandoc Div blocks.-If you want them to be parsed as raw HTML, use-\f[V]-f html-native_divs+raw_html\f[R].-.IP \[bu] 2-\f[V]native_spans\f[R] causes HTML \f[V]span\f[R] elements to be parsed-as native pandoc Span inlines.-If you want them to be parsed as raw HTML, use-\f[V]-f html-native_spans+raw_html\f[R].-If you want to drop all \f[V]div\f[R]s and \f[V]span\f[R]s when-converting HTML to Markdown, you can use-\f[V]pandoc -f html-native_divs-native_spans -t markdown\f[R].-.SS Literate Haskell support-.SS Extension: \f[V]literate_haskell\f[R]-.PP-Treat the document as literate Haskell source.-.PP-This extension can be enabled/disabled for the following formats:-.TP-input formats-\f[V]markdown\f[R], \f[V]rst\f[R], \f[V]latex\f[R]-.TP-output formats-\f[V]markdown\f[R], \f[V]rst\f[R], \f[V]latex\f[R], \f[V]html\f[R]-.PP-If you append \f[V]+lhs\f[R] (or \f[V]+literate_haskell\f[R]) to one of-the formats above, pandoc will treat the document as literate Haskell-source.-This means that-.IP \[bu] 2-In Markdown input, \[lq]bird track\[rq] sections will be parsed as-Haskell code rather than block quotations.-Text between \f[V]\[rs]begin{code}\f[R] and \f[V]\[rs]end{code}\f[R]-will also be treated as Haskell code.-For ATX-style headings the character `=' will be used instead of `#'.-.IP \[bu] 2-In Markdown output, code blocks with classes \f[V]haskell\f[R] and-\f[V]literate\f[R] will be rendered using bird tracks, and block-quotations will be indented one space, so they will not be treated as-Haskell code.-In addition, headings will be rendered setext-style (with underlines)-rather than ATX-style (with `#' characters).-(This is because ghc treats `#' characters in column 1 as introducing-line numbers.)-.IP \[bu] 2-In restructured text input, \[lq]bird track\[rq] sections will be parsed-as Haskell code.-.IP \[bu] 2-In restructured text output, code blocks with class \f[V]haskell\f[R]-will be rendered using bird tracks.-.IP \[bu] 2-In LaTeX input, text in \f[V]code\f[R] environments will be parsed as-Haskell code.-.IP \[bu] 2-In LaTeX output, code blocks with class \f[V]haskell\f[R] will be-rendered inside \f[V]code\f[R] environments.-.IP \[bu] 2-In HTML output, code blocks with class \f[V]haskell\f[R] will be-rendered with class \f[V]literatehaskell\f[R] and bird tracks.-.PP-Examples:-.IP-.nf-\f[C]-pandoc -f markdown+lhs -t html-\f[R]-.fi-.PP-reads literate Haskell source formatted with Markdown conventions and-writes ordinary HTML (without bird tracks).-.IP-.nf-\f[C]-pandoc -f markdown+lhs -t html+lhs-\f[R]-.fi-.PP-writes HTML with the Haskell code in bird tracks, so it can be copied-and pasted as literate Haskell source.-.PP-Note that GHC expects the bird tracks in the first column, so indented-literate code blocks (e.g.\ inside an itemized environment) will not be-picked up by the Haskell compiler.-.SS Other extensions-.SS Extension: \f[V]empty_paragraphs\f[R]-.PP-Allows empty paragraphs.-By default empty paragraphs are omitted.-.PP-This extension can be enabled/disabled for the following formats:-.TP-input formats-\f[V]docx\f[R], \f[V]html\f[R]-.TP-output formats-\f[V]docx\f[R], \f[V]odt\f[R], \f[V]opendocument\f[R], \f[V]html\f[R]-.SS Extension: \f[V]native_numbering\f[R]-.PP-Enables native numbering of figures and tables.-Enumeration starts at 1.-.PP-This extension can be enabled/disabled for the following formats:-.TP-output formats-\f[V]odt\f[R], \f[V]opendocument\f[R], \f[V]docx\f[R]-.SS Extension: \f[V]xrefs_name\f[R]-.PP-Links to headings, figures and tables inside the document are-substituted with cross-references that will use the name or caption of-the referenced item.-The original link text is replaced once the generated document is-refreshed.-This extension can be combined with \f[V]xrefs_number\f[R] in which case-numbers will appear before the name.-.PP-Text in cross-references is only made consistent with the referenced-item once the document has been refreshed.-.PP-This extension can be enabled/disabled for the following formats:-.TP-output formats-\f[V]odt\f[R], \f[V]opendocument\f[R]-.SS Extension: \f[V]xrefs_number\f[R]-.PP-Links to headings, figures and tables inside the document are-substituted with cross-references that will use the number of the-referenced item.-The original link text is discarded.-This extension can be combined with \f[V]xrefs_name\f[R] in which case-the name or caption numbers will appear after the number.-.PP-For the \f[V]xrefs_number\f[R] to be useful heading numbers must be-enabled in the generated document, also table and figure captions must-be enabled using for example the \f[V]native_numbering\f[R] extension.-.PP-Numbers in cross-references are only visible in the final document once-it has been refreshed.-.PP-This extension can be enabled/disabled for the following formats:-.TP-output formats-\f[V]odt\f[R], \f[V]opendocument\f[R]-.SS Extension: \f[V]styles\f[R]-.PP-When converting from docx, read all docx styles as divs (for paragraph-styles) and spans (for character styles) regardless of whether pandoc-understands the meaning of these styles.-This can be used with docx custom styles.-Disabled by default.-.TP-input formats-\f[V]docx\f[R]-.SS Extension: \f[V]amuse\f[R]-.PP-In the \f[V]muse\f[R] input format, this enables Text::Amuse extensions-to Emacs Muse markup.-.SS Extension: \f[V]raw_markdown\f[R]-.PP-In the \f[V]ipynb\f[R] input format, this causes Markdown cells to be-included as raw Markdown blocks (allowing lossless round-tripping)-rather than being parsed.-Use this only when you are targeting \f[V]ipynb\f[R] or a markdown-based-output format.-.SS Extension: \f[V]citations\f[R]-.PP-When the \f[V]citations\f[R] extension is enabled in \f[V]org\f[R],-org-cite and org-ref style citations will be parsed as native pandoc-citations.-.PP-When \f[V]citations\f[R] is enabled in \f[V]docx\f[R], citations-inserted by Zotero or Mendeley or EndNote plugins will be parsed as-native pandoc citations.-(Otherwise, the formatted citations generated by the bibliographic-software will be parsed as regular text.)-.SS Extension: \f[V]fancy_lists\f[R]-.PP-Some aspects of Pandoc\[cq]s Markdown fancy lists are also accepted in-\f[V]org\f[R] input, mimicking the option-\f[V]org-list-allow-alphabetical\f[R] in Emacs.-As in Org Mode, enabling this extension allows lowercase and uppercase-alphabetical markers for ordered lists to be parsed in addition to-arabic ones.-Note that for Org, this does not include roman numerals or the-\f[V]#\f[R] placeholder that are enabled by the extension in-Pandoc\[cq]s Markdown.-.SS Extension: \f[V]element_citations\f[R]-.PP-In the \f[V]jats\f[R] output formats, this causes reference items to be-replaced with \f[V]<element-citation>\f[R] elements.-These elements are not influenced by CSL styles, but all information on-the item is included in tags.-.SS Extension: \f[V]ntb\f[R]-.PP-In the \f[V]context\f[R] output format this enables the use of Natural-Tables (TABLE) instead of the default Extreme Tables (xtables).-Natural tables allow more fine-grained global customization but come at-a performance penalty compared to extreme tables.-.SS Extension: \f[V]tagging\f[R]-.PP-Enabling this extension with \f[V]context\f[R] output will produce-markup suitable for the production of tagged PDFs.-This includes additional markers for paragraphs and alternative markup-for emphasized text.-The \f[V]emphasis-command\f[R] template variable is set if the extension-is enabled.-.SH PANDOC\[cq]S MARKDOWN-.PP-Pandoc understands an extended and slightly revised version of John-Gruber\[cq]s Markdown syntax.-This document explains the syntax, noting differences from original-Markdown.-Except where noted, these differences can be suppressed by using the-\f[V]markdown_strict\f[R] format instead of \f[V]markdown\f[R].-Extensions can be enabled or disabled to specify the behavior more-granularly.-They are described in the following.-See also Extensions above, for extensions that work also on other-formats.-.SS Philosophy-.PP-Markdown is designed to be easy to write, and, even more importantly,-easy to read:-.RS-.PP-A Markdown-formatted document should be publishable as-is, as plain-text, without looking like it\[cq]s been marked up with tags or-formatting instructions.-\[en] John Gruber-.RE-.PP-This principle has guided pandoc\[cq]s decisions in finding syntax for-tables, footnotes, and other extensions.-.PP-There is, however, one respect in which pandoc\[cq]s aims are different-from the original aims of Markdown.-Whereas Markdown was originally designed with HTML generation in mind,-pandoc is designed for multiple output formats.-Thus, while pandoc allows the embedding of raw HTML, it discourages it,-and provides other, non-HTMLish ways of representing important document-elements like definition lists, tables, mathematics, and footnotes.-.SS Paragraphs-.PP-A paragraph is one or more lines of text followed by one or more blank-lines.-Newlines are treated as spaces, so you can reflow your paragraphs as you-like.-If you need a hard line break, put two or more spaces at the end of a-line.-.SS Extension: \f[V]escaped_line_breaks\f[R]-.PP-A backslash followed by a newline is also a hard line break.-Note: in multiline and grid table cells, this is the only way to create-a hard line break, since trailing spaces in the cells are ignored.-.SS Headings-.PP-There are two kinds of headings: Setext and ATX.-.SS Setext-style headings-.PP-A setext-style heading is a line of text \[lq]underlined\[rq] with a row-of \f[V]=\f[R] signs (for a level-one heading) or \f[V]-\f[R] signs (for-a level-two heading):-.IP-.nf-\f[C]-A level-one heading-===================--A level-two heading---------------------\f[R]-.fi-.PP-The heading text can contain inline formatting, such as emphasis (see-Inline formatting, below).-.SS ATX-style headings-.PP-An ATX-style heading consists of one to six \f[V]#\f[R] signs and a line-of text, optionally followed by any number of \f[V]#\f[R] signs.-The number of \f[V]#\f[R] signs at the beginning of the line is the-heading level:-.IP-.nf-\f[C]-## A level-two heading--### A level-three heading ###-\f[R]-.fi-.PP-As with setext-style headings, the heading text can contain formatting:-.IP-.nf-\f[C]-# A level-one heading with a [link](/url) and *emphasis*-\f[R]-.fi-.SS Extension: \f[V]blank_before_header\f[R]-.PP-Original Markdown syntax does not require a blank line before a heading.-Pandoc does require this (except, of course, at the beginning of the-document).-The reason for the requirement is that it is all too easy for a-\f[V]#\f[R] to end up at the beginning of a line by accident (perhaps-through line wrapping).-Consider, for example:-.IP-.nf-\f[C]-I like several of their flavors of ice cream:-#22, for example, and #5.-\f[R]-.fi-.SS Extension: \f[V]space_in_atx_header\f[R]-.PP-Many Markdown implementations do not require a space between the opening-\f[V]#\f[R]s of an ATX heading and the heading text, so that-\f[V]#5 bolt\f[R] and \f[V]#hashtag\f[R] count as headings.-With this extension, pandoc does require the space.-.SS Heading identifiers-.PP-See also the \f[V]auto_identifiers\f[R] extension above.-.SS Extension: \f[V]header_attributes\f[R]-.PP-Headings can be assigned attributes using this syntax at the end of the-line containing the heading text:-.IP-.nf-\f[C]-{#identifier .class .class key=value key=value}-\f[R]-.fi-.PP-Thus, for example, the following headings will all be assigned the-identifier \f[V]foo\f[R]:-.IP-.nf-\f[C]-# My heading {#foo}--## My heading ##    {#foo}--My other heading   {#foo}-----------------\f[R]-.fi-.PP-(This syntax is compatible with PHP Markdown Extra.)-.PP-Note that although this syntax allows assignment of classes and-key/value attributes, writers generally don\[cq]t use all of this-information.-Identifiers, classes, and key/value attributes are used in HTML and-HTML-based formats such as EPUB and slidy.-Identifiers are used for labels and link anchors in the LaTeX, ConTeXt,-Textile, Jira markup, and AsciiDoc writers.-.PP-Headings with the class \f[V]unnumbered\f[R] will not be numbered, even-if \f[V]--number-sections\f[R] is specified.-A single hyphen (\f[V]-\f[R]) in an attribute context is equivalent to-\f[V].unnumbered\f[R], and preferable in non-English documents.-So,-.IP-.nf-\f[C]-# My heading {-}-\f[R]-.fi-.PP-is just the same as-.IP-.nf-\f[C]-# My heading {.unnumbered}-\f[R]-.fi-.PP-If the \f[V]unlisted\f[R] class is present in addition to-\f[V]unnumbered\f[R], the heading will not be included in a table of-contents.-(Currently this feature is only implemented for certain formats: those-based on LaTeX and HTML, PowerPoint, and RTF.)-.SS Extension: \f[V]implicit_header_references\f[R]-.PP-Pandoc behaves as if reference links have been defined for each heading.-So, to link to a heading-.IP-.nf-\f[C]-# Heading identifiers in HTML-\f[R]-.fi-.PP-you can simply write-.IP-.nf-\f[C]-[Heading identifiers in HTML]-\f[R]-.fi-.PP-or-.IP-.nf-\f[C]-[Heading identifiers in HTML][]-\f[R]-.fi-.PP-or-.IP-.nf-\f[C]-[the section on heading identifiers][heading identifiers in-HTML]-\f[R]-.fi-.PP-instead of giving the identifier explicitly:-.IP-.nf-\f[C]-[Heading identifiers in HTML](#heading-identifiers-in-html)-\f[R]-.fi-.PP-If there are multiple headings with identical text, the corresponding-reference will link to the first one only, and you will need to use-explicit links to link to the others, as described above.-.PP-Like regular reference links, these references are case-insensitive.-.PP-Explicit link reference definitions always take priority over implicit-heading references.-So, in the following example, the link will point to \f[V]bar\f[R], not-to \f[V]#foo\f[R]:-.IP-.nf-\f[C]-# Foo--[foo]: bar--See [foo]-\f[R]-.fi-.SS Block quotations-.PP-Markdown uses email conventions for quoting blocks of text.-A block quotation is one or more paragraphs or other block elements-(such as lists or headings), with each line preceded by a \f[V]>\f[R]-character and an optional space.-(The \f[V]>\f[R] need not start at the left margin, but it should not be-indented more than three spaces.)-.IP-.nf-\f[C]-> This is a block quote. This-> paragraph has two lines.->-> 1. This is a list inside a block quote.-> 2. Second item.-\f[R]-.fi-.PP-A \[lq]lazy\[rq] form, which requires the \f[V]>\f[R] character only on-the first line of each block, is also allowed:-.IP-.nf-\f[C]-> This is a block quote. This-paragraph has two lines.--> 1. This is a list inside a block quote.-2. Second item.-\f[R]-.fi-.PP-Among the block elements that can be contained in a block quote are-other block quotes.-That is, block quotes can be nested:-.IP-.nf-\f[C]-> This is a block quote.->-> > A block quote within a block quote.-\f[R]-.fi-.PP-If the \f[V]>\f[R] character is followed by an optional space, that-space will be considered part of the block quote marker and not part of-the indentation of the contents.-Thus, to put an indented code block in a block quote, you need five-spaces after the \f[V]>\f[R]:-.IP-.nf-\f[C]->     code-\f[R]-.fi-.SS Extension: \f[V]blank_before_blockquote\f[R]-.PP-Original Markdown syntax does not require a blank line before a block-quote.-Pandoc does require this (except, of course, at the beginning of the-document).-The reason for the requirement is that it is all too easy for a-\f[V]>\f[R] to end up at the beginning of a line by accident (perhaps-through line wrapping).-So, unless the \f[V]markdown_strict\f[R] format is used, the following-does not produce a nested block quote in pandoc:-.IP-.nf-\f[C]-> This is a block quote.->> Not nested, since \[ga]blank_before_blockquote\[ga] is enabled by default-\f[R]-.fi-.SS Verbatim (code) blocks-.SS Indented code blocks-.PP-A block of text indented four spaces (or one tab) is treated as verbatim-text: that is, special characters do not trigger special formatting, and-all spaces and line breaks are preserved.-For example,-.IP-.nf-\f[C]-    if (a > 3) {-      moveShip(5 * gravity, DOWN);-    }-\f[R]-.fi-.PP-The initial (four space or one tab) indentation is not considered part-of the verbatim text, and is removed in the output.-.PP-Note: blank lines in the verbatim text need not begin with four spaces.-.SS Fenced code blocks-.SS Extension: \f[V]fenced_code_blocks\f[R]-.PP-In addition to standard indented code blocks, pandoc supports-\f[I]fenced\f[R] code blocks.-These begin with a row of three or more tildes (\f[V]\[ti]\f[R]) and end-with a row of tildes that must be at least as long as the starting row.-Everything between these lines is treated as code.-No indentation is necessary:-.IP-.nf-\f[C]-\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]-if (a > 3) {-  moveShip(5 * gravity, DOWN);-}-\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]-\f[R]-.fi-.PP-Like regular code blocks, fenced code blocks must be separated from-surrounding text by blank lines.-.PP-If the code itself contains a row of tildes or backticks, just use a-longer row of tildes or backticks at the start and end:-.IP-.nf-\f[C]-\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]-\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]-code including tildes-\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]-\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]-\f[R]-.fi-.SS Extension: \f[V]backtick_code_blocks\f[R]-.PP-Same as \f[V]fenced_code_blocks\f[R], but uses backticks-(\f[V]\[ga]\f[R]) instead of tildes (\f[V]\[ti]\f[R]).-.SS Extension: \f[V]fenced_code_attributes\f[R]-.PP-Optionally, you may attach attributes to fenced or backtick code block-using this syntax:-.IP-.nf-\f[C]-\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]\[ti] {#mycode .haskell .numberLines startFrom=\[dq]100\[dq]}-qsort []     = []-qsort (x:xs) = qsort (filter (< x) xs) ++ [x] ++-               qsort (filter (>= x) xs)-\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]-\f[R]-.fi-.PP-Here \f[V]mycode\f[R] is an identifier, \f[V]haskell\f[R] and-\f[V]numberLines\f[R] are classes, and \f[V]startFrom\f[R] is an-attribute with value \f[V]100\f[R].-Some output formats can use this information to do syntax highlighting.-Currently, the only output formats that use this information are HTML,-LaTeX, Docx, Ms, and PowerPoint.-If highlighting is supported for your output format and language, then-the code block above will appear highlighted, with numbered lines.-(To see which languages are supported, type-\f[V]pandoc --list-highlight-languages\f[R].)-Otherwise, the code block above will appear as follows:-.IP-.nf-\f[C]-<pre id=\[dq]mycode\[dq] class=\[dq]haskell numberLines\[dq] startFrom=\[dq]100\[dq]>-  <code>-  ...-  </code>-</pre>-\f[R]-.fi-.PP-The \f[V]numberLines\f[R] (or \f[V]number-lines\f[R]) class will cause-the lines of the code block to be numbered, starting with \f[V]1\f[R] or-the value of the \f[V]startFrom\f[R] attribute.-The \f[V]lineAnchors\f[R] (or \f[V]line-anchors\f[R]) class will cause-the lines to be clickable anchors in HTML output.-.PP-A shortcut form can also be used for specifying the language of the code-block:-.IP-.nf-\f[C]-\[ga]\[ga]\[ga]haskell-qsort [] = []-\[ga]\[ga]\[ga]-\f[R]-.fi-.PP-This is equivalent to:-.IP-.nf-\f[C]-\[ga]\[ga]\[ga] {.haskell}-qsort [] = []-\[ga]\[ga]\[ga]-\f[R]-.fi-.PP-This shortcut form may be combined with attributes:-.IP-.nf-\f[C]-\[ga]\[ga]\[ga]haskell {.numberLines}-qsort [] = []-\[ga]\[ga]\[ga]-\f[R]-.fi-.PP-Which is equivalent to:-.IP-.nf-\f[C]-\[ga]\[ga]\[ga] {.haskell .numberLines}-qsort [] = []-\[ga]\[ga]\[ga]-\f[R]-.fi-.PP-If the \f[V]fenced_code_attributes\f[R] extension is disabled, but input-contains class attribute(s) for the code block, the first class-attribute will be printed after the opening fence as a bare word.-.PP-To prevent all highlighting, use the \f[V]--no-highlight\f[R] flag.-To set the highlighting style, use \f[V]--highlight-style\f[R].-For more information on highlighting, see Syntax highlighting, below.-.SS Line blocks-.SS Extension: \f[V]line_blocks\f[R]-.PP-A line block is a sequence of lines beginning with a vertical bar-(\f[V]|\f[R]) followed by a space.-The division into lines will be preserved in the output, as will any-leading spaces; otherwise, the lines will be formatted as Markdown.-This is useful for verse and addresses:-.IP-.nf-\f[C]-| The limerick packs laughs anatomical-| In space that is quite economical.-|    But the good ones I\[aq]ve seen-|    So seldom are clean-| And the clean ones so seldom are comical--| 200 Main St.-| Berkeley, CA 94718-\f[R]-.fi-.PP-The lines can be hard-wrapped if needed, but the continuation line must-begin with a space.-.IP-.nf-\f[C]-| The Right Honorable Most Venerable and Righteous Samuel L.-  Constable, Jr.-| 200 Main St.-| Berkeley, CA 94718-\f[R]-.fi-.PP-Inline formatting (such as emphasis) is allowed in the content, but not-block-level formatting (such as block quotes or lists).-.PP-This syntax is borrowed from reStructuredText.-.SS Lists-.SS Bullet lists-.PP-A bullet list is a list of bulleted list items.-A bulleted list item begins with a bullet (\f[V]*\f[R], \f[V]+\f[R], or-\f[V]-\f[R]).-Here is a simple example:-.IP-.nf-\f[C]-* one-* two-* three-\f[R]-.fi-.PP-This will produce a \[lq]compact\[rq] list.-If you want a \[lq]loose\[rq] list, in which each item is formatted as a-paragraph, put spaces between the items:-.IP-.nf-\f[C]-* one--* two--* three-\f[R]-.fi-.PP-The bullets need not be flush with the left margin; they may be indented-one, two, or three spaces.-The bullet must be followed by whitespace.-.PP-List items look best if subsequent lines are flush with the first line-(after the bullet):-.IP-.nf-\f[C]-* here is my first-  list item.-* and my second.-\f[R]-.fi-.PP-But Markdown also allows a \[lq]lazy\[rq] format:-.IP-.nf-\f[C]-* here is my first-list item.-* and my second.-\f[R]-.fi-.SS Block content in list items-.PP-A list item may contain multiple paragraphs and other block-level-content.-However, subsequent paragraphs must be preceded by a blank line and-indented to line up with the first non-space content after the list-marker.-.IP-.nf-\f[C]-  * First paragraph.--    Continued.--  * Second paragraph. With a code block, which must be indented-    eight spaces:--        { code }-\f[R]-.fi-.PP-Exception: if the list marker is followed by an indented code block,-which must begin 5 spaces after the list marker, then subsequent-paragraphs must begin two columns after the last character of the list-marker:-.IP-.nf-\f[C]-*     code--  continuation paragraph-\f[R]-.fi-.PP-List items may include other lists.-In this case the preceding blank line is optional.-The nested list must be indented to line up with the first non-space-character after the list marker of the containing list item.-.IP-.nf-\f[C]-* fruits-  + apples-    - macintosh-    - red delicious-  + pears-  + peaches-* vegetables-  + broccoli-  + chard-\f[R]-.fi-.PP-As noted above, Markdown allows you to write list items-\[lq]lazily,\[rq] instead of indenting continuation lines.-However, if there are multiple paragraphs or other blocks in a list-item, the first line of each must be indented.-.IP-.nf-\f[C]-+ A lazy, lazy, list-item.--+ Another one; this looks-bad but is legal.--    Second paragraph of second-list item.-\f[R]-.fi-.SS Ordered lists-.PP-Ordered lists work just like bulleted lists, except that the items begin-with enumerators rather than bullets.-.PP-In original Markdown, enumerators are decimal numbers followed by a-period and a space.-The numbers themselves are ignored, so there is no difference between-this list:-.IP-.nf-\f[C]-1.  one-2.  two-3.  three-\f[R]-.fi-.PP-and this one:-.IP-.nf-\f[C]-5.  one-7.  two-1.  three-\f[R]-.fi-.SS Extension: \f[V]fancy_lists\f[R]-.PP-Unlike original Markdown, pandoc allows ordered list items to be marked-with uppercase and lowercase letters and roman numerals, in addition to-Arabic numerals.-List markers may be enclosed in parentheses or followed by a single-right-parenthesis or period.-They must be separated from the text that follows by at least one space,-and, if the list marker is a capital letter with a period, by at least-two spaces.-.PP-The \f[V]fancy_lists\f[R] extension also allows `\f[V]#\f[R]' to be used-as an ordered list marker in place of a numeral:-.IP-.nf-\f[C]-#. one-#. two-\f[R]-.fi-.PP-Note: the `\f[V]#\f[R]' ordered list marker doesn\[cq]t work with-\f[V]commonmark\f[R].-.SS Extension: \f[V]startnum\f[R]-.PP-Pandoc also pays attention to the type of list marker used, and to the-starting number, and both of these are preserved where possible in the-output format.-Thus, the following yields a list with numbers followed by a single-parenthesis, starting with 9, and a sublist with lowercase roman-numerals:-.IP-.nf-\f[C]- 9)  Ninth-10)  Tenth-11)  Eleventh-       i. subone-      ii. subtwo-     iii. subthree-\f[R]-.fi-.PP-Pandoc will start a new list each time a different type of list marker-is used.-So, the following will create three lists:-.IP-.nf-\f[C]-(2) Two-(5) Three-1.  Four-*   Five-\f[R]-.fi-.PP-If default list markers are desired, use \f[V]#.\f[R]:-.IP-.nf-\f[C]-#.  one-#.  two-#.  three-\f[R]-.fi-.SS Extension: \f[V]task_lists\f[R]-.PP-Pandoc supports task lists, using the syntax of GitHub-Flavored-Markdown.-.IP-.nf-\f[C]-- [ ] an unchecked task list item-- [x] checked item-\f[R]-.fi-.SS Definition lists-.SS Extension: \f[V]definition_lists\f[R]-.PP-Pandoc supports definition lists, using the syntax of PHP Markdown Extra-with some extensions.-.IP-.nf-\f[C]-Term 1--:   Definition 1--Term 2 with *inline markup*--:   Definition 2--        { some code, part of Definition 2 }--    Third paragraph of definition 2.-\f[R]-.fi-.PP-Each term must fit on one line, which may optionally be followed by a-blank line, and must be followed by one or more definitions.-A definition begins with a colon or tilde, which may be indented one or-two spaces.-.PP-A term may have multiple definitions, and each definition may consist of-one or more block elements (paragraph, code block, list, etc.), each-indented four spaces or one tab stop.-The body of the definition (not including the first line) should be-indented four spaces.-However, as with other Markdown lists, you can \[lq]lazily\[rq] omit-indentation except at the beginning of a paragraph or other block-element:-.IP-.nf-\f[C]-Term 1--:   Definition-with lazy continuation.--    Second paragraph of the definition.-\f[R]-.fi-.PP-If you leave space before the definition (as in the example above), the-text of the definition will be treated as a paragraph.-In some output formats, this will mean greater spacing between-term/definition pairs.-For a more compact definition list, omit the space before the-definition:-.IP-.nf-\f[C]-Term 1-  \[ti] Definition 1--Term 2-  \[ti] Definition 2a-  \[ti] Definition 2b-\f[R]-.fi-.PP-Note that space between items in a definition list is required.-(A variant that loosens this requirement, but disallows \[lq]lazy\[rq]-hard wrapping, can be activated with the-\f[V]compact_definition_lists\f[R] extension.)-.SS Numbered example lists-.SS Extension: \f[V]example_lists\f[R]-.PP-The special list marker \f[V]\[at]\f[R] can be used for sequentially-numbered examples.-The first list item with a \f[V]\[at]\f[R] marker will be numbered `1',-the next `2', and so on, throughout the document.-The numbered examples need not occur in a single list; each new list-using \f[V]\[at]\f[R] will take up where the last stopped.-So, for example:-.IP-.nf-\f[C]-(\[at])  My first example will be numbered (1).-(\[at])  My second example will be numbered (2).--Explanation of examples.--(\[at])  My third example will be numbered (3).-\f[R]-.fi-.PP-Numbered examples can be labeled and referred to elsewhere in the-document:-.IP-.nf-\f[C]-(\[at]good)  This is a good example.--As (\[at]good) illustrates, ...-\f[R]-.fi-.PP-The label can be any string of alphanumeric characters, underscores, or-hyphens.-.PP-Note: continuation paragraphs in example lists must always be indented-four spaces, regardless of the length of the list marker.-That is, example lists always behave as if the \f[V]four_space_rule\f[R]-extension is set.-This is because example labels tend to be long, and indenting content to-the first non-space character after the label would be awkward.-.SS Ending a list-.PP-What if you want to put an indented code block after a list?-.IP-.nf-\f[C]--   item one--   item two--    { my code block }-\f[R]-.fi-.PP-Trouble!-Here pandoc (like other Markdown implementations) will treat-\f[V]{ my code block }\f[R] as the second paragraph of item two, and not-as a code block.-.PP-To \[lq]cut off\[rq] the list after item two, you can insert some-non-indented content, like an HTML comment, which won\[cq]t produce-visible output in any format:-.IP-.nf-\f[C]--   item one--   item two--<!-- end of list -->--    { my code block }-\f[R]-.fi-.PP-You can use the same trick if you want two consecutive lists instead of-one big list:-.IP-.nf-\f[C]-1.  one-2.  two-3.  three--<!-- -->--1.  uno-2.  dos-3.  tres-\f[R]-.fi-.SS Horizontal rules-.PP-A line containing a row of three or more \f[V]*\f[R], \f[V]-\f[R], or-\f[V]_\f[R] characters (optionally separated by spaces) produces a-horizontal rule:-.IP-.nf-\f[C]-*  *  *  *------------------\f[R]-.fi-.PP-We strongly recommend that horizontal rules be separated from-surrounding text by blank lines.-If a horizontal rule is not followed by a blank line, pandoc may try to-interpret the lines that follow as a YAML metadata block or a table.-.SS Tables-.PP-Four kinds of tables may be used.-The first three kinds presuppose the use of a fixed-width font, such as-Courier.-The fourth kind can be used with proportionally spaced fonts, as it does-not require lining up columns.-.SS Extension: \f[V]table_captions\f[R]-.PP-A caption may optionally be provided with all 4 kinds of tables (as-illustrated in the examples below).-A caption is a paragraph beginning with the string \f[V]Table:\f[R] (or-\f[V]table:\f[R] or just \f[V]:\f[R]), which will be stripped off.-It may appear either before or after the table.-.SS Extension: \f[V]simple_tables\f[R]-.PP-Simple tables look like this:-.IP-.nf-\f[C]-  Right     Left     Center     Default--------     ------ ----------   --------     12     12        12            12-    123     123       123          123-      1     1          1             1--Table:  Demonstration of simple table syntax.-\f[R]-.fi-.PP-The header and table rows must each fit on one line.-Column alignments are determined by the position of the header text-relative to the dashed line below it:-.IP \[bu] 2-If the dashed line is flush with the header text on the right side but-extends beyond it on the left, the column is right-aligned.-.IP \[bu] 2-If the dashed line is flush with the header text on the left side but-extends beyond it on the right, the column is left-aligned.-.IP \[bu] 2-If the dashed line extends beyond the header text on both sides, the-column is centered.-.IP \[bu] 2-If the dashed line is flush with the header text on both sides, the-default alignment is used (in most cases, this will be left).-.PP-The table must end with a blank line, or a line of dashes followed by a-blank line.-.PP-The column header row may be omitted, provided a dashed line is used to-end the table.-For example:-.IP-.nf-\f[C]--------     ------ ----------   --------     12     12        12             12-    123     123       123           123-      1     1          1              1--------     ------ ----------   --------\f[R]-.fi-.PP-When the header row is omitted, column alignments are determined on the-basis of the first line of the table body.-So, in the tables above, the columns would be right, left, center, and-right aligned, respectively.-.SS Extension: \f[V]multiline_tables\f[R]-.PP-Multiline tables allow header and table rows to span multiple lines of-text (but cells that span multiple columns or rows of the table are not-supported).-Here is an example:-.IP-.nf-\f[C]--------------------------------------------------------------- Centered   Default           Right Left-  Header    Aligned         Aligned Aligned------------ ------- --------------- --------------------------   First    row                12.0 Example of a row that-                                    spans multiple lines.--  Second    row                 5.0 Here\[aq]s another one. Note-                                    the blank line between-                                    rows.----------------------------------------------------------------Table: Here\[aq]s the caption. It, too, may span-multiple lines.-\f[R]-.fi-.PP-These work like simple tables, but with the following differences:-.IP \[bu] 2-They must begin with a row of dashes, before the header text (unless the-header row is omitted).-.IP \[bu] 2-They must end with a row of dashes, then a blank line.-.IP \[bu] 2-The rows must be separated by blank lines.-.PP-In multiline tables, the table parser pays attention to the widths of-the columns, and the writers try to reproduce these relative widths in-the output.-So, if you find that one of the columns is too narrow in the output, try-widening it in the Markdown source.-.PP-The header may be omitted in multiline tables as well as simple tables:-.IP-.nf-\f[C]------------ ------- --------------- --------------------------   First    row                12.0 Example of a row that-                                    spans multiple lines.--  Second    row                 5.0 Here\[aq]s another one. Note-                                    the blank line between-                                    rows.------------ ------- --------------- ---------------------------: Here\[aq]s a multiline table without a header.-\f[R]-.fi-.PP-It is possible for a multiline table to have just one row, but the row-should be followed by a blank line (and then the row of dashes that ends-the table), or the table may be interpreted as a simple table.-.SS Extension: \f[V]grid_tables\f[R]-.PP-Grid tables look like this:-.IP-.nf-\f[C]-: Sample grid table.--+---------------+---------------+--------------------+-| Fruit         | Price         | Advantages         |-+===============+===============+====================+-| Bananas       | $1.34         | - built-in wrapper |-|               |               | - bright color     |-+---------------+---------------+--------------------+-| Oranges       | $2.10         | - cures scurvy     |-|               |               | - tasty            |-+---------------+---------------+--------------------+-\f[R]-.fi-.PP-The row of \f[V]=\f[R]s separates the header from the table body, and-can be omitted for a headerless table.-The cells of grid tables may contain arbitrary block elements (multiple-paragraphs, code blocks, lists, etc.).-.PP-Cells can span multiple columns or rows:-.IP-.nf-\f[C]-+---------------------+----------+-| Property            | Earth    |-+=============+=======+==========+-|             | min   | -89.2 °C |-| Temperature +-------+----------+-| 1961-1990   | mean  | 14 °C    |-|             +-------+----------+-|             | max   | 56.7 °C  |-+-------------+-------+----------+-\f[R]-.fi-.PP-A table header may contain more than one row:-.IP-.nf-\f[C]-+---------------------+-----------------------+-| Location            | Temperature 1961-1990 |-|                     | in degree Celsius     |-|                     +-------+-------+-------+-|                     | min   | mean  | max   |-+=====================+=======+=======+=======+-| Antarctica          | -89.2 | N/A   | 19.8  |-+---------------------+-------+-------+-------+-| Earth               | -89.2 | 14    | 56.7  |-+---------------------+-------+-------+-------+-\f[R]-.fi-.PP-Alignments can be specified as with pipe tables, by putting colons at-the boundaries of the separator line after the header:-.IP-.nf-\f[C]-+---------------+---------------+--------------------+-| Right         | Left          | Centered           |-+==============:+:==============+:==================:+-| Bananas       | $1.34         | built-in wrapper   |-+---------------+---------------+--------------------+-\f[R]-.fi-.PP-For headerless tables, the colons go on the top line instead:-.IP-.nf-\f[C]-+--------------:+:--------------+:------------------:+-| Right         | Left          | Centered           |-+---------------+---------------+--------------------+-\f[R]-.fi-.PP-A table foot can be defined by enclosing it with separator lines that-use \f[V]=\f[R] instead of \f[V]-\f[R]:-.IP-.nf-\f[C]- +---------------+---------------+- | Fruit         | Price         |- +===============+===============+- | Bananas       | $1.34         |- +---------------+---------------+- | Oranges       | $2.10         |- +===============+===============+- | Sum           | $3.44         |- +===============+===============+-\f[R]-.fi-.PP-The foot must always be placed at the very bottom of the table.-.PP-Grid tables can be created easily using Emacs\[cq] table-mode-(\f[V]M-x table-insert\f[R]).-.SS Extension: \f[V]pipe_tables\f[R]-.PP-Pipe tables look like this:-.IP-.nf-\f[C]-| Right | Left | Default | Center |-|------:|:-----|---------|:------:|-|   12  |  12  |    12   |    12  |-|  123  |  123 |   123   |   123  |-|    1  |    1 |     1   |     1  |--  : Demonstration of pipe table syntax.-\f[R]-.fi-.PP-The syntax is identical to PHP Markdown Extra tables.-The beginning and ending pipe characters are optional, but pipes are-required between all columns.-The colons indicate column alignment as shown.-The header cannot be omitted.-To simulate a headerless table, include a header with blank cells.-.PP-Since the pipes indicate column boundaries, columns need not be-vertically aligned, as they are in the above example.-So, this is a perfectly legal (though ugly) pipe table:-.IP-.nf-\f[C]-fruit| price------|-----:-apple|2.05-pear|1.37-orange|3.09-\f[R]-.fi-.PP-The cells of pipe tables cannot contain block elements like paragraphs-and lists, and cannot span multiple lines.-If any line of the markdown source is longer than the column width (see-\f[V]--columns\f[R]), then the table will take up the full text width-and the cell contents will wrap, with the relative cell widths-determined by the number of dashes in the line separating the table-header from the table body.-(For example \f[V]---|-\f[R] would make the first column 3/4 and the-second column 1/4 of the full text width.)-On the other hand, if no lines are wider than column width, then cell-contents will not be wrapped, and the cells will be sized to their-contents.-.PP-Note: pandoc also recognizes pipe tables of the following form, as can-be produced by Emacs\[cq] orgtbl-mode:-.IP-.nf-\f[C]-| One | Two   |-|-----+-------|-| my  | table |-| is  | nice  |-\f[R]-.fi-.PP-The difference is that \f[V]+\f[R] is used instead of \f[V]|\f[R].-Other orgtbl features are not supported.-In particular, to get non-default column alignment, you\[cq]ll need to-add colons as above.-.SS Metadata blocks-.SS Extension: \f[V]pandoc_title_block\f[R]-.PP-If the file begins with a title block-.IP-.nf-\f[C]-% title-% author(s) (separated by semicolons)-% date-\f[R]-.fi-.PP-it will be parsed as bibliographic information, not regular text.-(It will be used, for example, in the title of standalone LaTeX or HTML-output.)-The block may contain just a title, a title and an author, or all three-elements.-If you want to include an author but no title, or a title and a date but-no author, you need a blank line:-.IP-.nf-\f[C]-%-% Author-\f[R]-.fi-.IP-.nf-\f[C]-% My title-%-% June 15, 2006-\f[R]-.fi-.PP-The title may occupy multiple lines, but continuation lines must begin-with leading space, thus:-.IP-.nf-\f[C]-% My title-  on multiple lines-\f[R]-.fi-.PP-If a document has multiple authors, the authors may be put on separate-lines with leading space, or separated by semicolons, or both.-So, all of the following are equivalent:-.IP-.nf-\f[C]-% Author One-  Author Two-\f[R]-.fi-.IP-.nf-\f[C]-% Author One; Author Two-\f[R]-.fi-.IP-.nf-\f[C]-% Author One;-  Author Two-\f[R]-.fi-.PP-The date must fit on one line.-.PP-All three metadata fields may contain standard inline formatting-(italics, links, footnotes, etc.).-.PP-Title blocks will always be parsed, but they will affect the output only-when the \f[V]--standalone\f[R] (\f[V]-s\f[R]) option is chosen.-In HTML output, titles will appear twice: once in the document head-\[en] this is the title that will appear at the top of the window in a-browser \[en] and once at the beginning of the document body.-The title in the document head can have an optional prefix attached-(\f[V]--title-prefix\f[R] or \f[V]-T\f[R] option).-The title in the body appears as an H1 element with class-\[lq]title\[rq], so it can be suppressed or reformatted with CSS.-If a title prefix is specified with \f[V]-T\f[R] and no title block-appears in the document, the title prefix will be used by itself as the-HTML title.-.PP-The man page writer extracts a title, man page section number, and other-header and footer information from the title line.-The title is assumed to be the first word on the title line, which may-optionally end with a (single-digit) section number in parentheses.-(There should be no space between the title and the parentheses.)-Anything after this is assumed to be additional footer and header text.-A single pipe character (\f[V]|\f[R]) should be used to separate the-footer text from the header text.-Thus,-.IP-.nf-\f[C]-% PANDOC(1)-\f[R]-.fi-.PP-will yield a man page with the title \f[V]PANDOC\f[R] and section 1.-.IP-.nf-\f[C]-% PANDOC(1) Pandoc User Manuals-\f[R]-.fi-.PP-will also have \[lq]Pandoc User Manuals\[rq] in the footer.-.IP-.nf-\f[C]-% PANDOC(1) Pandoc User Manuals | Version 4.0-\f[R]-.fi-.PP-will also have \[lq]Version 4.0\[rq] in the header.-.SS Extension: \f[V]yaml_metadata_block\f[R]-.PP-A YAML metadata block is a valid YAML object, delimited by a line of-three hyphens (\f[V]---\f[R]) at the top and a line of three hyphens-(\f[V]---\f[R]) or three dots (\f[V]...\f[R]) at the bottom.-The initial line \f[V]---\f[R] must not be followed by a blank line.-A YAML metadata block may occur anywhere in the document, but if it is-not at the beginning, it must be preceded by a blank line.-.PP-Note that, because of the way pandoc concatenates input files when-several are provided, you may also keep the metadata in a separate YAML-file and pass it to pandoc as an argument, along with your Markdown-files:-.IP-.nf-\f[C]-pandoc chap1.md chap2.md chap3.md metadata.yaml -s -o book.html-\f[R]-.fi-.PP-Just be sure that the YAML file begins with \f[V]---\f[R] and ends with-\f[V]---\f[R] or \f[V]...\f[R].-Alternatively, you can use the \f[V]--metadata-file\f[R] option.-Using that approach however, you cannot reference content (like-footnotes) from the main markdown input document.-.PP-Metadata will be taken from the fields of the YAML object and added to-any existing document metadata.-Metadata can contain lists and objects (nested arbitrarily), but all-string scalars will be interpreted as Markdown.-Fields with names ending in an underscore will be ignored by pandoc.-(They may be given a role by external processors.)-Field names must not be interpretable as YAML numbers or boolean values-(so, for example, \f[V]yes\f[R], \f[V]True\f[R], and \f[V]15\f[R] cannot-be used as field names).-.PP-A document may contain multiple metadata blocks.-If two metadata blocks attempt to set the same field, the value from the-second block will be taken.-.PP-Each metadata block is handled internally as an independent YAML-document.-This means, for example, that any YAML anchors defined in a block cannot-be referenced in another block.-.PP-When pandoc is used with \f[V]-t markdown\f[R] to create a Markdown-document, a YAML metadata block will be produced only if the-\f[V]-s/--standalone\f[R] option is used.-All of the metadata will appear in a single block at the beginning of-the document.-.PP-Note that YAML escaping rules must be followed.-Thus, for example, if a title contains a colon, it must be quoted, and-if it contains a backslash escape, then it must be ensured that it is-not treated as a YAML escape sequence.-The pipe character (\f[V]|\f[R]) can be used to begin an indented block-that will be interpreted literally, without need for escaping.-This form is necessary when the field contains blank lines or-block-level formatting:-.IP-.nf-\f[C]-----title:  \[aq]This is the title: it contains a colon\[aq]-author:-- Author One-- Author Two-keywords: [nothing, nothingness]-abstract: |-  This is the abstract.--  It consists of two paragraphs.-\&...-\f[R]-.fi-.PP-The literal block after the \f[V]|\f[R] must be indented relative to the-line containing the \f[V]|\f[R].-If it is not, the YAML will be invalid and pandoc will not interpret it-as metadata.-For an overview of the complex rules governing YAML, see the Wikipedia-entry on YAML syntax.-.PP-Template variables will be set automatically from the metadata.-Thus, for example, in writing HTML, the variable \f[V]abstract\f[R] will-be set to the HTML equivalent of the Markdown in the \f[V]abstract\f[R]-field:-.IP-.nf-\f[C]-<p>This is the abstract.</p>-<p>It consists of two paragraphs.</p>-\f[R]-.fi-.PP-Variables can contain arbitrary YAML structures, but the template must-match this structure.-The \f[V]author\f[R] variable in the default templates expects a simple-list or string, but can be changed to support more complicated-structures.-The following combination, for example, would add an affiliation to the-author if one is given:-.IP-.nf-\f[C]-----title: The document title-author:-- name: Author One-  affiliation: University of Somewhere-- name: Author Two-  affiliation: University of Nowhere-\&...-\f[R]-.fi-.PP-To use the structured authors in the example above, you would need a-custom template:-.IP-.nf-\f[C]-$for(author)$-$if(author.name)$-$author.name$$if(author.affiliation)$ ($author.affiliation$)$endif$-$else$-$author$-$endif$-$endfor$-\f[R]-.fi-.PP-Raw content to include in the document\[cq]s header may be specified-using \f[V]header-includes\f[R]; however, it is important to mark up-this content as raw code for a particular output format, using the-\f[V]raw_attribute\f[R] extension, or it will be interpreted as-markdown.-For example:-.IP-.nf-\f[C]-header-includes:-- |-  \[ga]\[ga]\[ga]{=latex}-  \[rs]let\[rs]oldsection\[rs]section-  \[rs]renewcommand{\[rs]section}[1]{\[rs]clearpage\[rs]oldsection{#1}}-  \[ga]\[ga]\[ga]-\f[R]-.fi-.PP-Note: the \f[V]yaml_metadata_block\f[R] extension works with-\f[V]commonmark\f[R] as well as \f[V]markdown\f[R] (and it is enabled by-default in \f[V]gfm\f[R] and \f[V]commonmark_x\f[R]).-However, in these formats the following restrictions apply:-.IP \[bu] 2-The YAML metadata block must occur at the beginning of the document (and-there can be only one).-If multiple files are given as arguments to pandoc, only the first can-be a YAML metadata block.-.IP \[bu] 2-The leaf nodes of the YAML structure are parsed in isolation from each-other and from the rest of the document.-So, for example, you can\[cq]t use a reference link in these contexts if-the link definition is somewhere else in the document.-.SS Backslash escapes-.SS Extension: \f[V]all_symbols_escapable\f[R]-.PP-Except inside a code block or inline code, any punctuation or space-character preceded by a backslash will be treated literally, even if it-would normally indicate formatting.-Thus, for example, if one writes-.IP-.nf-\f[C]-*\[rs]*hello\[rs]**-\f[R]-.fi-.PP-one will get-.IP-.nf-\f[C]-<em>*hello*</em>-\f[R]-.fi-.PP-instead of-.IP-.nf-\f[C]-<strong>hello</strong>-\f[R]-.fi-.PP-This rule is easier to remember than original Markdown\[cq]s rule, which-allows only the following characters to be backslash-escaped:-.IP-.nf-\f[C]-\[rs]\[ga]*_{}[]()>#+-.!-\f[R]-.fi-.PP-(However, if the \f[V]markdown_strict\f[R] format is used, the original-Markdown rule will be used.)-.PP-A backslash-escaped space is parsed as a nonbreaking space.-In TeX output, it will appear as \f[V]\[ti]\f[R].-In HTML and XML output, it will appear as a literal unicode nonbreaking-space character (note that it will thus actually look-\[lq]invisible\[rq] in the generated HTML source; you can still use the-\f[V]--ascii\f[R] command-line option to make it appear as an explicit-entity).-.PP-A backslash-escaped newline (i.e.\ a backslash occurring at the end of a-line) is parsed as a hard line break.-It will appear in TeX output as \f[V]\[rs]\[rs]\f[R] and in HTML as-\f[V]<br />\f[R].-This is a nice alternative to Markdown\[cq]s \[lq]invisible\[rq] way of-indicating hard line breaks using two trailing spaces on a line.-.PP-Backslash escapes do not work in verbatim contexts.-.SS Inline formatting-.SS Emphasis-.PP-To \f[I]emphasize\f[R] some text, surround it with \f[V]*\f[R]s or-\f[V]_\f[R], like this:-.IP-.nf-\f[C]-This text is _emphasized with underscores_, and this-is *emphasized with asterisks*.-\f[R]-.fi-.PP-Double \f[V]*\f[R] or \f[V]_\f[R] produces \f[B]strong emphasis\f[R]:-.IP-.nf-\f[C]-This is **strong emphasis** and __with underscores__.-\f[R]-.fi-.PP-A \f[V]*\f[R] or \f[V]_\f[R] character surrounded by spaces, or-backslash-escaped, will not trigger emphasis:-.IP-.nf-\f[C]-This is * not emphasized *, and \[rs]*neither is this\[rs]*.-\f[R]-.fi-.SS Extension: \f[V]intraword_underscores\f[R]-.PP-Because \f[V]_\f[R] is sometimes used inside words and identifiers,-pandoc does not interpret a \f[V]_\f[R] surrounded by alphanumeric-characters as an emphasis marker.-If you want to emphasize just part of a word, use \f[V]*\f[R]:-.IP-.nf-\f[C]-feas*ible*, not feas*able*.-\f[R]-.fi-.SS Strikeout-.SS Extension: \f[V]strikeout\f[R]-.PP-To strike out a section of text with a horizontal line, begin and end it-with \f[V]\[ti]\[ti]\f[R].-Thus, for example,-.IP-.nf-\f[C]-This \[ti]\[ti]is deleted text.\[ti]\[ti]-\f[R]-.fi-.SS Superscripts and subscripts-.SS Extension: \f[V]superscript\f[R], \f[V]subscript\f[R]-.PP-Superscripts may be written by surrounding the superscripted text by-\f[V]\[ha]\f[R] characters; subscripts may be written by surrounding the-subscripted text by \f[V]\[ti]\f[R] characters.-Thus, for example,-.IP-.nf-\f[C]-H\[ti]2\[ti]O is a liquid.  2\[ha]10\[ha] is 1024.-\f[R]-.fi-.PP-The text between \f[V]\[ha]...\[ha]\f[R] or \f[V]\[ti]...\[ti]\f[R] may-not contain spaces or newlines.-If the superscripted or subscripted text contains spaces, these spaces-must be escaped with backslashes.-(This is to prevent accidental superscripting and subscripting through-the ordinary use of \f[V]\[ti]\f[R] and \f[V]\[ha]\f[R], and also bad-interactions with footnotes.)-Thus, if you want the letter P with `a cat' in subscripts, use-\f[V]P\[ti]a\[rs] cat\[ti]\f[R], not \f[V]P\[ti]a cat\[ti]\f[R].-.SS Verbatim-.PP-To make a short span of text verbatim, put it inside backticks:-.IP-.nf-\f[C]-What is the difference between \[ga]>>=\[ga] and \[ga]>>\[ga]?-\f[R]-.fi-.PP-If the verbatim text includes a backtick, use double backticks:-.IP-.nf-\f[C]-Here is a literal backtick \[ga]\[ga] \[ga] \[ga]\[ga].-\f[R]-.fi-.PP-(The spaces after the opening backticks and before the closing backticks-will be ignored.)-.PP-The general rule is that a verbatim span starts with a string of-consecutive backticks (optionally followed by a space) and ends with a-string of the same number of backticks (optionally preceded by a space).-.PP-Note that backslash-escapes (and other Markdown constructs) do not work-in verbatim contexts:-.IP-.nf-\f[C]-This is a backslash followed by an asterisk: \[ga]\[rs]*\[ga].-\f[R]-.fi-.SS Extension: \f[V]inline_code_attributes\f[R]-.PP-Attributes can be attached to verbatim text, just as with fenced code-blocks:-.IP-.nf-\f[C]-\[ga]<$>\[ga]{.haskell}-\f[R]-.fi-.SS Underline-.PP-To underline text, use the \f[V]underline\f[R] class:-.IP-.nf-\f[C]-[Underline]{.underline}-\f[R]-.fi-.PP-Or, without the \f[V]bracketed_spans\f[R] extension (but with-\f[V]native_spans\f[R]):-.IP-.nf-\f[C]-<span class=\[dq]underline\[dq]>Underline</span>-\f[R]-.fi-.PP-This will work in all output formats that support underline.-.SS Small caps-.PP-To write small caps, use the \f[V]smallcaps\f[R] class:-.IP-.nf-\f[C]-[Small caps]{.smallcaps}-\f[R]-.fi-.PP-Or, without the \f[V]bracketed_spans\f[R] extension:-.IP-.nf-\f[C]-<span class=\[dq]smallcaps\[dq]>Small caps</span>-\f[R]-.fi-.PP-For compatibility with other Markdown flavors, CSS is also supported:-.IP-.nf-\f[C]-<span style=\[dq]font-variant:small-caps;\[dq]>Small caps</span>-\f[R]-.fi-.PP-This will work in all output formats that support small caps.-.SS Highlighting-.PP-To highlight text, use the \f[V]mark\f[R] class:-.IP-.nf-\f[C]-[Mark]{.mark}-\f[R]-.fi-.PP-Or, without the \f[V]bracketed_spans\f[R] extension (but with-\f[V]native_spans\f[R]):-.IP-.nf-\f[C]-<span class=\[dq]mark\[dq]>Mark</span>-\f[R]-.fi-.PP-This will work in all output formats that support highlighting.-.SS Math-.SS Extension: \f[V]tex_math_dollars\f[R]-.PP-Anything between two \f[V]$\f[R] characters will be treated as TeX math.-The opening \f[V]$\f[R] must have a non-space character immediately to-its right, while the closing \f[V]$\f[R] must have a non-space character-immediately to its left, and must not be followed immediately by a-digit.-Thus, \f[V]$20,000 and $30,000\f[R] won\[cq]t parse as math.-If for some reason you need to enclose text in literal \f[V]$\f[R]-characters, backslash-escape them and they won\[cq]t be treated as math-delimiters.-.PP-For display math, use \f[V]$$\f[R] delimiters.-(In this case, the delimiters may be separated from the formula by-whitespace.-However, there can be no blank lines between the opening and closing-\f[V]$$\f[R] delimiters.)-.PP-TeX math will be printed in all output formats.-How it is rendered depends on the output format:-.TP-LaTeX-It will appear verbatim surrounded by \f[V]\[rs](...\[rs])\f[R] (for-inline math) or \f[V]\[rs][...\[rs]]\f[R] (for display math).-.TP-Markdown, Emacs Org mode, ConTeXt, ZimWiki-It will appear verbatim surrounded by \f[V]$...$\f[R] (for inline math)-or \f[V]$$...$$\f[R] (for display math).-.TP-XWiki-It will appear verbatim surrounded by-\f[V]{{formula}}..{{/formula}}\f[R].-.TP-reStructuredText-It will be rendered using an interpreted text role \f[V]:math:\f[R].-.TP-AsciiDoc-For AsciiDoc output math will appear verbatim surrounded by-\f[V]latexmath:[...]\f[R].-For \f[V]asciidoc_legacy\f[R] the bracketed material will also include-inline or display math delimiters.-.TP-Texinfo-It will be rendered inside a \f[V]\[at]math\f[R] command.-.TP-roff man, Jira markup-It will be rendered verbatim without \f[V]$\f[R]\[cq]s.-.TP-MediaWiki, DokuWiki-It will be rendered inside \f[V]<math>\f[R] tags.-.TP-Textile-It will be rendered inside \f[V]<span class=\[dq]math\[dq]>\f[R] tags.-.TP-RTF, OpenDocument-It will be rendered, if possible, using Unicode characters, and will-otherwise appear verbatim.-.TP-ODT-It will be rendered, if possible, using MathML.-.TP-DocBook-If the \f[V]--mathml\f[R] flag is used, it will be rendered using MathML-in an \f[V]inlineequation\f[R] or \f[V]informalequation\f[R] tag.-Otherwise it will be rendered, if possible, using Unicode characters.-.TP-Docx and PowerPoint-It will be rendered using OMML math markup.-.TP-FictionBook2-If the \f[V]--webtex\f[R] option is used, formulas are rendered as-images using CodeCogs or other compatible web service, downloaded and-embedded in the e-book.-Otherwise, they will appear verbatim.-.TP-HTML, Slidy, DZSlides, S5, EPUB-The way math is rendered in HTML will depend on the command-line options-selected.-Therefore see Math rendering in HTML above.-.SS Raw HTML-.SS Extension: \f[V]raw_html\f[R]-.PP-Markdown allows you to insert raw HTML (or DocBook) anywhere in a-document (except verbatim contexts, where \f[V]<\f[R], \f[V]>\f[R], and-\f[V]&\f[R] are interpreted literally).-(Technically this is not an extension, since standard Markdown allows-it, but it has been made an extension so that it can be disabled if-desired.)-.PP-The raw HTML is passed through unchanged in HTML, S5, Slidy, Slideous,-DZSlides, EPUB, Markdown, CommonMark, Emacs Org mode, and Textile-output, and suppressed in other formats.-.PP-For a more explicit way of including raw HTML in a Markdown document,-see the \f[V]raw_attribute\f[R] extension.-.PP-In the CommonMark format, if \f[V]raw_html\f[R] is enabled,-superscripts, subscripts, strikeouts and small capitals will be-represented as HTML.-Otherwise, plain-text fallbacks will be used.-Note that even if \f[V]raw_html\f[R] is disabled, tables will be-rendered with HTML syntax if they cannot use pipe syntax.-.SS Extension: \f[V]markdown_in_html_blocks\f[R]-.PP-Original Markdown allows you to include HTML \[lq]blocks\[rq]: blocks of-HTML between balanced tags that are separated from the surrounding text-with blank lines, and start and end at the left margin.-Within these blocks, everything is interpreted as HTML, not Markdown; so-(for example), \f[V]*\f[R] does not signify emphasis.-.PP-Pandoc behaves this way when the \f[V]markdown_strict\f[R] format is-used; but by default, pandoc interprets material between HTML block tags-as Markdown.-Thus, for example, pandoc will turn-.IP-.nf-\f[C]-<table>-<tr>-<td>*one*</td>-<td>[a link](https://google.com)</td>-</tr>-</table>-\f[R]-.fi-.PP-into-.IP-.nf-\f[C]-<table>-<tr>-<td><em>one</em></td>-<td><a href=\[dq]https://google.com\[dq]>a link</a></td>-</tr>-</table>-\f[R]-.fi-.PP-whereas \f[V]Markdown.pl\f[R] will preserve it as is.-.PP-There is one exception to this rule: text between \f[V]<script>\f[R],-\f[V]<style>\f[R], and \f[V]<textarea>\f[R] tags is not interpreted as-Markdown.-.PP-This departure from original Markdown should make it easier to mix-Markdown with HTML block elements.-For example, one can surround a block of Markdown text with-\f[V]<div>\f[R] tags without preventing it from being interpreted as-Markdown.-.SS Extension: \f[V]native_divs\f[R]-.PP-Use native pandoc \f[V]Div\f[R] blocks for content inside-\f[V]<div>\f[R] tags.-For the most part this should give the same output as-\f[V]markdown_in_html_blocks\f[R], but it makes it easier to write-pandoc filters to manipulate groups of blocks.-.SS Extension: \f[V]native_spans\f[R]-.PP-Use native pandoc \f[V]Span\f[R] blocks for content inside-\f[V]<span>\f[R] tags.-For the most part this should give the same output as-\f[V]raw_html\f[R], but it makes it easier to write pandoc filters to-manipulate groups of inlines.-.SS Extension: \f[V]raw_tex\f[R]-.PP-In addition to raw HTML, pandoc allows raw LaTeX, TeX, and ConTeXt to be-included in a document.-Inline TeX commands will be preserved and passed unchanged to the LaTeX-and ConTeXt writers.-Thus, for example, you can use LaTeX to include BibTeX citations:-.IP-.nf-\f[C]-This result was proved in \[rs]cite{jones.1967}.-\f[R]-.fi-.PP-Note that in LaTeX environments, like-.IP-.nf-\f[C]-\[rs]begin{tabular}{|l|l|}\[rs]hline-Age & Frequency \[rs]\[rs] \[rs]hline-18--25  & 15 \[rs]\[rs]-26--35  & 33 \[rs]\[rs]-36--45  & 22 \[rs]\[rs] \[rs]hline-\[rs]end{tabular}-\f[R]-.fi-.PP-the material between the begin and end tags will be interpreted as raw-LaTeX, not as Markdown.-.PP-For a more explicit and flexible way of including raw TeX in a Markdown-document, see the \f[V]raw_attribute\f[R] extension.-.PP-Inline LaTeX is ignored in output formats other than Markdown, LaTeX,-Emacs Org mode, and ConTeXt.-.SS Generic raw attribute-.SS Extension: \f[V]raw_attribute\f[R]-.PP-Inline spans and fenced code blocks with a special kind of attribute-will be parsed as raw content with the designated format.-For example, the following produces a raw roff \f[V]ms\f[R] block:-.IP-.nf-\f[C]-\[ga]\[ga]\[ga]{=ms}-\&.MYMACRO-blah blah-\[ga]\[ga]\[ga]-\f[R]-.fi-.PP-And the following produces a raw \f[V]html\f[R] inline element:-.IP-.nf-\f[C]-This is \[ga]<a>html</a>\[ga]{=html}-\f[R]-.fi-.PP-This can be useful to insert raw xml into \f[V]docx\f[R] documents, e.g.-a pagebreak:-.IP-.nf-\f[C]-\[ga]\[ga]\[ga]{=openxml}-<w:p>-  <w:r>-    <w:br w:type=\[dq]page\[dq]/>-  </w:r>-</w:p>-\[ga]\[ga]\[ga]-\f[R]-.fi-.PP-The format name should match the target format name (see-\f[V]-t/--to\f[R], above, for a list, or use-\f[V]pandoc --list-output-formats\f[R]).-Use \f[V]openxml\f[R] for \f[V]docx\f[R] output, \f[V]opendocument\f[R]-for \f[V]odt\f[R] output, \f[V]html5\f[R] for \f[V]epub3\f[R] output,-\f[V]html4\f[R] for \f[V]epub2\f[R] output, and \f[V]latex\f[R],-\f[V]beamer\f[R], \f[V]ms\f[R], or \f[V]html5\f[R] for \f[V]pdf\f[R]-output (depending on what you use for \f[V]--pdf-engine\f[R]).-.PP-This extension presupposes that the relevant kind of inline code or-fenced code block is enabled.-Thus, for example, to use a raw attribute with a backtick code block,-\f[V]backtick_code_blocks\f[R] must be enabled.-.PP-The raw attribute cannot be combined with regular attributes.-.SS LaTeX macros-.SS Extension: \f[V]latex_macros\f[R]-.PP-When this extension is enabled, pandoc will parse LaTeX macro-definitions and apply the resulting macros to all LaTeX math and raw-LaTeX.-So, for example, the following will work in all output formats, not just-LaTeX:-.IP-.nf-\f[C]-\[rs]newcommand{\[rs]tuple}[1]{\[rs]langle #1 \[rs]rangle}--$\[rs]tuple{a, b, c}$-\f[R]-.fi-.PP-Note that LaTeX macros will not be applied if they occur inside a raw-span or block marked with the \f[V]raw_attribute\f[R] extension.-.PP-When \f[V]latex_macros\f[R] is disabled, the raw LaTeX and math will not-have macros applied.-This is usually a better approach when you are targeting LaTeX or PDF.-.PP-Macro definitions in LaTeX will be passed through as raw LaTeX only if-\f[V]latex_macros\f[R] is not enabled.-Macro definitions in Markdown source (or other formats allowing-\f[V]raw_tex\f[R]) will be passed through regardless of whether-\f[V]latex_macros\f[R] is enabled.-.SS Links-.PP-Markdown allows links to be specified in several ways.-.SS Automatic links-.PP-If you enclose a URL or email address in pointy brackets, it will become-a link:-.IP-.nf-\f[C]-<https://google.com>-<sam\[at]green.eggs.ham>-\f[R]-.fi-.SS Inline links-.PP-An inline link consists of the link text in square brackets, followed by-the URL in parentheses.-(Optionally, the URL can be followed by a link title, in quotes.)-.IP-.nf-\f[C]-This is an [inline link](/url), and here\[aq]s [one with-a title](https://fsf.org \[dq]click here for a good time!\[dq]).-\f[R]-.fi-.PP-There can be no space between the bracketed part and the parenthesized-part.-The link text can contain formatting (such as emphasis), but the title-cannot.-.PP-Email addresses in inline links are not autodetected, so they have to be-prefixed with \f[V]mailto\f[R]:-.IP-.nf-\f[C]-[Write me!](mailto:sam\[at]green.eggs.ham)-\f[R]-.fi-.SS Reference links-.PP-An \f[I]explicit\f[R] reference link has two parts, the link itself and-the link definition, which may occur elsewhere in the document (either-before or after the link).-.PP-The link consists of link text in square brackets, followed by a label-in square brackets.-(There cannot be space between the two unless the-\f[V]spaced_reference_links\f[R] extension is enabled.)-The link definition consists of the bracketed label, followed by a colon-and a space, followed by the URL, and optionally (after a space) a link-title either in quotes or in parentheses.-The label must not be parseable as a citation (assuming the-\f[V]citations\f[R] extension is enabled): citations take precedence-over link labels.-.PP-Here are some examples:-.IP-.nf-\f[C]-[my label 1]: /foo/bar.html  \[dq]My title, optional\[dq]-[my label 2]: /foo-[my label 3]: https://fsf.org (The Free Software Foundation)-[my label 4]: /bar#special  \[aq]A title in single quotes\[aq]-\f[R]-.fi-.PP-The URL may optionally be surrounded by angle brackets:-.IP-.nf-\f[C]-[my label 5]: <http://foo.bar.baz>-\f[R]-.fi-.PP-The title may go on the next line:-.IP-.nf-\f[C]-[my label 3]: https://fsf.org-  \[dq]The Free Software Foundation\[dq]-\f[R]-.fi-.PP-Note that link labels are not case sensitive.-So, this will work:-.IP-.nf-\f[C]-Here is [my link][FOO]--[Foo]: /bar/baz-\f[R]-.fi-.PP-In an \f[I]implicit\f[R] reference link, the second pair of brackets is-empty:-.IP-.nf-\f[C]-See [my website][].--[my website]: http://foo.bar.baz-\f[R]-.fi-.PP-Note: In \f[V]Markdown.pl\f[R] and most other Markdown implementations,-reference link definitions cannot occur in nested constructions such as-list items or block quotes.-Pandoc lifts this arbitrary-seeming restriction.-So the following is fine in pandoc, though not in most other-implementations:-.IP-.nf-\f[C]-> My block [quote].->-> [quote]: /foo-\f[R]-.fi-.SS Extension: \f[V]shortcut_reference_links\f[R]-.PP-In a \f[I]shortcut\f[R] reference link, the second pair of brackets may-be omitted entirely:-.IP-.nf-\f[C]-See [my website].--[my website]: http://foo.bar.baz-\f[R]-.fi-.SS Internal links-.PP-To link to another section of the same document, use the automatically-generated identifier (see Heading identifiers).-For example:-.IP-.nf-\f[C]-See the [Introduction](#introduction).-\f[R]-.fi-.PP-or-.IP-.nf-\f[C]-See the [Introduction].--[Introduction]: #introduction-\f[R]-.fi-.PP-Internal links are currently supported for HTML formats (including HTML-slide shows and EPUB), LaTeX, and ConTeXt.-.SS Images-.PP-A link immediately preceded by a \f[V]!\f[R] will be treated as an-image.-The link text will be used as the image\[cq]s alt text:-.IP-.nf-\f[C]-![la lune](lalune.jpg \[dq]Voyage to the moon\[dq])--![movie reel]--[movie reel]: movie.gif-\f[R]-.fi-.SS Extension: \f[V]implicit_figures\f[R]-.PP-An image with nonempty alt text, occurring by itself in a paragraph,-will be rendered as a figure with a caption.-The image\[cq]s alt text will be used as the caption.-.IP-.nf-\f[C]-![This is the caption](/url/of/image.png)-\f[R]-.fi-.PP-How this is rendered depends on the output format.-Some output formats (e.g.\ RTF) do not yet support figures.-In those formats, you\[cq]ll just get an image in a paragraph by itself,-with no caption.-.PP-If you just want a regular inline image, just make sure it is not the-only thing in the paragraph.-One way to do this is to insert a nonbreaking space after the image:-.IP-.nf-\f[C]-![This image won\[aq]t be a figure](/url/of/image.png)\[rs]-\f[R]-.fi-.PP-Note that in reveal.js slide shows, an image in a paragraph by itself-that has the \f[V]r-stretch\f[R] class will fill the screen, and the-caption and figure tags will be omitted.-.SS Extension: \f[V]link_attributes\f[R]-.PP-Attributes can be set on links and images:-.IP-.nf-\f[C]-An inline ![image](foo.jpg){#id .class width=30 height=20px}-and a reference ![image][ref] with attributes.--[ref]: foo.jpg \[dq]optional title\[dq] {#id .class key=val key2=\[dq]val 2\[dq]}-\f[R]-.fi-.PP-(This syntax is compatible with PHP Markdown Extra when only-\f[V]#id\f[R] and \f[V].class\f[R] are used.)-.PP-For HTML and EPUB, all known HTML5 attributes except \f[V]width\f[R] and-\f[V]height\f[R] (but including \f[V]srcset\f[R] and \f[V]sizes\f[R])-are passed through as is.-Unknown attributes are passed through as custom attributes, with-\f[V]data-\f[R] prepended.-The other writers ignore attributes that are not specifically supported-by their output format.-.PP-The \f[V]width\f[R] and \f[V]height\f[R] attributes on images are-treated specially.-When used without a unit, the unit is assumed to be pixels.-However, any of the following unit identifiers can be used:-\f[V]px\f[R], \f[V]cm\f[R], \f[V]mm\f[R], \f[V]in\f[R], \f[V]inch\f[R]-and \f[V]%\f[R].-There must not be any spaces between the number and the unit.-For example:-.IP-.nf-\f[C]-![](file.jpg){ width=50% }-\f[R]-.fi-.IP \[bu] 2-Dimensions may be converted to a form that is compatible with the output-format (for example, dimensions given in pixels will be converted to-inches when converting HTML to LaTeX).-Conversion between pixels and physical measurements is affected by the-\f[V]--dpi\f[R] option (by default, 96 dpi is assumed, unless the image-itself contains dpi information).-.IP \[bu] 2-The \f[V]%\f[R] unit is generally relative to some available space.-For example the above example will render to the following.-.RS 2-.IP \[bu] 2-HTML:-\f[V]<img href=\[dq]file.jpg\[dq] style=\[dq]width: 50%;\[dq] />\f[R]-.IP \[bu] 2-LaTeX:-\f[V]\[rs]includegraphics[width=0.5\[rs]textwidth,height=\[rs]textheight]{file.jpg}\f[R]-(If you\[cq]re using a custom template, you need to configure-\f[V]graphicx\f[R] as in the default template.)-.IP \[bu] 2-ConTeXt:-\f[V]\[rs]externalfigure[file.jpg][width=0.5\[rs]textwidth]\f[R]-.RE-.IP \[bu] 2-Some output formats have a notion of a class (ConTeXt) or a unique-identifier (LaTeX \f[V]\[rs]caption\f[R]), or both (HTML).-.IP \[bu] 2-When no \f[V]width\f[R] or \f[V]height\f[R] attributes are specified,-the fallback is to look at the image resolution and the dpi metadata-embedded in the image file.-.SS Divs and Spans-.PP-Using the \f[V]native_divs\f[R] and \f[V]native_spans\f[R] extensions-(see above), HTML syntax can be used as part of markdown to create-native \f[V]Div\f[R] and \f[V]Span\f[R] elements in the pandoc AST (as-opposed to raw HTML).-However, there is also nicer syntax available:-.SS Extension: \f[V]fenced_divs\f[R]-.PP-Allow special fenced syntax for native \f[V]Div\f[R] blocks.-A Div starts with a fence containing at least three consecutive colons-plus some attributes.-The attributes may optionally be followed by another string of-consecutive colons.-.PP-Note: the \f[V]commonmark\f[R] parser doesn\[cq]t permit colons after-the attributes.-.PP-The attribute syntax is exactly as in fenced code blocks (see Extension:-\f[V]fenced_code_attributes\f[R]).-As with fenced code blocks, one can use either attributes in curly-braces or a single unbraced word, which will be treated as a class name.-The Div ends with another line containing a string of at least three-consecutive colons.-The fenced Div should be separated by blank lines from preceding and-following blocks.-.PP-Example:-.IP-.nf-\f[C]-::::: {#special .sidebar}-Here is a paragraph.--And another.-:::::-\f[R]-.fi-.PP-Fenced divs can be nested.-Opening fences are distinguished because they \f[I]must\f[R] have-attributes:-.IP-.nf-\f[C]-::: Warning ::::::-This is a warning.--::: Danger-This is a warning within a warning.-:::-::::::::::::::::::-\f[R]-.fi-.PP-Fences without attributes are always closing fences.-Unlike with fenced code blocks, the number of colons in the closing-fence need not match the number in the opening fence.-However, it can be helpful for visual clarity to use fences of different-lengths to distinguish nested divs from their parents.-.SS Extension: \f[V]bracketed_spans\f[R]-.PP-A bracketed sequence of inlines, as one would use to begin a link, will-be treated as a \f[V]Span\f[R] with attributes if it is followed-immediately by attributes:-.IP-.nf-\f[C]-[This is *some text*]{.class key=\[dq]val\[dq]}-\f[R]-.fi-.SS Footnotes-.SS Extension: \f[V]footnotes\f[R]-.PP-Pandoc\[cq]s Markdown allows footnotes, using the following syntax:-.IP-.nf-\f[C]-Here is a footnote reference,[\[ha]1] and another.[\[ha]longnote]--[\[ha]1]: Here is the footnote.--[\[ha]longnote]: Here\[aq]s one with multiple blocks.--    Subsequent paragraphs are indented to show that they-belong to the previous footnote.--        { some.code }--    The whole paragraph can be indented, or just the first-    line.  In this way, multi-paragraph footnotes work like-    multi-paragraph list items.--This paragraph won\[aq]t be part of the note, because it-isn\[aq]t indented.-\f[R]-.fi-.PP-The identifiers in footnote references may not contain spaces, tabs, or-newlines.-These identifiers are used only to correlate the footnote reference with-the note itself; in the output, footnotes will be numbered sequentially.-.PP-The footnotes themselves need not be placed at the end of the document.-They may appear anywhere except inside other block elements (lists,-block quotes, tables, etc.).-Each footnote should be separated from surrounding content (including-other footnotes) by blank lines.-.SS Extension: \f[V]inline_notes\f[R]-.PP-Inline footnotes are also allowed (though, unlike regular notes, they-cannot contain multiple paragraphs).-The syntax is as follows:-.IP-.nf-\f[C]-Here is an inline note.\[ha][Inline notes are easier to write, since-you don\[aq]t have to pick an identifier and move down to type the-note.]-\f[R]-.fi-.PP-Inline and regular footnotes may be mixed freely.-.SS Citation syntax-.SS Extension: \f[V]citations\f[R]-.PP-To cite a bibliographic item with an identifier foo, use the syntax-\f[V]\[at]foo\f[R].-Normal citations should be included in square brackets, with semicolons-separating distinct items:-.IP-.nf-\f[C]-Blah blah [\[at]doe99; \[at]smith2000; \[at]smith2004].-\f[R]-.fi-.PP-How this is rendered depends on the citation style.-In an author-date style, it might render as-.IP-.nf-\f[C]-Blah blah (Doe 1999, Smith 2000, 2004).-\f[R]-.fi-.PP-In a footnote style, it might render as-.IP-.nf-\f[C]-Blah blah.[\[ha]1]--[\[ha]1]:  John Doe, \[dq]Frogs,\[dq] *Journal of Amphibians* 44 (1999);-Susan Smith, \[dq]Flies,\[dq] *Journal of Insects* (2000);-Susan Smith, \[dq]Bees,\[dq] *Journal of Insects* (2004).-\f[R]-.fi-.PP-See the CSL user documentation for more information about CSL styles and-how they affect rendering.-.PP-Unless a citation key starts with a letter, digit, or \f[V]_\f[R], and-contains only alphanumerics and single internal punctuation characters-(\f[V]:.#$%&-+?<>\[ti]/\f[R]), it must be surrounded by curly braces,-which are not considered part of the key.-In \f[V]\[at]Foo_bar.baz.\f[R], the key is \f[V]Foo_bar.baz\f[R] because-the final period is not \f[I]internal\f[R] punctuation, so it is not-included in the key.-In \f[V]\[at]{Foo_bar.baz.}\f[R], the key is \f[V]Foo_bar.baz.\f[R],-including the final period.-In \f[V]\[at]Foo_bar--baz\f[R], the key is \f[V]Foo_bar\f[R] because the-repeated internal punctuation characters terminate the key.-The curly braces are recommended if you use URLs as keys:-\f[V][\[at]{https://example.com/bib?name=foobar&date=2000}, p.  33]\f[R].-.PP-Citation items may optionally include a prefix, a locator, and a suffix.-In-.IP-.nf-\f[C]-Blah blah [see \[at]doe99, pp. 33-35 and *passim*; \[at]smith04, chap. 1].-\f[R]-.fi-.PP-the first item (\f[V]doe99\f[R]) has prefix \f[V]see\f[R], locator-\f[V]pp.  33-35\f[R], and suffix \f[V]and *passim*\f[R].-The second item (\f[V]smith04\f[R]) has locator \f[V]chap. 1\f[R] and no-prefix or suffix.-.PP-Pandoc uses some heuristics to separate the locator from the rest of the-subject.-It is sensitive to the locator terms defined in the CSL locale files.-Either abbreviated or unabbreviated forms are accepted.-In the \f[V]en-US\f[R] locale, locator terms can be written in either-singular or plural forms, as \f[V]book\f[R],-\f[V]bk.\f[R]/\f[V]bks.\f[R]; \f[V]chapter\f[R],-\f[V]chap.\f[R]/\f[V]chaps.\f[R]; \f[V]column\f[R],-\f[V]col.\f[R]/\f[V]cols.\f[R]; \f[V]figure\f[R],-\f[V]fig.\f[R]/\f[V]figs.\f[R]; \f[V]folio\f[R],-\f[V]fol.\f[R]/\f[V]fols.\f[R]; \f[V]number\f[R],-\f[V]no.\f[R]/\f[V]nos.\f[R]; \f[V]line\f[R],-\f[V]l.\f[R]/\f[V]ll.\f[R]; \f[V]note\f[R], \f[V]n.\f[R]/\f[V]nn.\f[R];-\f[V]opus\f[R], \f[V]op.\f[R]/\f[V]opp.\f[R]; \f[V]page\f[R],-\f[V]p.\f[R]/\f[V]pp.\f[R]; \f[V]paragraph\f[R],-\f[V]para.\f[R]/\f[V]paras.\f[R]; \f[V]part\f[R],-\f[V]pt.\f[R]/\f[V]pts.\f[R]; \f[V]section\f[R],-\f[V]sec.\f[R]/\f[V]secs.\f[R]; \f[V]sub verbo\f[R],-\f[V]s.v.\f[R]/\f[V]s.vv.\f[R]; \f[V]verse\f[R],-\f[V]v.\f[R]/\f[V]vv.\f[R]; \f[V]volume\f[R],-\f[V]vol.\f[R]/\f[V]vols.\f[R]; \f[V]¶\f[R]/\f[V]¶¶\f[R];-\f[V]§\f[R]/\f[V]§§\f[R].-If no locator term is used, \[lq]page\[rq] is assumed.-.PP-In complex cases, you can force something to be treated as a locator by-enclosing it in curly braces or prevent parsing the suffix as locator by-prepending curly braces:-.IP-.nf-\f[C]-[\[at]smith{ii, A, D-Z}, with a suffix]-[\[at]smith, {pp. iv, vi-xi, (xv)-(xvii)} with suffix here]-[\[at]smith{}, 99 years later]-\f[R]-.fi-.PP-A minus sign (\f[V]-\f[R]) before the \f[V]\[at]\f[R] will suppress-mention of the author in the citation.-This can be useful when the author is already mentioned in the text:-.IP-.nf-\f[C]-Smith says blah [-\[at]smith04].-\f[R]-.fi-.PP-You can also write an author-in-text citation, by omitting the square-brackets:-.IP-.nf-\f[C]-\[at]smith04 says blah.--\[at]smith04 [p. 33] says blah.-\f[R]-.fi-.PP-This will cause the author\[cq]s name to be rendered, followed by the-bibliographical details.-Use this form when you want to make the citation the subject of a-sentence.-.PP-When you are using a note style, it is usually better to let citeproc-create the footnotes from citations rather than writing an explicit-note.-If you do write an explicit note that contains a citation, note that-normal citations will be put in parentheses, while author-in-text-citations will not.-For this reason, it is sometimes preferable to use the author-in-text-style inside notes when using a note style.-.SS Non-default extensions-.PP-The following Markdown syntax extensions are not enabled by default in-pandoc, but may be enabled by adding \f[V]+EXTENSION\f[R] to the format-name, where \f[V]EXTENSION\f[R] is the name of the extension.-Thus, for example, \f[V]markdown+hard_line_breaks\f[R] is Markdown with-hard line breaks.-.SS Extension: \f[V]rebase_relative_paths\f[R]-.PP-Rewrite relative paths for Markdown links and images, depending on the-path of the file containing the link or image link.-For each link or image, pandoc will compute the directory of the-containing file, relative to the working directory, and prepend the-resulting path to the link or image path.-.PP-The use of this extension is best understood by example.-Suppose you have a subdirectory for each chapter of a book,-\f[V]chap1\f[R], \f[V]chap2\f[R], \f[V]chap3\f[R].-Each contains a file \f[V]text.md\f[R] and a number of images used in-the chapter.-You would like to have \f[V]![image](spider.jpg)\f[R] in-\f[V]chap1/text.md\f[R] refer to \f[V]chap1/spider.jpg\f[R] and-\f[V]![image](spider.jpg)\f[R] in \f[V]chap2/text.md\f[R] refer to-\f[V]chap2/spider.jpg\f[R].-To do this, use-.IP-.nf-\f[C]-pandoc chap*/*.md -f markdown+rebase_relative_paths-\f[R]-.fi-.PP-Without this extension, you would have to use-\f[V]![image](chap1/spider.jpg)\f[R] in \f[V]chap1/text.md\f[R] and-\f[V]![image](chap2/spider.jpg)\f[R] in \f[V]chap2/text.md\f[R].-Links with relative paths will be rewritten in the same way as images.-.PP-Absolute paths and URLs are not changed.-Neither are empty paths or paths consisting entirely of a fragment,-e.g., \f[V]#foo\f[R].-.PP-Note that relative paths in reference links and images will be rewritten-relative to the file containing the link reference definition, not the-file containing the reference link or image itself, if these differ.-.SS Extension: \f[V]mark\f[R]-.PP-To highlight out a section of text, begin and end it with with-\f[V]==\f[R].-Thus, for example,-.IP-.nf-\f[C]-This ==is deleted text.==-\f[R]-.fi-.SS Extension: \f[V]attributes\f[R]-.PP-Allows attributes to be attached to any inline or block-level element-when parsing \f[V]commonmark\f[R].-The syntax for the attributes is the same as that used in-\f[V]header_attributes\f[R].-.IP \[bu] 2-Attributes that occur immediately after an inline element affect that-element.-If they follow a space, then they belong to the space.-(Hence, this option subsumes \f[V]inline_code_attributes\f[R] and-\f[V]link_attributes\f[R].)-.IP \[bu] 2-Attributes that occur immediately before a block element, on a line by-themselves, affect that element.-.IP \[bu] 2-Consecutive attribute specifiers may be used, either for blocks or for-inlines.-Their attributes will be combined.-.IP \[bu] 2-Attributes that occur at the end of the text of a Setext or ATX heading-(separated by whitespace from the text) affect the heading element.-(Hence, this option subsumes \f[V]header_attributes\f[R].)-.IP \[bu] 2-Attributes that occur after the opening fence in a fenced code block-affect the code block element.-(Hence, this option subsumes \f[V]fenced_code_attributes\f[R].)-.IP \[bu] 2-Attributes that occur at the end of a reference link definition affect-links that refer to that definition.-.PP-Note that pandoc\[cq]s AST does not currently allow attributes to be-attached to arbitrary elements.-Hence a Span or Div container will be added if needed.-.SS Extension: \f[V]old_dashes\f[R]-.PP-Selects the pandoc <= 1.8.2.1 behavior for parsing smart dashes:-\f[V]-\f[R] before a numeral is an en-dash, and \f[V]--\f[R] is an-em-dash.-This option only has an effect if \f[V]smart\f[R] is enabled.-It is selected automatically for \f[V]textile\f[R] input.-.SS Extension: \f[V]angle_brackets_escapable\f[R]-.PP-Allow \f[V]<\f[R] and \f[V]>\f[R] to be backslash-escaped, as they can-be in GitHub flavored Markdown but not original Markdown.-This is implied by pandoc\[cq]s default \f[V]all_symbols_escapable\f[R].-.SS Extension: \f[V]lists_without_preceding_blankline\f[R]-.PP-Allow a list to occur right after a paragraph, with no intervening blank-space.-.SS Extension: \f[V]four_space_rule\f[R]-.PP-Selects the pandoc <= 2.0 behavior for parsing lists, so that four-spaces indent are needed for list item continuation paragraphs.-.SS Extension: \f[V]spaced_reference_links\f[R]-.PP-Allow whitespace between the two components of a reference link, for-example,-.IP-.nf-\f[C]-[foo] [bar].-\f[R]-.fi-.SS Extension: \f[V]hard_line_breaks\f[R]-.PP-Causes all newlines within a paragraph to be interpreted as hard line-breaks instead of spaces.-.SS Extension: \f[V]ignore_line_breaks\f[R]-.PP-Causes newlines within a paragraph to be ignored, rather than being-treated as spaces or as hard line breaks.-This option is intended for use with East Asian languages where spaces-are not used between words, but text is divided into lines for-readability.-.SS Extension: \f[V]east_asian_line_breaks\f[R]-.PP-Causes newlines within a paragraph to be ignored, rather than being-treated as spaces or as hard line breaks, when they occur between two-East Asian wide characters.-This is a better choice than \f[V]ignore_line_breaks\f[R] for texts that-include a mix of East Asian wide characters and other characters.-.SS Extension: \f[V]emoji\f[R]-.PP-Parses textual emojis like \f[V]:smile:\f[R] as Unicode emoticons.-.SS Extension: \f[V]tex_math_single_backslash\f[R]-.PP-Causes anything between \f[V]\[rs](\f[R] and \f[V]\[rs])\f[R] to be-interpreted as inline TeX math, and anything between \f[V]\[rs][\f[R]-and \f[V]\[rs]]\f[R] to be interpreted as display TeX math.-Note: a drawback of this extension is that it precludes escaping-\f[V](\f[R] and \f[V][\f[R].-.SS Extension: \f[V]tex_math_double_backslash\f[R]-.PP-Causes anything between \f[V]\[rs]\[rs](\f[R] and \f[V]\[rs]\[rs])\f[R]-to be interpreted as inline TeX math, and anything between-\f[V]\[rs]\[rs][\f[R] and \f[V]\[rs]\[rs]]\f[R] to be interpreted as-display TeX math.-.SS Extension: \f[V]markdown_attribute\f[R]-.PP-By default, pandoc interprets material inside block-level tags as-Markdown.-This extension changes the behavior so that Markdown is only parsed-inside block-level tags if the tags have the attribute-\f[V]markdown=1\f[R].-.SS Extension: \f[V]mmd_title_block\f[R]-.PP-Enables a MultiMarkdown style title block at the top of the document,-for example:-.IP-.nf-\f[C]-Title:   My title-Author:  John Doe-Date:    September 1, 2008-Comment: This is a sample mmd title block, with-         a field spanning multiple lines.-\f[R]-.fi-.PP-See the MultiMarkdown documentation for details.-If \f[V]pandoc_title_block\f[R] or \f[V]yaml_metadata_block\f[R] is-enabled, it will take precedence over \f[V]mmd_title_block\f[R].-.SS Extension: \f[V]abbreviations\f[R]-.PP-Parses PHP Markdown Extra abbreviation keys, like-.IP-.nf-\f[C]-*[HTML]: Hypertext Markup Language-\f[R]-.fi-.PP-Note that the pandoc document model does not support abbreviations, so-if this extension is enabled, abbreviation keys are simply skipped (as-opposed to being parsed as paragraphs).-.SS Extension: \f[V]autolink_bare_uris\f[R]-.PP-Makes all absolute URIs into links, even when not surrounded by pointy-braces \f[V]<...>\f[R].-.SS Extension: \f[V]mmd_link_attributes\f[R]-.PP-Parses multimarkdown style key-value attributes on link and image-references.-This extension should not be confused with the \f[V]link_attributes\f[R]-extension.-.IP-.nf-\f[C]-This is a reference ![image][ref] with multimarkdown attributes.--[ref]: https://path.to/image \[dq]Image title\[dq] width=20px height=30px-       id=myId class=\[dq]myClass1 myClass2\[dq]-\f[R]-.fi-.SS Extension: \f[V]mmd_header_identifiers\f[R]-.PP-Parses multimarkdown style heading identifiers (in square brackets,-after the heading but before any trailing \f[V]#\f[R]s in an ATX-heading).-.SS Extension: \f[V]compact_definition_lists\f[R]-.PP-Activates the definition list syntax of pandoc 1.12.x and earlier.-This syntax differs from the one described above under Definition lists-in several respects:-.IP \[bu] 2-No blank line is required between consecutive items of the definition-list.-.IP \[bu] 2-To get a \[lq]tight\[rq] or \[lq]compact\[rq] list, omit space between-consecutive items; the space between a term and its definition does not-affect anything.-.IP \[bu] 2-Lazy wrapping of paragraphs is not allowed: the entire definition must-be indented four spaces.-.SS Extension: \f[V]gutenberg\f[R]-.PP-Use Project Gutenberg conventions for \f[V]plain\f[R] output: all-caps-for strong emphasis, surround by underscores for regular emphasis, add-extra blank space around headings.-.SS Extension: \f[V]sourcepos\f[R]-.PP-Include source position attributes when parsing \f[V]commonmark\f[R].-For elements that accept attributes, a \f[V]data-pos\f[R] attribute is-added; other elements are placed in a surrounding Div or Span element-with a \f[V]data-pos\f[R] attribute.-.SS Extension: \f[V]short_subsuperscripts\f[R]-.PP-Parse multimarkdown style subscripts and superscripts, which start with-a `\[ti]' or `\[ha]' character, respectively, and include the-alphanumeric sequence that follows.-For example:-.IP-.nf-\f[C]-x\[ha]2 = 4-\f[R]-.fi-.PP-or-.IP-.nf-\f[C]-Oxygen is O\[ti]2.-\f[R]-.fi-.SS Extension: \f[V]wikilinks_title_after_pipe\f[R]-.PP-Pandoc supports multiple markdown wikilink syntaxes, regardless of-whether the title is before or after the pipe.-.PP-Using \f[V]--from=markdown+wikilinks_title_after_pipe\f[R] results in-.IP-.nf-\f[C]-[[URL|title]]-\f[R]-.fi-.PP-while using \f[V]--from=markdown+wikilinks_title_before_pipe\f[R]-results in-.IP-.nf-\f[C]-[[title|URL]]-\f[R]-.fi-.SS Markdown variants-.PP-In addition to pandoc\[cq]s extended Markdown, the following Markdown-variants are supported:-.IP \[bu] 2-\f[V]markdown_phpextra\f[R] (PHP Markdown Extra)-.IP \[bu] 2-\f[V]markdown_github\f[R] (deprecated GitHub-Flavored Markdown)-.IP \[bu] 2-\f[V]markdown_mmd\f[R] (MultiMarkdown)-.IP \[bu] 2-\f[V]markdown_strict\f[R] (Markdown.pl)-.IP \[bu] 2-\f[V]commonmark\f[R] (CommonMark)-.IP \[bu] 2-\f[V]gfm\f[R] (Github-Flavored Markdown)-.IP \[bu] 2-\f[V]commonmark_x\f[R] (CommonMark with many pandoc extensions)-.PP-To see which extensions are supported for a given format, and which are-enabled by default, you can use the command-.IP-.nf-\f[C]-pandoc --list-extensions=FORMAT-\f[R]-.fi-.PP-where \f[V]FORMAT\f[R] is replaced with the name of the format.-.PP-Note that the list of extensions for \f[V]commonmark\f[R],-\f[V]gfm\f[R], and \f[V]commonmark_x\f[R] are defined relative to-default commonmark.-So, for example, \f[V]backtick_code_blocks\f[R] does not appear as an-extension, since it is enabled by default and cannot be disabled.-.SH CITATIONS-.PP-When the \f[V]--citeproc\f[R] option is used, pandoc can automatically-generate citations and a bibliography in a number of styles.-Basic usage is-.IP-.nf-\f[C]-pandoc --citeproc myinput.txt-\f[R]-.fi-.PP-To use this feature, you will need to have-.IP \[bu] 2-a document containing citations (see Citation syntax);-.IP \[bu] 2-a source of bibliographic data: either an external bibliography file or-a list of \f[V]references\f[R] in the document\[cq]s YAML metadata;-.IP \[bu] 2-optionally, a CSL citation style.-.SS Specifying bibliographic data-.PP-You can specify an external bibliography using the-\f[V]bibliography\f[R] metadata field in a YAML metadata section or the-\f[V]--bibliography\f[R] command line argument.-If you want to use multiple bibliography files, you can supply multiple-\f[V]--bibliography\f[R] arguments or set \f[V]bibliography\f[R]-metadata field to YAML array.-A bibliography may have any of these formats:-.RS -14n-.IP-.nf-\f[C]-  Format     File extension-  ---------- -----------------  BibLaTeX   .bib-  BibTeX     .bibtex-  CSL JSON   .json-  CSL YAML   .yaml-  RIS        .ris-\f[R]-.fi-.RE-.PP-Note that \f[V].bib\f[R] can be used with both BibTeX and BibLaTeX-files; use the extension \f[V].bibtex\f[R] to force interpretation as-BibTeX.-.PP-In BibTeX and BibLaTeX databases, pandoc parses LaTeX markup inside-fields such as \f[V]title\f[R]; in CSL YAML databases, pandoc Markdown;-and in CSL JSON databases, an HTML-like markup:-.TP-\f[V]<i>...</i>\f[R]-italics-.TP-\f[V]<b>...</b>\f[R]-bold-.TP-\f[V]<span style=\[dq]font-variant:small-caps;\[dq]>...</span>\f[R] or \f[V]<sc>...</sc>\f[R]-small capitals-.TP-\f[V]<sub>...</sub>\f[R]-subscript-.TP-\f[V]<sup>...</sup>\f[R]-superscript-.TP-\f[V]<span class=\[dq]nocase\[dq]>...</span>\f[R]-prevent a phrase from being capitalized as title case-.PP-As an alternative to specifying a bibliography file using-\f[V]--bibliography\f[R] or the YAML metadata field-\f[V]bibliography\f[R], you can include the citation data directly in-the \f[V]references\f[R] field of the document\[cq]s YAML metadata.-The field should contain an array of YAML-encoded references, for-example:-.IP-.nf-\f[C]-----references:-- type: article-journal-  id: WatsonCrick1953-  author:-  - family: Watson-    given: J. D.-  - family: Crick-    given: F. H. C.-  issued:-    date-parts:-    - - 1953-      - 4-      - 25-  title: \[aq]Molecular structure of nucleic acids: a structure for-    deoxyribose nucleic acid\[aq]-  title-short: Molecular structure of nucleic acids-  container-title: Nature-  volume: 171-  issue: 4356-  page: 737-738-  DOI: 10.1038/171737a0-  URL: https://www.nature.com/articles/171737a0-  language: en-GB-\&...-\f[R]-.fi-.PP-If both an external bibliography and inline (YAML metadata) references-are provided, both will be used.-In case of conflicting \f[V]id\f[R]s, the inline references will take-precedence.-.PP-Note that pandoc can be used to produce such a YAML metadata section-from a BibTeX, BibLaTeX, or CSL JSON bibliography:-.IP-.nf-\f[C]-pandoc chem.bib -s -f biblatex -t markdown-pandoc chem.json -s -f csljson -t markdown-\f[R]-.fi-.PP-Indeed, pandoc can convert between any of these citation formats:-.IP-.nf-\f[C]-pandoc chem.bib -s -f biblatex -t csljson-pandoc chem.yaml -s -f markdown -t biblatex-\f[R]-.fi-.PP-Running pandoc on a bibliography file with the \f[V]--citeproc\f[R]-option will create a formatted bibliography in the format of your-choice:-.IP-.nf-\f[C]-pandoc chem.bib -s --citeproc -o chem.html-pandoc chem.bib -s --citeproc -o chem.pdf-\f[R]-.fi-.SS Capitalization in titles-.PP-If you are using a bibtex or biblatex bibliography, then observe the-following rules:-.IP \[bu] 2-English titles should be in title case.-Non-English titles should be in sentence case, and the \f[V]langid\f[R]-field in biblatex should be set to the relevant language.-(The following values are treated as English: \f[V]american\f[R],-\f[V]british\f[R], \f[V]canadian\f[R], \f[V]english\f[R],-\f[V]australian\f[R], \f[V]newzealand\f[R], \f[V]USenglish\f[R], or-\f[V]UKenglish\f[R].)-.IP \[bu] 2-As is standard with bibtex/biblatex, proper names should be protected-with curly braces so that they won\[cq]t be lowercased in styles that-call for sentence case.-For example:-.RS 2-.IP-.nf-\f[C]-title = {My Dinner with {Andre}}-\f[R]-.fi-.RE-.IP \[bu] 2-In addition, words that should remain lowercase (or camelCase) should be-protected:-.RS 2-.IP-.nf-\f[C]-title = {Spin Wave Dispersion on the {nm} Scale}-\f[R]-.fi-.PP-Though this is not necessary in bibtex/biblatex, it is necessary with-citeproc, which stores titles internally in sentence case, and converts-to title case in styles that require it.-Here we protect \[lq]nm\[rq] so that it doesn\[cq]t get converted to-\[lq]Nm\[rq] at this stage.-.RE-.PP-If you are using a CSL bibliography (either JSON or YAML), then observe-the following rules:-.IP \[bu] 2-All titles should be in sentence case.-.IP \[bu] 2-Use the \f[V]language\f[R] field for non-English titles to prevent their-conversion to title case in styles that call for this.-(Conversion happens only if \f[V]language\f[R] begins with \f[V]en\f[R]-or is left empty.)-.IP \[bu] 2-Protect words that should not be converted to title case using this-syntax:-.RS 2-.IP-.nf-\f[C]-Spin wave dispersion on the <span class=\[dq]nocase\[dq]>nm</span> scale-\f[R]-.fi-.RE-.SS Conference Papers, Published vs.\ Unpublished-.PP-For a formally published conference paper, use the biblatex entry type-\f[V]inproceedings\f[R] (which will be mapped to CSL-\f[V]paper-conference\f[R]).-.PP-For an unpublished manuscript, use the biblatex entry type-\f[V]unpublished\f[R] without an \f[V]eventtitle\f[R] field (this entry-type will be mapped to CSL \f[V]manuscript\f[R]).-.PP-For a talk, an unpublished conference paper, or a poster presentation,-use the biblatex entry type \f[V]unpublished\f[R] with an-\f[V]eventtitle\f[R] field (this entry type will be mapped to CSL-\f[V]speech\f[R]).-Use the biblatex \f[V]type\f[R] field to indicate the type,-e.g.\ \[lq]Paper\[rq], or \[lq]Poster\[rq].-\f[V]venue\f[R] and \f[V]eventdate\f[R] may be useful too, though-\f[V]eventdate\f[R] will not be rendered by most CSL styles.-Note that \f[V]venue\f[R] is for the event\[cq]s venue, unlike-\f[V]location\f[R] which describes the publisher\[cq]s location; do not-use the latter for an unpublished conference paper.-.SS Specifying a citation style-.PP-Citations and references can be formatted using any style supported by-the Citation Style Language, listed in the Zotero Style Repository.-These files are specified using the \f[V]--csl\f[R] option or the-\f[V]csl\f[R] (or \f[V]citation-style\f[R]) metadata field.-By default, pandoc will use the Chicago Manual of Style author-date-format.-(You can override this default by copying a CSL style of your choice to-\f[V]default.csl\f[R] in your user data directory.)-The CSL project provides further information on finding and editing-styles.-.PP-The \f[V]--citation-abbreviations\f[R] option (or the-\f[V]citation-abbreviations\f[R] metadata field) may be used to specify-a JSON file containing abbreviations of journals that should be used in-formatted bibliographies when \f[V]form=\[dq]short\[dq]\f[R] is-specified.-The format of the file can be illustrated with an example:-.IP-.nf-\f[C]-{ \[dq]default\[dq]: {-    \[dq]container-title\[dq]: {-            \[dq]Lloyd\[aq]s Law Reports\[dq]: \[dq]Lloyd\[aq]s Rep\[dq],-            \[dq]Estates Gazette\[dq]: \[dq]EG\[dq],-            \[dq]Scots Law Times\[dq]: \[dq]SLT\[dq]-    }-  }-}-\f[R]-.fi-.SS Citations in note styles-.PP-Pandoc\[cq]s citation processing is designed to allow you to move-between author-date, numerical, and note styles without modifying the-markdown source.-When you\[cq]re using a note style, avoid inserting footnotes manually.-Instead, insert citations just as you would in an author-date-style\[em]for example,-.IP-.nf-\f[C]-Blah blah [\[at]foo, p. 33].-\f[R]-.fi-.PP-The footnote will be created automatically.-Pandoc will take care of removing the space and moving the note before-or after the period, depending on the setting of-\f[V]notes-after-punctuation\f[R], as described below in Other relevant-metadata fields.-.PP-In some cases you may need to put a citation inside a regular footnote.-Normal citations in footnotes (such as \f[V][\[at]foo, p. 33]\f[R]) will-be rendered in parentheses.-In-text citations (such as \f[V]\[at]foo [p. 33]\f[R]) will be rendered-without parentheses.-(A comma will be added if appropriate.)-Thus:-.IP-.nf-\f[C]-[\[ha]1]:  Some studies [\[at]foo; \[at]bar, p. 33] show that-frubulicious zoosnaps are quantical.  For a survey-of the literature, see \[at]baz [chap. 1].-\f[R]-.fi-.SS Placement of the bibliography-.PP-If the style calls for a list of works cited, it will be placed in a div-with id \f[V]refs\f[R], if one exists:-.IP-.nf-\f[C]-::: {#refs}-:::-\f[R]-.fi-.PP-Otherwise, it will be placed at the end of the document.-Generation of the bibliography can be suppressed by setting-\f[V]suppress-bibliography: true\f[R] in the YAML metadata.-.PP-If you wish the bibliography to have a section heading, you can set-\f[V]reference-section-title\f[R] in the metadata, or put the heading at-the beginning of the div with id \f[V]refs\f[R] (if you are using it) or-at the end of your document:-.IP-.nf-\f[C]-last paragraph...--# References-\f[R]-.fi-.PP-The bibliography will be inserted after this heading.-Note that the \f[V]unnumbered\f[R] class will be added to this heading,-so that the section will not be numbered.-.PP-If you want to put the bibliography into a variable in your template,-one way to do that is to put the div with id \f[V]refs\f[R] into a-metadata field, e.g.-.IP-.nf-\f[C]-----refs: |-   ::: {#refs}-   :::-\&...-\f[R]-.fi-.PP-You can then put the variable \f[V]$refs$\f[R] into your template where-you want the bibliography to be placed.-.SS Including uncited items in the bibliography-.PP-If you want to include items in the bibliography without actually citing-them in the body text, you can define a dummy \f[V]nocite\f[R] metadata-field and put the citations there:-.IP-.nf-\f[C]-----nocite: |-  \[at]item1, \[at]item2-\&...--\[at]item3-\f[R]-.fi-.PP-In this example, the document will contain a citation for-\f[V]item3\f[R] only, but the bibliography will contain entries for-\f[V]item1\f[R], \f[V]item2\f[R], and \f[V]item3\f[R].-.PP-It is possible to create a bibliography with all the citations, whether-or not they appear in the document, by using a wildcard:-.IP-.nf-\f[C]-----nocite: |-  \[at]*-\&...-\f[R]-.fi-.PP-For LaTeX output, you can also use \f[V]natbib\f[R] or-\f[V]biblatex\f[R] to render the bibliography.-In order to do so, specify bibliography files as outlined above, and add-\f[V]--natbib\f[R] or \f[V]--biblatex\f[R] argument to pandoc-invocation.-Bear in mind that bibliography files have to be in either BibTeX (for-\f[V]--natbib\f[R]) or BibLaTeX (for \f[V]--biblatex\f[R]) format.-.SS Other relevant metadata fields-.PP-A few other metadata fields affect bibliography formatting:-.TP-\f[V]link-citations\f[R]-If true, citations will be hyperlinked to the corresponding bibliography-entries (for author-date and numerical styles only).-Defaults to false.-.TP-\f[V]link-bibliography\f[R]-If true, DOIs, PMCIDs, PMID, and URLs in bibliographies will be rendered-as hyperlinks.-(If an entry contains a DOI, PMCID, PMID, or URL, but none of these-fields are rendered by the style, then the title, or in the absence of a-title the whole entry, will be hyperlinked.)-Defaults to true.-.TP-\f[V]lang\f[R]-The \f[V]lang\f[R] field will affect how the style is localized, for-example in the translation of labels, the use of quotation marks, and-the way items are sorted.-(For backwards compatibility, \f[V]locale\f[R] may be used instead of-\f[V]lang\f[R], but this use is deprecated.)-.RS-.PP-A BCP 47 language tag is expected: for example, \f[V]en\f[R],-\f[V]de\f[R], \f[V]en-US\f[R], \f[V]fr-CA\f[R], \f[V]ug-Cyrl\f[R].-The unicode extension syntax (after \f[V]-u-\f[R]) may be used to-specify options for collation (sorting) more precisely.-Here are some examples:-.IP \[bu] 2-\f[V]zh-u-co-pinyin\f[R] \[en] Chinese with the Pinyin collation.-.IP \[bu] 2-\f[V]es-u-co-trad\f[R] \[en] Spanish with the traditional collation-(with \f[V]Ch\f[R] sorting after \f[V]C\f[R]).-.IP \[bu] 2-\f[V]fr-u-kb\f[R] \[en] French with \[lq]backwards\[rq] accent sorting-(with \f[V]coté\f[R] sorting after \f[V]côte\f[R]).-.IP \[bu] 2-\f[V]en-US-u-kf-upper\f[R] \[en] English with uppercase letters sorting-before lower (default is lower before upper).-.RE-.TP-\f[V]notes-after-punctuation\f[R]-If true (the default for note styles), pandoc will put footnote-references or superscripted numerical citations after following-punctuation.-For example, if the source contains \f[V]blah blah [\[at]jones99].\f[R],-the result will look like \f[V]blah blah.[\[ha]1]\f[R], with the note-moved after the period and the space collapsed.-If false, the space will still be collapsed, but the footnote will not-be moved after the punctuation.-The option may also be used in numerical styles that use superscripts-for citation numbers (but for these styles the default is not to move-the citation).-.SH SLIDE SHOWS-.PP-You can use pandoc to produce an HTML + JavaScript slide presentation-that can be viewed via a web browser.-There are five ways to do this, using S5, DZSlides, Slidy, Slideous, or-reveal.js.-You can also produce a PDF slide show using LaTeX \f[V]beamer\f[R], or-slide shows in Microsoft PowerPoint format.-.PP-Here\[cq]s the Markdown source for a simple slide show,-\f[V]habits.txt\f[R]:-.IP-.nf-\f[C]-% Habits-% John Doe-% March 22, 2005--# In the morning--## Getting up--- Turn off alarm-- Get out of bed--## Breakfast--- Eat eggs-- Drink coffee--# In the evening--## Dinner--- Eat spaghetti-- Drink wine----------------------![picture of spaghetti](images/spaghetti.jpg)--## Going to sleep--- Get in bed-- Count sheep-\f[R]-.fi-.PP-To produce an HTML/JavaScript slide show, simply type-.IP-.nf-\f[C]-pandoc -t FORMAT -s habits.txt -o habits.html-\f[R]-.fi-.PP-where \f[V]FORMAT\f[R] is either \f[V]s5\f[R], \f[V]slidy\f[R],-\f[V]slideous\f[R], \f[V]dzslides\f[R], or \f[V]revealjs\f[R].-.PP-For Slidy, Slideous, reveal.js, and S5, the file produced by pandoc with-the \f[V]-s/--standalone\f[R] option embeds a link to JavaScript and CSS-files, which are assumed to be available at the relative path-\f[V]s5/default\f[R] (for S5), \f[V]slideous\f[R] (for Slideous),-\f[V]reveal.js\f[R] (for reveal.js), or at the Slidy website at-\f[V]w3.org\f[R] (for Slidy).-(These paths can be changed by setting the \f[V]slidy-url\f[R],-\f[V]slideous-url\f[R], \f[V]revealjs-url\f[R], or \f[V]s5-url\f[R]-variables; see Variables for HTML slides, above.)-For DZSlides, the (relatively short) JavaScript and CSS are included in-the file by default.-.PP-With all HTML slide formats, the \f[V]--self-contained\f[R] option can-be used to produce a single file that contains all of the data necessary-to display the slide show, including linked scripts, stylesheets,-images, and videos.-.PP-To produce a PDF slide show using beamer, type-.IP-.nf-\f[C]-pandoc -t beamer habits.txt -o habits.pdf-\f[R]-.fi-.PP-Note that a reveal.js slide show can also be converted to a PDF by-printing it to a file from the browser.-.PP-To produce a PowerPoint slide show, type-.IP-.nf-\f[C]-pandoc habits.txt -o habits.pptx-\f[R]-.fi-.SS Structuring the slide show-.PP-By default, the \f[I]slide level\f[R] is the highest heading level in-the hierarchy that is followed immediately by content, and not another-heading, somewhere in the document.-In the example above, level-1 headings are always followed by level-2-headings, which are followed by content, so the slide level is 2.-This default can be overridden using the \f[V]--slide-level\f[R] option.-.PP-The document is carved up into slides according to the following rules:-.IP \[bu] 2-A horizontal rule always starts a new slide.-.IP \[bu] 2-A heading at the slide level always starts a new slide.-.IP \[bu] 2-Headings \f[I]below\f[R] the slide level in the hierarchy create-headings \f[I]within\f[R] a slide.-(In beamer, a \[lq]block\[rq] will be created.-If the heading has the class \f[V]example\f[R], an-\f[V]exampleblock\f[R] environment will be used; if it has the class-\f[V]alert\f[R], an \f[V]alertblock\f[R] will be used; otherwise a-regular \f[V]block\f[R] will be used.)-.IP \[bu] 2-Headings \f[I]above\f[R] the slide level in the hierarchy create-\[lq]title slides,\[rq] which just contain the section title and help to-break the slide show into sections.-Non-slide content under these headings will be included on the title-slide (for HTML slide shows) or in a subsequent slide with the same-title (for beamer).-.IP \[bu] 2-A title page is constructed automatically from the document\[cq]s title-block, if present.-(In the case of beamer, this can be disabled by commenting out some-lines in the default template.)-.PP-These rules are designed to support many different styles of slide show.-If you don\[cq]t care about structuring your slides into sections and-subsections, you can either just use level-1 headings for all slides (in-that case, level 1 will be the slide level) or you can set-\f[V]--slide-level=0\f[R].-.PP-Note: in reveal.js slide shows, if slide level is 2, a two-dimensional-layout will be produced, with level-1 headings building horizontally and-level-2 headings building vertically.-It is not recommended that you use deeper nesting of section levels with-reveal.js unless you set \f[V]--slide-level=0\f[R] (which lets reveal.js-produce a one-dimensional layout and only interprets horizontal rules as-slide boundaries).-.SS PowerPoint layout choice-.PP-When creating slides, the pptx writer chooses from a number of-pre-defined layouts, based on the content of the slide:-.TP-Title Slide-This layout is used for the initial slide, which is generated and filled-from the metadata fields \f[V]date\f[R], \f[V]author\f[R], and-\f[V]title\f[R], if they are present.-.TP-Section Header-This layout is used for what pandoc calls \[lq]title slides\[rq], i.e.-slides which start with a header which is above the slide level in the-hierarchy.-.TP-Two Content-This layout is used for two-column slides, i.e.\ slides containing a div-with class \f[V]columns\f[R] which contains at least two divs with class-\f[V]column\f[R].-.TP-Comparison-This layout is used instead of \[lq]Two Content\[rq] for any two-column-slides in which at least one column contains text followed by non-text-(e.g.\ an image or a table).-.TP-Content with Caption-This layout is used for any non-two-column slides which contain text-followed by non-text (e.g.\ an image or a table).-.TP-Blank-This layout is used for any slides which only contain blank content,-e.g.\ a slide containing only speaker notes, or a slide containing only-a non-breaking space.-.TP-Title and Content-This layout is used for all slides which do not match the criteria for-another layout.-.PP-These layouts are chosen from the default pptx reference doc included-with pandoc, unless an alternative reference doc is specified using-\f[V]--reference-doc\f[R].-.SS Incremental lists-.PP-By default, these writers produce lists that display \[lq]all at-once.\[rq] If you want your lists to display incrementally (one item at-a time), use the \f[V]-i\f[R] option.-If you want a particular list to depart from the default, put it in a-\f[V]div\f[R] block with class \f[V]incremental\f[R] or-\f[V]nonincremental\f[R].-So, for example, using the \f[V]fenced div\f[R] syntax, the following-would be incremental regardless of the document default:-.IP-.nf-\f[C]-::: incremental--- Eat spaghetti-- Drink wine--:::-\f[R]-.fi-.PP-or-.IP-.nf-\f[C]-::: nonincremental--- Eat spaghetti-- Drink wine--:::-\f[R]-.fi-.PP-While using \f[V]incremental\f[R] and \f[V]nonincremental\f[R] divs is-the recommended method of setting incremental lists on a per-case basis,-an older method is also supported: putting lists inside a blockquote-will depart from the document default (that is, it will display-incrementally without the \f[V]-i\f[R] option and all at once with the-\f[V]-i\f[R] option):-.IP-.nf-\f[C]-> - Eat spaghetti-> - Drink wine-\f[R]-.fi-.PP-Both methods allow incremental and nonincremental lists to be mixed in a-single document.-.PP-If you want to include a block-quoted list, you can work around this-behavior by putting the list inside a fenced div, so that it is not the-direct child of the block quote:-.IP-.nf-\f[C]-> ::: wrapper-> - a-> - list in a quote-> :::-\f[R]-.fi-.SS Inserting pauses-.PP-You can add \[lq]pauses\[rq] within a slide by including a paragraph-containing three dots, separated by spaces:-.IP-.nf-\f[C]-# Slide with a pause--content before the pause--\&. . .--content after the pause-\f[R]-.fi-.PP-Note: this feature is not yet implemented for PowerPoint output.-.SS Styling the slides-.PP-You can change the style of HTML slides by putting customized CSS files-in \f[V]$DATADIR/s5/default\f[R] (for S5), \f[V]$DATADIR/slidy\f[R] (for-Slidy), or \f[V]$DATADIR/slideous\f[R] (for Slideous), where-\f[V]$DATADIR\f[R] is the user data directory (see \f[V]--data-dir\f[R],-above).-The originals may be found in pandoc\[cq]s system data directory-(generally \f[V]$CABALDIR/pandoc-VERSION/s5/default\f[R]).-Pandoc will look there for any files it does not find in the user data-directory.-.PP-For dzslides, the CSS is included in the HTML file itself, and may be-modified there.-.PP-All reveal.js configuration options can be set through variables.-For example, themes can be used by setting the \f[V]theme\f[R] variable:-.IP-.nf-\f[C]--V theme=moon-\f[R]-.fi-.PP-Or you can specify a custom stylesheet using the \f[V]--css\f[R] option.-.PP-To style beamer slides, you can specify a \f[V]theme\f[R],-\f[V]colortheme\f[R], \f[V]fonttheme\f[R], \f[V]innertheme\f[R], and-\f[V]outertheme\f[R], using the \f[V]-V\f[R] option:-.IP-.nf-\f[C]-pandoc -t beamer habits.txt -V theme:Warsaw -o habits.pdf-\f[R]-.fi-.PP-Note that heading attributes will turn into slide attributes (on a-\f[V]<div>\f[R] or \f[V]<section>\f[R]) in HTML slide formats, allowing-you to style individual slides.-In beamer, a number of heading classes and attributes are recognized as-frame options and will be passed through as options to the frame: see-Frame attributes in beamer, below.-.SS Speaker notes-.PP-Speaker notes are supported in reveal.js, PowerPoint (pptx), and beamer-output.-You can add notes to your Markdown document thus:-.IP-.nf-\f[C]-::: notes--This is my note.--- It can contain Markdown-- like this list--:::-\f[R]-.fi-.PP-To show the notes window in reveal.js, press \f[V]s\f[R] while viewing-the presentation.-Speaker notes in PowerPoint will be available, as usual, in handouts and-presenter view.-.PP-Notes are not yet supported for other slide formats, but the notes will-not appear on the slides themselves.-.SS Columns-.PP-To put material in side by side columns, you can use a native div-container with class \f[V]columns\f[R], containing two or more div-containers with class \f[V]column\f[R] and a \f[V]width\f[R] attribute:-.IP-.nf-\f[C]-:::::::::::::: {.columns}-::: {.column width=\[dq]40%\[dq]}-contents...-:::-::: {.column width=\[dq]60%\[dq]}-contents...-:::-::::::::::::::-\f[R]-.fi-.SS Additional columns attributes in beamer-.PP-The div containers with classes \f[V]columns\f[R] and \f[V]column\f[R]-can optionally have an \f[V]align\f[R] attribute.-The class \f[V]columns\f[R] can optionally have a \f[V]totalwidth\f[R]-attribute or an \f[V]onlytextwidth\f[R] class.-.IP-.nf-\f[C]-:::::::::::::: {.columns align=center totalwidth=8em}-::: {.column width=\[dq]40%\[dq]}-contents...-:::-::: {.column width=\[dq]60%\[dq] align=bottom}-contents...-:::-::::::::::::::-\f[R]-.fi-.PP-The \f[V]align\f[R] attributes on \f[V]columns\f[R] and \f[V]column\f[R]-can be used with the values \f[V]top\f[R], \f[V]top-baseline\f[R],-\f[V]center\f[R] and \f[V]bottom\f[R] to vertically align the columns.-It defaults to \f[V]top\f[R] in \f[V]columns\f[R].-.PP-The \f[V]totalwidth\f[R] attribute limits the width of the columns to-the given value.-.IP-.nf-\f[C]-:::::::::::::: {.columns align=top .onlytextwidth}-::: {.column width=\[dq]40%\[dq] align=center}-contents...-:::-::: {.column width=\[dq]60%\[dq]}-contents...-:::-::::::::::::::-\f[R]-.fi-.PP-The class \f[V]onlytextwidth\f[R] sets the \f[V]totalwidth\f[R] to-\f[V]\[rs]textwidth\f[R].-.PP-See Section 12.7 of the Beamer User\[cq]s Guide for more details.-.SS Frame attributes in beamer-.PP-Sometimes it is necessary to add the LaTeX \f[V][fragile]\f[R] option to-a frame in beamer (for example, when using the \f[V]minted\f[R]-environment).-This can be forced by adding the \f[V]fragile\f[R] class to the heading-introducing the slide:-.IP-.nf-\f[C]-# Fragile slide {.fragile}-\f[R]-.fi-.PP-All of the other frame attributes described in Section 8.1 of the Beamer-User\[cq]s Guide may also be used: \f[V]allowdisplaybreaks\f[R],-\f[V]allowframebreaks\f[R], \f[V]b\f[R], \f[V]c\f[R], \f[V]s\f[R],-\f[V]t\f[R], \f[V]environment\f[R], \f[V]label\f[R], \f[V]plain\f[R],-\f[V]shrink\f[R], \f[V]standout\f[R], \f[V]noframenumbering\f[R],-\f[V]squeeze\f[R].-\f[V]allowframebreaks\f[R] is recommended especially for bibliographies,-as it allows multiple slides to be created if the content overfills the-frame:-.IP-.nf-\f[C]-# References {.allowframebreaks}-\f[R]-.fi-.PP-In addition, the \f[V]frameoptions\f[R] attribute may be used to pass-arbitrary frame options to a beamer slide:-.IP-.nf-\f[C]-# Heading {frameoptions=\[dq]squeeze,shrink,customoption=foobar\[dq]}-\f[R]-.fi-.SS Background in reveal.js, beamer, and pptx-.PP-Background images can be added to self-contained reveal.js slide shows,-beamer slide shows, and pptx slide shows.-.SS On all slides (beamer, reveal.js, pptx)-.PP-With beamer and reveal.js, the configuration option-\f[V]background-image\f[R] can be used either in the YAML metadata block-or as a command-line variable to get the same image on every slide.-.PP-Note that for reveal.js, the \f[V]background-image\f[R] will be used as-a \f[V]parallaxBackgroundImage\f[R] (see below).-.PP-For pptx, you can use a reference doc in which background images have-been set on the relevant layouts.-.SS \f[V]parallaxBackgroundImage\f[R] (reveal.js)-.PP-For reveal.js, there is also the reveal.js-native option-\f[V]parallaxBackgroundImage\f[R], which produces a parallax scrolling-background.-You must also set \f[V]parallaxBackgroundSize\f[R], and can optionally-set \f[V]parallaxBackgroundHorizontal\f[R] and-\f[V]parallaxBackgroundVertical\f[R] to configure the scrolling-behaviour.-See the reveal.js documentation for more details about the meaning of-these options.-.PP-In reveal.js\[cq]s overview mode, the parallaxBackgroundImage will show-up only on the first slide.-.SS On individual slides (reveal.js, pptx)-.PP-To set an image for a particular reveal.js or pptx slide, add-\f[V]{background-image=\[dq]/path/to/image\[dq]}\f[R] to the first-slide-level heading on the slide (which may even be empty).-.PP-As the HTML writers pass unknown attributes through, other reveal.js-background settings also work on individual slides, including-\f[V]background-size\f[R], \f[V]background-repeat\f[R],-\f[V]background-color\f[R], \f[V]transition\f[R], and-\f[V]transition-speed\f[R].-(The \f[V]data-\f[R] prefix will automatically be added.)-.PP-Note: \f[V]data-background-image\f[R] is also supported in pptx for-consistency with reveal.js \[en] if \f[V]background-image\f[R] isn\[cq]t-found, \f[V]data-background-image\f[R] will be checked.-.SS On the title slide (reveal.js, pptx)-.PP-To add a background image to the automatically generated title slide for-reveal.js, use the \f[V]title-slide-attributes\f[R] variable in the YAML-metadata block.-It must contain a map of attribute names and values.-(Note that the \f[V]data-\f[R] prefix is required here, as it isn\[cq]t-added automatically.)-.PP-For pptx, pass a reference doc with the background image set on the-\[lq]Title Slide\[rq] layout.-.SS Example (reveal.js)-.IP-.nf-\f[C]-----title: My Slide Show-parallaxBackgroundImage: /path/to/my/background_image.png-title-slide-attributes:-    data-background-image: /path/to/title_image.png-    data-background-size: contain------## Slide One--Slide 1 has background_image.png as its background.--## {background-image=\[dq]/path/to/special_image.jpg\[dq]}--Slide 2 has a special image for its background, even though the heading has no content.-\f[R]-.fi-.SH EPUBS-.SS EPUB Metadata-.PP-EPUB metadata may be specified using the \f[V]--epub-metadata\f[R]-option, but if the source document is Markdown, it is better to use a-YAML metadata block.-Here is an example:-.IP-.nf-\f[C]-----title:-- type: main-  text: My Book-- type: subtitle-  text: An investigation of metadata-creator:-- role: author-  text: John Smith-- role: editor-  text: Sarah Jones-identifier:-- scheme: DOI-  text: doi:10.234234.234/33-publisher:  My Press-rights: © 2007 John Smith, CC BY-NC-ibooks:-  version: 1.3.4-\&...-\f[R]-.fi-.PP-The following fields are recognized:-.TP-\f[V]identifier\f[R]-Either a string value or an object with fields \f[V]text\f[R] and-\f[V]scheme\f[R].-Valid values for \f[V]scheme\f[R] are \f[V]ISBN-10\f[R],-\f[V]GTIN-13\f[R], \f[V]UPC\f[R], \f[V]ISMN-10\f[R], \f[V]DOI\f[R],-\f[V]LCCN\f[R], \f[V]GTIN-14\f[R], \f[V]ISBN-13\f[R],-\f[V]Legal deposit number\f[R], \f[V]URN\f[R], \f[V]OCLC\f[R],-\f[V]ISMN-13\f[R], \f[V]ISBN-A\f[R], \f[V]JP\f[R], \f[V]OLCC\f[R].-.TP-\f[V]title\f[R]-Either a string value, or an object with fields \f[V]file-as\f[R] and-\f[V]type\f[R], or a list of such objects.-Valid values for \f[V]type\f[R] are \f[V]main\f[R], \f[V]subtitle\f[R],-\f[V]short\f[R], \f[V]collection\f[R], \f[V]edition\f[R],-\f[V]extended\f[R].-.TP-\f[V]creator\f[R]-Either a string value, or an object with fields \f[V]role\f[R],-\f[V]file-as\f[R], and \f[V]text\f[R], or a list of such objects.-Valid values for \f[V]role\f[R] are MARC relators, but pandoc will-attempt to translate the human-readable versions (like \[lq]author\[rq]-and \[lq]editor\[rq]) to the appropriate marc relators.-.TP-\f[V]contributor\f[R]-Same format as \f[V]creator\f[R].-.TP-\f[V]date\f[R]-A string value in \f[V]YYYY-MM-DD\f[R] format.-(Only the year is necessary.)-Pandoc will attempt to convert other common date formats.-.TP-\f[V]lang\f[R] (or legacy: \f[V]language\f[R])-A string value in BCP 47 format.-Pandoc will default to the local language if nothing is specified.-.TP-\f[V]subject\f[R]-Either a string value, or an object with fields \f[V]text\f[R],-\f[V]authority\f[R], and \f[V]term\f[R], or a list of such objects.-Valid values for \f[V]authority\f[R] are either a reserved authority-value (currently \f[V]AAT\f[R], \f[V]BIC\f[R], \f[V]BISAC\f[R],-\f[V]CLC\f[R], \f[V]DDC\f[R], \f[V]CLIL\f[R], \f[V]EuroVoc\f[R],-\f[V]MEDTOP\f[R], \f[V]LCSH\f[R], \f[V]NDC\f[R], \f[V]Thema\f[R],-\f[V]UDC\f[R], and \f[V]WGS\f[R]) or an absolute IRI identifying a-custom scheme.-Valid values for \f[V]term\f[R] are defined by the scheme.-.TP-\f[V]description\f[R]-A string value.-.TP-\f[V]type\f[R]-A string value.-.TP-\f[V]format\f[R]-A string value.-.TP-\f[V]relation\f[R]-A string value.-.TP-\f[V]coverage\f[R]-A string value.-.TP-\f[V]rights\f[R]-A string value.-.TP-\f[V]belongs-to-collection\f[R]-A string value.-Identifies the name of a collection to which the EPUB Publication-belongs.-.TP-\f[V]group-position\f[R]-The \f[V]group-position\f[R] field indicates the numeric position in-which the EPUB Publication belongs relative to other works belonging to-the same \f[V]belongs-to-collection\f[R] field.-.TP-\f[V]cover-image\f[R]-A string value (path to cover image).-.TP-\f[V]css\f[R] (or legacy: \f[V]stylesheet\f[R])-A string value (path to CSS stylesheet).-.TP-\f[V]page-progression-direction\f[R]-Either \f[V]ltr\f[R] or \f[V]rtl\f[R].-Specifies the \f[V]page-progression-direction\f[R] attribute for the-\f[V]spine\f[R] element.-.TP-\f[V]ibooks\f[R]-iBooks-specific metadata, with the following fields:-.RS-.IP \[bu] 2-\f[V]version\f[R]: (string)-.IP \[bu] 2-\f[V]specified-fonts\f[R]: \f[V]true\f[R]|\f[V]false\f[R] (default-\f[V]false\f[R])-.IP \[bu] 2-\f[V]ipad-orientation-lock\f[R]:-\f[V]portrait-only\f[R]|\f[V]landscape-only\f[R]-.IP \[bu] 2-\f[V]iphone-orientation-lock\f[R]:-\f[V]portrait-only\f[R]|\f[V]landscape-only\f[R]-.IP \[bu] 2-\f[V]binding\f[R]: \f[V]true\f[R]|\f[V]false\f[R] (default-\f[V]true\f[R])-.IP \[bu] 2-\f[V]scroll-axis\f[R]:-\f[V]vertical\f[R]|\f[V]horizontal\f[R]|\f[V]default\f[R]-.RE-.SS The \f[V]epub:type\f[R] attribute-.PP-For \f[V]epub3\f[R] output, you can mark up the heading that corresponds-to an EPUB chapter using the \f[V]epub:type\f[R] attribute.-For example, to set the attribute to the value \f[V]prologue\f[R], use-this markdown:-.IP-.nf-\f[C]-# My chapter {epub:type=prologue}-\f[R]-.fi-.PP-Which will result in:-.IP-.nf-\f[C]-<body epub:type=\[dq]frontmatter\[dq]>-  <section epub:type=\[dq]prologue\[dq]>-    <h1>My chapter</h1>-\f[R]-.fi-.PP-Pandoc will output \f[V]<body epub:type=\[dq]bodymatter\[dq]>\f[R],-unless you use one of the following values, in which case either-\f[V]frontmatter\f[R] or \f[V]backmatter\f[R] will be output.-.RS -14n-.IP-.nf-\f[C]-  epub:type of first section   epub:type of body-  ---------------------------- --------------------  prologue                     frontmatter-  abstract                     frontmatter-  acknowledgments              frontmatter-  copyright-page               frontmatter-  dedication                   frontmatter-  credits                      frontmatter-  keywords                     frontmatter-  imprint                      frontmatter-  contributors                 frontmatter-  other-credits                frontmatter-  errata                       frontmatter-  revision-history             frontmatter-  titlepage                    frontmatter-  halftitlepage                frontmatter-  seriespage                   frontmatter-  foreword                     frontmatter-  preface                      frontmatter-  frontispiece                 frontmatter-  appendix                     backmatter-  colophon                     backmatter-  bibliography                 backmatter-  index                        backmatter-\f[R]-.fi-.RE-.SS Linked media-.PP-By default, pandoc will download media referenced from any-\f[V]<img>\f[R], \f[V]<audio>\f[R], \f[V]<video>\f[R] or-\f[V]<source>\f[R] element present in the generated EPUB, and include it-in the EPUB container, yielding a completely self-contained EPUB.-If you want to link to external media resources instead, use raw HTML in-your source and add \f[V]data-external=\[dq]1\[dq]\f[R] to the tag with-the \f[V]src\f[R] attribute.-For example:-.IP-.nf-\f[C]-<audio controls=\[dq]1\[dq]>-  <source src=\[dq]https://example.com/music/toccata.mp3\[dq]-          data-external=\[dq]1\[dq] type=\[dq]audio/mpeg\[dq]>-  </source>-</audio>-\f[R]-.fi-.PP-If the input format already is HTML then-\f[V]data-external=\[dq]1\[dq]\f[R] will work as expected for-\f[V]<img>\f[R] elements.-Similarly, for Markdown, external images can be declared with-\f[V]![img](url){external=1}\f[R].-Note that this only works for images; the other media elements have no-native representation in pandoc\[cq]s AST and require the use of raw-HTML.-.SS EPUB styling-.PP-By default, pandoc will include some basic styling contained in its-\f[V]epub.css\f[R] data file.-(To see this, use \f[V]pandoc --print-default-data-file epub.css\f[R].)-To use a different CSS file, just use the \f[V]--css\f[R] command line-option.-A few inline styles are defined in addition; these are essential for-correct formatting of pandoc\[cq]s HTML output.-.PP-The \f[V]document-css\f[R] variable may be set if the more opinionated-styling of pandoc\[cq]s default HTML templates is desired (and in that-case the variables defined in Variables for HTML may be used to-fine-tune the style).-.SH CHUNKED HTML-.PP-\f[V]pandoc -t chunkedhtml\f[R] will produce a zip archive of linked-HTML files, one for each section of the original document.-Internal links will automatically be adjusted to point to the right-place, images linked to under the working directory will be-incorporated, and navigation links will be added.-In addition, a JSON file \f[V]sitemap.json\f[R] will be included-describing the hierarchical structure of the files.-.PP-If an output file without an extension is specified, then it will be-interpreted as a directory and the zip archive will be automatically-unpacked into it (unless it already exists, in which case an error will-be raised).-Otherwise a \f[V].zip\f[R] file will be produced.-.PP-The navigation links can be customized by adjusting the template.-By default, a table of contents is included only on the top page.-To include it on every page, set the \f[V]toc\f[R] variable manually.-.SH JUPYTER NOTEBOOKS-.PP-When creating a Jupyter notebook, pandoc will try to infer the notebook-structure.-Code blocks with the class \f[V]code\f[R] will be taken as code cells,-and intervening content will be taken as Markdown cells.-Attachments will automatically be created for images in Markdown cells.-Metadata will be taken from the \f[V]jupyter\f[R] metadata field.-For example:-.IP-.nf-\f[C]-----title: My notebook-jupyter:-  nbformat: 4-  nbformat_minor: 5-  kernelspec:-     display_name: Python 2-     language: python-     name: python2-  language_info:-     codemirror_mode:-       name: ipython-       version: 2-     file_extension: \[dq].py\[dq]-     mimetype: \[dq]text/x-python\[dq]-     name: \[dq]python\[dq]-     nbconvert_exporter: \[dq]python\[dq]-     pygments_lexer: \[dq]ipython2\[dq]-     version: \[dq]2.7.15\[dq]------# Lorem ipsum--**Lorem ipsum** dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit. Nunc luctus-bibendum felis dictum sodales.--\[ga]\[ga]\[ga] code-print(\[dq]hello\[dq])-\[ga]\[ga]\[ga]--## Pyout--\[ga]\[ga]\[ga] code-from IPython.display import HTML-HTML(\[dq]\[dq]\[dq]-<script>-console.log(\[dq]hello\[dq]);-</script>-<b>HTML</b>-\[dq]\[dq]\[dq])-\[ga]\[ga]\[ga]--## Image--This image ![image](myimage.png) will be-included as a cell attachment.-\f[R]-.fi-.PP-If you want to add cell attributes, group cells differently, or add-output to code cells, then you need to include divs to indicate the-structure.-You can use either fenced divs or native divs for this.-Here is an example:-.IP-.nf-\f[C]-:::::: {.cell .markdown}-# Lorem--**Lorem ipsum** dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit. Nunc luctus-bibendum felis dictum sodales.-::::::--:::::: {.cell .code execution_count=1}-\[ga]\[ga]\[ga] {.python}-print(\[dq]hello\[dq])-\[ga]\[ga]\[ga]--::: {.output .stream .stdout}-\[ga]\[ga]\[ga]-hello-\[ga]\[ga]\[ga]-:::-::::::--:::::: {.cell .code execution_count=2}-\[ga]\[ga]\[ga] {.python}-from IPython.display import HTML-HTML(\[dq]\[dq]\[dq]-<script>-console.log(\[dq]hello\[dq]);-</script>-<b>HTML</b>-\[dq]\[dq]\[dq])-\[ga]\[ga]\[ga]--::: {.output .execute_result execution_count=2}-\[ga]\[ga]\[ga]{=html}-<script>-console.log(\[dq]hello\[dq]);-</script>-<b>HTML</b>-hello-\[ga]\[ga]\[ga]-:::-::::::-\f[R]-.fi-.PP-If you include raw HTML or TeX in an output cell, use the raw attribute,-as shown in the last cell of the example above.-Although pandoc can process \[lq]bare\[rq] raw HTML and TeX, the result-is often interspersed raw elements and normal textual elements, and in-an output cell pandoc expects a single, connected raw block.-To avoid using raw HTML or TeX except when marked explicitly using raw-attributes, we recommend specifying the extensions-\f[V]-raw_html-raw_tex+raw_attribute\f[R] when translating between-Markdown and ipynb notebooks.-.PP-Note that options and extensions that affect reading and writing of-Markdown will also affect Markdown cells in ipynb notebooks.-For example, \f[V]--wrap=preserve\f[R] will preserve soft line breaks in-Markdown cells; \f[V]--markdown-headings=setext\f[R] will cause-Setext-style headings to be used; and \f[V]--preserve-tabs\f[R] will-prevent tabs from being turned to spaces.-.SH SYNTAX HIGHLIGHTING-.PP-Pandoc will automatically highlight syntax in fenced code blocks that-are marked with a language name.-The Haskell library skylighting is used for highlighting.-Currently highlighting is supported only for HTML, EPUB, Docx, Ms, and-LaTeX/PDF output.-To see a list of language names that pandoc will recognize, type-\f[V]pandoc --list-highlight-languages\f[R].-.PP-The color scheme can be selected using the \f[V]--highlight-style\f[R]-option.-The default color scheme is \f[V]pygments\f[R], which imitates the-default color scheme used by the Python library pygments (though-pygments is not actually used to do the highlighting).-To see a list of highlight styles, type-\f[V]pandoc --list-highlight-styles\f[R].-.PP-If you are not satisfied with the predefined styles, you can use-\f[V]--print-highlight-style\f[R] to generate a JSON \f[V].theme\f[R]-file which can be modified and used as the argument to-\f[V]--highlight-style\f[R].-To get a JSON version of the \f[V]pygments\f[R] style, for example:-.IP-.nf-\f[C]-pandoc --print-highlight-style pygments > my.theme-\f[R]-.fi-.PP-Then edit \f[V]my.theme\f[R] and use it like this:-.IP-.nf-\f[C]-pandoc --highlight-style my.theme-\f[R]-.fi-.PP-If you are not satisfied with the built-in highlighting, or you want to-highlight a language that isn\[cq]t supported, you can use the-\f[V]--syntax-definition\f[R] option to load a KDE-style XML syntax-definition file.-Before writing your own, have a look at KDE\[cq]s repository of syntax-definitions.-.PP-To disable highlighting, use the \f[V]--no-highlight\f[R] option.-.SH CUSTOM STYLES-.PP-Custom styles can be used in the docx and ICML formats.-.SS Output-.PP-By default, pandoc\[cq]s docx and ICML output applies a predefined set-of styles for blocks such as paragraphs and block quotes, and uses-largely default formatting (italics, bold) for inlines.-This will work for most purposes, especially alongside a-\f[V]reference.docx\f[R] file.-However, if you need to apply your own styles to blocks, or match a-preexisting set of styles, pandoc allows you to define custom styles for-blocks and text using \f[V]div\f[R]s and \f[V]span\f[R]s, respectively.-.PP-If you define a \f[V]div\f[R] or \f[V]span\f[R] with the attribute-\f[V]custom-style\f[R], pandoc will apply your specified style to the-contained elements (with the exception of elements whose function-depends on a style, like headings, code blocks, block quotes, or links).-So, for example, using the \f[V]bracketed_spans\f[R] syntax,-.IP-.nf-\f[C]-[Get out]{custom-style=\[dq]Emphatically\[dq]}, he said.-\f[R]-.fi-.PP-would produce a docx file with \[lq]Get out\[rq] styled with character-style \f[V]Emphatically\f[R].-Similarly, using the \f[V]fenced_divs\f[R] syntax,-.IP-.nf-\f[C]-Dickinson starts the poem simply:--::: {custom-style=\[dq]Poetry\[dq]}-| A Bird came down the Walk----| He did not know I saw----:::-\f[R]-.fi-.PP-would style the two contained lines with the \f[V]Poetry\f[R] paragraph-style.-.PP-For docx output, styles will be defined in the output file as inheriting-from normal text, if the styles are not yet in your reference.docx.-If they are already defined, pandoc will not alter the definition.-.PP-This feature allows for greatest customization in conjunction with-pandoc filters.-If you want all paragraphs after block quotes to be indented, you can-write a filter to apply the styles necessary.-If you want all italics to be transformed to the \f[V]Emphasis\f[R]-character style (perhaps to change their color), you can write a filter-which will transform all italicized inlines to inlines within an-\f[V]Emphasis\f[R] custom-style \f[V]span\f[R].-.PP-For docx output, you don\[cq]t need to enable any extensions for custom-styles to work.-.SS Input-.PP-The docx reader, by default, only reads those styles that it can convert-into pandoc elements, either by direct conversion or interpreting the-derivation of the input document\[cq]s styles.-.PP-By enabling the \f[V]styles\f[R] extension in the docx reader-(\f[V]-f docx+styles\f[R]), you can produce output that maintains the-styles of the input document, using the \f[V]custom-style\f[R] class.-Paragraph styles are interpreted as divs, while character styles are-interpreted as spans.-.PP-For example, using the \f[V]custom-style-reference.docx\f[R] file in the-test directory, we have the following different outputs:-.PP-Without the \f[V]+styles\f[R] extension:-.IP-.nf-\f[C]-$ pandoc test/docx/custom-style-reference.docx -f docx -t markdown-This is some text.--This is text with an *emphasized* text style. And this is text with a-**strengthened** text style.--> Here is a styled paragraph that inherits from Block Text.-\f[R]-.fi-.PP-And with the extension:-.IP-.nf-\f[C]-$ pandoc test/docx/custom-style-reference.docx -f docx+styles -t markdown--::: {custom-style=\[dq]First Paragraph\[dq]}-This is some text.-:::--::: {custom-style=\[dq]Body Text\[dq]}-This is text with an [emphasized]{custom-style=\[dq]Emphatic\[dq]} text style.-And this is text with a [strengthened]{custom-style=\[dq]Strengthened\[dq]}-text style.-:::--::: {custom-style=\[dq]My Block Style\[dq]}-> Here is a styled paragraph that inherits from Block Text.-:::-\f[R]-.fi-.PP-With these custom styles, you can use your input document as a-reference-doc while creating docx output (see below), and maintain the-same styles in your input and output files.-.SH CUSTOM READERS AND WRITERS-.PP-Pandoc can be extended with custom readers and writers written in Lua.-(Pandoc includes a Lua interpreter, so Lua need not be installed-separately.)-.PP-To use a custom reader or writer, simply specify the path to the Lua-script in place of the input or output format.-For example:-.IP-.nf-\f[C]-pandoc -t data/sample.lua-pandoc -f my_custom_markup_language.lua -t latex -s-\f[R]-.fi-.PP-If the script is not found relative to the working directory, it will be-sought in the \f[V]custom\f[R] subdirectory of the user data directory-(see \f[V]--data-dir\f[R]).-.PP-A custom reader is a Lua script that defines one function, Reader, which-takes a string as input and returns a Pandoc AST.-See the Lua filters documentation for documentation of the functions-that are available for creating pandoc AST elements.-For parsing, the lpeg parsing library is available by default.-To see a sample custom reader:-.IP-.nf-\f[C]-pandoc --print-default-data-file creole.lua-\f[R]-.fi-.PP-If you want your custom reader to have access to reader options-(e.g.\ the tab stop setting), you give your Reader function a second-\f[V]options\f[R] parameter.-.PP-A custom writer is a Lua script that defines a function that specifies-how to render each element in a Pandoc AST.-See the djot-writer.lua for a full-featured example.-.PP-Note that custom writers have no default template.-If you want to use \f[V]--standalone\f[R] with a custom writer, you will-need to specify a template manually using \f[V]--template\f[R] or add a-new default template with the name-\f[V]default.NAME_OF_CUSTOM_WRITER.lua\f[R] to the \f[V]templates\f[R]-subdirectory of your user data directory (see Templates).-.SH REPRODUCIBLE BUILDS-.PP-Some of the document formats pandoc targets (such as EPUB, docx, and-ODT) include build timestamps in the generated document.-That means that the files generated on successive builds will differ,-even if the source does not.-To avoid this, set the \f[V]SOURCE_DATE_EPOCH\f[R] environment variable,-and the timestamp will be taken from it instead of the current time.-\f[V]SOURCE_DATE_EPOCH\f[R] should contain an integer unix timestamp-(specifying the number of seconds since midnight UTC January 1, 1970).-.PP-Some document formats also include a unique identifier.-For EPUB, this can be set explicitly by setting the \f[V]identifier\f[R]-metadata field (see EPUB Metadata, above).-.SH ACCESSIBLE PDFS AND PDF ARCHIVING STANDARDS-.PP-PDF is a flexible format, and using PDF in certain contexts requires-additional conventions.-For example, PDFs are not accessible by default; they define how-characters are placed on a page but do not contain semantic information-on the content.-However, it is possible to generate accessible PDFs, which use tagging-to add semantic information to the document.-.PP-Pandoc defaults to LaTeX to generate PDF.-Tagging support in LaTeX is in development and not readily available, so-PDFs generated in this way will always be untagged and not accessible.-This means that alternative engines must be used to generate accessible-PDFs.-.PP-The PDF standards PDF/A and PDF/UA define further restrictions intended-to optimize PDFs for archiving and accessibility.-Tagging is commonly used in combination with these standards to ensure-best results.-.PP-Note, however, that standard compliance depends on many things,-including the colorspace of embedded images.-Pandoc cannot check this, and external programs must be used to ensure-that generated PDFs are in compliance.-.SS ConTeXt-.PP-ConTeXt always produces tagged PDFs, but the quality depends on the-input.-The default ConTeXt markup generated by pandoc is optimized for-readability and reuse, not tagging.-Enable the \f[V]tagging\f[R] format extension to force markup that is-optimized for tagging.-This can be combined with the \f[V]pdfa\f[R] variable to generate-standard-compliant PDFs.-E.g.:-.IP-.nf-\f[C]-pandoc --to=context+tagging -V pdfa=3a-\f[R]-.fi-.PP-A recent \f[V]context\f[R] version should be used, as older versions-contained a bug that lead to invalid PDF metadata.-.SS WeasyPrint-.PP-The HTML-based engine WeasyPrint includes experimental support for PDF/A-and PDF/UA since version 57.-Tagged PDFs can created with-.IP-.nf-\f[C]-pandoc --pdf-engine=weasyprint \[rs]-       --pdf-engine-opt=--pdf-variant=pdf/ua-1 ...-\f[R]-.fi-.PP-The feature is experimental and standard compliance should not be-assumed.-.SS Prince XML-.PP-The non-free HTML-to-PDf converter \f[V]prince\f[R] has extensive-support for various PDF standards as well as tagging.-E.g.:-.IP-.nf-\f[C]-pandoc --pdf-engine=prince \[rs]-       --pdf-engine-opt=--tagged-pdf ...-\f[R]-.fi-.PP-See the prince documentation for more info.-.SS Word Processors-.PP-Word processors like LibreOffice and MS Word can also be used to-generate standardized and tagged PDF output.-Pandoc does not support direct conversions via these tools.-However, pandoc can convert a document to a \f[V]docx\f[R] or-\f[V]odt\f[R] file, which can then be opened and converted to PDF with-the respective word processor.-See the documentation for Word and LibreOffice.-.SH RUNNING PANDOC AS A WEB SERVER-.PP-If you rename (or symlink) the pandoc executable to-\f[V]pandoc-server\f[R], or if you call pandoc with \f[V]server\f[R] as-the first argument, it will start up a web server with a JSON API.-This server exposes most of the conversion functionality of pandoc.-For full documentation, see the pandoc-server man page.-.PP-If you rename (or symlink) the pandoc executable to-\f[V]pandoc-server.cgi\f[R], it will function as a CGI program exposing-the same API as \f[V]pandoc-server\f[R].-.PP-\f[V]pandoc-server\f[R] is designed to be maximally secure; it uses-Haskell\[cq]s type system to provide strong guarantees that no I/O will-be performed on the server during pandoc conversions.-.SH RUNNING PANDOC AS A LUA INTERPRETER-.PP-Calling the pandoc executable under the name \f[V]pandoc-lua\f[R] or-with \f[V]lua\f[R] as the first argument will make it function as a-standalone Lua interpreter.-The behavior is mostly identical to that of the standalone \f[V]lua\f[R]-executable, version 5.4.-However, there is no REPL yet, and the \f[V]-i\f[R] option has no-effect.-For full documentation, see the pandoc-lua man page.-.SH A NOTE ON SECURITY-.IP "1." 3-Although pandoc itself will not create or modify any files other than-those you explicitly ask it create (with the exception of temporary-files used in producing PDFs), a filter or custom writer could in-principle do anything on your file system.-Please audit filters and custom writers very carefully before using-them.-.IP "2." 3-Several input formats (including HTML, Org, and RST) support-\f[V]include\f[R] directives that allow the contents of a file to be-included in the output.-An untrusted attacker could use these to view the contents of files on-the file system.-(Using the \f[V]--sandbox\f[R] option can protect against this threat.)-.IP "3." 3-Several output formats (including RTF, FB2, HTML with-\f[V]--self-contained\f[R], EPUB, Docx, and ODT) will embed encoded or-raw images into the output file.-An untrusted attacker could exploit this to view the contents of-non-image files on the file system.-(Using the \f[V]--sandbox\f[R] option can protect against this threat,-but will also prevent including images in these formats.)-.IP "4." 3-If your application uses pandoc as a Haskell library (rather than-shelling out to the executable), it is possible to use it in a mode that-fully isolates pandoc from your file system, by running the pandoc-operations in the \f[V]PandocPure\f[R] monad.-See the document Using the pandoc API for more details.-(This corresponds to the use of the \f[V]--sandbox\f[R] option on the-command line.)-.IP "5." 3-Pandoc\[cq]s parsers can exhibit pathological performance on some corner-cases.-It is wise to put any pandoc operations under a timeout, to avoid DOS-attacks that exploit these issues.-If you are using the pandoc executable, you can add the command line-options \f[V]+RTS -M512M -RTS\f[R] (for example) to limit the heap size-to 512MB.-Note that the \f[V]commonmark\f[R] parser (including-\f[V]commonmark_x\f[R] and \f[V]gfm\f[R]) is much less vulnerable to-pathological performance than the \f[V]markdown\f[R] parser, so it is a-better choice when processing untrusted input.-.IP "6." 3-The HTML generated by pandoc is not guaranteed to be safe.-If \f[V]raw_html\f[R] is enabled for the Markdown input, users can-inject arbitrary HTML.-Even if \f[V]raw_html\f[R] is disabled, users can include dangerous-content in URLs and attributes.-To be safe, you should run all HTML generated from untrusted user input-through an HTML sanitizer.-.SH AUTHORS-.PP+.\" Automatically generated by Pandoc 3.1.7+.\"+.TH "pandoc" "1" "September 08, 2023" "pandoc 3.1.8" "Pandoc User\[cq]s Guide"+.SH NAME+pandoc - general markup converter+.SH SYNOPSIS+\f[CR]pandoc\f[R] [\f[I]options\f[R]] [\f[I]input-file\f[R]]\&...+.SH DESCRIPTION+Pandoc is a Haskell library for converting from one markup format to+another, and a command-line tool that uses this library.+.PP+Pandoc can convert between numerous markup and word processing formats,+including, but not limited to, various flavors of Markdown, HTML, LaTeX+and Word docx.+For the full lists of input and output formats, see the+\f[CR]--from\f[R] and \f[CR]--to\f[R] options below.+Pandoc can also produce PDF output: see creating a PDF, below.+.PP+Pandoc\[cq]s enhanced version of Markdown includes syntax for tables,+definition lists, metadata blocks, footnotes, citations, math, and much+more.+See below under Pandoc\[cq]s Markdown.+.PP+Pandoc has a modular design: it consists of a set of readers, which+parse text in a given format and produce a native representation of the+document (an \f[I]abstract syntax tree\f[R] or AST), and a set of+writers, which convert this native representation into a target format.+Thus, adding an input or output format requires only adding a reader or+writer.+Users can also run custom pandoc filters to modify the intermediate AST.+.PP+Because pandoc\[cq]s intermediate representation of a document is less+expressive than many of the formats it converts between, one should not+expect perfect conversions between every format and every other.+Pandoc attempts to preserve the structural elements of a document, but+not formatting details such as margin size.+And some document elements, such as complex tables, may not fit into+pandoc\[cq]s simple document model.+While conversions from pandoc\[cq]s Markdown to all formats aspire to be+perfect, conversions from formats more expressive than pandoc\[cq]s+Markdown can be expected to be lossy.+.SS Using pandoc+If no \f[I]input-files\f[R] are specified, input is read from+\f[I]stdin\f[R].+Output goes to \f[I]stdout\f[R] by default.+For output to a file, use the \f[CR]-o\f[R] option:+.IP+.EX+pandoc -o output.html input.txt+.EE+.PP+By default, pandoc produces a document fragment.+To produce a standalone document (e.g.\ a valid HTML file including+\f[CR]<head>\f[R] and \f[CR]<body>\f[R]), use the \f[CR]-s\f[R] or+\f[CR]--standalone\f[R] flag:+.IP+.EX+pandoc -s -o output.html input.txt+.EE+.PP+For more information on how standalone documents are produced, see+Templates below.+.PP+If multiple input files are given, pandoc will concatenate them all+(with blank lines between them) before parsing.+(Use \f[CR]--file-scope\f[R] to parse files individually.)+.SS Specifying formats+The format of the input and output can be specified explicitly using+command-line options.+The input format can be specified using the \f[CR]-f/--from\f[R] option,+the output format using the \f[CR]-t/--to\f[R] option.+Thus, to convert \f[CR]hello.txt\f[R] from Markdown to LaTeX, you could+type:+.IP+.EX+pandoc -f markdown -t latex hello.txt+.EE+.PP+To convert \f[CR]hello.html\f[R] from HTML to Markdown:+.IP+.EX+pandoc -f html -t markdown hello.html+.EE+.PP+Supported input and output formats are listed below under Options (see+\f[CR]-f\f[R] for input formats and \f[CR]-t\f[R] for output formats).+You can also use \f[CR]pandoc --list-input-formats\f[R] and+\f[CR]pandoc --list-output-formats\f[R] to print lists of supported+formats.+.PP+If the input or output format is not specified explicitly, pandoc will+attempt to guess it from the extensions of the filenames.+Thus, for example,+.IP+.EX+pandoc -o hello.tex hello.txt+.EE+.PP+will convert \f[CR]hello.txt\f[R] from Markdown to LaTeX.+If no output file is specified (so that output goes to+\f[I]stdout\f[R]), or if the output file\[cq]s extension is unknown, the+output format will default to HTML.+If no input file is specified (so that input comes from+\f[I]stdin\f[R]), or if the input files\[cq] extensions are unknown, the+input format will be assumed to be Markdown.+.SS Character encoding+Pandoc uses the UTF-8 character encoding for both input and output.+If your local character encoding is not UTF-8, you should pipe input and+output through \f[CR]iconv\f[R]:+.IP+.EX+iconv -t utf-8 input.txt | pandoc | iconv -f utf-8+.EE+.PP+Note that in some output formats (such as HTML, LaTeX, ConTeXt, RTF,+OPML, DocBook, and Texinfo), information about the character encoding is+included in the document header, which will only be included if you use+the \f[CR]-s/--standalone\f[R] option.+.SS Creating a PDF+To produce a PDF, specify an output file with a \f[CR].pdf\f[R]+extension:+.IP+.EX+pandoc test.txt -o test.pdf+.EE+.PP+By default, pandoc will use LaTeX to create the PDF, which requires that+a LaTeX engine be installed (see \f[CR]--pdf-engine\f[R] below).+Alternatively, pandoc can use ConTeXt, roff ms, or HTML as an+intermediate format.+To do this, specify an output file with a \f[CR].pdf\f[R] extension, as+before, but add the \f[CR]--pdf-engine\f[R] option or+\f[CR]-t context\f[R], \f[CR]-t html\f[R], or \f[CR]-t ms\f[R] to the+command line.+The tool used to generate the PDF from the intermediate format may be+specified using \f[CR]--pdf-engine\f[R].+.PP+You can control the PDF style using variables, depending on the+intermediate format used: see variables for LaTeX, variables for+ConTeXt, variables for \f[CR]wkhtmltopdf\f[R], variables for ms.+When HTML is used as an intermediate format, the output can be styled+using \f[CR]--css\f[R].+.PP+To debug the PDF creation, it can be useful to look at the intermediate+representation: instead of \f[CR]-o test.pdf\f[R], use for example+\f[CR]-s -o test.tex\f[R] to output the generated LaTeX.+You can then test it with \f[CR]pdflatex test.tex\f[R].+.PP+When using LaTeX, the following packages need to be available (they are+included with all recent versions of TeX Live): \f[CR]amsfonts\f[R],+\f[CR]amsmath\f[R], \f[CR]lm\f[R], \f[CR]unicode-math\f[R],+\f[CR]iftex\f[R], \f[CR]listings\f[R] (if the \f[CR]--listings\f[R]+option is used), \f[CR]fancyvrb\f[R], \f[CR]longtable\f[R],+\f[CR]booktabs\f[R], \f[CR]graphicx\f[R] (if the document contains+images), \f[CR]hyperref\f[R], \f[CR]xcolor\f[R], \f[CR]soul\f[R],+\f[CR]geometry\f[R] (with the \f[CR]geometry\f[R] variable set),+\f[CR]setspace\f[R] (with \f[CR]linestretch\f[R]), and \f[CR]babel\f[R]+(with \f[CR]lang\f[R]).+If \f[CR]CJKmainfont\f[R] is set, \f[CR]xeCJK\f[R] is needed.+The use of \f[CR]xelatex\f[R] or \f[CR]lualatex\f[R] as the PDF engine+requires \f[CR]fontspec\f[R].+\f[CR]lualatex\f[R] uses \f[CR]selnolig\f[R].+\f[CR]xelatex\f[R] uses \f[CR]bidi\f[R] (with the \f[CR]dir\f[R]+variable set).+If the \f[CR]mathspec\f[R] variable is set, \f[CR]xelatex\f[R] will use+\f[CR]mathspec\f[R] instead of \f[CR]unicode-math\f[R].+The \f[CR]upquote\f[R] and \f[CR]microtype\f[R] packages are used if+available, and \f[CR]csquotes\f[R] will be used for typography if the+\f[CR]csquotes\f[R] variable or metadata field is set to a true value.+The \f[CR]natbib\f[R], \f[CR]biblatex\f[R], \f[CR]bibtex\f[R], and+\f[CR]biber\f[R] packages can optionally be used for citation rendering.+The following packages will be used to improve output quality if+present, but pandoc does not require them to be present:+\f[CR]upquote\f[R] (for straight quotes in verbatim environments),+\f[CR]microtype\f[R] (for better spacing adjustments),+\f[CR]parskip\f[R] (for better inter-paragraph spaces), \f[CR]xurl\f[R]+(for better line breaks in URLs), \f[CR]bookmark\f[R] (for better PDF+bookmarks), and \f[CR]footnotehyper\f[R] or \f[CR]footnote\f[R] (to+allow footnotes in tables).+.SS Reading from the Web+Instead of an input file, an absolute URI may be given.+In this case pandoc will fetch the content using HTTP:+.IP+.EX+pandoc -f html -t markdown https://www.fsf.org+.EE+.PP+It is possible to supply a custom User-Agent string or other header when+requesting a document from a URL:+.IP+.EX+pandoc -f html -t markdown --request-header User-Agent:\[dq]Mozilla/5.0\[dq] \[rs]+  https://www.fsf.org+.EE+.SH OPTIONS+.SS General options+.TP+\f[CR]-f\f[R] \f[I]FORMAT\f[R], \f[CR]-r\f[R] \f[I]FORMAT\f[R], \f[CR]--from=\f[R]\f[I]FORMAT\f[R], \f[CR]--read=\f[R]\f[I]FORMAT\f[R]+Specify input format.+\f[I]FORMAT\f[R] can be:+.RS+.IP \[bu] 2+\f[CR]bibtex\f[R] (BibTeX bibliography)+.IP \[bu] 2+\f[CR]biblatex\f[R] (BibLaTeX bibliography)+.IP \[bu] 2+\f[CR]commonmark\f[R] (CommonMark Markdown)+.IP \[bu] 2+\f[CR]commonmark_x\f[R] (CommonMark Markdown with extensions)+.IP \[bu] 2+\f[CR]creole\f[R] (Creole 1.0)+.IP \[bu] 2+\f[CR]csljson\f[R] (CSL JSON bibliography)+.IP \[bu] 2+\f[CR]csv\f[R] (CSV table)+.IP \[bu] 2+\f[CR]tsv\f[R] (TSV table)+.IP \[bu] 2+\f[CR]docbook\f[R] (DocBook)+.IP \[bu] 2+\f[CR]docx\f[R] (Word docx)+.IP \[bu] 2+\f[CR]dokuwiki\f[R] (DokuWiki markup)+.IP \[bu] 2+\f[CR]endnotexml\f[R] (EndNote XML bibliography)+.IP \[bu] 2+\f[CR]epub\f[R] (EPUB)+.IP \[bu] 2+\f[CR]fb2\f[R] (FictionBook2 e-book)+.IP \[bu] 2+\f[CR]gfm\f[R] (GitHub-Flavored Markdown), or the deprecated and less+accurate \f[CR]markdown_github\f[R]; use \f[CR]markdown_github\f[R] only+if you need extensions not supported in \f[CR]gfm\f[R].+.IP \[bu] 2+\f[CR]haddock\f[R] (Haddock markup)+.IP \[bu] 2+\f[CR]html\f[R] (HTML)+.IP \[bu] 2+\f[CR]ipynb\f[R] (Jupyter notebook)+.IP \[bu] 2+\f[CR]jats\f[R] (JATS XML)+.IP \[bu] 2+\f[CR]jira\f[R] (Jira/Confluence wiki markup)+.IP \[bu] 2+\f[CR]json\f[R] (JSON version of native AST)+.IP \[bu] 2+\f[CR]latex\f[R] (LaTeX)+.IP \[bu] 2+\f[CR]markdown\f[R] (Pandoc\[cq]s Markdown)+.IP \[bu] 2+\f[CR]markdown_mmd\f[R] (MultiMarkdown)+.IP \[bu] 2+\f[CR]markdown_phpextra\f[R] (PHP Markdown Extra)+.IP \[bu] 2+\f[CR]markdown_strict\f[R] (original unextended Markdown)+.IP \[bu] 2+\f[CR]mediawiki\f[R] (MediaWiki markup)+.IP \[bu] 2+\f[CR]man\f[R] (roff man)+.IP \[bu] 2+\f[CR]muse\f[R] (Muse)+.IP \[bu] 2+\f[CR]native\f[R] (native Haskell)+.IP \[bu] 2+\f[CR]odt\f[R] (ODT)+.IP \[bu] 2+\f[CR]opml\f[R] (OPML)+.IP \[bu] 2+\f[CR]org\f[R] (Emacs Org mode)+.IP \[bu] 2+\f[CR]ris\f[R] (RIS bibliography)+.IP \[bu] 2+\f[CR]rtf\f[R] (Rich Text Format)+.IP \[bu] 2+\f[CR]rst\f[R] (reStructuredText)+.IP \[bu] 2+\f[CR]t2t\f[R] (txt2tags)+.IP \[bu] 2+\f[CR]textile\f[R] (Textile)+.IP \[bu] 2+\f[CR]tikiwiki\f[R] (TikiWiki markup)+.IP \[bu] 2+\f[CR]twiki\f[R] (TWiki markup)+.IP \[bu] 2+\f[CR]typst\f[R] (typst)+.IP \[bu] 2+\f[CR]vimwiki\f[R] (Vimwiki)+.IP \[bu] 2+the path of a custom Lua reader, see Custom readers and writers below+.PP+Extensions can be individually enabled or disabled by appending+\f[CR]+EXTENSION\f[R] or \f[CR]-EXTENSION\f[R] to the format name.+See Extensions below, for a list of extensions and their names.+See \f[CR]--list-input-formats\f[R] and \f[CR]--list-extensions\f[R],+below.+.RE+.TP+\f[CR]-t\f[R] \f[I]FORMAT\f[R], \f[CR]-w\f[R] \f[I]FORMAT\f[R], \f[CR]--to=\f[R]\f[I]FORMAT\f[R], \f[CR]--write=\f[R]\f[I]FORMAT\f[R]+Specify output format.+\f[I]FORMAT\f[R] can be:+.RS+.IP \[bu] 2+\f[CR]asciidoc\f[R] (modern AsciiDoc as interpreted by AsciiDoctor)+.IP \[bu] 2+\f[CR]asciidoc_legacy\f[R] (AsciiDoc as interpreted by+\f[CR]asciidoc-py\f[R]).+.IP \[bu] 2+\f[CR]asciidoctor\f[R] (deprecated synonym for \f[CR]asciidoc\f[R])+.IP \[bu] 2+\f[CR]beamer\f[R] (LaTeX beamer slide show)+.IP \[bu] 2+\f[CR]bibtex\f[R] (BibTeX bibliography)+.IP \[bu] 2+\f[CR]biblatex\f[R] (BibLaTeX bibliography)+.IP \[bu] 2+\f[CR]chunkedhtml\f[R] (zip archive of multiple linked HTML files)+.IP \[bu] 2+\f[CR]commonmark\f[R] (CommonMark Markdown)+.IP \[bu] 2+\f[CR]commonmark_x\f[R] (CommonMark Markdown with extensions)+.IP \[bu] 2+\f[CR]context\f[R] (ConTeXt)+.IP \[bu] 2+\f[CR]csljson\f[R] (CSL JSON bibliography)+.IP \[bu] 2+\f[CR]docbook\f[R] or \f[CR]docbook4\f[R] (DocBook 4)+.IP \[bu] 2+\f[CR]docbook5\f[R] (DocBook 5)+.IP \[bu] 2+\f[CR]docx\f[R] (Word docx)+.IP \[bu] 2+\f[CR]dokuwiki\f[R] (DokuWiki markup)+.IP \[bu] 2+\f[CR]epub\f[R] or \f[CR]epub3\f[R] (EPUB v3 book)+.IP \[bu] 2+\f[CR]epub2\f[R] (EPUB v2)+.IP \[bu] 2+\f[CR]fb2\f[R] (FictionBook2 e-book)+.IP \[bu] 2+\f[CR]gfm\f[R] (GitHub-Flavored Markdown), or the deprecated and less+accurate \f[CR]markdown_github\f[R]; use \f[CR]markdown_github\f[R] only+if you need extensions not supported in \f[CR]gfm\f[R].+.IP \[bu] 2+\f[CR]haddock\f[R] (Haddock markup)+.IP \[bu] 2+\f[CR]html\f[R] or \f[CR]html5\f[R] (HTML, i.e.\ HTML5/XHTML polyglot+markup)+.IP \[bu] 2+\f[CR]html4\f[R] (XHTML 1.0 Transitional)+.IP \[bu] 2+\f[CR]icml\f[R] (InDesign ICML)+.IP \[bu] 2+\f[CR]ipynb\f[R] (Jupyter notebook)+.IP \[bu] 2+\f[CR]jats_archiving\f[R] (JATS XML, Archiving and Interchange Tag Set)+.IP \[bu] 2+\f[CR]jats_articleauthoring\f[R] (JATS XML, Article Authoring Tag Set)+.IP \[bu] 2+\f[CR]jats_publishing\f[R] (JATS XML, Journal Publishing Tag Set)+.IP \[bu] 2+\f[CR]jats\f[R] (alias for \f[CR]jats_archiving\f[R])+.IP \[bu] 2+\f[CR]jira\f[R] (Jira/Confluence wiki markup)+.IP \[bu] 2+\f[CR]json\f[R] (JSON version of native AST)+.IP \[bu] 2+\f[CR]latex\f[R] (LaTeX)+.IP \[bu] 2+\f[CR]man\f[R] (roff man)+.IP \[bu] 2+\f[CR]markdown\f[R] (Pandoc\[cq]s Markdown)+.IP \[bu] 2+\f[CR]markdown_mmd\f[R] (MultiMarkdown)+.IP \[bu] 2+\f[CR]markdown_phpextra\f[R] (PHP Markdown Extra)+.IP \[bu] 2+\f[CR]markdown_strict\f[R] (original unextended Markdown)+.IP \[bu] 2+\f[CR]markua\f[R] (Markua)+.IP \[bu] 2+\f[CR]mediawiki\f[R] (MediaWiki markup)+.IP \[bu] 2+\f[CR]ms\f[R] (roff ms)+.IP \[bu] 2+\f[CR]muse\f[R] (Muse)+.IP \[bu] 2+\f[CR]native\f[R] (native Haskell)+.IP \[bu] 2+\f[CR]odt\f[R] (OpenOffice text document)+.IP \[bu] 2+\f[CR]opml\f[R] (OPML)+.IP \[bu] 2+\f[CR]opendocument\f[R] (OpenDocument)+.IP \[bu] 2+\f[CR]org\f[R] (Emacs Org mode)+.IP \[bu] 2+\f[CR]pdf\f[R] (PDF)+.IP \[bu] 2+\f[CR]plain\f[R] (plain text)+.IP \[bu] 2+\f[CR]pptx\f[R] (PowerPoint slide show)+.IP \[bu] 2+\f[CR]rst\f[R] (reStructuredText)+.IP \[bu] 2+\f[CR]rtf\f[R] (Rich Text Format)+.IP \[bu] 2+\f[CR]texinfo\f[R] (GNU Texinfo)+.IP \[bu] 2+\f[CR]textile\f[R] (Textile)+.IP \[bu] 2+\f[CR]slideous\f[R] (Slideous HTML and JavaScript slide show)+.IP \[bu] 2+\f[CR]slidy\f[R] (Slidy HTML and JavaScript slide show)+.IP \[bu] 2+\f[CR]dzslides\f[R] (DZSlides HTML5 + JavaScript slide show)+.IP \[bu] 2+\f[CR]revealjs\f[R] (reveal.js HTML5 + JavaScript slide show)+.IP \[bu] 2+\f[CR]s5\f[R] (S5 HTML and JavaScript slide show)+.IP \[bu] 2+\f[CR]tei\f[R] (TEI Simple)+.IP \[bu] 2+\f[CR]typst\f[R] (typst)+.IP \[bu] 2+\f[CR]xwiki\f[R] (XWiki markup)+.IP \[bu] 2+\f[CR]zimwiki\f[R] (ZimWiki markup)+.IP \[bu] 2+the path of a custom Lua writer, see Custom readers and writers below+.PP+Note that \f[CR]odt\f[R], \f[CR]docx\f[R], \f[CR]epub\f[R], and+\f[CR]pdf\f[R] output will not be directed to \f[I]stdout\f[R] unless+forced with \f[CR]-o -\f[R].+.PP+Extensions can be individually enabled or disabled by appending+\f[CR]+EXTENSION\f[R] or \f[CR]-EXTENSION\f[R] to the format name.+See Extensions below, for a list of extensions and their names.+See \f[CR]--list-output-formats\f[R] and \f[CR]--list-extensions\f[R],+below.+.RE+.TP+\f[CR]-o\f[R] \f[I]FILE\f[R], \f[CR]--output=\f[R]\f[I]FILE\f[R]+Write output to \f[I]FILE\f[R] instead of \f[I]stdout\f[R].+If \f[I]FILE\f[R] is \f[CR]-\f[R], output will go to \f[I]stdout\f[R],+even if a non-textual format (\f[CR]docx\f[R], \f[CR]odt\f[R],+\f[CR]epub2\f[R], \f[CR]epub3\f[R]) is specified.+If the output format is \f[CR]chunkedhtml\f[R] and \f[I]FILE\f[R] has no+extension, then instead of producing a \f[CR].zip\f[R] file pandoc will+create a directory \f[I]FILE\f[R] and unpack the zip archive there+(unless \f[I]FILE\f[R] already exists, in which case an error will be+raised).+.TP+\f[CR]--data-dir=\f[R]\f[I]DIRECTORY\f[R]+Specify the user data directory to search for pandoc data files.+If this option is not specified, the default user data directory will be+used.+On *nix and macOS systems this will be the \f[CR]pandoc\f[R]+subdirectory of the XDG data directory (by default,+\f[CR]$HOME/.local/share\f[R], overridable by setting the+\f[CR]XDG_DATA_HOME\f[R] environment variable).+If that directory does not exist and \f[CR]$HOME/.pandoc\f[R] exists, it+will be used (for backwards compatibility).+On Windows the default user data directory is+\f[CR]%APPDATA%\[rs]pandoc\f[R].+You can find the default user data directory on your system by looking+at the output of \f[CR]pandoc --version\f[R].+Data files placed in this directory (for example,+\f[CR]reference.odt\f[R], \f[CR]reference.docx\f[R],+\f[CR]epub.css\f[R], \f[CR]templates\f[R]) will override pandoc\[cq]s+normal defaults.+(Note that the user data directory is not created by pandoc, so you will+need to create it yourself if you want to make use of it.)+.TP+\f[CR]-d\f[R] \f[I]FILE\f[R], \f[CR]--defaults=\f[R]\f[I]FILE\f[R]+Specify a set of default option settings.+\f[I]FILE\f[R] is a YAML file whose fields correspond to command-line+option settings.+All options for document conversion, including input and output files,+can be set using a defaults file.+The file will be searched for first in the working directory, and then+in the \f[CR]defaults\f[R] subdirectory of the user data directory (see+\f[CR]--data-dir\f[R]).+The \f[CR].yaml\f[R] extension may be omitted.+See the section Defaults files for more information on the file format.+Settings from the defaults file may be overridden or extended by+subsequent options on the command line.+.TP+\f[CR]--bash-completion\f[R]+Generate a bash completion script.+To enable bash completion with pandoc, add this to your+\f[CR].bashrc\f[R]:+.RS+.IP+.EX+eval \[dq]$(pandoc --bash-completion)\[dq]+.EE+.RE+.TP+\f[CR]--verbose\f[R]+Give verbose debugging output.+.TP+\f[CR]--quiet\f[R]+Suppress warning messages.+.TP+\f[CR]--fail-if-warnings[=true|false]\f[R]+Exit with error status if there are any warnings.+.TP+\f[CR]--log=\f[R]\f[I]FILE\f[R]+Write log messages in machine-readable JSON format to \f[I]FILE\f[R].+All messages above DEBUG level will be written, regardless of verbosity+settings (\f[CR]--verbose\f[R], \f[CR]--quiet\f[R]).+.TP+\f[CR]--list-input-formats\f[R]+List supported input formats, one per line.+.TP+\f[CR]--list-output-formats\f[R]+List supported output formats, one per line.+.TP+\f[CR]--list-extensions\f[R][\f[CR]=\f[R]\f[I]FORMAT\f[R]]+List supported extensions for \f[I]FORMAT\f[R], one per line, preceded+by a \f[CR]+\f[R] or \f[CR]-\f[R] indicating whether it is enabled by+default in \f[I]FORMAT\f[R].+If \f[I]FORMAT\f[R] is not specified, defaults for pandoc\[cq]s Markdown+are given.+.TP+\f[CR]--list-highlight-languages\f[R]+List supported languages for syntax highlighting, one per line.+.TP+\f[CR]--list-highlight-styles\f[R]+List supported styles for syntax highlighting, one per line.+See \f[CR]--highlight-style\f[R].+.TP+\f[CR]-v\f[R], \f[CR]--version\f[R]+Print version.+.TP+\f[CR]-h\f[R], \f[CR]--help\f[R]+Show usage message.+.SS Reader options+.TP+\f[CR]--shift-heading-level-by=\f[R]\f[I]NUMBER\f[R]+Shift heading levels by a positive or negative integer.+For example, with \f[CR]--shift-heading-level-by=-1\f[R], level 2+headings become level 1 headings, and level 3 headings become level 2+headings.+Headings cannot have a level less than 1, so a heading that would be+shifted below level 1 becomes a regular paragraph.+Exception: with a shift of -N, a level-N heading at the beginning of the+document replaces the metadata title.+\f[CR]--shift-heading-level-by=-1\f[R] is a good choice when converting+HTML or Markdown documents that use an initial level-1 heading for the+document title and level-2+ headings for sections.+\f[CR]--shift-heading-level-by=1\f[R] may be a good choice for+converting Markdown documents that use level-1 headings for sections to+HTML, since pandoc uses a level-1 heading to render the document title.+.TP+\f[CR]--base-header-level=\f[R]\f[I]NUMBER\f[R]+\f[I]Deprecated.+Use \f[CI]--shift-heading-level-by\f[I]=X instead, where X = NUMBER -+1.\f[R] Specify the base level for headings (defaults to 1).+.TP+\f[CR]--indented-code-classes=\f[R]\f[I]CLASSES\f[R]+Specify classes to use for indented code blocks\[en]for example,+\f[CR]perl,numberLines\f[R] or \f[CR]haskell\f[R].+Multiple classes may be separated by spaces or commas.+.TP+\f[CR]--default-image-extension=\f[R]\f[I]EXTENSION\f[R]+Specify a default extension to use when image paths/URLs have no+extension.+This allows you to use the same source for formats that require+different kinds of images.+Currently this option only affects the Markdown and LaTeX readers.+.TP+\f[CR]--file-scope[=true|false]\f[R]+Parse each file individually before combining for multifile documents.+This will allow footnotes in different files with the same identifiers+to work as expected.+If this option is set, footnotes and links will not work across files.+Reading binary files (docx, odt, epub) implies \f[CR]--file-scope\f[R].+.RS+.PP+If two or more files are processed using \f[CR]--file-scope\f[R],+prefixes based on the filenames will be added to identifiers in order to+disambiguate them, and internal links will be adjusted accordingly.+For example, a header with identifier \f[CR]foo\f[R] in+\f[CR]subdir/file1.txt\f[R] will have its identifier changed to+\f[CR]subdir__file1.txt__foo\f[R].+.PP+In addition, a Div with an identifier based on the filename will be+added around the file\[cq]s content, so that internal links to the+filename will point to this Div\[cq]s identifier.+.RE+.TP+\f[CR]-F\f[R] \f[I]PROGRAM\f[R], \f[CR]--filter=\f[R]\f[I]PROGRAM\f[R]+Specify an executable to be used as a filter transforming the pandoc AST+after the input is parsed and before the output is written.+The executable should read JSON from stdin and write JSON to stdout.+The JSON must be formatted like pandoc\[cq]s own JSON input and output.+The name of the output format will be passed to the filter as the first+argument.+Hence,+.RS+.IP+.EX+pandoc --filter ./caps.py -t latex+.EE+.PP+is equivalent to+.IP+.EX+pandoc -t json | ./caps.py latex | pandoc -f json -t latex+.EE+.PP+The latter form may be useful for debugging filters.+.PP+Filters may be written in any language.+\f[CR]Text.Pandoc.JSON\f[R] exports \f[CR]toJSONFilter\f[R] to+facilitate writing filters in Haskell.+Those who would prefer to write filters in python can use the module+\f[CR]pandocfilters\f[R], installable from PyPI.+There are also pandoc filter libraries in PHP, perl, and+JavaScript/node.js.+.PP+In order of preference, pandoc will look for filters in+.IP "1." 3+a specified full or relative path (executable or non-executable),+.IP "2." 3+\f[CR]$DATADIR/filters\f[R] (executable or non-executable) where+\f[CR]$DATADIR\f[R] is the user data directory (see+\f[CR]--data-dir\f[R], above),+.IP "3." 3+\f[CR]$PATH\f[R] (executable only).+.PP+Filters, Lua-filters, and citeproc processing are applied in the order+specified on the command line.+.RE+.TP+\f[CR]-L\f[R] \f[I]SCRIPT\f[R], \f[CR]--lua-filter=\f[R]\f[I]SCRIPT\f[R]+Transform the document in a similar fashion as JSON filters (see+\f[CR]--filter\f[R]), but use pandoc\[cq]s built-in Lua filtering+system.+The given Lua script is expected to return a list of Lua filters which+will be applied in order.+Each Lua filter must contain element-transforming functions indexed by+the name of the AST element on which the filter function should be+applied.+.RS+.PP+The \f[CR]pandoc\f[R] Lua module provides helper functions for element+creation.+It is always loaded into the script\[cq]s Lua environment.+.PP+See the Lua filters documentation for further details.+.PP+In order of preference, pandoc will look for Lua filters in+.IP "1." 3+a specified full or relative path,+.IP "2." 3+\f[CR]$DATADIR/filters\f[R] where \f[CR]$DATADIR\f[R] is the user data+directory (see \f[CR]--data-dir\f[R], above).+.PP+Filters, Lua filters, and citeproc processing are applied in the order+specified on the command line.+.RE+.TP+\f[CR]-M\f[R] \f[I]KEY\f[R][\f[CR]=\f[R]\f[I]VAL\f[R]], \f[CR]--metadata=\f[R]\f[I]KEY\f[R][\f[CR]:\f[R]\f[I]VAL\f[R]]+Set the metadata field \f[I]KEY\f[R] to the value \f[I]VAL\f[R].+A value specified on the command line overrides a value specified in the+document using YAML metadata blocks.+Values will be parsed as YAML boolean or string values.+If no value is specified, the value will be treated as Boolean true.+Like \f[CR]--variable\f[R], \f[CR]--metadata\f[R] causes template+variables to be set.+But unlike \f[CR]--variable\f[R], \f[CR]--metadata\f[R] affects the+metadata of the underlying document (which is accessible from filters+and may be printed in some output formats) and metadata values will be+escaped when inserted into the template.+.TP+\f[CR]--metadata-file=\f[R]\f[I]FILE\f[R]+Read metadata from the supplied YAML (or JSON) file.+This option can be used with every input format, but string scalars in+the metadata file will always be parsed as Markdown.+(If the input format is Markdown or a Markdown variant, then the same+variant will be used to parse the metadata file; if it is a non-Markdown+format, pandoc\[cq]s default Markdown extensions will be used.)+This option can be used repeatedly to include multiple metadata files;+values in files specified later on the command line will be preferred+over those specified in earlier files.+Metadata values specified inside the document, or by using+\f[CR]-M\f[R], overwrite values specified with this option.+The file will be searched for first in the working directory, and then+in the \f[CR]metadata\f[R] subdirectory of the user data directory (see+\f[CR]--data-dir\f[R]).+.TP+\f[CR]-p\f[R], \f[CR]--preserve-tabs[=true|false]\f[R]+Preserve tabs instead of converting them to spaces.+(By default, pandoc converts tabs to spaces before parsing its input.)+Note that this will only affect tabs in literal code spans and code+blocks.+Tabs in regular text are always treated as spaces.+.TP+\f[CR]--tab-stop=\f[R]\f[I]NUMBER\f[R]+Specify the number of spaces per tab (default is 4).+.TP+\f[CR]--track-changes=accept\f[R]|\f[CR]reject\f[R]|\f[CR]all\f[R]+Specifies what to do with insertions, deletions, and comments produced+by the MS Word \[lq]Track Changes\[rq] feature.+\f[CR]accept\f[R] (the default) processes all the insertions and+deletions.+\f[CR]reject\f[R] ignores them.+Both \f[CR]accept\f[R] and \f[CR]reject\f[R] ignore comments.+\f[CR]all\f[R] includes all insertions, deletions, and comments, wrapped+in spans with \f[CR]insertion\f[R], \f[CR]deletion\f[R],+\f[CR]comment-start\f[R], and \f[CR]comment-end\f[R] classes,+respectively.+The author and time of change is included.+\f[CR]all\f[R] is useful for scripting: only accepting changes from a+certain reviewer, say, or before a certain date.+If a paragraph is inserted or deleted, \f[CR]track-changes=all\f[R]+produces a span with the class+\f[CR]paragraph-insertion\f[R]/\f[CR]paragraph-deletion\f[R] before the+affected paragraph break.+This option only affects the docx reader.+.TP+\f[CR]--extract-media=\f[R]\f[I]DIR\f[R]+Extract images and other media contained in or linked from the source+document to the path \f[I]DIR\f[R], creating it if necessary, and adjust+the images references in the document so they point to the extracted+files.+Media are downloaded, read from the file system, or extracted from a+binary container (e.g.\ docx), as needed.+The original file paths are used if they are relative paths not+containing \f[CR]..\f[R].+Otherwise filenames are constructed from the SHA1 hash of the contents.+.TP+\f[CR]--abbreviations=\f[R]\f[I]FILE\f[R]+Specifies a custom abbreviations file, with abbreviations one to a line.+If this option is not specified, pandoc will read the data file+\f[CR]abbreviations\f[R] from the user data directory or fall back on a+system default.+To see the system default, use+\f[CR]pandoc --print-default-data-file=abbreviations\f[R].+The only use pandoc makes of this list is in the Markdown reader.+Strings found in this list will be followed by a nonbreaking space, and+the period will not produce sentence-ending space in formats like LaTeX.+The strings may not contain spaces.+.TP+\f[CR]--trace[=true|false]\f[R]+Print diagnostic output tracing parser progress to stderr.+This option is intended for use by developers in diagnosing performance+issues.+.SS General writer options+.TP+\f[CR]-s\f[R], \f[CR]--standalone\f[R]+Produce output with an appropriate header and footer (e.g.\ a standalone+HTML, LaTeX, TEI, or RTF file, not a fragment).+This option is set automatically for \f[CR]pdf\f[R], \f[CR]epub\f[R],+\f[CR]epub3\f[R], \f[CR]fb2\f[R], \f[CR]docx\f[R], and \f[CR]odt\f[R]+output.+For \f[CR]native\f[R] output, this option causes metadata to be+included; otherwise, metadata is suppressed.+.TP+\f[CR]--template=\f[R]\f[I]FILE\f[R]|\f[I]URL\f[R]+Use the specified file as a custom template for the generated document.+Implies \f[CR]--standalone\f[R].+See Templates, below, for a description of template syntax.+If no extension is specified, an extension corresponding to the writer+will be added, so that \f[CR]--template=special\f[R] looks for+\f[CR]special.html\f[R] for HTML output.+If the template is not found, pandoc will search for it in the+\f[CR]templates\f[R] subdirectory of the user data directory (see+\f[CR]--data-dir\f[R]).+If this option is not used, a default template appropriate for the+output format will be used (see \f[CR]-D/--print-default-template\f[R]).+.TP+\f[CR]-V\f[R] \f[I]KEY\f[R][\f[CR]=\f[R]\f[I]VAL\f[R]], \f[CR]--variable=\f[R]\f[I]KEY\f[R][\f[CR]:\f[R]\f[I]VAL\f[R]]+Set the template variable \f[I]KEY\f[R] to the value \f[I]VAL\f[R] when+rendering the document in standalone mode.+If no \f[I]VAL\f[R] is specified, the key will be given the value+\f[CR]true\f[R].+.TP+\f[CR]--sandbox[=true|false]\f[R]+Run pandoc in a sandbox, limiting IO operations in readers and writers+to reading the files specified on the command line.+Note that this option does not limit IO operations by filters or in the+production of PDF documents.+But it does offer security against, for example, disclosure of files+through the use of \f[CR]include\f[R] directives.+Anyone using pandoc on untrusted user input should use this option.+.RS+.PP+Note: some readers and writers (e.g., \f[CR]docx\f[R]) need access to+data files.+If these are stored on the file system, then pandoc will not be able to+find them when run in \f[CR]--sandbox\f[R] mode and will raise an error.+For these applications, we recommend using a pandoc binary compiled with+the \f[CR]embed_data_files\f[R] option, which causes the data files to+be baked into the binary instead of being stored on the file system.+.RE+.TP+\f[CR]-D\f[R] \f[I]FORMAT\f[R], \f[CR]--print-default-template=\f[R]\f[I]FORMAT\f[R]+Print the system default template for an output \f[I]FORMAT\f[R].+(See \f[CR]-t\f[R] for a list of possible \f[I]FORMAT\f[R]s.)+Templates in the user data directory are ignored.+This option may be used with \f[CR]-o\f[R]/\f[CR]--output\f[R] to+redirect output to a file, but \f[CR]-o\f[R]/\f[CR]--output\f[R] must+come before \f[CR]--print-default-template\f[R] on the command line.+.RS+.PP+Note that some of the default templates use partials, for example+\f[CR]styles.html\f[R].+To print the partials, use \f[CR]--print-default-data-file\f[R]: for+example, \f[CR]--print-default-data-file=templates/styles.html\f[R].+.RE+.TP+\f[CR]--print-default-data-file=\f[R]\f[I]FILE\f[R]+Print a system default data file.+Files in the user data directory are ignored.+This option may be used with \f[CR]-o\f[R]/\f[CR]--output\f[R] to+redirect output to a file, but \f[CR]-o\f[R]/\f[CR]--output\f[R] must+come before \f[CR]--print-default-data-file\f[R] on the command line.+.TP+\f[CR]--eol=crlf\f[R]|\f[CR]lf\f[R]|\f[CR]native\f[R]+Manually specify line endings: \f[CR]crlf\f[R] (Windows), \f[CR]lf\f[R]+(macOS/Linux/UNIX), or \f[CR]native\f[R] (line endings appropriate to+the OS on which pandoc is being run).+The default is \f[CR]native\f[R].+.TP+\f[CR]--dpi\f[R]=\f[I]NUMBER\f[R]+Specify the default dpi (dots per inch) value for conversion from pixels+to inch/centimeters and vice versa.+(Technically, the correct term would be ppi: pixels per inch.)+The default is 96dpi.+When images contain information about dpi internally, the encoded value+is used instead of the default specified by this option.+.TP+\f[CR]--wrap=auto\f[R]|\f[CR]none\f[R]|\f[CR]preserve\f[R]+Determine how text is wrapped in the output (the source code, not the+rendered version).+With \f[CR]auto\f[R] (the default), pandoc will attempt to wrap lines to+the column width specified by \f[CR]--columns\f[R] (default 72).+With \f[CR]none\f[R], pandoc will not wrap lines at all.+With \f[CR]preserve\f[R], pandoc will attempt to preserve the wrapping+from the source document (that is, where there are nonsemantic newlines+in the source, there will be nonsemantic newlines in the output as+well).+In \f[CR]ipynb\f[R] output, this option affects wrapping of the contents+of markdown cells.+.TP+\f[CR]--columns=\f[R]\f[I]NUMBER\f[R]+Specify length of lines in characters.+This affects text wrapping in the generated source code (see+\f[CR]--wrap\f[R]).+It also affects calculation of column widths for plain text tables (see+Tables below).+.TP+\f[CR]--toc[=true|false]\f[R], \f[CR]--table-of-contents[=true|false]\f[R]+Include an automatically generated table of contents (or, in the case of+\f[CR]latex\f[R], \f[CR]context\f[R], \f[CR]docx\f[R], \f[CR]odt\f[R],+\f[CR]opendocument\f[R], \f[CR]rst\f[R], or \f[CR]ms\f[R], an+instruction to create one) in the output document.+This option has no effect unless \f[CR]-s/--standalone\f[R] is used, and+it has no effect on \f[CR]man\f[R], \f[CR]docbook4\f[R],+\f[CR]docbook5\f[R], or \f[CR]jats\f[R] output.+.RS+.PP+Note that if you are producing a PDF via \f[CR]ms\f[R], the table of+contents will appear at the beginning of the document, before the title.+If you would prefer it to be at the end of the document, use the option+\f[CR]--pdf-engine-opt=--no-toc-relocation\f[R].+.RE+.TP+\f[CR]--toc-depth=\f[R]\f[I]NUMBER\f[R]+Specify the number of section levels to include in the table of+contents.+The default is 3 (which means that level-1, 2, and 3 headings will be+listed in the contents).+.TP+\f[CR]--strip-comments[=true|false]\f[R]+Strip out HTML comments in the Markdown or Textile source, rather than+passing them on to Markdown, Textile or HTML output as raw HTML.+This does not apply to HTML comments inside raw HTML blocks when the+\f[CR]markdown_in_html_blocks\f[R] extension is not set.+.TP+\f[CR]--no-highlight\f[R]+Disables syntax highlighting for code blocks and inlines, even when a+language attribute is given.+.TP+\f[CR]--highlight-style=\f[R]\f[I]STYLE\f[R]|\f[I]FILE\f[R]+Specifies the coloring style to be used in highlighted source code.+Options are \f[CR]pygments\f[R] (the default), \f[CR]kate\f[R],+\f[CR]monochrome\f[R], \f[CR]breezeDark\f[R], \f[CR]espresso\f[R],+\f[CR]zenburn\f[R], \f[CR]haddock\f[R], and \f[CR]tango\f[R].+For more information on syntax highlighting in pandoc, see Syntax+highlighting, below.+See also \f[CR]--list-highlight-styles\f[R].+.RS+.PP+Instead of a \f[I]STYLE\f[R] name, a JSON file with extension+\f[CR].theme\f[R] may be supplied.+This will be parsed as a KDE syntax highlighting theme and (if valid)+used as the highlighting style.+.PP+To generate the JSON version of an existing style, use+\f[CR]--print-highlight-style\f[R].+.RE+.TP+\f[CR]--print-highlight-style=\f[R]\f[I]STYLE\f[R]|\f[I]FILE\f[R]+Prints a JSON version of a highlighting style, which can be modified,+saved with a \f[CR].theme\f[R] extension, and used with+\f[CR]--highlight-style\f[R].+This option may be used with \f[CR]-o\f[R]/\f[CR]--output\f[R] to+redirect output to a file, but \f[CR]-o\f[R]/\f[CR]--output\f[R] must+come before \f[CR]--print-highlight-style\f[R] on the command line.+.TP+\f[CR]--syntax-definition=\f[R]\f[I]FILE\f[R]+Instructs pandoc to load a KDE XML syntax definition file, which will be+used for syntax highlighting of appropriately marked code blocks.+This can be used to add support for new languages or to use altered+syntax definitions for existing languages.+This option may be repeated to add multiple syntax definitions.+.TP+\f[CR]-H\f[R] \f[I]FILE\f[R], \f[CR]--include-in-header=\f[R]\f[I]FILE\f[R]|\f[I]URL\f[R]+Include contents of \f[I]FILE\f[R], verbatim, at the end of the header.+This can be used, for example, to include special CSS or JavaScript in+HTML documents.+This option can be used repeatedly to include multiple files in the+header.+They will be included in the order specified.+Implies \f[CR]--standalone\f[R].+.TP+\f[CR]-B\f[R] \f[I]FILE\f[R], \f[CR]--include-before-body=\f[R]\f[I]FILE\f[R]|\f[I]URL\f[R]+Include contents of \f[I]FILE\f[R], verbatim, at the beginning of the+document body (e.g.\ after the \f[CR]<body>\f[R] tag in HTML, or the+\f[CR]\[rs]begin{document}\f[R] command in LaTeX).+This can be used to include navigation bars or banners in HTML+documents.+This option can be used repeatedly to include multiple files.+They will be included in the order specified.+Implies \f[CR]--standalone\f[R].+.TP+\f[CR]-A\f[R] \f[I]FILE\f[R], \f[CR]--include-after-body=\f[R]\f[I]FILE\f[R]|\f[I]URL\f[R]+Include contents of \f[I]FILE\f[R], verbatim, at the end of the document+body (before the \f[CR]</body>\f[R] tag in HTML, or the+\f[CR]\[rs]end{document}\f[R] command in LaTeX).+This option can be used repeatedly to include multiple files.+They will be included in the order specified.+Implies \f[CR]--standalone\f[R].+.TP+\f[CR]--resource-path=\f[R]\f[I]SEARCHPATH\f[R]+List of paths to search for images and other resources.+The paths should be separated by \f[CR]:\f[R] on Linux, UNIX, and macOS+systems, and by \f[CR];\f[R] on Windows.+If \f[CR]--resource-path\f[R] is not specified, the default resource+path is the working directory.+Note that, if \f[CR]--resource-path\f[R] is specified, the working+directory must be explicitly listed or it will not be searched.+For example: \f[CR]--resource-path=.:test\f[R] will search the working+directory and the \f[CR]test\f[R] subdirectory, in that order.+This option can be used repeatedly.+Search path components that come later on the command line will be+searched before those that come earlier, so+\f[CR]--resource-path foo:bar --resource-path baz:bim\f[R] is equivalent+to \f[CR]--resource-path baz:bim:foo:bar\f[R].+.TP+\f[CR]--request-header=\f[R]\f[I]NAME\f[R]\f[CR]:\f[R]\f[I]VAL\f[R]+Set the request header \f[I]NAME\f[R] to the value \f[I]VAL\f[R] when+making HTTP requests (for example, when a URL is given on the command+line, or when resources used in a document must be downloaded).+If you\[cq]re behind a proxy, you also need to set the environment+variable \f[CR]http_proxy\f[R] to \f[CR]http://...\f[R].+.TP+\f[CR]--no-check-certificate[=true|false]\f[R]+Disable the certificate verification to allow access to unsecure HTTP+resources (for example when the certificate is no longer valid or self+signed).+.SS Options affecting specific writers+.TP+\f[CR]--self-contained[=true|false]\f[R]+\f[I]Deprecated synonym for+\f[CI]--embed-resources --standalone\f[I].\f[R]+.TP+\f[CR]--embed-resources[=true|false]\f[R]+Produce a standalone HTML file with no external dependencies, using+\f[CR]data:\f[R] URIs to incorporate the contents of linked scripts,+stylesheets, images, and videos.+The resulting file should be \[lq]self-contained,\[rq] in the sense that+it needs no external files and no net access to be displayed properly by+a browser.+This option works only with HTML output formats, including+\f[CR]html4\f[R], \f[CR]html5\f[R], \f[CR]html+lhs\f[R],+\f[CR]html5+lhs\f[R], \f[CR]s5\f[R], \f[CR]slidy\f[R],+\f[CR]slideous\f[R], \f[CR]dzslides\f[R], and \f[CR]revealjs\f[R].+Scripts, images, and stylesheets at absolute URLs will be downloaded;+those at relative URLs will be sought relative to the working directory+(if the first source file is local) or relative to the base URL (if the+first source file is remote).+Elements with the attribute \f[CR]data-external=\[dq]1\[dq]\f[R] will be+left alone; the documents they link to will not be incorporated in the+document.+Limitation: resources that are loaded dynamically through JavaScript+cannot be incorporated; as a result, fonts may be missing when+\f[CR]--mathjax\f[R] is used, and some advanced features (e.g.\ zoom or+speaker notes) may not work in an offline \[lq]self-contained\[rq]+\f[CR]reveal.js\f[R] slide show.+.TP+\f[CR]--html-q-tags[=true|false]\f[R]+Use \f[CR]<q>\f[R] tags for quotes in HTML.+(This option only has an effect if the \f[CR]smart\f[R] extension is+enabled for the input format used.)+.TP+\f[CR]--ascii[=true|false]\f[R]+Use only ASCII characters in output.+Currently supported for XML and HTML formats (which use entities instead+of UTF-8 when this option is selected), CommonMark, gfm, and Markdown+(which use entities), roff man and ms (which use hexadecimal escapes),+and to a limited degree LaTeX (which uses standard commands for accented+characters when possible).+.TP+\f[CR]--reference-links[=true|false]\f[R]+Use reference-style links, rather than inline links, in writing Markdown+or reStructuredText.+By default inline links are used.+The placement of link references is affected by the+\f[CR]--reference-location\f[R] option.+.TP+\f[CR]--reference-location=block\f[R]|\f[CR]section\f[R]|\f[CR]document\f[R]+Specify whether footnotes (and references, if \f[CR]reference-links\f[R]+is set) are placed at the end of the current (top-level) block, the+current section, or the document.+The default is \f[CR]document\f[R].+Currently this option only affects the \f[CR]markdown\f[R],+\f[CR]muse\f[R], \f[CR]html\f[R], \f[CR]epub\f[R], \f[CR]slidy\f[R],+\f[CR]s5\f[R], \f[CR]slideous\f[R], \f[CR]dzslides\f[R], and+\f[CR]revealjs\f[R] writers.+In slide formats, specifying \f[CR]--reference-location=section\f[R]+will cause notes to be rendered at the bottom of a slide.+.TP+\f[CR]--markdown-headings=setext\f[R]|\f[CR]atx\f[R]+Specify whether to use ATX-style (\f[CR]#\f[R]-prefixed) or Setext-style+(underlined) headings for level 1 and 2 headings in Markdown output.+(The default is \f[CR]atx\f[R].)+ATX-style headings are always used for levels 3+.+This option also affects Markdown cells in \f[CR]ipynb\f[R] output.+.TP+\f[CR]--list-tables[=true|false]\f[R]+Render tables as list tables in RST output.+.TP+\f[CR]--top-level-division=default\f[R]|\f[CR]section\f[R]|\f[CR]chapter\f[R]|\f[CR]part\f[R]+Treat top-level headings as the given division type in LaTeX, ConTeXt,+DocBook, and TEI output.+The hierarchy order is part, chapter, then section; all headings are+shifted such that the top-level heading becomes the specified type.+The default behavior is to determine the best division type via+heuristics: unless other conditions apply, \f[CR]section\f[R] is chosen.+When the \f[CR]documentclass\f[R] variable is set to \f[CR]report\f[R],+\f[CR]book\f[R], or \f[CR]memoir\f[R] (unless the \f[CR]article\f[R]+option is specified), \f[CR]chapter\f[R] is implied as the setting for+this option.+If \f[CR]beamer\f[R] is the output format, specifying either+\f[CR]chapter\f[R] or \f[CR]part\f[R] will cause top-level headings to+become \f[CR]\[rs]part{..}\f[R], while second-level headings remain as+their default type.+.TP+\f[CR]-N\f[R], \f[CR]--number-sections\f[R]+Number section headings in LaTeX, ConTeXt, HTML, Docx, ms, or EPUB+output.+By default, sections are not numbered.+Sections with class \f[CR]unnumbered\f[R] will never be numbered, even+if \f[CR]--number-sections\f[R] is specified.+.TP+\f[CR]--number-offset=\f[R]\f[I]NUMBER\f[R][\f[CR],\f[R]\f[I]NUMBER\f[R]\f[CR],\f[R]\f[I]\&...\f[R]]+Offset for section headings in HTML output (ignored in other output+formats).+The first number is added to the section number for top-level headings,+the second for second-level headings, and so on.+So, for example, if you want the first top-level heading in your+document to be numbered \[lq]6\[rq], specify+\f[CR]--number-offset=5\f[R].+If your document starts with a level-2 heading which you want to be+numbered \[lq]1.5\[rq], specify \f[CR]--number-offset=1,4\f[R].+Offsets are 0 by default.+Implies \f[CR]--number-sections\f[R].+.TP+\f[CR]--listings[=true|false]\f[R]+Use the \f[CR]listings\f[R] package for LaTeX code blocks.+The package does not support multi-byte encoding for source code.+To handle UTF-8 you would need to use a custom template.+This issue is fully documented here: Encoding issue with the listings+package.+.TP+\f[CR]-i\f[R], \f[CR]--incremental[=true|false]\f[R]+Make list items in slide shows display incrementally (one by one).+The default is for lists to be displayed all at once.+.TP+\f[CR]--slide-level=\f[R]\f[I]NUMBER\f[R]+Specifies that headings with the specified level create slides (for+\f[CR]beamer\f[R], \f[CR]s5\f[R], \f[CR]slidy\f[R], \f[CR]slideous\f[R],+\f[CR]dzslides\f[R]).+Headings above this level in the hierarchy are used to divide the slide+show into sections; headings below this level create subheads within a+slide.+Valid values are 0-6.+If a slide level of 0 is specified, slides will not be split+automatically on headings, and horizontal rules must be used to indicate+slide boundaries.+If a slide level is not specified explicitly, the slide level will be+set automatically based on the contents of the document; see Structuring+the slide show.+.TP+\f[CR]--section-divs[=true|false]\f[R]+Wrap sections in \f[CR]<section>\f[R] tags (or \f[CR]<div>\f[R] tags for+\f[CR]html4\f[R]), and attach identifiers to the enclosing+\f[CR]<section>\f[R] (or \f[CR]<div>\f[R]) rather than the heading+itself (see Heading identifiers, below).+This option only affects HTML output (and does not affect HTML slide+formats).+.TP+\f[CR]--email-obfuscation=none\f[R]|\f[CR]javascript\f[R]|\f[CR]references\f[R]+Specify a method for obfuscating \f[CR]mailto:\f[R] links in HTML+documents.+\f[CR]none\f[R] leaves \f[CR]mailto:\f[R] links as they are.+\f[CR]javascript\f[R] obfuscates them using JavaScript.+\f[CR]references\f[R] obfuscates them by printing their letters as+decimal or hexadecimal character references.+The default is \f[CR]none\f[R].+.TP+\f[CR]--id-prefix=\f[R]\f[I]STRING\f[R]+Specify a prefix to be added to all identifiers and internal links in+HTML and DocBook output, and to footnote numbers in Markdown and Haddock+output.+This is useful for preventing duplicate identifiers when generating+fragments to be included in other pages.+.TP+\f[CR]-T\f[R] \f[I]STRING\f[R], \f[CR]--title-prefix=\f[R]\f[I]STRING\f[R]+Specify \f[I]STRING\f[R] as a prefix at the beginning of the title that+appears in the HTML header (but not in the title as it appears at the+beginning of the HTML body).+Implies \f[CR]--standalone\f[R].+.TP+\f[CR]-c\f[R] \f[I]URL\f[R], \f[CR]--css=\f[R]\f[I]URL\f[R]+Link to a CSS style sheet.+This option can be used repeatedly to include multiple files.+They will be included in the order specified.+This option only affects HTML (including HTML slide shows) and EPUB+output.+It should be used together with \f[CR]-s/--standalone\f[R], because the+link to the stylesheet goes in the document header.+.RS+.PP+A stylesheet is required for generating EPUB.+If none is provided using this option (or the \f[CR]css\f[R] or+\f[CR]stylesheet\f[R] metadata fields), pandoc will look for a file+\f[CR]epub.css\f[R] in the user data directory (see+\f[CR]--data-dir\f[R]).+If it is not found there, sensible defaults will be used.+.RE+.TP+\f[CR]--reference-doc=\f[R]\f[I]FILE\f[R]|\f[I]URL\f[R]+Use the specified file as a style reference in producing a docx or ODT+file.+.RS+.TP+Docx+For best results, the reference docx should be a modified version of a+docx file produced using pandoc.+The contents of the reference docx are ignored, but its stylesheets and+document properties (including margins, page size, header, and footer)+are used in the new docx.+If no reference docx is specified on the command line, pandoc will look+for a file \f[CR]reference.docx\f[R] in the user data directory (see+\f[CR]--data-dir\f[R]).+If this is not found either, sensible defaults will be used.+.RS+.PP+To produce a custom \f[CR]reference.docx\f[R], first get a copy of the+default \f[CR]reference.docx\f[R]:+\f[CR]pandoc -o custom-reference.docx --print-default-data-file reference.docx\f[R].+Then open \f[CR]custom-reference.docx\f[R] in Word, modify the styles as+you wish, and save the file.+For best results, do not make changes to this file other than modifying+the styles used by pandoc:+.PP+Paragraph styles:+.IP \[bu] 2+Normal+.IP \[bu] 2+Body Text+.IP \[bu] 2+First Paragraph+.IP \[bu] 2+Compact+.IP \[bu] 2+Title+.IP \[bu] 2+Subtitle+.IP \[bu] 2+Author+.IP \[bu] 2+Date+.IP \[bu] 2+Abstract+.IP \[bu] 2+AbstractTitle+.IP \[bu] 2+Bibliography+.IP \[bu] 2+Heading 1+.IP \[bu] 2+Heading 2+.IP \[bu] 2+Heading 3+.IP \[bu] 2+Heading 4+.IP \[bu] 2+Heading 5+.IP \[bu] 2+Heading 6+.IP \[bu] 2+Heading 7+.IP \[bu] 2+Heading 8+.IP \[bu] 2+Heading 9+.IP \[bu] 2+Block Text+.IP \[bu] 2+Source Code+.IP \[bu] 2+Footnote Text+.IP \[bu] 2+Definition Term+.IP \[bu] 2+Definition+.IP \[bu] 2+Caption+.IP \[bu] 2+Table Caption+.IP \[bu] 2+Image Caption+.IP \[bu] 2+Figure+.IP \[bu] 2+Captioned Figure+.IP \[bu] 2+TOC Heading+.PP+Character styles:+.IP \[bu] 2+Default Paragraph Font+.IP \[bu] 2+Body Text Char+.IP \[bu] 2+Verbatim Char+.IP \[bu] 2+Footnote Reference+.IP \[bu] 2+Hyperlink+.IP \[bu] 2+Section Number+.PP+Table style:+.IP \[bu] 2+Table+.RE+.TP+ODT+For best results, the reference ODT should be a modified version of an+ODT produced using pandoc.+The contents of the reference ODT are ignored, but its stylesheets are+used in the new ODT.+If no reference ODT is specified on the command line, pandoc will look+for a file \f[CR]reference.odt\f[R] in the user data directory (see+\f[CR]--data-dir\f[R]).+If this is not found either, sensible defaults will be used.+.RS+.PP+To produce a custom \f[CR]reference.odt\f[R], first get a copy of the+default \f[CR]reference.odt\f[R]:+\f[CR]pandoc -o custom-reference.odt --print-default-data-file reference.odt\f[R].+Then open \f[CR]custom-reference.odt\f[R] in LibreOffice, modify the+styles as you wish, and save the file.+.RE+.TP+PowerPoint+Templates included with Microsoft PowerPoint 2013 (either with+\f[CR].pptx\f[R] or \f[CR].potx\f[R] extension) are known to work, as+are most templates derived from these.+.RS+.PP+The specific requirement is that the template should contain layouts+with the following names (as seen within PowerPoint):+.IP \[bu] 2+Title Slide+.IP \[bu] 2+Title and Content+.IP \[bu] 2+Section Header+.IP \[bu] 2+Two Content+.IP \[bu] 2+Comparison+.IP \[bu] 2+Content with Caption+.IP \[bu] 2+Blank+.PP+For each name, the first layout found with that name will be used.+If no layout is found with one of the names, pandoc will output a+warning and use the layout with that name from the default reference doc+instead.+(How these layouts are used is described in PowerPoint layout choice.)+.PP+All templates included with a recent version of MS PowerPoint will fit+these criteria.+(You can click on \f[CR]Layout\f[R] under the \f[CR]Home\f[R] menu to+check.)+.PP+You can also modify the default \f[CR]reference.pptx\f[R]: first run+\f[CR]pandoc -o custom-reference.pptx --print-default-data-file reference.pptx\f[R],+and then modify \f[CR]custom-reference.pptx\f[R] in MS PowerPoint+(pandoc will use the layouts with the names listed above).+.RE+.RE+.TP+\f[CR]--split-level=\f[R]\f[I]NUMBER\f[R]+Specify the heading level at which to split an EPUB or chunked HTML+document into separate files.+The default is to split into chapters at level-1 headings.+In the case of EPUB, this option only affects the internal composition+of the EPUB, not the way chapters and sections are displayed to users.+Some readers may be slow if the chapter files are too large, so for+large documents with few level-1 headings, one might want to use a+chapter level of 2 or 3.+For chunked HTML, this option determines how much content goes in each+\[lq]chunk.\[rq]+.TP+\f[CR]--chunk-template=\f[R]\f[I]PATHTEMPLATE\f[R]+Specify a template for the filenames in a \f[CR]chunkedhtml\f[R]+document.+In the template, \f[CR]%n\f[R] will be replaced by the chunk number+(padded with leading 0s to 3 digits), \f[CR]%s\f[R] with the section+number of the chunk, \f[CR]%h\f[R] with the heading text (with+formatting removed), \f[CR]%i\f[R] with the section identifier.+For example, \f[CR]%section-%s-%i.html\f[R] might be resolved to+\f[CR]section-1.1-introduction.html\f[R].+The characters \f[CR]/\f[R] and \f[CR]\[rs]\f[R] are not allowed in+chunk templates and will be ignored.+The default is \f[CR]%s-%i.html\f[R].+.TP+\f[CR]--epub-chapter-level=\f[R]\f[I]NUMBER\f[R]+\f[I]Deprecated synonym for \f[CI]--split-level\f[I].\f[R]+.TP+\f[CR]--epub-cover-image=\f[R]\f[I]FILE\f[R]+Use the specified image as the EPUB cover.+It is recommended that the image be less than 1000px in width and+height.+Note that in a Markdown source document you can also specify+\f[CR]cover-image\f[R] in a YAML metadata block (see EPUB Metadata,+below).+.TP+\f[CR]--epub-title-page=true\f[R]|\f[CR]false\f[R]+Determines whether a the title page is included in the EPUB (default is+\f[CR]true\f[R]).+.TP+\f[CR]--epub-metadata=\f[R]\f[I]FILE\f[R]+Look in the specified XML file for metadata for the EPUB.+The file should contain a series of Dublin Core elements.+For example:+.RS+.IP+.EX+ <dc:rights>Creative Commons</dc:rights>+ <dc:language>es-AR</dc:language>+.EE+.PP+By default, pandoc will include the following metadata elements:+\f[CR]<dc:title>\f[R] (from the document title), \f[CR]<dc:creator>\f[R]+(from the document authors), \f[CR]<dc:date>\f[R] (from the document+date, which should be in ISO 8601 format), \f[CR]<dc:language>\f[R]+(from the \f[CR]lang\f[R] variable, or, if is not set, the locale), and+\f[CR]<dc:identifier id=\[dq]BookId\[dq]>\f[R] (a randomly generated+UUID).+Any of these may be overridden by elements in the metadata file.+.PP+Note: if the source document is Markdown, a YAML metadata block in the+document can be used instead.+See below under EPUB Metadata.+.RE+.TP+\f[CR]--epub-embed-font=\f[R]\f[I]FILE\f[R]+Embed the specified font in the EPUB.+This option can be repeated to embed multiple fonts.+Wildcards can also be used: for example, \f[CR]DejaVuSans-*.ttf\f[R].+However, if you use wildcards on the command line, be sure to escape+them or put the whole filename in single quotes, to prevent them from+being interpreted by the shell.+To use the embedded fonts, you will need to add declarations like the+following to your CSS (see \f[CR]--css\f[R]):+.RS+.IP+.EX+\[at]font-face {+   font-family: DejaVuSans;+   font-style: normal;+   font-weight: normal;+   src:url(\[dq]../fonts/DejaVuSans-Regular.ttf\[dq]);+}+\[at]font-face {+   font-family: DejaVuSans;+   font-style: normal;+   font-weight: bold;+   src:url(\[dq]../fonts/DejaVuSans-Bold.ttf\[dq]);+}+\[at]font-face {+   font-family: DejaVuSans;+   font-style: italic;+   font-weight: normal;+   src:url(\[dq]../fonts/DejaVuSans-Oblique.ttf\[dq]);+}+\[at]font-face {+   font-family: DejaVuSans;+   font-style: italic;+   font-weight: bold;+   src:url(\[dq]../fonts/DejaVuSans-BoldOblique.ttf\[dq]);+}+body { font-family: \[dq]DejaVuSans\[dq]; }+.EE+.RE+.TP+\f[CR]--epub-subdirectory=\f[R]\f[I]DIRNAME\f[R]+Specify the subdirectory in the OCF container that is to hold the+EPUB-specific contents.+The default is \f[CR]EPUB\f[R].+To put the EPUB contents in the top level, use an empty string.+.TP+\f[CR]--ipynb-output=all|none|best\f[R]+Determines how ipynb output cells are treated.+\f[CR]all\f[R] means that all of the data formats included in the+original are preserved.+\f[CR]none\f[R] means that the contents of data cells are omitted.+\f[CR]best\f[R] causes pandoc to try to pick the richest data block in+each output cell that is compatible with the output format.+The default is \f[CR]best\f[R].+.TP+\f[CR]--pdf-engine=\f[R]\f[I]PROGRAM\f[R]+Use the specified engine when producing PDF output.+Valid values are \f[CR]pdflatex\f[R], \f[CR]lualatex\f[R],+\f[CR]xelatex\f[R], \f[CR]latexmk\f[R], \f[CR]tectonic\f[R],+\f[CR]wkhtmltopdf\f[R], \f[CR]weasyprint\f[R], \f[CR]pagedjs-cli\f[R],+\f[CR]prince\f[R], \f[CR]context\f[R], \f[CR]pdfroff\f[R], and+\f[CR]typst\f[R].+If the engine is not in your PATH, the full path of the engine may be+specified here.+If this option is not specified, pandoc uses the following defaults+depending on the output format specified using \f[CR]-t/--to\f[R]:+.RS+.IP \[bu] 2+\f[CR]-t latex\f[R] or none: \f[CR]pdflatex\f[R] (other options:+\f[CR]xelatex\f[R], \f[CR]lualatex\f[R], \f[CR]tectonic\f[R],+\f[CR]latexmk\f[R])+.IP \[bu] 2+\f[CR]-t context\f[R]: \f[CR]context\f[R]+.IP \[bu] 2+\f[CR]-t html\f[R]: \f[CR]wkhtmltopdf\f[R] (other options:+\f[CR]prince\f[R], \f[CR]weasyprint\f[R], \f[CR]pagedjs-cli\f[R]; see+print-css.rocks for a good introduction to PDF generation from HTML/CSS)+.IP \[bu] 2+\f[CR]-t ms\f[R]: \f[CR]pdfroff\f[R]+.IP \[bu] 2+\f[CR]-t typst\f[R]: \f[CR]typst\f[R]+.RE+.TP+\f[CR]--pdf-engine-opt=\f[R]\f[I]STRING\f[R]+Use the given string as a command-line argument to the+\f[CR]pdf-engine\f[R].+For example, to use a persistent directory \f[CR]foo\f[R] for+\f[CR]latexmk\f[R]\[cq]s auxiliary files, use+\f[CR]--pdf-engine-opt=-outdir=foo\f[R].+Note that no check for duplicate options is done.+.SS Citation rendering+.TP+\f[CR]-C\f[R], \f[CR]--citeproc\f[R]+Process the citations in the file, replacing them with rendered+citations and adding a bibliography.+Citation processing will not take place unless bibliographic data is+supplied, either through an external file specified using the+\f[CR]--bibliography\f[R] option or the \f[CR]bibliography\f[R] field in+metadata, or via a \f[CR]references\f[R] section in metadata containing+a list of citations in CSL YAML format with Markdown formatting.+The style is controlled by a CSL stylesheet specified using the+\f[CR]--csl\f[R] option or the \f[CR]csl\f[R] field in metadata.+(If no stylesheet is specified, the \f[CR]chicago-author-date\f[R] style+will be used by default.)+The citation processing transformation may be applied before or after+filters or Lua filters (see \f[CR]--filter\f[R],+\f[CR]--lua-filter\f[R]): these transformations are applied in the order+they appear on the command line.+For more information, see the section on Citations.+.TP+\f[CR]--bibliography=\f[R]\f[I]FILE\f[R]+Set the \f[CR]bibliography\f[R] field in the document\[cq]s metadata to+\f[I]FILE\f[R], overriding any value set in the metadata.+If you supply this argument multiple times, each \f[I]FILE\f[R] will be+added to bibliography.+If \f[I]FILE\f[R] is a URL, it will be fetched via HTTP.+If \f[I]FILE\f[R] is not found relative to the working directory, it+will be sought in the resource path (see \f[CR]--resource-path\f[R]).+.TP+\f[CR]--csl=\f[R]\f[I]FILE\f[R]+Set the \f[CR]csl\f[R] field in the document\[cq]s metadata to+\f[I]FILE\f[R], overriding any value set in the metadata.+(This is equivalent to \f[CR]--metadata csl=FILE\f[R].)+If \f[I]FILE\f[R] is a URL, it will be fetched via HTTP.+If \f[I]FILE\f[R] is not found relative to the working directory, it+will be sought in the resource path (see \f[CR]--resource-path\f[R]) and+finally in the \f[CR]csl\f[R] subdirectory of the pandoc user data+directory.+.TP+\f[CR]--citation-abbreviations=\f[R]\f[I]FILE\f[R]+Set the \f[CR]citation-abbreviations\f[R] field in the document\[cq]s+metadata to \f[I]FILE\f[R], overriding any value set in the metadata.+(This is equivalent to+\f[CR]--metadata citation-abbreviations=FILE\f[R].)+If \f[I]FILE\f[R] is a URL, it will be fetched via HTTP.+If \f[I]FILE\f[R] is not found relative to the working directory, it+will be sought in the resource path (see \f[CR]--resource-path\f[R]) and+finally in the \f[CR]csl\f[R] subdirectory of the pandoc user data+directory.+.TP+\f[CR]--natbib\f[R]+Use \f[CR]natbib\f[R] for citations in LaTeX output.+This option is not for use with the \f[CR]--citeproc\f[R] option or with+PDF output.+It is intended for use in producing a LaTeX file that can be processed+with \f[CR]bibtex\f[R].+.TP+\f[CR]--biblatex\f[R]+Use \f[CR]biblatex\f[R] for citations in LaTeX output.+This option is not for use with the \f[CR]--citeproc\f[R] option or with+PDF output.+It is intended for use in producing a LaTeX file that can be processed+with \f[CR]bibtex\f[R] or \f[CR]biber\f[R].+.SS Math rendering in HTML+The default is to render TeX math as far as possible using Unicode+characters.+Formulas are put inside a \f[CR]span\f[R] with+\f[CR]class=\[dq]math\[dq]\f[R], so that they may be styled differently+from the surrounding text if needed.+However, this gives acceptable results only for basic math, usually you+will want to use \f[CR]--mathjax\f[R] or another of the following+options.+.TP+\f[CR]--mathjax\f[R][\f[CR]=\f[R]\f[I]URL\f[R]]+Use MathJax to display embedded TeX math in HTML output.+TeX math will be put between \f[CR]\[rs](...\[rs])\f[R] (for inline+math) or \f[CR]\[rs][...\[rs]]\f[R] (for display math) and wrapped in+\f[CR]<span>\f[R] tags with class \f[CR]math\f[R].+Then the MathJax JavaScript will render it.+The \f[I]URL\f[R] should point to the \f[CR]MathJax.js\f[R] load script.+If a \f[I]URL\f[R] is not provided, a link to the Cloudflare CDN will be+inserted.+.TP+\f[CR]--mathml\f[R]+Convert TeX math to MathML (in \f[CR]epub3\f[R], \f[CR]docbook4\f[R],+\f[CR]docbook5\f[R], \f[CR]jats\f[R], \f[CR]html4\f[R] and+\f[CR]html5\f[R]).+This is the default in \f[CR]odt\f[R] output.+MathML is supported natively by the main web browsers and select e-book+readers.+.TP+\f[CR]--webtex\f[R][\f[CR]=\f[R]\f[I]URL\f[R]]+Convert TeX formulas to \f[CR]<img>\f[R] tags that link to an external+script that converts formulas to images.+The formula will be URL-encoded and concatenated with the URL provided.+For SVG images you can for example use+\f[CR]--webtex https://latex.codecogs.com/svg.latex?\f[R].+If no URL is specified, the CodeCogs URL generating PNGs will be used+(\f[CR]https://latex.codecogs.com/png.latex?\f[R]).+Note: the \f[CR]--webtex\f[R] option will affect Markdown output as well+as HTML, which is useful if you\[cq]re targeting a version of Markdown+without native math support.+.TP+\f[CR]--katex\f[R][\f[CR]=\f[R]\f[I]URL\f[R]]+Use KaTeX to display embedded TeX math in HTML output.+The \f[I]URL\f[R] is the base URL for the KaTeX library.+That directory should contain a \f[CR]katex.min.js\f[R] and a+\f[CR]katex.min.css\f[R] file.+If a \f[I]URL\f[R] is not provided, a link to the KaTeX CDN will be+inserted.+.TP+\f[CR]--gladtex\f[R]+Enclose TeX math in \f[CR]<eq>\f[R] tags in HTML output.+The resulting HTML can then be processed by GladTeX to produce SVG+images of the typeset formulas and an HTML file with these images+embedded.+.RS+.IP+.EX+pandoc -s --gladtex input.md -o myfile.htex+gladtex -d image_dir myfile.htex+# produces myfile.html and images in image_dir+.EE+.RE+.SS Options for wrapper scripts+.TP+\f[CR]--dump-args[=true|false]\f[R]+Print information about command-line arguments to \f[I]stdout\f[R], then+exit.+This option is intended primarily for use in wrapper scripts.+The first line of output contains the name of the output file specified+with the \f[CR]-o\f[R] option, or \f[CR]-\f[R] (for \f[I]stdout\f[R]) if+no output file was specified.+The remaining lines contain the command-line arguments, one per line, in+the order they appear.+These do not include regular pandoc options and their arguments, but do+include any options appearing after a \f[CR]--\f[R] separator at the end+of the line.+.TP+\f[CR]--ignore-args[=true|false]\f[R]+Ignore command-line arguments (for use in wrapper scripts).+Regular pandoc options are not ignored.+Thus, for example,+.RS+.IP+.EX+pandoc --ignore-args -o foo.html -s foo.txt -- -e latin1+.EE+.PP+is equivalent to+.IP+.EX+pandoc -o foo.html -s+.EE+.RE+.SH EXIT CODES+If pandoc completes successfully, it will return exit code 0.+Nonzero exit codes have the following meanings:+.RS -14n+.IP+.EX+    Code Error+  ------ -------------------------------------+       1 PandocIOError+       3 PandocFailOnWarningError+       4 PandocAppError+       5 PandocTemplateError+       6 PandocOptionError+      21 PandocUnknownReaderError+      22 PandocUnknownWriterError+      23 PandocUnsupportedExtensionError+      24 PandocCiteprocError+      25 PandocBibliographyError+      31 PandocEpubSubdirectoryError+      43 PandocPDFError+      44 PandocXMLError+      47 PandocPDFProgramNotFoundError+      61 PandocHttpError+      62 PandocShouldNeverHappenError+      63 PandocSomeError+      64 PandocParseError+      66 PandocMakePDFError+      67 PandocSyntaxMapError+      83 PandocFilterError+      84 PandocLuaError+      89 PandocNoScriptingEngine+      91 PandocMacroLoop+      92 PandocUTF8DecodingError+      93 PandocIpynbDecodingError+      94 PandocUnsupportedCharsetError+      97 PandocCouldNotFindDataFileError+      98 PandocCouldNotFindMetadataFileError+      99 PandocResourceNotFound+.EE+.RE+.SH DEFAULTS FILES+The \f[CR]--defaults\f[R] option may be used to specify a package of+options, in the form of a YAML file.+.PP+Fields that are omitted will just have their regular default values.+So a defaults file can be as simple as one line:+.IP+.EX+verbosity: INFO+.EE+.PP+In fields that expect a file path (or list of file paths), the following+syntax may be used to interpolate environment variables:+.IP+.EX+csl:  ${HOME}/mycsldir/special.csl+.EE+.PP+\f[CR]${USERDATA}\f[R] may also be used; this will always resolve to the+user data directory that is current when the defaults file is parsed,+regardless of the setting of the environment variable+\f[CR]USERDATA\f[R].+.PP+\f[CR]${.}\f[R] will resolve to the directory containing the defaults+file itself.+This allows you to refer to resources contained in that directory:+.IP+.EX+epub-cover-image: ${.}/cover.jpg+epub-metadata: ${.}/meta.xml+resource-path:+- .             # the working directory from which pandoc is run+- ${.}/images   # the images subdirectory of the directory+                # containing this defaults file+.EE+.PP+This environment variable interpolation syntax \f[I]only\f[R] works in+fields that expect file paths.+.PP+Defaults files can be placed in the \f[CR]defaults\f[R] subdirectory of+the user data directory and used from any directory.+For example, one could create a file specifying defaults for writing+letters, save it as \f[CR]letter.yaml\f[R] in the \f[CR]defaults\f[R]+subdirectory of the user data directory, and then invoke these defaults+from any directory using \f[CR]pandoc --defaults letter\f[R] or+\f[CR]pandoc -dletter\f[R].+.PP+When multiple defaults are used, their contents will be combined.+.PP+Note that, where command-line arguments may be repeated+(\f[CR]--metadata-file\f[R], \f[CR]--css\f[R],+\f[CR]--include-in-header\f[R], \f[CR]--include-before-body\f[R],+\f[CR]--include-after-body\f[R], \f[CR]--variable\f[R],+\f[CR]--metadata\f[R], \f[CR]--syntax-definition\f[R]), the values+specified on the command line will combine with values specified in the+defaults file, rather than replacing them.+.PP+The following tables show the mapping between the command line and+defaults file entries.+.RS -14n+.IP+.EX++ command line                      defaults file                     + --------------------------------- ----------------------------------+ foo.md                            input-file: foo.md            ++ foo.md bar.md                     input-files:                  +                                     - foo.md                    +                                     - bar.md                    ++.EE+.RE+.PP+The value of \f[CR]input-files\f[R] may be left empty to indicate input+from stdin, and it can be an empty sequence \f[CR][]\f[R] for no input.+.SS General options+.RS -14n+.IP+.EX++ command line                      defaults file                     + --------------------------------- ----------------------------------+ --from markdown+emoji             from: markdown+emoji          +                                                                 +                                   reader: markdown+emoji        ++                                   to: markdown+hard_line_breaks +   --to markdown+hard_line_breaks                                    +                                                                 +                               writer: markdown+hard_line_breaks ++ --output foo.pdf                  output-file: foo.pdf          ++ --output -                        output-file:                  ++ --data-dir dir                    data-dir: dir                 ++ --defaults file                   defaults:                     +                                   - file                        ++ --verbose                         verbosity: INFO               ++ --quiet                           verbosity: ERROR              ++ --fail-if-warnings                fail-if-warnings: true        ++ --sandbox                         sandbox: true                 ++ --log=FILE                        log-file: FILE                ++.EE+.RE+.PP+Options specified in a defaults file itself always have priority over+those in another file included with a \f[CR]defaults:\f[R] entry.+.PP+\f[CR]verbosity\f[R] can have the values \f[CR]ERROR\f[R],+\f[CR]WARNING\f[R], or \f[CR]INFO\f[R].+.SS Reader options+.RS -14n+.IP+.EX++ command line                      defaults file                     + --------------------------------- ----------------------------------+ --shift-heading-level-by -1       shift-heading-level-by: -1    ++                                   indented-code-classes:        +   --indented-code-classes python        - python                    ++                                                                 + --default-image-extension \[dq].jpg\[dq]    default-image-extension: \[aq].jpg\[aq] ++ --file-scope                      file-scope: true              ++ --filter pandoc-citeproc \[rs]        filters:                      +                                     - pandoc-citeproc           +   --lua-filter count-words.lua \[rs]        - count-words.lua           +  --filter special.lua               - type: json                +                                       path: special.lua         ++ --metadata key=value \[rs]            metadata:                     +  --metadata key2                    key: value                  +                                     key2: true                  ++ --metadata-file meta.yaml         metadata-files:               +                                     - meta.yaml                 +                                                                 +                                   metadata-file: meta.yaml      ++ --preserve-tabs                   preserve-tabs: true           ++ --tab-stop 8                      tab-stop: 8                   ++ --track-changes accept            track-changes: accept         ++ --extract-media dir               extract-media: dir            ++ --abbreviations abbrevs.txt       abbreviations: abbrevs.txt    ++ --trace                           trace: true                   ++.EE+.RE+.PP+Metadata values specified in a defaults file are parsed as literal+string text, not Markdown.+.PP+Filters will be assumed to be Lua filters if they have the+\f[CR].lua\f[R] extension, and JSON filters otherwise.+But the filter type can also be specified explicitly, as shown.+Filters are run in the order specified.+To include the built-in citeproc filter, use either \f[CR]citeproc\f[R]+or \f[CR]{type: citeproc}\f[R].+.SS General writer options+.RS -14n+.IP+.EX++ command line                      defaults file                     + --------------------------------- ----------------------------------+ --standalone                      standalone: true              ++ --template letter                 template: letter              ++ --variable key=val \[rs]              variables:                    +   --variable key2                   key: val                    +                                     key2: true                  ++ --eol nl                          eol: nl                       ++ --dpi 300                         dpi: 300                      ++ --wrap 60                         wrap: 60                      ++ --columns 72                      columns: 72                   ++ --table-of-contents               table-of-contents: true       ++ --toc                             toc: true                     ++ --toc-depth 3                     toc-depth: 3                  ++ --strip-comments                  strip-comments: true          ++ --no-highlight                    highlight-style: null         ++ --highlight-style kate            highlight-style: kate         ++                                   syntax-definitions:           +   --syntax-definition mylang.xml        - mylang.xml                +                                                                 +                                   syntax-definition: mylang.xml ++ --include-in-header inc.tex       include-in-header:            +                                     - inc.tex                   ++                                   include-before-body:          +--include-before-body inc.tex        - inc.tex                   ++ --include-after-body inc.tex      include-after-body:           +                                     - inc.tex                   ++ --resource-path .:foo             resource-path: [\[aq].\[aq],\[aq]foo\[aq]]    ++ --request-header foo:bar          request-headers:              +                                                                 +                                 - [\[dq]User-Agent\[dq], \[dq]Mozilla/5.0\[dq]] ++ --no-check-certificate            no-check-certificate: true    ++.EE+.RE+.SS Options affecting specific writers+.RS -14n+.IP+.EX++ command line                      defaults file                     + --------------------------------- ----------------------------------+ --self-contained                  self-contained: true          ++ --html-q-tags                     html-q-tags: true             ++ --ascii                           ascii: true                   ++ --reference-links                 reference-links: true         ++ --reference-location block        reference-location: block     ++ --markdown-headings atx           markdown-headings: atx        ++ --list-tables                     list-tables: true             ++ --top-level-division chapter      top-level-division: chapter   ++ --number-sections                 number-sections: true         ++ --number-offset=1,4               number-offset: \[rs][1,4\[rs]]        ++ --listings                        listings: true                ++ --incremental                     incremental: true             ++ --slide-level 2                   slide-level: 2                ++ --section-divs                    section-divs: true            ++                                   email-obfuscation: references +   --email-obfuscation references                                    ++ --id-prefix ch1                   identifier-prefix: ch1        ++ --title-prefix MySite             title-prefix: MySite          ++ --css styles/screen.css  \[rs]        css:                          +   --css styles/special.css          - styles/screen.css         +                                     - styles/special.css        ++ --reference-doc my.docx           reference-doc: my.docx        ++ --epub-cover-image cover.jpg      epub-cover-image: cover.jpg   ++ --epub-title-page=false           epub-title-page: false        ++ --epub-metadata meta.xml          epub-metadata: meta.xml       ++                                   epub-fonts:                   +  --epub-embed-font special.otf \[rs]        - special.otf               +                                     - headline.otf              +   --epub-embed-font headline.otf                                    ++ --split-level 2                   split-level: 2                ++ --chunk-template=\[dq]%i.html\[dq]        chunk-template: \[dq]%i.html\[dq]     ++ --epub-subdirectory=\[dq]\[dq]            epub-subdirectory: \[aq]\[aq]         ++ --ipynb-output best               ipynb-output: best            ++ --pdf-engine xelatex              pdf-engine: xelatex           ++                                   pdf-engine-opts:              +  --pdf-engine-opt=--shell-escape        - \[aq]-shell-escape\[aq]           +                                                                 +                                                                 +                                 pdf-engine-opt: \[aq]-shell-escape\[aq] ++.EE+.RE+.SS Citation rendering+.RS -14n+.IP+.EX++ command line                      defaults file                     + --------------------------------- ----------------------------------+ --citeproc                        citeproc: true                ++ --bibliography logic.bib          metadata:                     +                                     bibliography: logic.bib     ++ --csl ieee.csl                    metadata:                     +                                     csl: ieee.csl               ++                                   metadata:                     + --citation-abbreviations ab.json                                    +                                 citation-abbreviations: ab.json ++ --natbib                          cite-method: natbib           ++ --biblatex                        cite-method: biblatex         ++.EE+.RE+.PP+\f[CR]cite-method\f[R] can be \f[CR]citeproc\f[R], \f[CR]natbib\f[R], or+\f[CR]biblatex\f[R].+This only affects LaTeX output.+If you want to use citeproc to format citations, you should also set+`citeproc: true'.+.PP+If you need control over when the citeproc processing is done relative+to other filters, you should instead use \f[CR]citeproc\f[R] in the list+of \f[CR]filters\f[R] (see above).+.SS Math rendering in HTML+.RS -14n+.IP+.EX++ command line                      defaults file                     + --------------------------------- ----------------------------------+ --mathjax                         html-math-method:             +                                     method: mathjax             ++ --mathml                          html-math-method:             +                                     method: mathml              ++ --webtex                          html-math-method:             +                                     method: webtex              ++ --katex                           html-math-method:             +                                     method: katex               ++ --gladtex                         html-math-method:             +                                     method: gladtex             ++.EE+.RE+.PP+In addition to the values listed above, \f[CR]method\f[R] can have the+value \f[CR]plain\f[R].+.PP+If the command line option accepts a URL argument, an \f[CR]url:\f[R]+field can be added to \f[CR]html-math-method:\f[R].+.SS Options for wrapper scripts+.RS -14n+.IP+.EX++ command line                      defaults file                     + --------------------------------- ----------------------------------+ --dump-args                       dump-args: true               ++ --ignore-args                     ignore-args: true             ++.EE+.RE+.SH TEMPLATES+When the \f[CR]-s/--standalone\f[R] option is used, pandoc uses a+template to add header and footer material that is needed for a+self-standing document.+To see the default template that is used, just type+.IP+.EX+pandoc -D *FORMAT*+.EE+.PP+where \f[I]FORMAT\f[R] is the name of the output format.+A custom template can be specified using the \f[CR]--template\f[R]+option.+You can also override the system default templates for a given output+format \f[I]FORMAT\f[R] by putting a file+\f[CR]templates/default.*FORMAT*\f[R] in the user data directory (see+\f[CR]--data-dir\f[R], above).+\f[I]Exceptions:\f[R]+.IP \[bu] 2+For \f[CR]odt\f[R] output, customize the \f[CR]default.opendocument\f[R]+template.+.IP \[bu] 2+For \f[CR]pdf\f[R] output, customize the \f[CR]default.latex\f[R]+template (or the \f[CR]default.context\f[R] template, if you use+\f[CR]-t context\f[R], or the \f[CR]default.ms\f[R] template, if you use+\f[CR]-t ms\f[R], or the \f[CR]default.html\f[R] template, if you use+\f[CR]-t html\f[R]).+.IP \[bu] 2+\f[CR]docx\f[R] and \f[CR]pptx\f[R] have no template (however, you can+use \f[CR]--reference-doc\f[R] to customize the output).+.PP+Templates contain \f[I]variables\f[R], which allow for the inclusion of+arbitrary information at any point in the file.+They may be set at the command line using the \f[CR]-V/--variable\f[R]+option.+If a variable is not set, pandoc will look for the key in the+document\[cq]s metadata, which can be set using either YAML metadata+blocks or with the \f[CR]-M/--metadata\f[R] option.+In addition, some variables are given default values by pandoc.+See Variables below for a list of variables used in pandoc\[cq]s default+templates.+.PP+If you use custom templates, you may need to revise them as pandoc+changes.+We recommend tracking the changes in the default templates, and+modifying your custom templates accordingly.+An easy way to do this is to fork the pandoc-templates repository and+merge in changes after each pandoc release.+.SS Template syntax+.SS Comments+Anything between the sequence \f[CR]$--\f[R] and the end of the line+will be treated as a comment and omitted from the output.+.SS Delimiters+To mark variables and control structures in the template, either+\f[CR]$\f[R]\&...\f[CR]$\f[R] or \f[CR]${\f[R]\&...\f[CR]}\f[R] may be+used as delimiters.+The styles may also be mixed in the same template, but the opening and+closing delimiter must match in each case.+The opening delimiter may be followed by one or more spaces or tabs,+which will be ignored.+The closing delimiter may be preceded by one or more spaces or tabs,+which will be ignored.+.PP+To include a literal \f[CR]$\f[R] in the document, use \f[CR]$$\f[R].+.SS Interpolated variables+A slot for an interpolated variable is a variable name surrounded by+matched delimiters.+Variable names must begin with a letter and can contain letters,+numbers, \f[CR]_\f[R], \f[CR]-\f[R], and \f[CR].\f[R].+The keywords \f[CR]it\f[R], \f[CR]if\f[R], \f[CR]else\f[R],+\f[CR]endif\f[R], \f[CR]for\f[R], \f[CR]sep\f[R], and \f[CR]endfor\f[R]+may not be used as variable names.+Examples:+.IP+.EX+$foo$+$foo.bar.baz$+$foo_bar.baz-bim$+$ foo $+${foo}+${foo.bar.baz}+${foo_bar.baz-bim}+${ foo }+.EE+.PP+Variable names with periods are used to get at structured variable+values.+So, for example, \f[CR]employee.salary\f[R] will return the value of the+\f[CR]salary\f[R] field of the object that is the value of the+\f[CR]employee\f[R] field.+.IP \[bu] 2+If the value of the variable is a simple value, it will be rendered+verbatim.+(Note that no escaping is done; the assumption is that the calling+program will escape the strings appropriately for the output format.)+.IP \[bu] 2+If the value is a list, the values will be concatenated.+.IP \[bu] 2+If the value is a map, the string \f[CR]true\f[R] will be rendered.+.IP \[bu] 2+Every other value will be rendered as the empty string.+.SS Conditionals+A conditional begins with \f[CR]if(variable)\f[R] (enclosed in matched+delimiters) and ends with \f[CR]endif\f[R] (enclosed in matched+delimiters).+It may optionally contain an \f[CR]else\f[R] (enclosed in matched+delimiters).+The \f[CR]if\f[R] section is used if \f[CR]variable\f[R] has a non-empty+value, otherwise the \f[CR]else\f[R] section is used (if present).+Examples:+.IP+.EX+$if(foo)$bar$endif$++$if(foo)$+  $foo$+$endif$++$if(foo)$+part one+$else$+part two+$endif$++${if(foo)}bar${endif}++${if(foo)}+  ${foo}+${endif}++${if(foo)}+${ foo.bar }+${else}+no foo!+${endif}+.EE+.PP+The keyword \f[CR]elseif\f[R] may be used to simplify complex nested+conditionals:+.IP+.EX+$if(foo)$+XXX+$elseif(bar)$+YYY+$else$+ZZZ+$endif$+.EE+.SS For loops+A for loop begins with \f[CR]for(variable)\f[R] (enclosed in matched+delimiters) and ends with \f[CR]endfor\f[R] (enclosed in matched+delimiters).+.IP \[bu] 2+If \f[CR]variable\f[R] is an array, the material inside the loop will be+evaluated repeatedly, with \f[CR]variable\f[R] being set to each value+of the array in turn, and concatenated.+.IP \[bu] 2+If \f[CR]variable\f[R] is a map, the material inside will be set to the+map.+.IP \[bu] 2+If the value of the associated variable is not an array or a map, a+single iteration will be performed on its value.+.PP+Examples:+.IP+.EX+$for(foo)$$foo$$sep$, $endfor$++$for(foo)$+  - $foo.last$, $foo.first$+$endfor$++${ for(foo.bar) }+  - ${ foo.bar.last }, ${ foo.bar.first }+${ endfor }++$for(mymap)$+$it.name$: $it.office$+$endfor$+.EE+.PP+You may optionally specify a separator between consecutive values using+\f[CR]sep\f[R] (enclosed in matched delimiters).+The material between \f[CR]sep\f[R] and the \f[CR]endfor\f[R] is the+separator.+.IP+.EX+${ for(foo) }${ foo }${ sep }, ${ endfor }+.EE+.PP+Instead of using \f[CR]variable\f[R] inside the loop, the special+anaphoric keyword \f[CR]it\f[R] may be used.+.IP+.EX+${ for(foo.bar) }+  - ${ it.last }, ${ it.first }+${ endfor }+.EE+.SS Partials+Partials (subtemplates stored in different files) may be included by+using the name of the partial, followed by \f[CR]()\f[R], for example:+.IP+.EX+${ styles() }+.EE+.PP+Partials will be sought in the directory containing the main template.+The file name will be assumed to have the same extension as the main+template if it lacks an extension.+When calling the partial, the full name including file extension can+also be used:+.IP+.EX+${ styles.html() }+.EE+.PP+(If a partial is not found in the directory of the template and the+template path is given as a relative path, it will also be sought in the+\f[CR]templates\f[R] subdirectory of the user data directory.)+.PP+Partials may optionally be applied to variables using a colon:+.IP+.EX+${ date:fancy() }++${ articles:bibentry() }+.EE+.PP+If \f[CR]articles\f[R] is an array, this will iterate over its values,+applying the partial \f[CR]bibentry()\f[R] to each one.+So the second example above is equivalent to+.IP+.EX+${ for(articles) }+${ it:bibentry() }+${ endfor }+.EE+.PP+Note that the anaphoric keyword \f[CR]it\f[R] must be used when+iterating over partials.+In the above examples, the \f[CR]bibentry\f[R] partial should contain+\f[CR]it.title\f[R] (and so on) instead of \f[CR]articles.title\f[R].+.PP+Final newlines are omitted from included partials.+.PP+Partials may include other partials.+.PP+A separator between values of an array may be specified in square+brackets, immediately after the variable name or partial:+.IP+.EX+${months[, ]}$++${articles:bibentry()[; ]$+.EE+.PP+The separator in this case is literal and (unlike with \f[CR]sep\f[R] in+an explicit \f[CR]for\f[R] loop) cannot contain interpolated variables+or other template directives.+.SS Nesting+To ensure that content is \[lq]nested,\[rq] that is, subsequent lines+indented, use the \f[CR]\[ha]\f[R] directive:+.IP+.EX+$item.number$  $\[ha]$$item.description$ ($item.price$)+.EE+.PP+In this example, if \f[CR]item.description\f[R] has multiple lines, they+will all be indented to line up with the first line:+.IP+.EX+00123  A fine bottle of 18-year old+       Oban whiskey. ($148)+.EE+.PP+To nest multiple lines to the same level, align them with the+\f[CR]\[ha]\f[R] directive in the template.+For example:+.IP+.EX+$item.number$  $\[ha]$$item.description$ ($item.price$)+               (Available til $item.sellby$.)+.EE+.PP+will produce+.IP+.EX+00123  A fine bottle of 18-year old+       Oban whiskey. ($148)+       (Available til March 30, 2020.)+.EE+.PP+If a variable occurs by itself on a line, preceded by whitespace and not+followed by further text or directives on the same line, and the+variable\[cq]s value contains multiple lines, it will be nested+automatically.+.SS Breakable spaces+Normally, spaces in the template itself (as opposed to values of the+interpolated variables) are not breakable, but they can be made+breakable in part of the template by using the \f[CR]\[ti]\f[R] keyword+(ended with another \f[CR]\[ti]\f[R]).+.IP+.EX+$\[ti]$This long line may break if the document is rendered+with a short line length.$\[ti]$+.EE+.SS Pipes+A pipe transforms the value of a variable or partial.+Pipes are specified using a slash (\f[CR]/\f[R]) between the variable+name (or partial) and the pipe name.+Example:+.IP+.EX+$for(name)$+$name/uppercase$+$endfor$++$for(metadata/pairs)$+- $it.key$: $it.value$+$endfor$++$employee:name()/uppercase$+.EE+.PP+Pipes may be chained:+.IP+.EX+$for(employees/pairs)$+$it.key/alpha/uppercase$. $it.name$+$endfor$+.EE+.PP+Some pipes take parameters:+.IP+.EX+|----------------------|------------|+$for(employee)$+$it.name.first/uppercase/left 20 \[dq]| \[dq]$$it.name.salary/right 10 \[dq] | \[dq] \[dq] |\[dq]$+$endfor$+|----------------------|------------|+.EE+.PP+Currently the following pipes are predefined:+.IP \[bu] 2+\f[CR]pairs\f[R]: Converts a map or array to an array of maps, each with+\f[CR]key\f[R] and \f[CR]value\f[R] fields.+If the original value was an array, the \f[CR]key\f[R] will be the array+index, starting with 1.+.IP \[bu] 2+\f[CR]uppercase\f[R]: Converts text to uppercase.+.IP \[bu] 2+\f[CR]lowercase\f[R]: Converts text to lowercase.+.IP \[bu] 2+\f[CR]length\f[R]: Returns the length of the value: number of characters+for a textual value, number of elements for a map or array.+.IP \[bu] 2+\f[CR]reverse\f[R]: Reverses a textual value or array, and has no effect+on other values.+.IP \[bu] 2+\f[CR]first\f[R]: Returns the first value of an array, if applied to a+non-empty array; otherwise returns the original value.+.IP \[bu] 2+\f[CR]last\f[R]: Returns the last value of an array, if applied to a+non-empty array; otherwise returns the original value.+.IP \[bu] 2+\f[CR]rest\f[R]: Returns all but the first value of an array, if applied+to a non-empty array; otherwise returns the original value.+.IP \[bu] 2+\f[CR]allbutlast\f[R]: Returns all but the last value of an array, if+applied to a non-empty array; otherwise returns the original value.+.IP \[bu] 2+\f[CR]chomp\f[R]: Removes trailing newlines (and breakable space).+.IP \[bu] 2+\f[CR]nowrap\f[R]: Disables line wrapping on breakable spaces.+.IP \[bu] 2+\f[CR]alpha\f[R]: Converts textual values that can be read as an integer+into lowercase alphabetic characters \f[CR]a..z\f[R] (mod 26).+This can be used to get lettered enumeration from array indices.+To get uppercase letters, chain with \f[CR]uppercase\f[R].+.IP \[bu] 2+\f[CR]roman\f[R]: Converts textual values that can be read as an integer+into lowercase roman numerals.+This can be used to get lettered enumeration from array indices.+To get uppercase roman, chain with \f[CR]uppercase\f[R].+.IP \[bu] 2+\f[CR]left n \[dq]leftborder\[dq] \[dq]rightborder\[dq]\f[R]: Renders a+textual value in a block of width \f[CR]n\f[R], aligned to the left,+with an optional left and right border.+Has no effect on other values.+This can be used to align material in tables.+Widths are positive integers indicating the number of characters.+Borders are strings inside double quotes; literal \f[CR]\[dq]\f[R] and+\f[CR]\[rs]\f[R] characters must be backslash-escaped.+.IP \[bu] 2+\f[CR]right n \[dq]leftborder\[dq] \[dq]rightborder\[dq]\f[R]: Renders a+textual value in a block of width \f[CR]n\f[R], aligned to the right,+and has no effect on other values.+.IP \[bu] 2+\f[CR]center n \[dq]leftborder\[dq] \[dq]rightborder\[dq]\f[R]: Renders+a textual value in a block of width \f[CR]n\f[R], aligned to the center,+and has no effect on other values.+.SS Variables+.SS Metadata variables+.TP+\f[CR]title\f[R], \f[CR]author\f[R], \f[CR]date\f[R]+allow identification of basic aspects of the document.+Included in PDF metadata through LaTeX and ConTeXt.+These can be set through a pandoc title block, which allows for multiple+authors, or through a YAML metadata block:+.RS+.IP+.EX+---+author:+- Aristotle+- Peter Abelard+\&...+.EE+.PP+Note that if you just want to set PDF or HTML metadata, without+including a title block in the document itself, you can set the+\f[CR]title-meta\f[R], \f[CR]author-meta\f[R], and \f[CR]date-meta\f[R]+variables.+(By default these are set automatically, based on \f[CR]title\f[R],+\f[CR]author\f[R], and \f[CR]date\f[R].)+The page title in HTML is set by \f[CR]pagetitle\f[R], which is equal to+\f[CR]title\f[R] by default.+.RE+.TP+\f[CR]subtitle\f[R]+document subtitle, included in HTML, EPUB, LaTeX, ConTeXt, and docx+documents+.TP+\f[CR]abstract\f[R]+document summary, included in HTML, LaTeX, ConTeXt, AsciiDoc, and docx+documents+.TP+\f[CR]abstract-title\f[R]+title of abstract, currently used only in HTML, EPUB, and docx.+This will be set automatically to a localized value, depending on+\f[CR]lang\f[R], but can be manually overridden.+.TP+\f[CR]keywords\f[R]+list of keywords to be included in HTML, PDF, ODT, pptx, docx and+AsciiDoc metadata; repeat as for \f[CR]author\f[R], above+.TP+\f[CR]subject\f[R]+document subject, included in ODT, PDF, docx, EPUB, and pptx metadata+.TP+\f[CR]description\f[R]+document description, included in ODT, docx and pptx metadata.+Some applications show this as \f[CR]Comments\f[R] metadata.+.TP+\f[CR]category\f[R]+document category, included in docx and pptx metadata+.PP+Additionally, any root-level string metadata, not included in ODT, docx+or pptx metadata is added as a \f[I]custom property\f[R].+The following YAML metadata block for instance:+.IP+.EX+---+title:  \[aq]This is the title\[aq]+subtitle: \[dq]This is the subtitle\[dq]+author:+- Author One+- Author Two+description: |+    This is a long+    description.++    It consists of two paragraphs+\&...+.EE+.PP+will include \f[CR]title\f[R], \f[CR]author\f[R] and+\f[CR]description\f[R] as standard document properties and+\f[CR]subtitle\f[R] as a custom property when converting to docx, ODT or+pptx.+.SS Language variables+.TP+\f[CR]lang\f[R]+identifies the main language of the document using IETF language tags+(following the BCP 47 standard), such as \f[CR]en\f[R] or+\f[CR]en-GB\f[R].+The Language subtag lookup tool can look up or verify these tags.+This affects most formats, and controls hyphenation in PDF output when+using LaTeX (through \f[CR]babel\f[R] and \f[CR]polyglossia\f[R]) or+ConTeXt.+.RS+.PP+Use native pandoc Divs and Spans with the \f[CR]lang\f[R] attribute to+switch the language:+.IP+.EX+---+lang: en-GB+\&...++Text in the main document language (British English).++::: {lang=fr-CA}+> Cette citation est écrite en français canadien.+:::++More text in English. [\[aq]Zitat auf Deutsch.\[aq]]{lang=de}+.EE+.RE+.TP+\f[CR]dir\f[R]+the base script direction, either \f[CR]rtl\f[R] (right-to-left) or+\f[CR]ltr\f[R] (left-to-right).+.RS+.PP+For bidirectional documents, native pandoc \f[CR]span\f[R]s and+\f[CR]div\f[R]s with the \f[CR]dir\f[R] attribute (value \f[CR]rtl\f[R]+or \f[CR]ltr\f[R]) can be used to override the base direction in some+output formats.+This may not always be necessary if the final renderer (e.g.\ the+browser, when generating HTML) supports the Unicode Bidirectional+Algorithm.+.PP+When using LaTeX for bidirectional documents, only the+\f[CR]xelatex\f[R] engine is fully supported (use+\f[CR]--pdf-engine=xelatex\f[R]).+.RE+.SS Variables for HTML+.TP+\f[CR]document-css\f[R]+Enables inclusion of most of the CSS in the \f[CR]styles.html\f[R]+partial (have a look with+\f[CR]pandoc --print-default-data-file=templates/styles.html\f[R]).+Unless you use \f[CR]--css\f[R], this variable is set to \f[CR]true\f[R]+by default.+You can disable it with e.g.\ \f[CR]pandoc -M document-css=false\f[R].+.TP+\f[CR]mainfont\f[R]+sets the CSS \f[CR]font-family\f[R] property on the \f[CR]html\f[R]+element.+.TP+\f[CR]fontsize\f[R]+sets the base CSS \f[CR]font-size\f[R], which you\[cq]d usually set to+e.g.\ \f[CR]20px\f[R], but it also accepts \f[CR]pt\f[R] (12pt = 16px in+most browsers).+.TP+\f[CR]fontcolor\f[R]+sets the CSS \f[CR]color\f[R] property on the \f[CR]html\f[R] element.+.TP+\f[CR]linkcolor\f[R]+sets the CSS \f[CR]color\f[R] property on all links.+.TP+\f[CR]monofont\f[R]+sets the CSS \f[CR]font-family\f[R] property on \f[CR]code\f[R]+elements.+.TP+\f[CR]monobackgroundcolor\f[R]+sets the CSS \f[CR]background-color\f[R] property on \f[CR]code\f[R]+elements and adds extra padding.+.TP+\f[CR]linestretch\f[R]+sets the CSS \f[CR]line-height\f[R] property on the \f[CR]html\f[R]+element, which is preferred to be unitless.+.TP+\f[CR]maxwidth\f[R]+sets the CSS \f[CR]max-width\f[R] property (default is 32em).+.TP+\f[CR]backgroundcolor\f[R]+sets the CSS \f[CR]background-color\f[R] property on the \f[CR]html\f[R]+element.+.TP+\f[CR]margin-left\f[R], \f[CR]margin-right\f[R], \f[CR]margin-top\f[R], \f[CR]margin-bottom\f[R]+sets the corresponding CSS \f[CR]padding\f[R] properties on the+\f[CR]body\f[R] element.+.PP+To override or extend some CSS for just one document, include for+example:+.IP+.EX+---+header-includes: |+  <style>+  blockquote {+    font-style: italic;+  }+  tr.even {+    background-color: #f0f0f0;+  }+  td, th {+    padding: 0.5em 2em 0.5em 0.5em;+  }+  tbody {+    border-bottom: none;+  }+  </style>+---+.EE+.SS Variables for HTML math+.TP+\f[CR]classoption\f[R]+when using KaTeX, you can render display math equations flush left using+YAML metadata or with \f[CR]-M classoption=fleqn\f[R].+.SS Variables for HTML slides+These affect HTML output when producing slide shows with pandoc.+.TP+\f[CR]institute\f[R]+author affiliations: can be a list when there are multiple authors+.TP+\f[CR]revealjs-url\f[R]+base URL for reveal.js documents (defaults to+\f[CR]https://unpkg.com/reveal.js\[at]\[ha]4/\f[R])+.TP+\f[CR]s5-url\f[R]+base URL for S5 documents (defaults to \f[CR]s5/default\f[R])+.TP+\f[CR]slidy-url\f[R]+base URL for Slidy documents (defaults to+\f[CR]https://www.w3.org/Talks/Tools/Slidy2\f[R])+.TP+\f[CR]slideous-url\f[R]+base URL for Slideous documents (defaults to \f[CR]slideous\f[R])+.TP+\f[CR]title-slide-attributes\f[R]+additional attributes for the title slide of reveal.js slide shows.+See background in reveal.js, beamer, and pptx for an example.+.PP+All reveal.js configuration options are available as variables.+To turn off boolean flags that default to true in reveal.js, use+\f[CR]0\f[R].+.SS Variables for Beamer slides+These variables change the appearance of PDF slides using+\f[CR]beamer\f[R].+.TP+\f[CR]aspectratio\f[R]+slide aspect ratio (\f[CR]43\f[R] for 4:3 [default], \f[CR]169\f[R] for+16:9, \f[CR]1610\f[R] for 16:10, \f[CR]149\f[R] for 14:9, \f[CR]141\f[R]+for 1.41:1, \f[CR]54\f[R] for 5:4, \f[CR]32\f[R] for 3:2)+.TP+\f[CR]beameroption\f[R]+add extra beamer option with \f[CR]\[rs]setbeameroption{}\f[R]+.TP+\f[CR]institute\f[R]+author affiliations: can be a list when there are multiple authors+.TP+\f[CR]logo\f[R]+logo image for slides+.TP+\f[CR]navigation\f[R]+controls navigation symbols (default is \f[CR]empty\f[R] for no+navigation symbols; other valid values are \f[CR]frame\f[R],+\f[CR]vertical\f[R], and \f[CR]horizontal\f[R])+.TP+\f[CR]section-titles\f[R]+enables \[lq]title pages\[rq] for new sections (default is true)+.TP+\f[CR]theme\f[R], \f[CR]colortheme\f[R], \f[CR]fonttheme\f[R], \f[CR]innertheme\f[R], \f[CR]outertheme\f[R]+beamer themes+.TP+\f[CR]themeoptions\f[R]+options for LaTeX beamer themes (a list).+.TP+\f[CR]titlegraphic\f[R]+image for title slide+.SS Variables for PowerPoint+These variables control the visual aspects of a slide show that are not+easily controlled via templates.+.TP+\f[CR]monofont\f[R]+font to use for code.+.SS Variables for LaTeX+Pandoc uses these variables when creating a PDF with a LaTeX engine.+.SS Layout+.TP+\f[CR]block-headings\f[R]+make \f[CR]\[rs]paragraph\f[R] and \f[CR]\[rs]subparagraph\f[R] (fourth-+and fifth-level headings, or fifth- and sixth-level with book classes)+free-standing rather than run-in; requires further formatting to+distinguish from \f[CR]\[rs]subsubsection\f[R] (third- or fourth-level+headings).+Instead of using this option, KOMA-Script can adjust headings more+extensively:+.RS+.IP+.EX+---+documentclass: scrartcl+header-includes: |+  \[rs]RedeclareSectionCommand[+    beforeskip=-10pt plus -2pt minus -1pt,+    afterskip=1sp plus -1sp minus 1sp,+    font=\[rs]normalfont\[rs]itshape]{paragraph}+  \[rs]RedeclareSectionCommand[+    beforeskip=-10pt plus -2pt minus -1pt,+    afterskip=1sp plus -1sp minus 1sp,+    font=\[rs]normalfont\[rs]scshape,+    indent=0pt]{subparagraph}+\&...+.EE+.RE+.TP+\f[CR]classoption\f[R]+option for document class, e.g.\ \f[CR]oneside\f[R]; repeat for multiple+options:+.RS+.IP+.EX+---+classoption:+- twocolumn+- landscape+\&...+.EE+.RE+.TP+\f[CR]documentclass\f[R]+document class: usually one of the standard classes, \f[CR]article\f[R],+\f[CR]book\f[R], and \f[CR]report\f[R]; the KOMA-Script equivalents,+\f[CR]scrartcl\f[R], \f[CR]scrbook\f[R], and \f[CR]scrreprt\f[R], which+default to smaller margins; or \f[CR]memoir\f[R]+.TP+\f[CR]geometry\f[R]+option for \f[CR]geometry\f[R] package, e.g.\ \f[CR]margin=1in\f[R];+repeat for multiple options:+.RS+.IP+.EX+---+geometry:+- top=30mm+- left=20mm+- heightrounded+\&...+.EE+.RE+.TP+\f[CR]hyperrefoptions\f[R]+option for \f[CR]hyperref\f[R] package, e.g.\ \f[CR]linktoc=all\f[R];+repeat for multiple options:+.RS+.IP+.EX+---+hyperrefoptions:+- linktoc=all+- pdfwindowui+- pdfpagemode=FullScreen+\&...+.EE+.RE+.TP+\f[CR]indent\f[R]+if true, pandoc will use document class settings for indentation (the+default LaTeX template otherwise removes indentation and adds space+between paragraphs)+.TP+\f[CR]linestretch\f[R]+adjusts line spacing using the \f[CR]setspace\f[R] package,+e.g.\ \f[CR]1.25\f[R], \f[CR]1.5\f[R]+.TP+\f[CR]margin-left\f[R], \f[CR]margin-right\f[R], \f[CR]margin-top\f[R], \f[CR]margin-bottom\f[R]+sets margins if \f[CR]geometry\f[R] is not used (otherwise+\f[CR]geometry\f[R] overrides these)+.TP+\f[CR]pagestyle\f[R]+control \f[CR]\[rs]pagestyle{}\f[R]: the default article class supports+\f[CR]plain\f[R] (default), \f[CR]empty\f[R] (no running heads or page+numbers), and \f[CR]headings\f[R] (section titles in running heads)+.TP+\f[CR]papersize\f[R]+paper size, e.g.\ \f[CR]letter\f[R], \f[CR]a4\f[R]+.TP+\f[CR]secnumdepth\f[R]+numbering depth for sections (with \f[CR]--number-sections\f[R] option+or \f[CR]numbersections\f[R] variable)+.TP+\f[CR]beamerarticle\f[R]+produce an article from Beamer slides+.SS Fonts+.TP+\f[CR]fontenc\f[R]+allows font encoding to be specified through \f[CR]fontenc\f[R] package+(with \f[CR]pdflatex\f[R]); default is \f[CR]T1\f[R] (see LaTeX font+encodings guide)+.TP+\f[CR]fontfamily\f[R]+font package for use with \f[CR]pdflatex\f[R]: TeX Live includes many+options, documented in the LaTeX Font Catalogue.+The default is Latin Modern.+.TP+\f[CR]fontfamilyoptions\f[R]+options for package used as \f[CR]fontfamily\f[R]; repeat for multiple+options.+For example, to use the Libertine font with proportional lowercase+(old-style) figures through the \f[CR]libertinus\f[R] package:+.RS+.IP+.EX+---+fontfamily: libertinus+fontfamilyoptions:+- osf+- p+\&...+.EE+.RE+.TP+\f[CR]fontsize\f[R]+font size for body text.+The standard classes allow 10pt, 11pt, and 12pt.+To use another size, set \f[CR]documentclass\f[R] to one of the+KOMA-Script classes, such as \f[CR]scrartcl\f[R] or \f[CR]scrbook\f[R].+.TP+\f[CR]mainfont\f[R], \f[CR]sansfont\f[R], \f[CR]monofont\f[R], \f[CR]mathfont\f[R], \f[CR]CJKmainfont\f[R], \f[CR]CJKsansfont\f[R], \f[CR]CJKmonofont\f[R]+font families for use with \f[CR]xelatex\f[R] or \f[CR]lualatex\f[R]:+take the name of any system font, using the \f[CR]fontspec\f[R] package.+\f[CR]CJKmainfont\f[R] uses the \f[CR]xecjk\f[R] package.+.TP+\f[CR]mainfontoptions\f[R], \f[CR]sansfontoptions\f[R], \f[CR]monofontoptions\f[R], \f[CR]mathfontoptions\f[R], \f[CR]CJKoptions\f[R]+options to use with \f[CR]mainfont\f[R], \f[CR]sansfont\f[R],+\f[CR]monofont\f[R], \f[CR]mathfont\f[R], \f[CR]CJKmainfont\f[R] in+\f[CR]xelatex\f[R] and \f[CR]lualatex\f[R].+Allow for any choices available through \f[CR]fontspec\f[R]; repeat for+multiple options.+For example, to use the TeX Gyre version of Palatino with lowercase+figures:+.RS+.IP+.EX+---+mainfont: TeX Gyre Pagella+mainfontoptions:+- Numbers=Lowercase+- Numbers=Proportional+\&...+.EE+.RE+.TP+\f[CR]babelfonts\f[R]+a map of Babel language names (e.g.\ \f[CR]chinese\f[R]) to the font to+be used with the language:+.RS+.PP+   *   *   *   *   *+.PP+babelfonts: chinese-hant: \[lq]Noto Serif CJK TC\[rq] russian: \[lq]Noto+Serif\[rq] \&...+.RE+.TP+\f[CR]microtypeoptions\f[R]+options to pass to the microtype package+.SS Links+.TP+\f[CR]colorlinks\f[R]+add color to link text; automatically enabled if any of+\f[CR]linkcolor\f[R], \f[CR]filecolor\f[R], \f[CR]citecolor\f[R],+\f[CR]urlcolor\f[R], or \f[CR]toccolor\f[R] are set+.TP+\f[CR]boxlinks\f[R]+add visible box around links (has no effect if \f[CR]colorlinks\f[R] is+set)+.TP+\f[CR]linkcolor\f[R], \f[CR]filecolor\f[R], \f[CR]citecolor\f[R], \f[CR]urlcolor\f[R], \f[CR]toccolor\f[R]+color for internal links, external links, citation links, linked URLs,+and links in table of contents, respectively: uses options allowed by+\f[CR]xcolor\f[R], including the \f[CR]dvipsnames\f[R],+\f[CR]svgnames\f[R], and \f[CR]x11names\f[R] lists+.TP+\f[CR]links-as-notes\f[R]+causes links to be printed as footnotes+.TP+\f[CR]urlstyle\f[R]+style for URLs (e.g., \f[CR]tt\f[R], \f[CR]rm\f[R], \f[CR]sf\f[R], and,+the default, \f[CR]same\f[R])+.SS Front matter+.TP+\f[CR]lof\f[R], \f[CR]lot\f[R]+include list of figures, list of tables+.TP+\f[CR]thanks\f[R]+contents of acknowledgments footnote after document title+.TP+\f[CR]toc\f[R]+include table of contents (can also be set using+\f[CR]--toc/--table-of-contents\f[R])+.TP+\f[CR]toc-depth\f[R]+level of section to include in table of contents+.SS BibLaTeX Bibliographies+These variables function when using BibLaTeX for citation rendering.+.TP+\f[CR]biblatexoptions\f[R]+list of options for biblatex+.TP+\f[CR]biblio-style\f[R]+bibliography style, when used with \f[CR]--natbib\f[R] and+\f[CR]--biblatex\f[R]+.TP+\f[CR]biblio-title\f[R]+bibliography title, when used with \f[CR]--natbib\f[R] and+\f[CR]--biblatex\f[R]+.TP+\f[CR]bibliography\f[R]+bibliography to use for resolving references+.TP+\f[CR]natbiboptions\f[R]+list of options for natbib+.SS Variables for ConTeXt+Pandoc uses these variables when creating a PDF with ConTeXt.+.TP+\f[CR]fontsize\f[R]+font size for body text (e.g.\ \f[CR]10pt\f[R], \f[CR]12pt\f[R])+.TP+\f[CR]headertext\f[R], \f[CR]footertext\f[R]+text to be placed in running header or footer (see ConTeXt Headers and+Footers); repeat up to four times for different placement+.TP+\f[CR]indenting\f[R]+controls indentation of paragraphs, e.g.\ \f[CR]yes,small,next\f[R] (see+ConTeXt Indentation); repeat for multiple options+.TP+\f[CR]interlinespace\f[R]+adjusts line spacing, e.g.\ \f[CR]4ex\f[R] (using+\f[CR]setupinterlinespace\f[R]); repeat for multiple options+.TP+\f[CR]layout\f[R]+options for page margins and text arrangement (see ConTeXt Layout);+repeat for multiple options+.TP+\f[CR]linkcolor\f[R], \f[CR]contrastcolor\f[R]+color for links outside and inside a page, e.g.\ \f[CR]red\f[R],+\f[CR]blue\f[R] (see ConTeXt Color)+.TP+\f[CR]linkstyle\f[R]+typeface style for links, e.g.\ \f[CR]normal\f[R], \f[CR]bold\f[R],+\f[CR]slanted\f[R], \f[CR]boldslanted\f[R], \f[CR]type\f[R],+\f[CR]cap\f[R], \f[CR]small\f[R]+.TP+\f[CR]lof\f[R], \f[CR]lot\f[R]+include list of figures, list of tables+.TP+\f[CR]mainfont\f[R], \f[CR]sansfont\f[R], \f[CR]monofont\f[R], \f[CR]mathfont\f[R]+font families: take the name of any system font (see ConTeXt Font+Switching)+.TP+\f[CR]margin-left\f[R], \f[CR]margin-right\f[R], \f[CR]margin-top\f[R], \f[CR]margin-bottom\f[R]+sets margins, if \f[CR]layout\f[R] is not used (otherwise+\f[CR]layout\f[R] overrides these)+.TP+\f[CR]pagenumbering\f[R]+page number style and location (using \f[CR]setuppagenumbering\f[R]);+repeat for multiple options+.TP+\f[CR]papersize\f[R]+paper size, e.g.\ \f[CR]letter\f[R], \f[CR]A4\f[R], \f[CR]landscape\f[R]+(see ConTeXt Paper Setup); repeat for multiple options+.TP+\f[CR]pdfa\f[R]+adds to the preamble the setup necessary to generate PDF/A of the type+specified, e.g.\ \f[CR]1a:2005\f[R], \f[CR]2a\f[R].+If no type is specified (i.e.\ the value is set to True, by e.g.+\f[CR]--metadata=pdfa\f[R] or \f[CR]pdfa: true\f[R] in a YAML metadata+block), \f[CR]1b:2005\f[R] will be used as default, for reasons of+backwards compatibility.+Using \f[CR]--variable=pdfa\f[R] without specified value is not+supported.+To successfully generate PDF/A the required ICC color profiles have to+be available and the content and all included files (such as images)+have to be standard-conforming.+The ICC profiles and output intent may be specified using the variables+\f[CR]pdfaiccprofile\f[R] and \f[CR]pdfaintent\f[R].+See also ConTeXt PDFA for more details.+.TP+\f[CR]pdfaiccprofile\f[R]+when used in conjunction with \f[CR]pdfa\f[R], specifies the ICC profile+to use in the PDF, e.g.\ \f[CR]default.cmyk\f[R].+If left unspecified, \f[CR]sRGB.icc\f[R] is used as default.+May be repeated to include multiple profiles.+Note that the profiles have to be available on the system.+They can be obtained from ConTeXt ICC Profiles.+.TP+\f[CR]pdfaintent\f[R]+when used in conjunction with \f[CR]pdfa\f[R], specifies the output+intent for the colors,+e.g.\ \f[CR]ISO coated v2 300\[rs]letterpercent\[rs]space (ECI)\f[R] If+left unspecified, \f[CR]sRGB IEC61966-2.1\f[R] is used as default.+.TP+\f[CR]toc\f[R]+include table of contents (can also be set using+\f[CR]--toc/--table-of-contents\f[R])+.TP+\f[CR]urlstyle\f[R]+typeface style for links without link text, e.g.\ \f[CR]normal\f[R],+\f[CR]bold\f[R], \f[CR]slanted\f[R], \f[CR]boldslanted\f[R],+\f[CR]type\f[R], \f[CR]cap\f[R], \f[CR]small\f[R]+.TP+\f[CR]whitespace\f[R]+spacing between paragraphs, e.g.\ \f[CR]none\f[R], \f[CR]small\f[R]+(using \f[CR]setupwhitespace\f[R])+.TP+\f[CR]includesource\f[R]+include all source documents as file attachments in the PDF file+.SS Variables for \f[CR]wkhtmltopdf\f[R]+Pandoc uses these variables when creating a PDF with+\f[CR]wkhtmltopdf\f[R].+The \f[CR]--css\f[R] option also affects the output.+.TP+\f[CR]footer-html\f[R], \f[CR]header-html\f[R]+add information to the header and footer+.TP+\f[CR]margin-left\f[R], \f[CR]margin-right\f[R], \f[CR]margin-top\f[R], \f[CR]margin-bottom\f[R]+set the page margins+.TP+\f[CR]papersize\f[R]+sets the PDF paper size+.SS Variables for man pages+.TP+\f[CR]adjusting\f[R]+adjusts text to left (\f[CR]l\f[R]), right (\f[CR]r\f[R]), center+(\f[CR]c\f[R]), or both (\f[CR]b\f[R]) margins+.TP+\f[CR]footer\f[R]+footer in man pages+.TP+\f[CR]header\f[R]+header in man pages+.TP+\f[CR]section\f[R]+section number in man pages+.SS Variables for Typst+.TP+\f[CR]margin\f[R]+A dictionary with the fields defined in the Typst documentation:+\f[CR]x\f[R], \f[CR]y\f[R], \f[CR]top\f[R], \f[CR]bottom\f[R],+\f[CR]left\f[R], \f[CR]right\f[R].+.TP+\f[CR]papersize\f[R]+Paper size: \f[CR]a4\f[R], \f[CR]us-letter\f[R], etc.+.TP+\f[CR]mainfont\f[R]+Name of system font to use for the main font.+.TP+\f[CR]fontsize\f[R]+Font size (e.g., \f[CR]12pt\f[R]).+.TP+\f[CR]section-numbering\f[R]+Schema to use for numbering sections, e.g.\ \f[CR]1.A.1\f[R].+.TP+\f[CR]columns\f[R]+Number of columns for body text.+.SS Variables for ms+.TP+\f[CR]fontfamily\f[R]+\f[CR]A\f[R] (Avant Garde), \f[CR]B\f[R] (Bookman), \f[CR]C\f[R]+(Helvetica), \f[CR]HN\f[R] (Helvetica Narrow), \f[CR]P\f[R] (Palatino),+or \f[CR]T\f[R] (Times New Roman).+This setting does not affect source code, which is always displayed+using monospace Courier.+These built-in fonts are limited in their coverage of characters.+Additional fonts may be installed using the script+\f[CR]install-font.sh\f[R] provided by Peter Schaffter and documented in+detail on his web site.+.TP+\f[CR]indent\f[R]+paragraph indent (e.g.\ \f[CR]2m\f[R])+.TP+\f[CR]lineheight\f[R]+line height (e.g.\ \f[CR]12p\f[R])+.TP+\f[CR]pointsize\f[R]+point size (e.g.\ \f[CR]10p\f[R])+.SS Variables set automatically+Pandoc sets these variables automatically in response to options or+document contents; users can also modify them.+These vary depending on the output format, and include the following:+.TP+\f[CR]body\f[R]+body of document+.TP+\f[CR]date-meta\f[R]+the \f[CR]date\f[R] variable converted to ISO 8601 YYYY-MM-DD, included+in all HTML based formats (dzslides, epub, html, html4, html5, revealjs,+s5, slideous, slidy).+The recognized formats for \f[CR]date\f[R] are: \f[CR]mm/dd/yyyy\f[R],+\f[CR]mm/dd/yy\f[R], \f[CR]yyyy-mm-dd\f[R] (ISO 8601),+\f[CR]dd MM yyyy\f[R] (e.g.\ either \f[CR]02 Apr 2018\f[R] or+\f[CR]02 April 2018\f[R]), \f[CR]MM dd, yyyy\f[R]+(e.g.\ \f[CR]Apr. 02, 2018\f[R] or+\f[CR]April 02, 2018),\f[R]yyyy[mm[dd]]\f[CR](e.g.\f[R]20180402,+\f[CR]201804\f[R] or \f[CR]2018\f[R]).+.TP+\f[CR]header-includes\f[R]+contents specified by \f[CR]-H/--include-in-header\f[R] (may have+multiple values)+.TP+\f[CR]include-before\f[R]+contents specified by \f[CR]-B/--include-before-body\f[R] (may have+multiple values)+.TP+\f[CR]include-after\f[R]+contents specified by \f[CR]-A/--include-after-body\f[R] (may have+multiple values)+.TP+\f[CR]meta-json\f[R]+JSON representation of all of the document\[cq]s metadata.+Field values are transformed to the selected output format.+.TP+\f[CR]numbersections\f[R]+non-null value if \f[CR]-N/--number-sections\f[R] was specified+.TP+\f[CR]sourcefile\f[R], \f[CR]outputfile\f[R]+source and destination filenames, as given on the command line.+\f[CR]sourcefile\f[R] can also be a list if input comes from multiple+files, or empty if input is from stdin.+You can use the following snippet in your template to distinguish them:+.RS+.IP+.EX+$if(sourcefile)$+$for(sourcefile)$+$sourcefile$+$endfor$+$else$+(stdin)+$endif$+.EE+.PP+Similarly, \f[CR]outputfile\f[R] can be \f[CR]-\f[R] if output goes to+the terminal.+.PP+If you need absolute paths, use e.g.\ \f[CR]$curdir$/$sourcefile$\f[R].+.RE+.TP+\f[CR]curdir\f[R]+working directory from which pandoc is run.+.TP+\f[CR]pandoc-version\f[R]+pandoc version.+.TP+\f[CR]toc\f[R]+non-null value if \f[CR]--toc/--table-of-contents\f[R] was specified+.TP+\f[CR]toc-title\f[R]+title of table of contents (works only with EPUB, HTML, revealjs,+opendocument, odt, docx, pptx, beamer, LaTeX)+.SH EXTENSIONS+The behavior of some of the readers and writers can be adjusted by+enabling or disabling various extensions.+.PP+An extension can be enabled by adding \f[CR]+EXTENSION\f[R] to the+format name and disabled by adding \f[CR]-EXTENSION\f[R].+For example, \f[CR]--from markdown_strict+footnotes\f[R] is strict+Markdown with footnotes enabled, while+\f[CR]--from markdown-footnotes-pipe_tables\f[R] is pandoc\[cq]s+Markdown without footnotes or pipe tables.+.PP+The markdown reader and writer make by far the most use of extensions.+Extensions only used by them are therefore covered in the section+Pandoc\[cq]s Markdown below (see Markdown variants for+\f[CR]commonmark\f[R] and \f[CR]gfm\f[R]).+In the following, extensions that also work for other formats are+covered.+.PP+Note that markdown extensions added to the \f[CR]ipynb\f[R] format+affect Markdown cells in Jupyter notebooks (as do command-line options+like \f[CR]--markdown-headings\f[R]).+.SS Typography+.SS Extension: \f[CR]smart\f[R]+Interpret straight quotes as curly quotes, \f[CR]---\f[R] as em-dashes,+\f[CR]--\f[R] as en-dashes, and \f[CR]...\f[R] as ellipses.+Nonbreaking spaces are inserted after certain abbreviations, such as+\[lq]Mr.\[rq]+.PP+This extension can be enabled/disabled for the following formats:+.TP+input formats+\f[CR]markdown\f[R], \f[CR]commonmark\f[R], \f[CR]latex\f[R],+\f[CR]mediawiki\f[R], \f[CR]org\f[R], \f[CR]rst\f[R], \f[CR]twiki\f[R],+\f[CR]html\f[R]+.TP+output formats+\f[CR]markdown\f[R], \f[CR]latex\f[R], \f[CR]context\f[R],+\f[CR]rst\f[R]+.TP+enabled by default in+\f[CR]markdown\f[R], \f[CR]latex\f[R], \f[CR]context\f[R] (both input+and output)+.PP+Note: If you are \f[I]writing\f[R] Markdown, then the \f[CR]smart\f[R]+extension has the reverse effect: what would have been curly quotes+comes out straight.+.PP+In LaTeX, \f[CR]smart\f[R] means to use the standard TeX ligatures for+quotation marks (\f[CR]\[ga]\[ga]\f[R] and \f[CR]\[aq]\[aq]\f[R] for+double quotes, \f[CR]\[ga]\f[R] and \f[CR]\[aq]\f[R] for single quotes)+and dashes (\f[CR]--\f[R] for en-dash and \f[CR]---\f[R] for em-dash).+If \f[CR]smart\f[R] is disabled, then in reading LaTeX pandoc will parse+these characters literally.+In writing LaTeX, enabling \f[CR]smart\f[R] tells pandoc to use the+ligatures when possible; if \f[CR]smart\f[R] is disabled pandoc will use+unicode quotation mark and dash characters.+.SS Headings and sections+.SS Extension: \f[CR]auto_identifiers\f[R]+A heading without an explicitly specified identifier will be+automatically assigned a unique identifier based on the heading text.+.PP+This extension can be enabled/disabled for the following formats:+.TP+input formats+\f[CR]markdown\f[R], \f[CR]latex\f[R], \f[CR]rst\f[R],+\f[CR]mediawiki\f[R], \f[CR]textile\f[R]+.TP+output formats+\f[CR]markdown\f[R], \f[CR]muse\f[R]+.TP+enabled by default in+\f[CR]markdown\f[R], \f[CR]muse\f[R]+.PP+The default algorithm used to derive the identifier from the heading+text is:+.IP \[bu] 2+Remove all formatting, links, etc.+.IP \[bu] 2+Remove all footnotes.+.IP \[bu] 2+Remove all non-alphanumeric characters, except underscores, hyphens, and+periods.+.IP \[bu] 2+Replace all spaces and newlines with hyphens.+.IP \[bu] 2+Convert all alphabetic characters to lowercase.+.IP \[bu] 2+Remove everything up to the first letter (identifiers may not begin with+a number or punctuation mark).+.IP \[bu] 2+If nothing is left after this, use the identifier \f[CR]section\f[R].+.PP+Thus, for example,+.RS -14n+.IP+.EX+  Heading                       Identifier+  ----------------------------- -----------------------------+  Heading identifiers in HTML   heading-identifiers-in-html+  Maître d\[aq]hôtel                maître-dhôtel+  *Dogs*?--in *my* house?       dogs--in-my-house+  [HTML], [S5], or [RTF]?       html-s5-or-rtf+  3. Applications               applications+  33                            section+.EE+.RE+.PP+These rules should, in most cases, allow one to determine the identifier+from the heading text.+The exception is when several headings have the same text; in this case,+the first will get an identifier as described above; the second will get+the same identifier with \f[CR]-1\f[R] appended; the third with+\f[CR]-2\f[R]; and so on.+.PP+(However, a different algorithm is used if+\f[CR]gfm_auto_identifiers\f[R] is enabled; see below.)+.PP+These identifiers are used to provide link targets in the table of+contents generated by the \f[CR]--toc|--table-of-contents\f[R] option.+They also make it easy to provide links from one section of a document+to another.+A link to this section, for example, might look like this:+.IP+.EX+See the section on+[heading identifiers](#heading-identifiers-in-html-latex-and-context).+.EE+.PP+Note, however, that this method of providing links to sections works+only in HTML, LaTeX, and ConTeXt formats.+.PP+If the \f[CR]--section-divs\f[R] option is specified, then each section+will be wrapped in a \f[CR]section\f[R] (or a \f[CR]div\f[R], if+\f[CR]html4\f[R] was specified), and the identifier will be attached to+the enclosing \f[CR]<section>\f[R] (or \f[CR]<div>\f[R]) tag rather than+the heading itself.+This allows entire sections to be manipulated using JavaScript or+treated differently in CSS.+.SS Extension: \f[CR]ascii_identifiers\f[R]+Causes the identifiers produced by \f[CR]auto_identifiers\f[R] to be+pure ASCII.+Accents are stripped off of accented Latin letters, and non-Latin+letters are omitted.+.SS Extension: \f[CR]gfm_auto_identifiers\f[R]+Changes the algorithm used by \f[CR]auto_identifiers\f[R] to conform to+GitHub\[cq]s method.+Spaces are converted to dashes (\f[CR]-\f[R]), uppercase characters to+lowercase characters, and punctuation characters other than \f[CR]-\f[R]+and \f[CR]_\f[R] are removed.+Emojis are replaced by their names.+.SS Math Input+The extensions \f[CR]tex_math_dollars\f[R],+\f[CR]tex_math_single_backslash\f[R], and+\f[CR]tex_math_double_backslash\f[R] are described in the section about+Pandoc\[cq]s Markdown.+.PP+However, they can also be used with HTML input.+This is handy for reading web pages formatted using MathJax, for+example.+.SS Raw HTML/TeX+The following extensions are described in more detail in their+respective sections of Pandoc\[cq]s Markdown:+.IP \[bu] 2+\f[CR]raw_html\f[R] allows HTML elements which are not representable in+pandoc\[cq]s AST to be parsed as raw HTML.+By default, this is disabled for HTML input.+.IP \[bu] 2+\f[CR]raw_tex\f[R] allows raw LaTeX, TeX, and ConTeXt to be included in+a document.+This extension can be enabled/disabled for the following formats (in+addition to \f[CR]markdown\f[R]):+.RS 2+.TP+input formats+\f[CR]latex\f[R], \f[CR]textile\f[R], \f[CR]html\f[R] (environments,+\f[CR]\[rs]ref\f[R], and \f[CR]\[rs]eqref\f[R] only), \f[CR]ipynb\f[R]+.TP+output formats+\f[CR]textile\f[R], \f[CR]commonmark\f[R]+.PP+Note: as applied to \f[CR]ipynb\f[R], \f[CR]raw_html\f[R] and+\f[CR]raw_tex\f[R] affect not only raw TeX in markdown cells, but data+with mime type \f[CR]text/html\f[R] in output cells.+Since the \f[CR]ipynb\f[R] reader attempts to preserve the richest+possible outputs when several options are given, you will get best+results if you disable \f[CR]raw_html\f[R] and \f[CR]raw_tex\f[R] when+converting to formats like \f[CR]docx\f[R] which don\[cq]t allow raw+\f[CR]html\f[R] or \f[CR]tex\f[R].+.RE+.IP \[bu] 2+\f[CR]native_divs\f[R] causes HTML \f[CR]div\f[R] elements to be parsed+as native pandoc Div blocks.+If you want them to be parsed as raw HTML, use+\f[CR]-f html-native_divs+raw_html\f[R].+.IP \[bu] 2+\f[CR]native_spans\f[R] causes HTML \f[CR]span\f[R] elements to be+parsed as native pandoc Span inlines.+If you want them to be parsed as raw HTML, use+\f[CR]-f html-native_spans+raw_html\f[R].+If you want to drop all \f[CR]div\f[R]s and \f[CR]span\f[R]s when+converting HTML to Markdown, you can use+\f[CR]pandoc -f html-native_divs-native_spans -t markdown\f[R].+.SS Literate Haskell support+.SS Extension: \f[CR]literate_haskell\f[R]+Treat the document as literate Haskell source.+.PP+This extension can be enabled/disabled for the following formats:+.TP+input formats+\f[CR]markdown\f[R], \f[CR]rst\f[R], \f[CR]latex\f[R]+.TP+output formats+\f[CR]markdown\f[R], \f[CR]rst\f[R], \f[CR]latex\f[R], \f[CR]html\f[R]+.PP+If you append \f[CR]+lhs\f[R] (or \f[CR]+literate_haskell\f[R]) to one+of the formats above, pandoc will treat the document as literate Haskell+source.+This means that+.IP \[bu] 2+In Markdown input, \[lq]bird track\[rq] sections will be parsed as+Haskell code rather than block quotations.+Text between \f[CR]\[rs]begin{code}\f[R] and \f[CR]\[rs]end{code}\f[R]+will also be treated as Haskell code.+For ATX-style headings the character `=' will be used instead of `#'.+.IP \[bu] 2+In Markdown output, code blocks with classes \f[CR]haskell\f[R] and+\f[CR]literate\f[R] will be rendered using bird tracks, and block+quotations will be indented one space, so they will not be treated as+Haskell code.+In addition, headings will be rendered setext-style (with underlines)+rather than ATX-style (with `#' characters).+(This is because ghc treats `#' characters in column 1 as introducing+line numbers.)+.IP \[bu] 2+In restructured text input, \[lq]bird track\[rq] sections will be parsed+as Haskell code.+.IP \[bu] 2+In restructured text output, code blocks with class \f[CR]haskell\f[R]+will be rendered using bird tracks.+.IP \[bu] 2+In LaTeX input, text in \f[CR]code\f[R] environments will be parsed as+Haskell code.+.IP \[bu] 2+In LaTeX output, code blocks with class \f[CR]haskell\f[R] will be+rendered inside \f[CR]code\f[R] environments.+.IP \[bu] 2+In HTML output, code blocks with class \f[CR]haskell\f[R] will be+rendered with class \f[CR]literatehaskell\f[R] and bird tracks.+.PP+Examples:+.IP+.EX+pandoc -f markdown+lhs -t html+.EE+.PP+reads literate Haskell source formatted with Markdown conventions and+writes ordinary HTML (without bird tracks).+.IP+.EX+pandoc -f markdown+lhs -t html+lhs+.EE+.PP+writes HTML with the Haskell code in bird tracks, so it can be copied+and pasted as literate Haskell source.+.PP+Note that GHC expects the bird tracks in the first column, so indented+literate code blocks (e.g.\ inside an itemized environment) will not be+picked up by the Haskell compiler.+.SS Other extensions+.SS Extension: \f[CR]empty_paragraphs\f[R]+Allows empty paragraphs.+By default empty paragraphs are omitted.+.PP+This extension can be enabled/disabled for the following formats:+.TP+input formats+\f[CR]docx\f[R], \f[CR]html\f[R]+.TP+output formats+\f[CR]docx\f[R], \f[CR]odt\f[R], \f[CR]opendocument\f[R],+\f[CR]html\f[R]+.SS Extension: \f[CR]native_numbering\f[R]+Enables native numbering of figures and tables.+Enumeration starts at 1.+.PP+This extension can be enabled/disabled for the following formats:+.TP+output formats+\f[CR]odt\f[R], \f[CR]opendocument\f[R], \f[CR]docx\f[R]+.SS Extension: \f[CR]xrefs_name\f[R]+Links to headings, figures and tables inside the document are+substituted with cross-references that will use the name or caption of+the referenced item.+The original link text is replaced once the generated document is+refreshed.+This extension can be combined with \f[CR]xrefs_number\f[R] in which+case numbers will appear before the name.+.PP+Text in cross-references is only made consistent with the referenced+item once the document has been refreshed.+.PP+This extension can be enabled/disabled for the following formats:+.TP+output formats+\f[CR]odt\f[R], \f[CR]opendocument\f[R]+.SS Extension: \f[CR]xrefs_number\f[R]+Links to headings, figures and tables inside the document are+substituted with cross-references that will use the number of the+referenced item.+The original link text is discarded.+This extension can be combined with \f[CR]xrefs_name\f[R] in which case+the name or caption numbers will appear after the number.+.PP+For the \f[CR]xrefs_number\f[R] to be useful heading numbers must be+enabled in the generated document, also table and figure captions must+be enabled using for example the \f[CR]native_numbering\f[R] extension.+.PP+Numbers in cross-references are only visible in the final document once+it has been refreshed.+.PP+This extension can be enabled/disabled for the following formats:+.TP+output formats+\f[CR]odt\f[R], \f[CR]opendocument\f[R]+.SS Extension: \f[CR]styles\f[R]+When converting from docx, read all docx styles as divs (for paragraph+styles) and spans (for character styles) regardless of whether pandoc+understands the meaning of these styles.+This can be used with docx custom styles.+Disabled by default.+.TP+input formats+\f[CR]docx\f[R]+.SS Extension: \f[CR]amuse\f[R]+In the \f[CR]muse\f[R] input format, this enables Text::Amuse extensions+to Emacs Muse markup.+.SS Extension: \f[CR]raw_markdown\f[R]+In the \f[CR]ipynb\f[R] input format, this causes Markdown cells to be+included as raw Markdown blocks (allowing lossless round-tripping)+rather than being parsed.+Use this only when you are targeting \f[CR]ipynb\f[R] or a+markdown-based output format.+.SS Extension: \f[CR]citations\f[R]+When the \f[CR]citations\f[R] extension is enabled in \f[CR]org\f[R],+org-cite and org-ref style citations will be parsed as native pandoc+citations.+.PP+When \f[CR]citations\f[R] is enabled in \f[CR]docx\f[R], citations+inserted by Zotero or Mendeley or EndNote plugins will be parsed as+native pandoc citations.+(Otherwise, the formatted citations generated by the bibliographic+software will be parsed as regular text.)+.SS Extension: \f[CR]fancy_lists\f[R]+Some aspects of Pandoc\[cq]s Markdown fancy lists are also accepted in+\f[CR]org\f[R] input, mimicking the option+\f[CR]org-list-allow-alphabetical\f[R] in Emacs.+As in Org Mode, enabling this extension allows lowercase and uppercase+alphabetical markers for ordered lists to be parsed in addition to+arabic ones.+Note that for Org, this does not include roman numerals or the+\f[CR]#\f[R] placeholder that are enabled by the extension in+Pandoc\[cq]s Markdown.+.SS Extension: \f[CR]element_citations\f[R]+In the \f[CR]jats\f[R] output formats, this causes reference items to be+replaced with \f[CR]<element-citation>\f[R] elements.+These elements are not influenced by CSL styles, but all information on+the item is included in tags.+.SS Extension: \f[CR]ntb\f[R]+In the \f[CR]context\f[R] output format this enables the use of Natural+Tables (TABLE) instead of the default Extreme Tables (xtables).+Natural tables allow more fine-grained global customization but come at+a performance penalty compared to extreme tables.+.SS Extension: \f[CR]tagging\f[R]+Enabling this extension with \f[CR]context\f[R] output will produce+markup suitable for the production of tagged PDFs.+This includes additional markers for paragraphs and alternative markup+for emphasized text.+The \f[CR]emphasis-command\f[R] template variable is set if the+extension is enabled.+.SH PANDOC\[cq]S MARKDOWN+Pandoc understands an extended and slightly revised version of John+Gruber\[cq]s Markdown syntax.+This document explains the syntax, noting differences from original+Markdown.+Except where noted, these differences can be suppressed by using the+\f[CR]markdown_strict\f[R] format instead of \f[CR]markdown\f[R].+Extensions can be enabled or disabled to specify the behavior more+granularly.+They are described in the following.+See also Extensions above, for extensions that work also on other+formats.+.SS Philosophy+Markdown is designed to be easy to write, and, even more importantly,+easy to read:+.RS+.PP+A Markdown-formatted document should be publishable as-is, as plain+text, without looking like it\[cq]s been marked up with tags or+formatting instructions.+\[en] John Gruber+.RE+.PP+This principle has guided pandoc\[cq]s decisions in finding syntax for+tables, footnotes, and other extensions.+.PP+There is, however, one respect in which pandoc\[cq]s aims are different+from the original aims of Markdown.+Whereas Markdown was originally designed with HTML generation in mind,+pandoc is designed for multiple output formats.+Thus, while pandoc allows the embedding of raw HTML, it discourages it,+and provides other, non-HTMLish ways of representing important document+elements like definition lists, tables, mathematics, and footnotes.+.SS Paragraphs+A paragraph is one or more lines of text followed by one or more blank+lines.+Newlines are treated as spaces, so you can reflow your paragraphs as you+like.+If you need a hard line break, put two or more spaces at the end of a+line.+.SS Extension: \f[CR]escaped_line_breaks\f[R]+A backslash followed by a newline is also a hard line break.+Note: in multiline and grid table cells, this is the only way to create+a hard line break, since trailing spaces in the cells are ignored.+.SS Headings+There are two kinds of headings: Setext and ATX.+.SS Setext-style headings+A setext-style heading is a line of text \[lq]underlined\[rq] with a row+of \f[CR]=\f[R] signs (for a level-one heading) or \f[CR]-\f[R] signs+(for a level-two heading):+.IP+.EX+A level-one heading+===================++A level-two heading+-------------------+.EE+.PP+The heading text can contain inline formatting, such as emphasis (see+Inline formatting, below).+.SS ATX-style headings+An ATX-style heading consists of one to six \f[CR]#\f[R] signs and a+line of text, optionally followed by any number of \f[CR]#\f[R] signs.+The number of \f[CR]#\f[R] signs at the beginning of the line is the+heading level:+.IP+.EX+## A level-two heading++### A level-three heading ###+.EE+.PP+As with setext-style headings, the heading text can contain formatting:+.IP+.EX+# A level-one heading with a [link](/url) and *emphasis*+.EE+.SS Extension: \f[CR]blank_before_header\f[R]+Original Markdown syntax does not require a blank line before a heading.+Pandoc does require this (except, of course, at the beginning of the+document).+The reason for the requirement is that it is all too easy for a+\f[CR]#\f[R] to end up at the beginning of a line by accident (perhaps+through line wrapping).+Consider, for example:+.IP+.EX+I like several of their flavors of ice cream:+#22, for example, and #5.+.EE+.SS Extension: \f[CR]space_in_atx_header\f[R]+Many Markdown implementations do not require a space between the opening+\f[CR]#\f[R]s of an ATX heading and the heading text, so that+\f[CR]#5 bolt\f[R] and \f[CR]#hashtag\f[R] count as headings.+With this extension, pandoc does require the space.+.SS Heading identifiers+See also the \f[CR]auto_identifiers\f[R] extension above.+.SS Extension: \f[CR]header_attributes\f[R]+Headings can be assigned attributes using this syntax at the end of the+line containing the heading text:+.IP+.EX+{#identifier .class .class key=value key=value}+.EE+.PP+Thus, for example, the following headings will all be assigned the+identifier \f[CR]foo\f[R]:+.IP+.EX+# My heading {#foo}++## My heading ##    {#foo}++My other heading   {#foo}+---------------+.EE+.PP+(This syntax is compatible with PHP Markdown Extra.)+.PP+Note that although this syntax allows assignment of classes and+key/value attributes, writers generally don\[cq]t use all of this+information.+Identifiers, classes, and key/value attributes are used in HTML and+HTML-based formats such as EPUB and slidy.+Identifiers are used for labels and link anchors in the LaTeX, ConTeXt,+Textile, Jira markup, and AsciiDoc writers.+.PP+Headings with the class \f[CR]unnumbered\f[R] will not be numbered, even+if \f[CR]--number-sections\f[R] is specified.+A single hyphen (\f[CR]-\f[R]) in an attribute context is equivalent to+\f[CR].unnumbered\f[R], and preferable in non-English documents.+So,+.IP+.EX+# My heading {-}+.EE+.PP+is just the same as+.IP+.EX+# My heading {.unnumbered}+.EE+.PP+If the \f[CR]unlisted\f[R] class is present in addition to+\f[CR]unnumbered\f[R], the heading will not be included in a table of+contents.+(Currently this feature is only implemented for certain formats: those+based on LaTeX and HTML, PowerPoint, and RTF.)+.SS Extension: \f[CR]implicit_header_references\f[R]+Pandoc behaves as if reference links have been defined for each heading.+So, to link to a heading+.IP+.EX+# Heading identifiers in HTML+.EE+.PP+you can simply write+.IP+.EX+[Heading identifiers in HTML]+.EE+.PP+or+.IP+.EX+[Heading identifiers in HTML][]+.EE+.PP+or+.IP+.EX+[the section on heading identifiers][heading identifiers in+HTML]+.EE+.PP+instead of giving the identifier explicitly:+.IP+.EX+[Heading identifiers in HTML](#heading-identifiers-in-html)+.EE+.PP+If there are multiple headings with identical text, the corresponding+reference will link to the first one only, and you will need to use+explicit links to link to the others, as described above.+.PP+Like regular reference links, these references are case-insensitive.+.PP+Explicit link reference definitions always take priority over implicit+heading references.+So, in the following example, the link will point to \f[CR]bar\f[R], not+to \f[CR]#foo\f[R]:+.IP+.EX+# Foo++[foo]: bar++See [foo]+.EE+.SS Block quotations+Markdown uses email conventions for quoting blocks of text.+A block quotation is one or more paragraphs or other block elements+(such as lists or headings), with each line preceded by a \f[CR]>\f[R]+character and an optional space.+(The \f[CR]>\f[R] need not start at the left margin, but it should not+be indented more than three spaces.)+.IP+.EX+> This is a block quote. This+> paragraph has two lines.+>+> 1. This is a list inside a block quote.+> 2. Second item.+.EE+.PP+A \[lq]lazy\[rq] form, which requires the \f[CR]>\f[R] character only on+the first line of each block, is also allowed:+.IP+.EX+> This is a block quote. This+paragraph has two lines.++> 1. This is a list inside a block quote.+2. Second item.+.EE+.PP+Among the block elements that can be contained in a block quote are+other block quotes.+That is, block quotes can be nested:+.IP+.EX+> This is a block quote.+>+> > A block quote within a block quote.+.EE+.PP+If the \f[CR]>\f[R] character is followed by an optional space, that+space will be considered part of the block quote marker and not part of+the indentation of the contents.+Thus, to put an indented code block in a block quote, you need five+spaces after the \f[CR]>\f[R]:+.IP+.EX+>     code+.EE+.SS Extension: \f[CR]blank_before_blockquote\f[R]+Original Markdown syntax does not require a blank line before a block+quote.+Pandoc does require this (except, of course, at the beginning of the+document).+The reason for the requirement is that it is all too easy for a+\f[CR]>\f[R] to end up at the beginning of a line by accident (perhaps+through line wrapping).+So, unless the \f[CR]markdown_strict\f[R] format is used, the following+does not produce a nested block quote in pandoc:+.IP+.EX+> This is a block quote.+>> Not nested, since \[ga]blank_before_blockquote\[ga] is enabled by default+.EE+.SS Verbatim (code) blocks+.SS Indented code blocks+A block of text indented four spaces (or one tab) is treated as verbatim+text: that is, special characters do not trigger special formatting, and+all spaces and line breaks are preserved.+For example,+.IP+.EX+    if (a > 3) {+      moveShip(5 * gravity, DOWN);+    }+.EE+.PP+The initial (four space or one tab) indentation is not considered part+of the verbatim text, and is removed in the output.+.PP+Note: blank lines in the verbatim text need not begin with four spaces.+.SS Fenced code blocks+.SS Extension: \f[CR]fenced_code_blocks\f[R]+In addition to standard indented code blocks, pandoc supports+\f[I]fenced\f[R] code blocks.+These begin with a row of three or more tildes (\f[CR]\[ti]\f[R]) and+end with a row of tildes that must be at least as long as the starting+row.+Everything between these lines is treated as code.+No indentation is necessary:+.IP+.EX+\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]+if (a > 3) {+  moveShip(5 * gravity, DOWN);+}+\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]+.EE+.PP+Like regular code blocks, fenced code blocks must be separated from+surrounding text by blank lines.+.PP+If the code itself contains a row of tildes or backticks, just use a+longer row of tildes or backticks at the start and end:+.IP+.EX+\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]+\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]+code including tildes+\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]+\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]+.EE+.SS Extension: \f[CR]backtick_code_blocks\f[R]+Same as \f[CR]fenced_code_blocks\f[R], but uses backticks+(\f[CR]\[ga]\f[R]) instead of tildes (\f[CR]\[ti]\f[R]).+.SS Extension: \f[CR]fenced_code_attributes\f[R]+Optionally, you may attach attributes to fenced or backtick code block+using this syntax:+.IP+.EX+\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]\[ti] {#mycode .haskell .numberLines startFrom=\[dq]100\[dq]}+qsort []     = []+qsort (x:xs) = qsort (filter (< x) xs) ++ [x] +++               qsort (filter (>= x) xs)+\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]\[ti]+.EE+.PP+Here \f[CR]mycode\f[R] is an identifier, \f[CR]haskell\f[R] and+\f[CR]numberLines\f[R] are classes, and \f[CR]startFrom\f[R] is an+attribute with value \f[CR]100\f[R].+Some output formats can use this information to do syntax highlighting.+Currently, the only output formats that use this information are HTML,+LaTeX, Docx, Ms, and PowerPoint.+If highlighting is supported for your output format and language, then+the code block above will appear highlighted, with numbered lines.+(To see which languages are supported, type+\f[CR]pandoc --list-highlight-languages\f[R].)+Otherwise, the code block above will appear as follows:+.IP+.EX+<pre id=\[dq]mycode\[dq] class=\[dq]haskell numberLines\[dq] startFrom=\[dq]100\[dq]>+  <code>+  ...+  </code>+</pre>+.EE+.PP+The \f[CR]numberLines\f[R] (or \f[CR]number-lines\f[R]) class will cause+the lines of the code block to be numbered, starting with \f[CR]1\f[R]+or the value of the \f[CR]startFrom\f[R] attribute.+The \f[CR]lineAnchors\f[R] (or \f[CR]line-anchors\f[R]) class will cause+the lines to be clickable anchors in HTML output.+.PP+A shortcut form can also be used for specifying the language of the code+block:+.IP+.EX+\[ga]\[ga]\[ga]haskell+qsort [] = []+\[ga]\[ga]\[ga]+.EE+.PP+This is equivalent to:+.IP+.EX+\[ga]\[ga]\[ga] {.haskell}+qsort [] = []+\[ga]\[ga]\[ga]+.EE+.PP+This shortcut form may be combined with attributes:+.IP+.EX+\[ga]\[ga]\[ga]haskell {.numberLines}+qsort [] = []+\[ga]\[ga]\[ga]+.EE+.PP+Which is equivalent to:+.IP+.EX+\[ga]\[ga]\[ga] {.haskell .numberLines}+qsort [] = []+\[ga]\[ga]\[ga]+.EE+.PP+If the \f[CR]fenced_code_attributes\f[R] extension is disabled, but+input contains class attribute(s) for the code block, the first class+attribute will be printed after the opening fence as a bare word.+.PP+To prevent all highlighting, use the \f[CR]--no-highlight\f[R] flag.+To set the highlighting style, use \f[CR]--highlight-style\f[R].+For more information on highlighting, see Syntax highlighting, below.+.SS Line blocks+.SS Extension: \f[CR]line_blocks\f[R]+A line block is a sequence of lines beginning with a vertical bar+(\f[CR]|\f[R]) followed by a space.+The division into lines will be preserved in the output, as will any+leading spaces; otherwise, the lines will be formatted as Markdown.+This is useful for verse and addresses:+.IP+.EX+| The limerick packs laughs anatomical+| In space that is quite economical.+|    But the good ones I\[aq]ve seen+|    So seldom are clean+| And the clean ones so seldom are comical++| 200 Main St.+| Berkeley, CA 94718+.EE+.PP+The lines can be hard-wrapped if needed, but the continuation line must+begin with a space.+.IP+.EX+| The Right Honorable Most Venerable and Righteous Samuel L.+  Constable, Jr.+| 200 Main St.+| Berkeley, CA 94718+.EE+.PP+Inline formatting (such as emphasis) is allowed in the content, but not+block-level formatting (such as block quotes or lists).+.PP+This syntax is borrowed from reStructuredText.+.SS Lists+.SS Bullet lists+A bullet list is a list of bulleted list items.+A bulleted list item begins with a bullet (\f[CR]*\f[R], \f[CR]+\f[R],+or \f[CR]-\f[R]).+Here is a simple example:+.IP+.EX+* one+* two+* three+.EE+.PP+This will produce a \[lq]compact\[rq] list.+If you want a \[lq]loose\[rq] list, in which each item is formatted as a+paragraph, put spaces between the items:+.IP+.EX+* one++* two++* three+.EE+.PP+The bullets need not be flush with the left margin; they may be indented+one, two, or three spaces.+The bullet must be followed by whitespace.+.PP+List items look best if subsequent lines are flush with the first line+(after the bullet):+.IP+.EX+* here is my first+  list item.+* and my second.+.EE+.PP+But Markdown also allows a \[lq]lazy\[rq] format:+.IP+.EX+* here is my first+list item.+* and my second.+.EE+.SS Block content in list items+A list item may contain multiple paragraphs and other block-level+content.+However, subsequent paragraphs must be preceded by a blank line and+indented to line up with the first non-space content after the list+marker.+.IP+.EX+  * First paragraph.++    Continued.++  * Second paragraph. With a code block, which must be indented+    eight spaces:++        { code }+.EE+.PP+Exception: if the list marker is followed by an indented code block,+which must begin 5 spaces after the list marker, then subsequent+paragraphs must begin two columns after the last character of the list+marker:+.IP+.EX+*     code++  continuation paragraph+.EE+.PP+List items may include other lists.+In this case the preceding blank line is optional.+The nested list must be indented to line up with the first non-space+character after the list marker of the containing list item.+.IP+.EX+* fruits+  + apples+    - macintosh+    - red delicious+  + pears+  + peaches+* vegetables+  + broccoli+  + chard+.EE+.PP+As noted above, Markdown allows you to write list items+\[lq]lazily,\[rq] instead of indenting continuation lines.+However, if there are multiple paragraphs or other blocks in a list+item, the first line of each must be indented.+.IP+.EX++ A lazy, lazy, list+item.+++ Another one; this looks+bad but is legal.++    Second paragraph of second+list item.+.EE+.SS Ordered lists+Ordered lists work just like bulleted lists, except that the items begin+with enumerators rather than bullets.+.PP+In original Markdown, enumerators are decimal numbers followed by a+period and a space.+The numbers themselves are ignored, so there is no difference between+this list:+.IP+.EX+1.  one+2.  two+3.  three+.EE+.PP+and this one:+.IP+.EX+5.  one+7.  two+1.  three+.EE+.SS Extension: \f[CR]fancy_lists\f[R]+Unlike original Markdown, pandoc allows ordered list items to be marked+with uppercase and lowercase letters and roman numerals, in addition to+Arabic numerals.+List markers may be enclosed in parentheses or followed by a single+right-parenthesis or period.+They must be separated from the text that follows by at least one space,+and, if the list marker is a capital letter with a period, by at least+two spaces.+.PP+The \f[CR]fancy_lists\f[R] extension also allows `\f[CR]#\f[R]' to be+used as an ordered list marker in place of a numeral:+.IP+.EX+#. one+#. two+.EE+.PP+Note: the `\f[CR]#\f[R]' ordered list marker doesn\[cq]t work with+\f[CR]commonmark\f[R].+.SS Extension: \f[CR]startnum\f[R]+Pandoc also pays attention to the type of list marker used, and to the+starting number, and both of these are preserved where possible in the+output format.+Thus, the following yields a list with numbers followed by a single+parenthesis, starting with 9, and a sublist with lowercase roman+numerals:+.IP+.EX+ 9)  Ninth+10)  Tenth+11)  Eleventh+       i. subone+      ii. subtwo+     iii. subthree+.EE+.PP+Pandoc will start a new list each time a different type of list marker+is used.+So, the following will create three lists:+.IP+.EX+(2) Two+(5) Three+1.  Four+*   Five+.EE+.PP+If default list markers are desired, use \f[CR]#.\f[R]:+.IP+.EX+#.  one+#.  two+#.  three+.EE+.SS Extension: \f[CR]task_lists\f[R]+Pandoc supports task lists, using the syntax of GitHub-Flavored+Markdown.+.IP+.EX+- [ ] an unchecked task list item+- [x] checked item+.EE+.SS Definition lists+.SS Extension: \f[CR]definition_lists\f[R]+Pandoc supports definition lists, using the syntax of PHP Markdown Extra+with some extensions.+.IP+.EX+Term 1++:   Definition 1++Term 2 with *inline markup*++:   Definition 2++        { some code, part of Definition 2 }++    Third paragraph of definition 2.+.EE+.PP+Each term must fit on one line, which may optionally be followed by a+blank line, and must be followed by one or more definitions.+A definition begins with a colon or tilde, which may be indented one or+two spaces.+.PP+A term may have multiple definitions, and each definition may consist of+one or more block elements (paragraph, code block, list, etc.), each+indented four spaces or one tab stop.+The body of the definition (not including the first line) should be+indented four spaces.+However, as with other Markdown lists, you can \[lq]lazily\[rq] omit+indentation except at the beginning of a paragraph or other block+element:+.IP+.EX+Term 1++:   Definition+with lazy continuation.++    Second paragraph of the definition.+.EE+.PP+If you leave space before the definition (as in the example above), the+text of the definition will be treated as a paragraph.+In some output formats, this will mean greater spacing between+term/definition pairs.+For a more compact definition list, omit the space before the+definition:+.IP+.EX+Term 1+  \[ti] Definition 1++Term 2+  \[ti] Definition 2a+  \[ti] Definition 2b+.EE+.PP+Note that space between items in a definition list is required.+(A variant that loosens this requirement, but disallows \[lq]lazy\[rq]+hard wrapping, can be activated with the+\f[CR]compact_definition_lists\f[R] extension.)+.SS Numbered example lists+.SS Extension: \f[CR]example_lists\f[R]+The special list marker \f[CR]\[at]\f[R] can be used for sequentially+numbered examples.+The first list item with a \f[CR]\[at]\f[R] marker will be numbered `1',+the next `2', and so on, throughout the document.+The numbered examples need not occur in a single list; each new list+using \f[CR]\[at]\f[R] will take up where the last stopped.+So, for example:+.IP+.EX+(\[at])  My first example will be numbered (1).+(\[at])  My second example will be numbered (2).++Explanation of examples.++(\[at])  My third example will be numbered (3).+.EE+.PP+Numbered examples can be labeled and referred to elsewhere in the+document:+.IP+.EX+(\[at]good)  This is a good example.++As (\[at]good) illustrates, ...+.EE+.PP+The label can be any string of alphanumeric characters, underscores, or+hyphens.+.PP+Note: continuation paragraphs in example lists must always be indented+four spaces, regardless of the length of the list marker.+That is, example lists always behave as if the+\f[CR]four_space_rule\f[R] extension is set.+This is because example labels tend to be long, and indenting content to+the first non-space character after the label would be awkward.+.SS Ending a list+What if you want to put an indented code block after a list?+.IP+.EX+-   item one+-   item two++    { my code block }+.EE+.PP+Trouble!+Here pandoc (like other Markdown implementations) will treat+\f[CR]{ my code block }\f[R] as the second paragraph of item two, and+not as a code block.+.PP+To \[lq]cut off\[rq] the list after item two, you can insert some+non-indented content, like an HTML comment, which won\[cq]t produce+visible output in any format:+.IP+.EX+-   item one+-   item two++<!-- end of list -->++    { my code block }+.EE+.PP+You can use the same trick if you want two consecutive lists instead of+one big list:+.IP+.EX+1.  one+2.  two+3.  three++<!-- -->++1.  uno+2.  dos+3.  tres+.EE+.SS Horizontal rules+A line containing a row of three or more \f[CR]*\f[R], \f[CR]-\f[R], or+\f[CR]_\f[R] characters (optionally separated by spaces) produces a+horizontal rule:+.IP+.EX+*  *  *  *++---------------+.EE+.PP+We strongly recommend that horizontal rules be separated from+surrounding text by blank lines.+If a horizontal rule is not followed by a blank line, pandoc may try to+interpret the lines that follow as a YAML metadata block or a table.+.SS Tables+Four kinds of tables may be used.+The first three kinds presuppose the use of a fixed-width font, such as+Courier.+The fourth kind can be used with proportionally spaced fonts, as it does+not require lining up columns.+.SS Extension: \f[CR]table_captions\f[R]+A caption may optionally be provided with all 4 kinds of tables (as+illustrated in the examples below).+A caption is a paragraph beginning with the string \f[CR]Table:\f[R] (or+\f[CR]table:\f[R] or just \f[CR]:\f[R]), which will be stripped off.+It may appear either before or after the table.+.SS Extension: \f[CR]simple_tables\f[R]+Simple tables look like this:+.IP+.EX+  Right     Left     Center     Default+-------     ------ ----------   -------+     12     12        12            12+    123     123       123          123+      1     1          1             1++Table:  Demonstration of simple table syntax.+.EE+.PP+The header and table rows must each fit on one line.+Column alignments are determined by the position of the header text+relative to the dashed line below it:+.IP \[bu] 2+If the dashed line is flush with the header text on the right side but+extends beyond it on the left, the column is right-aligned.+.IP \[bu] 2+If the dashed line is flush with the header text on the left side but+extends beyond it on the right, the column is left-aligned.+.IP \[bu] 2+If the dashed line extends beyond the header text on both sides, the+column is centered.+.IP \[bu] 2+If the dashed line is flush with the header text on both sides, the+default alignment is used (in most cases, this will be left).+.PP+The table must end with a blank line, or a line of dashes followed by a+blank line.+.PP+The column header row may be omitted, provided a dashed line is used to+end the table.+For example:+.IP+.EX+-------     ------ ----------   -------+     12     12        12             12+    123     123       123           123+      1     1          1              1+-------     ------ ----------   -------+.EE+.PP+When the header row is omitted, column alignments are determined on the+basis of the first line of the table body.+So, in the tables above, the columns would be right, left, center, and+right aligned, respectively.+.SS Extension: \f[CR]multiline_tables\f[R]+Multiline tables allow header and table rows to span multiple lines of+text (but cells that span multiple columns or rows of the table are not+supported).+Here is an example:+.IP+.EX+-------------------------------------------------------------+ Centered   Default           Right Left+  Header    Aligned         Aligned Aligned+----------- ------- --------------- -------------------------+   First    row                12.0 Example of a row that+                                    spans multiple lines.++  Second    row                 5.0 Here\[aq]s another one. Note+                                    the blank line between+                                    rows.+-------------------------------------------------------------++Table: Here\[aq]s the caption. It, too, may span+multiple lines.+.EE+.PP+These work like simple tables, but with the following differences:+.IP \[bu] 2+They must begin with a row of dashes, before the header text (unless the+header row is omitted).+.IP \[bu] 2+They must end with a row of dashes, then a blank line.+.IP \[bu] 2+The rows must be separated by blank lines.+.PP+In multiline tables, the table parser pays attention to the widths of+the columns, and the writers try to reproduce these relative widths in+the output.+So, if you find that one of the columns is too narrow in the output, try+widening it in the Markdown source.+.PP+The header may be omitted in multiline tables as well as simple tables:+.IP+.EX+----------- ------- --------------- -------------------------+   First    row                12.0 Example of a row that+                                    spans multiple lines.++  Second    row                 5.0 Here\[aq]s another one. Note+                                    the blank line between+                                    rows.+----------- ------- --------------- -------------------------++: Here\[aq]s a multiline table without a header.+.EE+.PP+It is possible for a multiline table to have just one row, but the row+should be followed by a blank line (and then the row of dashes that ends+the table), or the table may be interpreted as a simple table.+.SS Extension: \f[CR]grid_tables\f[R]+Grid tables look like this:+.IP+.EX+: Sample grid table.+++---------------+---------------+--------------------++| Fruit         | Price         | Advantages         |++===============+===============+====================++| Bananas       | $1.34         | - built-in wrapper |+|               |               | - bright color     |++---------------+---------------+--------------------++| Oranges       | $2.10         | - cures scurvy     |+|               |               | - tasty            |++---------------+---------------+--------------------++.EE+.PP+The row of \f[CR]=\f[R]s separates the header from the table body, and+can be omitted for a headerless table.+The cells of grid tables may contain arbitrary block elements (multiple+paragraphs, code blocks, lists, etc.).+.PP+Cells can span multiple columns or rows:+.IP+.EX++---------------------+----------++| Property            | Earth    |++=============+=======+==========++|             | min   | -89.2 °C |+| Temperature +-------+----------++| 1961-1990   | mean  | 14 °C    |+|             +-------+----------++|             | max   | 56.7 °C  |++-------------+-------+----------++.EE+.PP+A table header may contain more than one row:+.IP+.EX++---------------------+-----------------------++| Location            | Temperature 1961-1990 |+|                     | in degree Celsius     |+|                     +-------+-------+-------++|                     | min   | mean  | max   |++=====================+=======+=======+=======++| Antarctica          | -89.2 | N/A   | 19.8  |++---------------------+-------+-------+-------++| Earth               | -89.2 | 14    | 56.7  |++---------------------+-------+-------+-------++.EE+.PP+Alignments can be specified as with pipe tables, by putting colons at+the boundaries of the separator line after the header:+.IP+.EX++---------------+---------------+--------------------++| Right         | Left          | Centered           |++==============:+:==============+:==================:++| Bananas       | $1.34         | built-in wrapper   |++---------------+---------------+--------------------++.EE+.PP+For headerless tables, the colons go on the top line instead:+.IP+.EX++--------------:+:--------------+:------------------:++| Right         | Left          | Centered           |++---------------+---------------+--------------------++.EE+.PP+A table foot can be defined by enclosing it with separator lines that+use \f[CR]=\f[R] instead of \f[CR]-\f[R]:+.IP+.EX+ +---------------+---------------++ | Fruit         | Price         |+ +===============+===============++ | Bananas       | $1.34         |+ +---------------+---------------++ | Oranges       | $2.10         |+ +===============+===============++ | Sum           | $3.44         |+ +===============+===============++.EE+.PP+The foot must always be placed at the very bottom of the table.+.PP+Grid tables can be created easily using Emacs\[cq] table-mode+(\f[CR]M-x table-insert\f[R]).+.SS Extension: \f[CR]pipe_tables\f[R]+Pipe tables look like this:+.IP+.EX+| Right | Left | Default | Center |+|------:|:-----|---------|:------:|+|   12  |  12  |    12   |    12  |+|  123  |  123 |   123   |   123  |+|    1  |    1 |     1   |     1  |++  : Demonstration of pipe table syntax.+.EE+.PP+The syntax is identical to PHP Markdown Extra tables.+The beginning and ending pipe characters are optional, but pipes are+required between all columns.+The colons indicate column alignment as shown.+The header cannot be omitted.+To simulate a headerless table, include a header with blank cells.+.PP+Since the pipes indicate column boundaries, columns need not be+vertically aligned, as they are in the above example.+So, this is a perfectly legal (though ugly) pipe table:+.IP+.EX+fruit| price+-----|-----:+apple|2.05+pear|1.37+orange|3.09+.EE+.PP+The cells of pipe tables cannot contain block elements like paragraphs+and lists, and cannot span multiple lines.+If any line of the markdown source is longer than the column width (see+\f[CR]--columns\f[R]), then the table will take up the full text width+and the cell contents will wrap, with the relative cell widths+determined by the number of dashes in the line separating the table+header from the table body.+(For example \f[CR]---|-\f[R] would make the first column 3/4 and the+second column 1/4 of the full text width.)+On the other hand, if no lines are wider than column width, then cell+contents will not be wrapped, and the cells will be sized to their+contents.+.PP+Note: pandoc also recognizes pipe tables of the following form, as can+be produced by Emacs\[cq] orgtbl-mode:+.IP+.EX+| One | Two   |+|-----+-------|+| my  | table |+| is  | nice  |+.EE+.PP+The difference is that \f[CR]+\f[R] is used instead of \f[CR]|\f[R].+Other orgtbl features are not supported.+In particular, to get non-default column alignment, you\[cq]ll need to+add colons as above.+.SS Metadata blocks+.SS Extension: \f[CR]pandoc_title_block\f[R]+If the file begins with a title block+.IP+.EX+% title+% author(s) (separated by semicolons)+% date+.EE+.PP+it will be parsed as bibliographic information, not regular text.+(It will be used, for example, in the title of standalone LaTeX or HTML+output.)+The block may contain just a title, a title and an author, or all three+elements.+If you want to include an author but no title, or a title and a date but+no author, you need a blank line:+.IP+.EX+%+% Author+.EE+.IP+.EX+% My title+%+% June 15, 2006+.EE+.PP+The title may occupy multiple lines, but continuation lines must begin+with leading space, thus:+.IP+.EX+% My title+  on multiple lines+.EE+.PP+If a document has multiple authors, the authors may be put on separate+lines with leading space, or separated by semicolons, or both.+So, all of the following are equivalent:+.IP+.EX+% Author One+  Author Two+.EE+.IP+.EX+% Author One; Author Two+.EE+.IP+.EX+% Author One;+  Author Two+.EE+.PP+The date must fit on one line.+.PP+All three metadata fields may contain standard inline formatting+(italics, links, footnotes, etc.).+.PP+Title blocks will always be parsed, but they will affect the output only+when the \f[CR]--standalone\f[R] (\f[CR]-s\f[R]) option is chosen.+In HTML output, titles will appear twice: once in the document head+\[en] this is the title that will appear at the top of the window in a+browser \[en] and once at the beginning of the document body.+The title in the document head can have an optional prefix attached+(\f[CR]--title-prefix\f[R] or \f[CR]-T\f[R] option).+The title in the body appears as an H1 element with class+\[lq]title\[rq], so it can be suppressed or reformatted with CSS.+If a title prefix is specified with \f[CR]-T\f[R] and no title block+appears in the document, the title prefix will be used by itself as the+HTML title.+.PP+The man page writer extracts a title, man page section number, and other+header and footer information from the title line.+The title is assumed to be the first word on the title line, which may+optionally end with a (single-digit) section number in parentheses.+(There should be no space between the title and the parentheses.)+Anything after this is assumed to be additional footer and header text.+A single pipe character (\f[CR]|\f[R]) should be used to separate the+footer text from the header text.+Thus,+.IP+.EX+% PANDOC(1)+.EE+.PP+will yield a man page with the title \f[CR]PANDOC\f[R] and section 1.+.IP+.EX+% PANDOC(1) Pandoc User Manuals+.EE+.PP+will also have \[lq]Pandoc User Manuals\[rq] in the footer.+.IP+.EX+% PANDOC(1) Pandoc User Manuals | Version 4.0+.EE+.PP+will also have \[lq]Version 4.0\[rq] in the header.+.SS Extension: \f[CR]yaml_metadata_block\f[R]+A YAML metadata block is a valid YAML object, delimited by a line of+three hyphens (\f[CR]---\f[R]) at the top and a line of three hyphens+(\f[CR]---\f[R]) or three dots (\f[CR]...\f[R]) at the bottom.+The initial line \f[CR]---\f[R] must not be followed by a blank line.+A YAML metadata block may occur anywhere in the document, but if it is+not at the beginning, it must be preceded by a blank line.+.PP+Note that, because of the way pandoc concatenates input files when+several are provided, you may also keep the metadata in a separate YAML+file and pass it to pandoc as an argument, along with your Markdown+files:+.IP+.EX+pandoc chap1.md chap2.md chap3.md metadata.yaml -s -o book.html+.EE+.PP+Just be sure that the YAML file begins with \f[CR]---\f[R] and ends with+\f[CR]---\f[R] or \f[CR]...\f[R].+Alternatively, you can use the \f[CR]--metadata-file\f[R] option.+Using that approach however, you cannot reference content (like+footnotes) from the main markdown input document.+.PP+Metadata will be taken from the fields of the YAML object and added to+any existing document metadata.+Metadata can contain lists and objects (nested arbitrarily), but all+string scalars will be interpreted as Markdown.+Fields with names ending in an underscore will be ignored by pandoc.+(They may be given a role by external processors.)+Field names must not be interpretable as YAML numbers or boolean values+(so, for example, \f[CR]yes\f[R], \f[CR]True\f[R], and \f[CR]15\f[R]+cannot be used as field names).+.PP+A document may contain multiple metadata blocks.+If two metadata blocks attempt to set the same field, the value from the+second block will be taken.+.PP+Each metadata block is handled internally as an independent YAML+document.+This means, for example, that any YAML anchors defined in a block cannot+be referenced in another block.+.PP+When pandoc is used with \f[CR]-t markdown\f[R] to create a Markdown+document, a YAML metadata block will be produced only if the+\f[CR]-s/--standalone\f[R] option is used.+All of the metadata will appear in a single block at the beginning of+the document.+.PP+Note that YAML escaping rules must be followed.+Thus, for example, if a title contains a colon, it must be quoted, and+if it contains a backslash escape, then it must be ensured that it is+not treated as a YAML escape sequence.+The pipe character (\f[CR]|\f[R]) can be used to begin an indented block+that will be interpreted literally, without need for escaping.+This form is necessary when the field contains blank lines or+block-level formatting:+.IP+.EX+---+title:  \[aq]This is the title: it contains a colon\[aq]+author:+- Author One+- Author Two+keywords: [nothing, nothingness]+abstract: |+  This is the abstract.++  It consists of two paragraphs.+\&...+.EE+.PP+The literal block after the \f[CR]|\f[R] must be indented relative to+the line containing the \f[CR]|\f[R].+If it is not, the YAML will be invalid and pandoc will not interpret it+as metadata.+For an overview of the complex rules governing YAML, see the Wikipedia+entry on YAML syntax.+.PP+Template variables will be set automatically from the metadata.+Thus, for example, in writing HTML, the variable \f[CR]abstract\f[R]+will be set to the HTML equivalent of the Markdown in the+\f[CR]abstract\f[R] field:+.IP+.EX+<p>This is the abstract.</p>+<p>It consists of two paragraphs.</p>+.EE+.PP+Variables can contain arbitrary YAML structures, but the template must+match this structure.+The \f[CR]author\f[R] variable in the default templates expects a simple+list or string, but can be changed to support more complicated+structures.+The following combination, for example, would add an affiliation to the+author if one is given:+.IP+.EX+---+title: The document title+author:+- name: Author One+  affiliation: University of Somewhere+- name: Author Two+  affiliation: University of Nowhere+\&...+.EE+.PP+To use the structured authors in the example above, you would need a+custom template:+.IP+.EX+$for(author)$+$if(author.name)$+$author.name$$if(author.affiliation)$ ($author.affiliation$)$endif$+$else$+$author$+$endif$+$endfor$+.EE+.PP+Raw content to include in the document\[cq]s header may be specified+using \f[CR]header-includes\f[R]; however, it is important to mark up+this content as raw code for a particular output format, using the+\f[CR]raw_attribute\f[R] extension, or it will be interpreted as+markdown.+For example:+.IP+.EX+header-includes:+- |+  \[ga]\[ga]\[ga]{=latex}+  \[rs]let\[rs]oldsection\[rs]section+  \[rs]renewcommand{\[rs]section}[1]{\[rs]clearpage\[rs]oldsection{#1}}+  \[ga]\[ga]\[ga]+.EE+.PP+Note: the \f[CR]yaml_metadata_block\f[R] extension works with+\f[CR]commonmark\f[R] as well as \f[CR]markdown\f[R] (and it is enabled+by default in \f[CR]gfm\f[R] and \f[CR]commonmark_x\f[R]).+However, in these formats the following restrictions apply:+.IP \[bu] 2+The YAML metadata block must occur at the beginning of the document (and+there can be only one).+If multiple files are given as arguments to pandoc, only the first can+be a YAML metadata block.+.IP \[bu] 2+The leaf nodes of the YAML structure are parsed in isolation from each+other and from the rest of the document.+So, for example, you can\[cq]t use a reference link in these contexts if+the link definition is somewhere else in the document.+.SS Backslash escapes+.SS Extension: \f[CR]all_symbols_escapable\f[R]+Except inside a code block or inline code, any punctuation or space+character preceded by a backslash will be treated literally, even if it+would normally indicate formatting.+Thus, for example, if one writes+.IP+.EX+*\[rs]*hello\[rs]**+.EE+.PP+one will get+.IP+.EX+<em>*hello*</em>+.EE+.PP+instead of+.IP+.EX+<strong>hello</strong>+.EE+.PP+This rule is easier to remember than original Markdown\[cq]s rule, which+allows only the following characters to be backslash-escaped:+.IP+.EX+\[rs]\[ga]*_{}[]()>#+-.!+.EE+.PP+(However, if the \f[CR]markdown_strict\f[R] format is used, the original+Markdown rule will be used.)+.PP+A backslash-escaped space is parsed as a nonbreaking space.+In TeX output, it will appear as \f[CR]\[ti]\f[R].+In HTML and XML output, it will appear as a literal unicode nonbreaking+space character (note that it will thus actually look+\[lq]invisible\[rq] in the generated HTML source; you can still use the+\f[CR]--ascii\f[R] command-line option to make it appear as an explicit+entity).+.PP+A backslash-escaped newline (i.e.\ a backslash occurring at the end of a+line) is parsed as a hard line break.+It will appear in TeX output as \f[CR]\[rs]\[rs]\f[R] and in HTML as+\f[CR]<br />\f[R].+This is a nice alternative to Markdown\[cq]s \[lq]invisible\[rq] way of+indicating hard line breaks using two trailing spaces on a line.+.PP+Backslash escapes do not work in verbatim contexts.+.SS Inline formatting+.SS Emphasis+To \f[I]emphasize\f[R] some text, surround it with \f[CR]*\f[R]s or+\f[CR]_\f[R], like this:+.IP+.EX+This text is _emphasized with underscores_, and this+is *emphasized with asterisks*.+.EE+.PP+Double \f[CR]*\f[R] or \f[CR]_\f[R] produces \f[B]strong emphasis\f[R]:+.IP+.EX+This is **strong emphasis** and __with underscores__.+.EE+.PP+A \f[CR]*\f[R] or \f[CR]_\f[R] character surrounded by spaces, or+backslash-escaped, will not trigger emphasis:+.IP+.EX+This is * not emphasized *, and \[rs]*neither is this\[rs]*.+.EE+.SS Extension: \f[CR]intraword_underscores\f[R]+Because \f[CR]_\f[R] is sometimes used inside words and identifiers,+pandoc does not interpret a \f[CR]_\f[R] surrounded by alphanumeric+characters as an emphasis marker.+If you want to emphasize just part of a word, use \f[CR]*\f[R]:+.IP+.EX+feas*ible*, not feas*able*.+.EE+.SS Strikeout+.SS Extension: \f[CR]strikeout\f[R]+To strike out a section of text with a horizontal line, begin and end it+with \f[CR]\[ti]\[ti]\f[R].+Thus, for example,+.IP+.EX+This \[ti]\[ti]is deleted text.\[ti]\[ti]+.EE+.SS Superscripts and subscripts+.SS Extension: \f[CR]superscript\f[R], \f[CR]subscript\f[R]+Superscripts may be written by surrounding the superscripted text by+\f[CR]\[ha]\f[R] characters; subscripts may be written by surrounding+the subscripted text by \f[CR]\[ti]\f[R] characters.+Thus, for example,+.IP+.EX+H\[ti]2\[ti]O is a liquid.  2\[ha]10\[ha] is 1024.+.EE+.PP+The text between \f[CR]\[ha]...\[ha]\f[R] or \f[CR]\[ti]...\[ti]\f[R]+may not contain spaces or newlines.+If the superscripted or subscripted text contains spaces, these spaces+must be escaped with backslashes.+(This is to prevent accidental superscripting and subscripting through+the ordinary use of \f[CR]\[ti]\f[R] and \f[CR]\[ha]\f[R], and also bad+interactions with footnotes.)+Thus, if you want the letter P with `a cat' in subscripts, use+\f[CR]P\[ti]a\[rs] cat\[ti]\f[R], not \f[CR]P\[ti]a cat\[ti]\f[R].+.SS Verbatim+To make a short span of text verbatim, put it inside backticks:+.IP+.EX+What is the difference between \[ga]>>=\[ga] and \[ga]>>\[ga]?+.EE+.PP+If the verbatim text includes a backtick, use double backticks:+.IP+.EX+Here is a literal backtick \[ga]\[ga] \[ga] \[ga]\[ga].+.EE+.PP+(The spaces after the opening backticks and before the closing backticks+will be ignored.)+.PP+The general rule is that a verbatim span starts with a string of+consecutive backticks (optionally followed by a space) and ends with a+string of the same number of backticks (optionally preceded by a space).+.PP+Note that backslash-escapes (and other Markdown constructs) do not work+in verbatim contexts:+.IP+.EX+This is a backslash followed by an asterisk: \[ga]\[rs]*\[ga].+.EE+.SS Extension: \f[CR]inline_code_attributes\f[R]+Attributes can be attached to verbatim text, just as with fenced code+blocks:+.IP+.EX+\[ga]<$>\[ga]{.haskell}+.EE+.SS Underline+To underline text, use the \f[CR]underline\f[R] class:+.IP+.EX+[Underline]{.underline}+.EE+.PP+Or, without the \f[CR]bracketed_spans\f[R] extension (but with+\f[CR]native_spans\f[R]):+.IP+.EX+<span class=\[dq]underline\[dq]>Underline</span>+.EE+.PP+This will work in all output formats that support underline.+.SS Small caps+To write small caps, use the \f[CR]smallcaps\f[R] class:+.IP+.EX+[Small caps]{.smallcaps}+.EE+.PP+Or, without the \f[CR]bracketed_spans\f[R] extension:+.IP+.EX+<span class=\[dq]smallcaps\[dq]>Small caps</span>+.EE+.PP+For compatibility with other Markdown flavors, CSS is also supported:+.IP+.EX+<span style=\[dq]font-variant:small-caps;\[dq]>Small caps</span>+.EE+.PP+This will work in all output formats that support small caps.+.SS Highlighting+To highlight text, use the \f[CR]mark\f[R] class:+.IP+.EX+[Mark]{.mark}+.EE+.PP+Or, without the \f[CR]bracketed_spans\f[R] extension (but with+\f[CR]native_spans\f[R]):+.IP+.EX+<span class=\[dq]mark\[dq]>Mark</span>+.EE+.PP+This will work in all output formats that support highlighting.+.SS Math+.SS Extension: \f[CR]tex_math_dollars\f[R]+Anything between two \f[CR]$\f[R] characters will be treated as TeX+math.+The opening \f[CR]$\f[R] must have a non-space character immediately to+its right, while the closing \f[CR]$\f[R] must have a non-space+character immediately to its left, and must not be followed immediately+by a digit.+Thus, \f[CR]$20,000 and $30,000\f[R] won\[cq]t parse as math.+If for some reason you need to enclose text in literal \f[CR]$\f[R]+characters, backslash-escape them and they won\[cq]t be treated as math+delimiters.+.PP+For display math, use \f[CR]$$\f[R] delimiters.+(In this case, the delimiters may be separated from the formula by+whitespace.+However, there can be no blank lines between the opening and closing+\f[CR]$$\f[R] delimiters.)+.PP+TeX math will be printed in all output formats.+How it is rendered depends on the output format:+.TP+LaTeX+It will appear verbatim surrounded by \f[CR]\[rs](...\[rs])\f[R] (for+inline math) or \f[CR]\[rs][...\[rs]]\f[R] (for display math).+.TP+Markdown, Emacs Org mode, ConTeXt, ZimWiki+It will appear verbatim surrounded by \f[CR]$...$\f[R] (for inline math)+or \f[CR]$$...$$\f[R] (for display math).+.TP+XWiki+It will appear verbatim surrounded by+\f[CR]{{formula}}..{{/formula}}\f[R].+.TP+reStructuredText+It will be rendered using an interpreted text role \f[CR]:math:\f[R].+.TP+AsciiDoc+For AsciiDoc output math will appear verbatim surrounded by+\f[CR]latexmath:[...]\f[R].+For \f[CR]asciidoc_legacy\f[R] the bracketed material will also include+inline or display math delimiters.+.TP+Texinfo+It will be rendered inside a \f[CR]\[at]math\f[R] command.+.TP+roff man, Jira markup+It will be rendered verbatim without \f[CR]$\f[R]\[cq]s.+.TP+MediaWiki, DokuWiki+It will be rendered inside \f[CR]<math>\f[R] tags.+.TP+Textile+It will be rendered inside \f[CR]<span class=\[dq]math\[dq]>\f[R] tags.+.TP+RTF, OpenDocument+It will be rendered, if possible, using Unicode characters, and will+otherwise appear verbatim.+.TP+ODT+It will be rendered, if possible, using MathML.+.TP+DocBook+If the \f[CR]--mathml\f[R] flag is used, it will be rendered using+MathML in an \f[CR]inlineequation\f[R] or \f[CR]informalequation\f[R]+tag.+Otherwise it will be rendered, if possible, using Unicode characters.+.TP+Docx and PowerPoint+It will be rendered using OMML math markup.+.TP+FictionBook2+If the \f[CR]--webtex\f[R] option is used, formulas are rendered as+images using CodeCogs or other compatible web service, downloaded and+embedded in the e-book.+Otherwise, they will appear verbatim.+.TP+HTML, Slidy, DZSlides, S5, EPUB+The way math is rendered in HTML will depend on the command-line options+selected.+Therefore see Math rendering in HTML above.+.SS Raw HTML+.SS Extension: \f[CR]raw_html\f[R]+Markdown allows you to insert raw HTML (or DocBook) anywhere in a+document (except verbatim contexts, where \f[CR]<\f[R], \f[CR]>\f[R],+and \f[CR]&\f[R] are interpreted literally).+(Technically this is not an extension, since standard Markdown allows+it, but it has been made an extension so that it can be disabled if+desired.)+.PP+The raw HTML is passed through unchanged in HTML, S5, Slidy, Slideous,+DZSlides, EPUB, Markdown, CommonMark, Emacs Org mode, and Textile+output, and suppressed in other formats.+.PP+For a more explicit way of including raw HTML in a Markdown document,+see the \f[CR]raw_attribute\f[R] extension.+.PP+In the CommonMark format, if \f[CR]raw_html\f[R] is enabled,+superscripts, subscripts, strikeouts and small capitals will be+represented as HTML.+Otherwise, plain-text fallbacks will be used.+Note that even if \f[CR]raw_html\f[R] is disabled, tables will be+rendered with HTML syntax if they cannot use pipe syntax.+.SS Extension: \f[CR]markdown_in_html_blocks\f[R]+Original Markdown allows you to include HTML \[lq]blocks\[rq]: blocks of+HTML between balanced tags that are separated from the surrounding text+with blank lines, and start and end at the left margin.+Within these blocks, everything is interpreted as HTML, not Markdown; so+(for example), \f[CR]*\f[R] does not signify emphasis.+.PP+Pandoc behaves this way when the \f[CR]markdown_strict\f[R] format is+used; but by default, pandoc interprets material between HTML block tags+as Markdown.+Thus, for example, pandoc will turn+.IP+.EX+<table>+<tr>+<td>*one*</td>+<td>[a link](https://google.com)</td>+</tr>+</table>+.EE+.PP+into+.IP+.EX+<table>+<tr>+<td><em>one</em></td>+<td><a href=\[dq]https://google.com\[dq]>a link</a></td>+</tr>+</table>+.EE+.PP+whereas \f[CR]Markdown.pl\f[R] will preserve it as is.+.PP+There is one exception to this rule: text between \f[CR]<script>\f[R],+\f[CR]<style>\f[R], and \f[CR]<textarea>\f[R] tags is not interpreted as+Markdown.+.PP+This departure from original Markdown should make it easier to mix+Markdown with HTML block elements.+For example, one can surround a block of Markdown text with+\f[CR]<div>\f[R] tags without preventing it from being interpreted as+Markdown.+.SS Extension: \f[CR]native_divs\f[R]+Use native pandoc \f[CR]Div\f[R] blocks for content inside+\f[CR]<div>\f[R] tags.+For the most part this should give the same output as+\f[CR]markdown_in_html_blocks\f[R], but it makes it easier to write+pandoc filters to manipulate groups of blocks.+.SS Extension: \f[CR]native_spans\f[R]+Use native pandoc \f[CR]Span\f[R] blocks for content inside+\f[CR]<span>\f[R] tags.+For the most part this should give the same output as+\f[CR]raw_html\f[R], but it makes it easier to write pandoc filters to+manipulate groups of inlines.+.SS Extension: \f[CR]raw_tex\f[R]+In addition to raw HTML, pandoc allows raw LaTeX, TeX, and ConTeXt to be+included in a document.+Inline TeX commands will be preserved and passed unchanged to the LaTeX+and ConTeXt writers.+Thus, for example, you can use LaTeX to include BibTeX citations:+.IP+.EX+This result was proved in \[rs]cite{jones.1967}.+.EE+.PP+Note that in LaTeX environments, like+.IP+.EX+\[rs]begin{tabular}{|l|l|}\[rs]hline+Age & Frequency \[rs]\[rs] \[rs]hline+18--25  & 15 \[rs]\[rs]+26--35  & 33 \[rs]\[rs]+36--45  & 22 \[rs]\[rs] \[rs]hline+\[rs]end{tabular}+.EE+.PP+the material between the begin and end tags will be interpreted as raw+LaTeX, not as Markdown.+.PP+For a more explicit and flexible way of including raw TeX in a Markdown+document, see the \f[CR]raw_attribute\f[R] extension.+.PP+Inline LaTeX is ignored in output formats other than Markdown, LaTeX,+Emacs Org mode, and ConTeXt.+.SS Generic raw attribute+.SS Extension: \f[CR]raw_attribute\f[R]+Inline spans and fenced code blocks with a special kind of attribute+will be parsed as raw content with the designated format.+For example, the following produces a raw roff \f[CR]ms\f[R] block:+.IP+.EX+\[ga]\[ga]\[ga]{=ms}+\&.MYMACRO+blah blah+\[ga]\[ga]\[ga]+.EE+.PP+And the following produces a raw \f[CR]html\f[R] inline element:+.IP+.EX+This is \[ga]<a>html</a>\[ga]{=html}+.EE+.PP+This can be useful to insert raw xml into \f[CR]docx\f[R] documents,+e.g.+a pagebreak:+.IP+.EX+\[ga]\[ga]\[ga]{=openxml}+<w:p>+  <w:r>+    <w:br w:type=\[dq]page\[dq]/>+  </w:r>+</w:p>+\[ga]\[ga]\[ga]+.EE+.PP+The format name should match the target format name (see+\f[CR]-t/--to\f[R], above, for a list, or use+\f[CR]pandoc --list-output-formats\f[R]).+Use \f[CR]openxml\f[R] for \f[CR]docx\f[R] output,+\f[CR]opendocument\f[R] for \f[CR]odt\f[R] output, \f[CR]html5\f[R] for+\f[CR]epub3\f[R] output, \f[CR]html4\f[R] for \f[CR]epub2\f[R] output,+and \f[CR]latex\f[R], \f[CR]beamer\f[R], \f[CR]ms\f[R], or+\f[CR]html5\f[R] for \f[CR]pdf\f[R] output (depending on what you use+for \f[CR]--pdf-engine\f[R]).+.PP+This extension presupposes that the relevant kind of inline code or+fenced code block is enabled.+Thus, for example, to use a raw attribute with a backtick code block,+\f[CR]backtick_code_blocks\f[R] must be enabled.+.PP+The raw attribute cannot be combined with regular attributes.+.SS LaTeX macros+.SS Extension: \f[CR]latex_macros\f[R]+When this extension is enabled, pandoc will parse LaTeX macro+definitions and apply the resulting macros to all LaTeX math and raw+LaTeX.+So, for example, the following will work in all output formats, not just+LaTeX:+.IP+.EX+\[rs]newcommand{\[rs]tuple}[1]{\[rs]langle #1 \[rs]rangle}++$\[rs]tuple{a, b, c}$+.EE+.PP+Note that LaTeX macros will not be applied if they occur inside a raw+span or block marked with the \f[CR]raw_attribute\f[R] extension.+.PP+When \f[CR]latex_macros\f[R] is disabled, the raw LaTeX and math will+not have macros applied.+This is usually a better approach when you are targeting LaTeX or PDF.+.PP+Macro definitions in LaTeX will be passed through as raw LaTeX only if+\f[CR]latex_macros\f[R] is not enabled.+Macro definitions in Markdown source (or other formats allowing+\f[CR]raw_tex\f[R]) will be passed through regardless of whether+\f[CR]latex_macros\f[R] is enabled.+.SS Links+Markdown allows links to be specified in several ways.+.SS Automatic links+If you enclose a URL or email address in pointy brackets, it will become+a link:+.IP+.EX+<https://google.com>+<sam\[at]green.eggs.ham>+.EE+.SS Inline links+An inline link consists of the link text in square brackets, followed by+the URL in parentheses.+(Optionally, the URL can be followed by a link title, in quotes.)+.IP+.EX+This is an [inline link](/url), and here\[aq]s [one with+a title](https://fsf.org \[dq]click here for a good time!\[dq]).+.EE+.PP+There can be no space between the bracketed part and the parenthesized+part.+The link text can contain formatting (such as emphasis), but the title+cannot.+.PP+Email addresses in inline links are not autodetected, so they have to be+prefixed with \f[CR]mailto\f[R]:+.IP+.EX+[Write me!](mailto:sam\[at]green.eggs.ham)+.EE+.SS Reference links+An \f[I]explicit\f[R] reference link has two parts, the link itself and+the link definition, which may occur elsewhere in the document (either+before or after the link).+.PP+The link consists of link text in square brackets, followed by a label+in square brackets.+(There cannot be space between the two unless the+\f[CR]spaced_reference_links\f[R] extension is enabled.)+The link definition consists of the bracketed label, followed by a colon+and a space, followed by the URL, and optionally (after a space) a link+title either in quotes or in parentheses.+The label must not be parseable as a citation (assuming the+\f[CR]citations\f[R] extension is enabled): citations take precedence+over link labels.+.PP+Here are some examples:+.IP+.EX+[my label 1]: /foo/bar.html  \[dq]My title, optional\[dq]+[my label 2]: /foo+[my label 3]: https://fsf.org (The Free Software Foundation)+[my label 4]: /bar#special  \[aq]A title in single quotes\[aq]+.EE+.PP+The URL may optionally be surrounded by angle brackets:+.IP+.EX+[my label 5]: <http://foo.bar.baz>+.EE+.PP+The title may go on the next line:+.IP+.EX+[my label 3]: https://fsf.org+  \[dq]The Free Software Foundation\[dq]+.EE+.PP+Note that link labels are not case sensitive.+So, this will work:+.IP+.EX+Here is [my link][FOO]++[Foo]: /bar/baz+.EE+.PP+In an \f[I]implicit\f[R] reference link, the second pair of brackets is+empty:+.IP+.EX+See [my website][].++[my website]: http://foo.bar.baz+.EE+.PP+Note: In \f[CR]Markdown.pl\f[R] and most other Markdown implementations,+reference link definitions cannot occur in nested constructions such as+list items or block quotes.+Pandoc lifts this arbitrary-seeming restriction.+So the following is fine in pandoc, though not in most other+implementations:+.IP+.EX+> My block [quote].+>+> [quote]: /foo+.EE+.SS Extension: \f[CR]shortcut_reference_links\f[R]+In a \f[I]shortcut\f[R] reference link, the second pair of brackets may+be omitted entirely:+.IP+.EX+See [my website].++[my website]: http://foo.bar.baz+.EE+.SS Internal links+To link to another section of the same document, use the automatically+generated identifier (see Heading identifiers).+For example:+.IP+.EX+See the [Introduction](#introduction).+.EE+.PP+or+.IP+.EX+See the [Introduction].++[Introduction]: #introduction+.EE+.PP+Internal links are currently supported for HTML formats (including HTML+slide shows and EPUB), LaTeX, and ConTeXt.+.SS Images+A link immediately preceded by a \f[CR]!\f[R] will be treated as an+image.+The link text will be used as the image\[cq]s alt text:+.IP+.EX+![la lune](lalune.jpg \[dq]Voyage to the moon\[dq])++![movie reel]++[movie reel]: movie.gif+.EE+.SS Extension: \f[CR]implicit_figures\f[R]+An image with nonempty alt text, occurring by itself in a paragraph,+will be rendered as a figure with a caption.+The image\[cq]s alt text will be used as the caption.+.IP+.EX+![This is the caption](/url/of/image.png)+.EE+.PP+How this is rendered depends on the output format.+Some output formats (e.g.\ RTF) do not yet support figures.+In those formats, you\[cq]ll just get an image in a paragraph by itself,+with no caption.+.PP+If you just want a regular inline image, just make sure it is not the+only thing in the paragraph.+One way to do this is to insert a nonbreaking space after the image:+.IP+.EX+![This image won\[aq]t be a figure](/url/of/image.png)\[rs]+.EE+.PP+Note that in reveal.js slide shows, an image in a paragraph by itself+that has the \f[CR]r-stretch\f[R] class will fill the screen, and the+caption and figure tags will be omitted.+.SS Extension: \f[CR]link_attributes\f[R]+Attributes can be set on links and images:+.IP+.EX+An inline ![image](foo.jpg){#id .class width=30 height=20px}+and a reference ![image][ref] with attributes.++[ref]: foo.jpg \[dq]optional title\[dq] {#id .class key=val key2=\[dq]val 2\[dq]}+.EE+.PP+(This syntax is compatible with PHP Markdown Extra when only+\f[CR]#id\f[R] and \f[CR].class\f[R] are used.)+.PP+For HTML and EPUB, all known HTML5 attributes except \f[CR]width\f[R]+and \f[CR]height\f[R] (but including \f[CR]srcset\f[R] and+\f[CR]sizes\f[R]) are passed through as is.+Unknown attributes are passed through as custom attributes, with+\f[CR]data-\f[R] prepended.+The other writers ignore attributes that are not specifically supported+by their output format.+.PP+The \f[CR]width\f[R] and \f[CR]height\f[R] attributes on images are+treated specially.+When used without a unit, the unit is assumed to be pixels.+However, any of the following unit identifiers can be used:+\f[CR]px\f[R], \f[CR]cm\f[R], \f[CR]mm\f[R], \f[CR]in\f[R],+\f[CR]inch\f[R] and \f[CR]%\f[R].+There must not be any spaces between the number and the unit.+For example:+.IP+.EX+![](file.jpg){ width=50% }+.EE+.IP \[bu] 2+Dimensions may be converted to a form that is compatible with the output+format (for example, dimensions given in pixels will be converted to+inches when converting HTML to LaTeX).+Conversion between pixels and physical measurements is affected by the+\f[CR]--dpi\f[R] option (by default, 96 dpi is assumed, unless the image+itself contains dpi information).+.IP \[bu] 2+The \f[CR]%\f[R] unit is generally relative to some available space.+For example the above example will render to the following.+.RS 2+.IP \[bu] 2+HTML:+\f[CR]<img href=\[dq]file.jpg\[dq] style=\[dq]width: 50%;\[dq] />\f[R]+.IP \[bu] 2+LaTeX:+\f[CR]\[rs]includegraphics[width=0.5\[rs]textwidth,height=\[rs]textheight]{file.jpg}\f[R]+(If you\[cq]re using a custom template, you need to configure+\f[CR]graphicx\f[R] as in the default template.)+.IP \[bu] 2+ConTeXt:+\f[CR]\[rs]externalfigure[file.jpg][width=0.5\[rs]textwidth]\f[R]+.RE+.IP \[bu] 2+Some output formats have a notion of a class (ConTeXt) or a unique+identifier (LaTeX \f[CR]\[rs]caption\f[R]), or both (HTML).+.IP \[bu] 2+When no \f[CR]width\f[R] or \f[CR]height\f[R] attributes are specified,+the fallback is to look at the image resolution and the dpi metadata+embedded in the image file.+.SS Divs and Spans+Using the \f[CR]native_divs\f[R] and \f[CR]native_spans\f[R] extensions+(see above), HTML syntax can be used as part of markdown to create+native \f[CR]Div\f[R] and \f[CR]Span\f[R] elements in the pandoc AST (as+opposed to raw HTML).+However, there is also nicer syntax available:+.SS Extension: \f[CR]fenced_divs\f[R]+Allow special fenced syntax for native \f[CR]Div\f[R] blocks.+A Div starts with a fence containing at least three consecutive colons+plus some attributes.+The attributes may optionally be followed by another string of+consecutive colons.+.PP+Note: the \f[CR]commonmark\f[R] parser doesn\[cq]t permit colons after+the attributes.+.PP+The attribute syntax is exactly as in fenced code blocks (see Extension:+\f[CR]fenced_code_attributes\f[R]).+As with fenced code blocks, one can use either attributes in curly+braces or a single unbraced word, which will be treated as a class name.+The Div ends with another line containing a string of at least three+consecutive colons.+The fenced Div should be separated by blank lines from preceding and+following blocks.+.PP+Example:+.IP+.EX+::::: {#special .sidebar}+Here is a paragraph.++And another.+:::::+.EE+.PP+Fenced divs can be nested.+Opening fences are distinguished because they \f[I]must\f[R] have+attributes:+.IP+.EX+::: Warning ::::::+This is a warning.++::: Danger+This is a warning within a warning.+:::+::::::::::::::::::+.EE+.PP+Fences without attributes are always closing fences.+Unlike with fenced code blocks, the number of colons in the closing+fence need not match the number in the opening fence.+However, it can be helpful for visual clarity to use fences of different+lengths to distinguish nested divs from their parents.+.SS Extension: \f[CR]bracketed_spans\f[R]+A bracketed sequence of inlines, as one would use to begin a link, will+be treated as a \f[CR]Span\f[R] with attributes if it is followed+immediately by attributes:+.IP+.EX+[This is *some text*]{.class key=\[dq]val\[dq]}+.EE+.SS Footnotes+.SS Extension: \f[CR]footnotes\f[R]+Pandoc\[cq]s Markdown allows footnotes, using the following syntax:+.IP+.EX+Here is a footnote reference,[\[ha]1] and another.[\[ha]longnote]++[\[ha]1]: Here is the footnote.++[\[ha]longnote]: Here\[aq]s one with multiple blocks.++    Subsequent paragraphs are indented to show that they+belong to the previous footnote.++        { some.code }++    The whole paragraph can be indented, or just the first+    line.  In this way, multi-paragraph footnotes work like+    multi-paragraph list items.++This paragraph won\[aq]t be part of the note, because it+isn\[aq]t indented.+.EE+.PP+The identifiers in footnote references may not contain spaces, tabs, or+newlines.+These identifiers are used only to correlate the footnote reference with+the note itself; in the output, footnotes will be numbered sequentially.+.PP+The footnotes themselves need not be placed at the end of the document.+They may appear anywhere except inside other block elements (lists,+block quotes, tables, etc.).+Each footnote should be separated from surrounding content (including+other footnotes) by blank lines.+.SS Extension: \f[CR]inline_notes\f[R]+Inline footnotes are also allowed (though, unlike regular notes, they+cannot contain multiple paragraphs).+The syntax is as follows:+.IP+.EX+Here is an inline note.\[ha][Inline notes are easier to write, since+you don\[aq]t have to pick an identifier and move down to type the+note.]+.EE+.PP+Inline and regular footnotes may be mixed freely.+.SS Citation syntax+.SS Extension: \f[CR]citations\f[R]+To cite a bibliographic item with an identifier foo, use the syntax+\f[CR]\[at]foo\f[R].+Normal citations should be included in square brackets, with semicolons+separating distinct items:+.IP+.EX+Blah blah [\[at]doe99; \[at]smith2000; \[at]smith2004].+.EE+.PP+How this is rendered depends on the citation style.+In an author-date style, it might render as+.IP+.EX+Blah blah (Doe 1999, Smith 2000, 2004).+.EE+.PP+In a footnote style, it might render as+.IP+.EX+Blah blah.[\[ha]1]++[\[ha]1]:  John Doe, \[dq]Frogs,\[dq] *Journal of Amphibians* 44 (1999);+Susan Smith, \[dq]Flies,\[dq] *Journal of Insects* (2000);+Susan Smith, \[dq]Bees,\[dq] *Journal of Insects* (2004).+.EE+.PP+See the CSL user documentation for more information about CSL styles and+how they affect rendering.+.PP+Unless a citation key starts with a letter, digit, or \f[CR]_\f[R], and+contains only alphanumerics and single internal punctuation characters+(\f[CR]:.#$%&-+?<>\[ti]/\f[R]), it must be surrounded by curly braces,+which are not considered part of the key.+In \f[CR]\[at]Foo_bar.baz.\f[R], the key is \f[CR]Foo_bar.baz\f[R]+because the final period is not \f[I]internal\f[R] punctuation, so it is+not included in the key.+In \f[CR]\[at]{Foo_bar.baz.}\f[R], the key is \f[CR]Foo_bar.baz.\f[R],+including the final period.+In \f[CR]\[at]Foo_bar--baz\f[R], the key is \f[CR]Foo_bar\f[R] because+the repeated internal punctuation characters terminate the key.+The curly braces are recommended if you use URLs as keys:+\f[CR][\[at]{https://example.com/bib?name=foobar&date=2000}, p.  33]\f[R].+.PP+Citation items may optionally include a prefix, a locator, and a suffix.+In+.IP+.EX+Blah blah [see \[at]doe99, pp. 33-35 and *passim*; \[at]smith04, chap. 1].+.EE+.PP+the first item (\f[CR]doe99\f[R]) has prefix \f[CR]see\f[R], locator+\f[CR]pp.  33-35\f[R], and suffix \f[CR]and *passim*\f[R].+The second item (\f[CR]smith04\f[R]) has locator \f[CR]chap. 1\f[R] and+no prefix or suffix.+.PP+Pandoc uses some heuristics to separate the locator from the rest of the+subject.+It is sensitive to the locator terms defined in the CSL locale files.+Either abbreviated or unabbreviated forms are accepted.+In the \f[CR]en-US\f[R] locale, locator terms can be written in either+singular or plural forms, as \f[CR]book\f[R],+\f[CR]bk.\f[R]/\f[CR]bks.\f[R]; \f[CR]chapter\f[R],+\f[CR]chap.\f[R]/\f[CR]chaps.\f[R]; \f[CR]column\f[R],+\f[CR]col.\f[R]/\f[CR]cols.\f[R]; \f[CR]figure\f[R],+\f[CR]fig.\f[R]/\f[CR]figs.\f[R]; \f[CR]folio\f[R],+\f[CR]fol.\f[R]/\f[CR]fols.\f[R]; \f[CR]number\f[R],+\f[CR]no.\f[R]/\f[CR]nos.\f[R]; \f[CR]line\f[R],+\f[CR]l.\f[R]/\f[CR]ll.\f[R]; \f[CR]note\f[R],+\f[CR]n.\f[R]/\f[CR]nn.\f[R]; \f[CR]opus\f[R],+\f[CR]op.\f[R]/\f[CR]opp.\f[R]; \f[CR]page\f[R],+\f[CR]p.\f[R]/\f[CR]pp.\f[R]; \f[CR]paragraph\f[R],+\f[CR]para.\f[R]/\f[CR]paras.\f[R]; \f[CR]part\f[R],+\f[CR]pt.\f[R]/\f[CR]pts.\f[R]; \f[CR]section\f[R],+\f[CR]sec.\f[R]/\f[CR]secs.\f[R]; \f[CR]sub verbo\f[R],+\f[CR]s.v.\f[R]/\f[CR]s.vv.\f[R]; \f[CR]verse\f[R],+\f[CR]v.\f[R]/\f[CR]vv.\f[R]; \f[CR]volume\f[R],+\f[CR]vol.\f[R]/\f[CR]vols.\f[R]; \f[CR]¶\f[R]/\f[CR]¶¶\f[R];+\f[CR]§\f[R]/\f[CR]§§\f[R].+If no locator term is used, \[lq]page\[rq] is assumed.+.PP+In complex cases, you can force something to be treated as a locator by+enclosing it in curly braces or prevent parsing the suffix as locator by+prepending curly braces:+.IP+.EX+[\[at]smith{ii, A, D-Z}, with a suffix]+[\[at]smith, {pp. iv, vi-xi, (xv)-(xvii)} with suffix here]+[\[at]smith{}, 99 years later]+.EE+.PP+A minus sign (\f[CR]-\f[R]) before the \f[CR]\[at]\f[R] will suppress+mention of the author in the citation.+This can be useful when the author is already mentioned in the text:+.IP+.EX+Smith says blah [-\[at]smith04].+.EE+.PP+You can also write an author-in-text citation, by omitting the square+brackets:+.IP+.EX+\[at]smith04 says blah.++\[at]smith04 [p. 33] says blah.+.EE+.PP+This will cause the author\[cq]s name to be rendered, followed by the+bibliographical details.+Use this form when you want to make the citation the subject of a+sentence.+.PP+When you are using a note style, it is usually better to let citeproc+create the footnotes from citations rather than writing an explicit+note.+If you do write an explicit note that contains a citation, note that+normal citations will be put in parentheses, while author-in-text+citations will not.+For this reason, it is sometimes preferable to use the author-in-text+style inside notes when using a note style.+.SS Non-default extensions+The following Markdown syntax extensions are not enabled by default in+pandoc, but may be enabled by adding \f[CR]+EXTENSION\f[R] to the format+name, where \f[CR]EXTENSION\f[R] is the name of the extension.+Thus, for example, \f[CR]markdown+hard_line_breaks\f[R] is Markdown with+hard line breaks.+.SS Extension: \f[CR]rebase_relative_paths\f[R]+Rewrite relative paths for Markdown links and images, depending on the+path of the file containing the link or image link.+For each link or image, pandoc will compute the directory of the+containing file, relative to the working directory, and prepend the+resulting path to the link or image path.+.PP+The use of this extension is best understood by example.+Suppose you have a subdirectory for each chapter of a book,+\f[CR]chap1\f[R], \f[CR]chap2\f[R], \f[CR]chap3\f[R].+Each contains a file \f[CR]text.md\f[R] and a number of images used in+the chapter.+You would like to have \f[CR]![image](spider.jpg)\f[R] in+\f[CR]chap1/text.md\f[R] refer to \f[CR]chap1/spider.jpg\f[R] and+\f[CR]![image](spider.jpg)\f[R] in \f[CR]chap2/text.md\f[R] refer to+\f[CR]chap2/spider.jpg\f[R].+To do this, use+.IP+.EX+pandoc chap*/*.md -f markdown+rebase_relative_paths+.EE+.PP+Without this extension, you would have to use+\f[CR]![image](chap1/spider.jpg)\f[R] in \f[CR]chap1/text.md\f[R] and+\f[CR]![image](chap2/spider.jpg)\f[R] in \f[CR]chap2/text.md\f[R].+Links with relative paths will be rewritten in the same way as images.+.PP+Absolute paths and URLs are not changed.+Neither are empty paths or paths consisting entirely of a fragment,+e.g., \f[CR]#foo\f[R].+.PP+Note that relative paths in reference links and images will be rewritten+relative to the file containing the link reference definition, not the+file containing the reference link or image itself, if these differ.+.SS Extension: \f[CR]mark\f[R]+To highlight out a section of text, begin and end it with with+\f[CR]==\f[R].+Thus, for example,+.IP+.EX+This ==is deleted text.==+.EE+.SS Extension: \f[CR]attributes\f[R]+Allows attributes to be attached to any inline or block-level element+when parsing \f[CR]commonmark\f[R].+The syntax for the attributes is the same as that used in+\f[CR]header_attributes\f[R].+.IP \[bu] 2+Attributes that occur immediately after an inline element affect that+element.+If they follow a space, then they belong to the space.+(Hence, this option subsumes \f[CR]inline_code_attributes\f[R] and+\f[CR]link_attributes\f[R].)+.IP \[bu] 2+Attributes that occur immediately before a block element, on a line by+themselves, affect that element.+.IP \[bu] 2+Consecutive attribute specifiers may be used, either for blocks or for+inlines.+Their attributes will be combined.+.IP \[bu] 2+Attributes that occur at the end of the text of a Setext or ATX heading+(separated by whitespace from the text) affect the heading element.+(Hence, this option subsumes \f[CR]header_attributes\f[R].)+.IP \[bu] 2+Attributes that occur after the opening fence in a fenced code block+affect the code block element.+(Hence, this option subsumes \f[CR]fenced_code_attributes\f[R].)+.IP \[bu] 2+Attributes that occur at the end of a reference link definition affect+links that refer to that definition.+.PP+Note that pandoc\[cq]s AST does not currently allow attributes to be+attached to arbitrary elements.+Hence a Span or Div container will be added if needed.+.SS Extension: \f[CR]old_dashes\f[R]+Selects the pandoc <= 1.8.2.1 behavior for parsing smart dashes:+\f[CR]-\f[R] before a numeral is an en-dash, and \f[CR]--\f[R] is an+em-dash.+This option only has an effect if \f[CR]smart\f[R] is enabled.+It is selected automatically for \f[CR]textile\f[R] input.+.SS Extension: \f[CR]angle_brackets_escapable\f[R]+Allow \f[CR]<\f[R] and \f[CR]>\f[R] to be backslash-escaped, as they can+be in GitHub flavored Markdown but not original Markdown.+This is implied by pandoc\[cq]s default+\f[CR]all_symbols_escapable\f[R].+.SS Extension: \f[CR]lists_without_preceding_blankline\f[R]+Allow a list to occur right after a paragraph, with no intervening blank+space.+.SS Extension: \f[CR]four_space_rule\f[R]+Selects the pandoc <= 2.0 behavior for parsing lists, so that four+spaces indent are needed for list item continuation paragraphs.+.SS Extension: \f[CR]spaced_reference_links\f[R]+Allow whitespace between the two components of a reference link, for+example,+.IP+.EX+[foo] [bar].+.EE+.SS Extension: \f[CR]hard_line_breaks\f[R]+Causes all newlines within a paragraph to be interpreted as hard line+breaks instead of spaces.+.SS Extension: \f[CR]ignore_line_breaks\f[R]+Causes newlines within a paragraph to be ignored, rather than being+treated as spaces or as hard line breaks.+This option is intended for use with East Asian languages where spaces+are not used between words, but text is divided into lines for+readability.+.SS Extension: \f[CR]east_asian_line_breaks\f[R]+Causes newlines within a paragraph to be ignored, rather than being+treated as spaces or as hard line breaks, when they occur between two+East Asian wide characters.+This is a better choice than \f[CR]ignore_line_breaks\f[R] for texts+that include a mix of East Asian wide characters and other characters.+.SS Extension: \f[CR]emoji\f[R]+Parses textual emojis like \f[CR]:smile:\f[R] as Unicode emoticons.+.SS Extension: \f[CR]tex_math_single_backslash\f[R]+Causes anything between \f[CR]\[rs](\f[R] and \f[CR]\[rs])\f[R] to be+interpreted as inline TeX math, and anything between \f[CR]\[rs][\f[R]+and \f[CR]\[rs]]\f[R] to be interpreted as display TeX math.+Note: a drawback of this extension is that it precludes escaping+\f[CR](\f[R] and \f[CR][\f[R].+.SS Extension: \f[CR]tex_math_double_backslash\f[R]+Causes anything between \f[CR]\[rs]\[rs](\f[R] and+\f[CR]\[rs]\[rs])\f[R] to be interpreted as inline TeX math, and+anything between \f[CR]\[rs]\[rs][\f[R] and \f[CR]\[rs]\[rs]]\f[R] to be+interpreted as display TeX math.+.SS Extension: \f[CR]markdown_attribute\f[R]+By default, pandoc interprets material inside block-level tags as+Markdown.+This extension changes the behavior so that Markdown is only parsed+inside block-level tags if the tags have the attribute+\f[CR]markdown=1\f[R].+.SS Extension: \f[CR]mmd_title_block\f[R]+Enables a MultiMarkdown style title block at the top of the document,+for example:+.IP+.EX+Title:   My title+Author:  John Doe+Date:    September 1, 2008+Comment: This is a sample mmd title block, with+         a field spanning multiple lines.+.EE+.PP+See the MultiMarkdown documentation for details.+If \f[CR]pandoc_title_block\f[R] or \f[CR]yaml_metadata_block\f[R] is+enabled, it will take precedence over \f[CR]mmd_title_block\f[R].+.SS Extension: \f[CR]abbreviations\f[R]+Parses PHP Markdown Extra abbreviation keys, like+.IP+.EX+*[HTML]: Hypertext Markup Language+.EE+.PP+Note that the pandoc document model does not support abbreviations, so+if this extension is enabled, abbreviation keys are simply skipped (as+opposed to being parsed as paragraphs).+.SS Extension: \f[CR]autolink_bare_uris\f[R]+Makes all absolute URIs into links, even when not surrounded by pointy+braces \f[CR]<...>\f[R].+.SS Extension: \f[CR]mmd_link_attributes\f[R]+Parses multimarkdown style key-value attributes on link and image+references.+This extension should not be confused with the+\f[CR]link_attributes\f[R] extension.+.IP+.EX+This is a reference ![image][ref] with multimarkdown attributes.++[ref]: https://path.to/image \[dq]Image title\[dq] width=20px height=30px+       id=myId class=\[dq]myClass1 myClass2\[dq]+.EE+.SS Extension: \f[CR]mmd_header_identifiers\f[R]+Parses multimarkdown style heading identifiers (in square brackets,+after the heading but before any trailing \f[CR]#\f[R]s in an ATX+heading).+.SS Extension: \f[CR]compact_definition_lists\f[R]+Activates the definition list syntax of pandoc 1.12.x and earlier.+This syntax differs from the one described above under Definition lists+in several respects:+.IP \[bu] 2+No blank line is required between consecutive items of the definition+list.+.IP \[bu] 2+To get a \[lq]tight\[rq] or \[lq]compact\[rq] list, omit space between+consecutive items; the space between a term and its definition does not+affect anything.+.IP \[bu] 2+Lazy wrapping of paragraphs is not allowed: the entire definition must+be indented four spaces.+.SS Extension: \f[CR]gutenberg\f[R]+Use Project Gutenberg conventions for \f[CR]plain\f[R] output: all-caps+for strong emphasis, surround by underscores for regular emphasis, add+extra blank space around headings.+.SS Extension: \f[CR]sourcepos\f[R]+Include source position attributes when parsing \f[CR]commonmark\f[R].+For elements that accept attributes, a \f[CR]data-pos\f[R] attribute is+added; other elements are placed in a surrounding Div or Span element+with a \f[CR]data-pos\f[R] attribute.+.SS Extension: \f[CR]short_subsuperscripts\f[R]+Parse multimarkdown style subscripts and superscripts, which start with+a `\[ti]' or `\[ha]' character, respectively, and include the+alphanumeric sequence that follows.+For example:+.IP+.EX+x\[ha]2 = 4+.EE+.PP+or+.IP+.EX+Oxygen is O\[ti]2.+.EE+.SS Extension: \f[CR]wikilinks_title_after_pipe\f[R]+Pandoc supports multiple markdown wikilink syntaxes, regardless of+whether the title is before or after the pipe.+.PP+Using \f[CR]--from=markdown+wikilinks_title_after_pipe\f[R] results in+.IP+.EX+[[URL|title]]+.EE+.PP+while using \f[CR]--from=markdown+wikilinks_title_before_pipe\f[R]+results in+.IP+.EX+[[title|URL]]+.EE+.SS Markdown variants+In addition to pandoc\[cq]s extended Markdown, the following Markdown+variants are supported:+.IP \[bu] 2+\f[CR]markdown_phpextra\f[R] (PHP Markdown Extra)+.IP \[bu] 2+\f[CR]markdown_github\f[R] (deprecated GitHub-Flavored Markdown)+.IP \[bu] 2+\f[CR]markdown_mmd\f[R] (MultiMarkdown)+.IP \[bu] 2+\f[CR]markdown_strict\f[R] (Markdown.pl)+.IP \[bu] 2+\f[CR]commonmark\f[R] (CommonMark)+.IP \[bu] 2+\f[CR]gfm\f[R] (Github-Flavored Markdown)+.IP \[bu] 2+\f[CR]commonmark_x\f[R] (CommonMark with many pandoc extensions)+.PP+To see which extensions are supported for a given format, and which are+enabled by default, you can use the command+.IP+.EX+pandoc --list-extensions=FORMAT+.EE+.PP+where \f[CR]FORMAT\f[R] is replaced with the name of the format.+.PP+Note that the list of extensions for \f[CR]commonmark\f[R],+\f[CR]gfm\f[R], and \f[CR]commonmark_x\f[R] are defined relative to+default commonmark.+So, for example, \f[CR]backtick_code_blocks\f[R] does not appear as an+extension, since it is enabled by default and cannot be disabled.+.SH CITATIONS+When the \f[CR]--citeproc\f[R] option is used, pandoc can automatically+generate citations and a bibliography in a number of styles.+Basic usage is+.IP+.EX+pandoc --citeproc myinput.txt+.EE+.PP+To use this feature, you will need to have+.IP \[bu] 2+a document containing citations (see Citation syntax);+.IP \[bu] 2+a source of bibliographic data: either an external bibliography file or+a list of \f[CR]references\f[R] in the document\[cq]s YAML metadata;+.IP \[bu] 2+optionally, a CSL citation style.+.SS Specifying bibliographic data+You can specify an external bibliography using the+\f[CR]bibliography\f[R] metadata field in a YAML metadata section or the+\f[CR]--bibliography\f[R] command line argument.+If you want to use multiple bibliography files, you can supply multiple+\f[CR]--bibliography\f[R] arguments or set \f[CR]bibliography\f[R]+metadata field to YAML array.+A bibliography may have any of these formats:+.RS -14n+.IP+.EX+  Format     File extension+  ---------- ----------------+  BibLaTeX   .bib+  BibTeX     .bibtex+  CSL JSON   .json+  CSL YAML   .yaml+  RIS        .ris+.EE+.RE+.PP+Note that \f[CR].bib\f[R] can be used with both BibTeX and BibLaTeX+files; use the extension \f[CR].bibtex\f[R] to force interpretation as+BibTeX.+.PP+In BibTeX and BibLaTeX databases, pandoc parses LaTeX markup inside+fields such as \f[CR]title\f[R]; in CSL YAML databases, pandoc Markdown;+and in CSL JSON databases, an HTML-like markup:+.TP+\f[CR]<i>...</i>\f[R]+italics+.TP+\f[CR]<b>...</b>\f[R]+bold+.TP+\f[CR]<span style=\[dq]font-variant:small-caps;\[dq]>...</span>\f[R] or \f[CR]<sc>...</sc>\f[R]+small capitals+.TP+\f[CR]<sub>...</sub>\f[R]+subscript+.TP+\f[CR]<sup>...</sup>\f[R]+superscript+.TP+\f[CR]<span class=\[dq]nocase\[dq]>...</span>\f[R]+prevent a phrase from being capitalized as title case+.PP+As an alternative to specifying a bibliography file using+\f[CR]--bibliography\f[R] or the YAML metadata field+\f[CR]bibliography\f[R], you can include the citation data directly in+the \f[CR]references\f[R] field of the document\[cq]s YAML metadata.+The field should contain an array of YAML-encoded references, for+example:+.IP+.EX+---+references:+- type: article-journal+  id: WatsonCrick1953+  author:+  - family: Watson+    given: J. D.+  - family: Crick+    given: F. H. C.+  issued:+    date-parts:+    - - 1953+      - 4+      - 25+  title: \[aq]Molecular structure of nucleic acids: a structure for+    deoxyribose nucleic acid\[aq]+  title-short: Molecular structure of nucleic acids+  container-title: Nature+  volume: 171+  issue: 4356+  page: 737-738+  DOI: 10.1038/171737a0+  URL: https://www.nature.com/articles/171737a0+  language: en-GB+\&...+.EE+.PP+If both an external bibliography and inline (YAML metadata) references+are provided, both will be used.+In case of conflicting \f[CR]id\f[R]s, the inline references will take+precedence.+.PP+Note that pandoc can be used to produce such a YAML metadata section+from a BibTeX, BibLaTeX, or CSL JSON bibliography:+.IP+.EX+pandoc chem.bib -s -f biblatex -t markdown+pandoc chem.json -s -f csljson -t markdown+.EE+.PP+Indeed, pandoc can convert between any of these citation formats:+.IP+.EX+pandoc chem.bib -s -f biblatex -t csljson+pandoc chem.yaml -s -f markdown -t biblatex+.EE+.PP+Running pandoc on a bibliography file with the \f[CR]--citeproc\f[R]+option will create a formatted bibliography in the format of your+choice:+.IP+.EX+pandoc chem.bib -s --citeproc -o chem.html+pandoc chem.bib -s --citeproc -o chem.pdf+.EE+.SS Capitalization in titles+If you are using a bibtex or biblatex bibliography, then observe the+following rules:+.IP \[bu] 2+English titles should be in title case.+Non-English titles should be in sentence case, and the \f[CR]langid\f[R]+field in biblatex should be set to the relevant language.+(The following values are treated as English: \f[CR]american\f[R],+\f[CR]british\f[R], \f[CR]canadian\f[R], \f[CR]english\f[R],+\f[CR]australian\f[R], \f[CR]newzealand\f[R], \f[CR]USenglish\f[R], or+\f[CR]UKenglish\f[R].)+.IP \[bu] 2+As is standard with bibtex/biblatex, proper names should be protected+with curly braces so that they won\[cq]t be lowercased in styles that+call for sentence case.+For example:+.RS 2+.IP+.EX+title = {My Dinner with {Andre}}+.EE+.RE+.IP \[bu] 2+In addition, words that should remain lowercase (or camelCase) should be+protected:+.RS 2+.IP+.EX+title = {Spin Wave Dispersion on the {nm} Scale}+.EE+.PP+Though this is not necessary in bibtex/biblatex, it is necessary with+citeproc, which stores titles internally in sentence case, and converts+to title case in styles that require it.+Here we protect \[lq]nm\[rq] so that it doesn\[cq]t get converted to+\[lq]Nm\[rq] at this stage.+.RE+.PP+If you are using a CSL bibliography (either JSON or YAML), then observe+the following rules:+.IP \[bu] 2+All titles should be in sentence case.+.IP \[bu] 2+Use the \f[CR]language\f[R] field for non-English titles to prevent+their conversion to title case in styles that call for this.+(Conversion happens only if \f[CR]language\f[R] begins with+\f[CR]en\f[R] or is left empty.)+.IP \[bu] 2+Protect words that should not be converted to title case using this+syntax:+.RS 2+.IP+.EX+Spin wave dispersion on the <span class=\[dq]nocase\[dq]>nm</span> scale+.EE+.RE+.SS Conference Papers, Published vs.\ Unpublished+For a formally published conference paper, use the biblatex entry type+\f[CR]inproceedings\f[R] (which will be mapped to CSL+\f[CR]paper-conference\f[R]).+.PP+For an unpublished manuscript, use the biblatex entry type+\f[CR]unpublished\f[R] without an \f[CR]eventtitle\f[R] field (this+entry type will be mapped to CSL \f[CR]manuscript\f[R]).+.PP+For a talk, an unpublished conference paper, or a poster presentation,+use the biblatex entry type \f[CR]unpublished\f[R] with an+\f[CR]eventtitle\f[R] field (this entry type will be mapped to CSL+\f[CR]speech\f[R]).+Use the biblatex \f[CR]type\f[R] field to indicate the type,+e.g.\ \[lq]Paper\[rq], or \[lq]Poster\[rq].+\f[CR]venue\f[R] and \f[CR]eventdate\f[R] may be useful too, though+\f[CR]eventdate\f[R] will not be rendered by most CSL styles.+Note that \f[CR]venue\f[R] is for the event\[cq]s venue, unlike+\f[CR]location\f[R] which describes the publisher\[cq]s location; do not+use the latter for an unpublished conference paper.+.SS Specifying a citation style+Citations and references can be formatted using any style supported by+the Citation Style Language, listed in the Zotero Style Repository.+These files are specified using the \f[CR]--csl\f[R] option or the+\f[CR]csl\f[R] (or \f[CR]citation-style\f[R]) metadata field.+By default, pandoc will use the Chicago Manual of Style author-date+format.+(You can override this default by copying a CSL style of your choice to+\f[CR]default.csl\f[R] in your user data directory.)+The CSL project provides further information on finding and editing+styles.+.PP+The \f[CR]--citation-abbreviations\f[R] option (or the+\f[CR]citation-abbreviations\f[R] metadata field) may be used to specify+a JSON file containing abbreviations of journals that should be used in+formatted bibliographies when \f[CR]form=\[dq]short\[dq]\f[R] is+specified.+The format of the file can be illustrated with an example:+.IP+.EX+{ \[dq]default\[dq]: {+    \[dq]container-title\[dq]: {+            \[dq]Lloyd\[aq]s Law Reports\[dq]: \[dq]Lloyd\[aq]s Rep\[dq],+            \[dq]Estates Gazette\[dq]: \[dq]EG\[dq],+            \[dq]Scots Law Times\[dq]: \[dq]SLT\[dq]+    }+  }+}+.EE+.SS Citations in note styles+Pandoc\[cq]s citation processing is designed to allow you to move+between author-date, numerical, and note styles without modifying the+markdown source.+When you\[cq]re using a note style, avoid inserting footnotes manually.+Instead, insert citations just as you would in an author-date+style\[em]for example,+.IP+.EX+Blah blah [\[at]foo, p. 33].+.EE+.PP+The footnote will be created automatically.+Pandoc will take care of removing the space and moving the note before+or after the period, depending on the setting of+\f[CR]notes-after-punctuation\f[R], as described below in Other relevant+metadata fields.+.PP+In some cases you may need to put a citation inside a regular footnote.+Normal citations in footnotes (such as \f[CR][\[at]foo, p. 33]\f[R])+will be rendered in parentheses.+In-text citations (such as \f[CR]\[at]foo [p. 33]\f[R]) will be rendered+without parentheses.+(A comma will be added if appropriate.)+Thus:+.IP+.EX+[\[ha]1]:  Some studies [\[at]foo; \[at]bar, p. 33] show that+frubulicious zoosnaps are quantical.  For a survey+of the literature, see \[at]baz [chap. 1].+.EE+.SS Placement of the bibliography+If the style calls for a list of works cited, it will be placed in a div+with id \f[CR]refs\f[R], if one exists:+.IP+.EX+::: {#refs}+:::+.EE+.PP+Otherwise, it will be placed at the end of the document.+Generation of the bibliography can be suppressed by setting+\f[CR]suppress-bibliography: true\f[R] in the YAML metadata.+.PP+If you wish the bibliography to have a section heading, you can set+\f[CR]reference-section-title\f[R] in the metadata, or put the heading+at the beginning of the div with id \f[CR]refs\f[R] (if you are using+it) or at the end of your document:+.IP+.EX+last paragraph...++# References+.EE+.PP+The bibliography will be inserted after this heading.+Note that the \f[CR]unnumbered\f[R] class will be added to this heading,+so that the section will not be numbered.+.PP+If you want to put the bibliography into a variable in your template,+one way to do that is to put the div with id \f[CR]refs\f[R] into a+metadata field, e.g.+.IP+.EX+---+refs: |+   ::: {#refs}+   :::+\&...+.EE+.PP+You can then put the variable \f[CR]$refs$\f[R] into your template where+you want the bibliography to be placed.+.SS Including uncited items in the bibliography+If you want to include items in the bibliography without actually citing+them in the body text, you can define a dummy \f[CR]nocite\f[R] metadata+field and put the citations there:+.IP+.EX+---+nocite: |+  \[at]item1, \[at]item2+\&...++\[at]item3+.EE+.PP+In this example, the document will contain a citation for+\f[CR]item3\f[R] only, but the bibliography will contain entries for+\f[CR]item1\f[R], \f[CR]item2\f[R], and \f[CR]item3\f[R].+.PP+It is possible to create a bibliography with all the citations, whether+or not they appear in the document, by using a wildcard:+.IP+.EX+---+nocite: |+  \[at]*+\&...+.EE+.PP+For LaTeX output, you can also use \f[CR]natbib\f[R] or+\f[CR]biblatex\f[R] to render the bibliography.+In order to do so, specify bibliography files as outlined above, and add+\f[CR]--natbib\f[R] or \f[CR]--biblatex\f[R] argument to pandoc+invocation.+Bear in mind that bibliography files have to be in either BibTeX (for+\f[CR]--natbib\f[R]) or BibLaTeX (for \f[CR]--biblatex\f[R]) format.+.SS Other relevant metadata fields+A few other metadata fields affect bibliography formatting:+.TP+\f[CR]link-citations\f[R]+If true, citations will be hyperlinked to the corresponding bibliography+entries (for author-date and numerical styles only).+Defaults to false.+.TP+\f[CR]link-bibliography\f[R]+If true, DOIs, PMCIDs, PMID, and URLs in bibliographies will be rendered+as hyperlinks.+(If an entry contains a DOI, PMCID, PMID, or URL, but none of these+fields are rendered by the style, then the title, or in the absence of a+title the whole entry, will be hyperlinked.)+Defaults to true.+.TP+\f[CR]lang\f[R]+The \f[CR]lang\f[R] field will affect how the style is localized, for+example in the translation of labels, the use of quotation marks, and+the way items are sorted.+(For backwards compatibility, \f[CR]locale\f[R] may be used instead of+\f[CR]lang\f[R], but this use is deprecated.)+.RS+.PP+A BCP 47 language tag is expected: for example, \f[CR]en\f[R],+\f[CR]de\f[R], \f[CR]en-US\f[R], \f[CR]fr-CA\f[R], \f[CR]ug-Cyrl\f[R].+The unicode extension syntax (after \f[CR]-u-\f[R]) may be used to+specify options for collation (sorting) more precisely.+Here are some examples:+.IP \[bu] 2+\f[CR]zh-u-co-pinyin\f[R] \[en] Chinese with the Pinyin collation.+.IP \[bu] 2+\f[CR]es-u-co-trad\f[R] \[en] Spanish with the traditional collation+(with \f[CR]Ch\f[R] sorting after \f[CR]C\f[R]).+.IP \[bu] 2+\f[CR]fr-u-kb\f[R] \[en] French with \[lq]backwards\[rq] accent sorting+(with \f[CR]coté\f[R] sorting after \f[CR]côte\f[R]).+.IP \[bu] 2+\f[CR]en-US-u-kf-upper\f[R] \[en] English with uppercase letters sorting+before lower (default is lower before upper).+.RE+.TP+\f[CR]notes-after-punctuation\f[R]+If true (the default for note styles), pandoc will put footnote+references or superscripted numerical citations after following+punctuation.+For example, if the source contains+\f[CR]blah blah [\[at]jones99].\f[R], the result will look like+\f[CR]blah blah.[\[ha]1]\f[R], with the note moved after the period and+the space collapsed.+If false, the space will still be collapsed, but the footnote will not+be moved after the punctuation.+The option may also be used in numerical styles that use superscripts+for citation numbers (but for these styles the default is not to move+the citation).+.SH SLIDE SHOWS+You can use pandoc to produce an HTML + JavaScript slide presentation+that can be viewed via a web browser.+There are five ways to do this, using S5, DZSlides, Slidy, Slideous, or+reveal.js.+You can also produce a PDF slide show using LaTeX \f[CR]beamer\f[R], or+slide shows in Microsoft PowerPoint format.+.PP+Here\[cq]s the Markdown source for a simple slide show,+\f[CR]habits.txt\f[R]:+.IP+.EX+% Habits+% John Doe+% March 22, 2005++# In the morning++## Getting up++- Turn off alarm+- Get out of bed++## Breakfast++- Eat eggs+- Drink coffee++# In the evening++## Dinner++- Eat spaghetti+- Drink wine++------------------++![picture of spaghetti](images/spaghetti.jpg)++## Going to sleep++- Get in bed+- Count sheep+.EE+.PP+To produce an HTML/JavaScript slide show, simply type+.IP+.EX+pandoc -t FORMAT -s habits.txt -o habits.html+.EE+.PP+where \f[CR]FORMAT\f[R] is either \f[CR]s5\f[R], \f[CR]slidy\f[R],+\f[CR]slideous\f[R], \f[CR]dzslides\f[R], or \f[CR]revealjs\f[R].+.PP+For Slidy, Slideous, reveal.js, and S5, the file produced by pandoc with+the \f[CR]-s/--standalone\f[R] option embeds a link to JavaScript and+CSS files, which are assumed to be available at the relative path+\f[CR]s5/default\f[R] (for S5), \f[CR]slideous\f[R] (for Slideous),+\f[CR]reveal.js\f[R] (for reveal.js), or at the Slidy website at+\f[CR]w3.org\f[R] (for Slidy).+(These paths can be changed by setting the \f[CR]slidy-url\f[R],+\f[CR]slideous-url\f[R], \f[CR]revealjs-url\f[R], or \f[CR]s5-url\f[R]+variables; see Variables for HTML slides, above.)+For DZSlides, the (relatively short) JavaScript and CSS are included in+the file by default.+.PP+With all HTML slide formats, the \f[CR]--self-contained\f[R] option can+be used to produce a single file that contains all of the data necessary+to display the slide show, including linked scripts, stylesheets,+images, and videos.+.PP+To produce a PDF slide show using beamer, type+.IP+.EX+pandoc -t beamer habits.txt -o habits.pdf+.EE+.PP+Note that a reveal.js slide show can also be converted to a PDF by+printing it to a file from the browser.+.PP+To produce a PowerPoint slide show, type+.IP+.EX+pandoc habits.txt -o habits.pptx+.EE+.SS Structuring the slide show+By default, the \f[I]slide level\f[R] is the highest heading level in+the hierarchy that is followed immediately by content, and not another+heading, somewhere in the document.+In the example above, level-1 headings are always followed by level-2+headings, which are followed by content, so the slide level is 2.+This default can be overridden using the \f[CR]--slide-level\f[R]+option.+.PP+The document is carved up into slides according to the following rules:+.IP \[bu] 2+A horizontal rule always starts a new slide.+.IP \[bu] 2+A heading at the slide level always starts a new slide.+.IP \[bu] 2+Headings \f[I]below\f[R] the slide level in the hierarchy create+headings \f[I]within\f[R] a slide.+(In beamer, a \[lq]block\[rq] will be created.+If the heading has the class \f[CR]example\f[R], an+\f[CR]exampleblock\f[R] environment will be used; if it has the class+\f[CR]alert\f[R], an \f[CR]alertblock\f[R] will be used; otherwise a+regular \f[CR]block\f[R] will be used.)+.IP \[bu] 2+Headings \f[I]above\f[R] the slide level in the hierarchy create+\[lq]title slides,\[rq] which just contain the section title and help to+break the slide show into sections.+Non-slide content under these headings will be included on the title+slide (for HTML slide shows) or in a subsequent slide with the same+title (for beamer).+.IP \[bu] 2+A title page is constructed automatically from the document\[cq]s title+block, if present.+(In the case of beamer, this can be disabled by commenting out some+lines in the default template.)+.PP+These rules are designed to support many different styles of slide show.+If you don\[cq]t care about structuring your slides into sections and+subsections, you can either just use level-1 headings for all slides (in+that case, level 1 will be the slide level) or you can set+\f[CR]--slide-level=0\f[R].+.PP+Note: in reveal.js slide shows, if slide level is 2, a two-dimensional+layout will be produced, with level-1 headings building horizontally and+level-2 headings building vertically.+It is not recommended that you use deeper nesting of section levels with+reveal.js unless you set \f[CR]--slide-level=0\f[R] (which lets+reveal.js produce a one-dimensional layout and only interprets+horizontal rules as slide boundaries).+.SS PowerPoint layout choice+When creating slides, the pptx writer chooses from a number of+pre-defined layouts, based on the content of the slide:+.TP+Title Slide+This layout is used for the initial slide, which is generated and filled+from the metadata fields \f[CR]date\f[R], \f[CR]author\f[R], and+\f[CR]title\f[R], if they are present.+.TP+Section Header+This layout is used for what pandoc calls \[lq]title slides\[rq], i.e.+slides which start with a header which is above the slide level in the+hierarchy.+.TP+Two Content+This layout is used for two-column slides, i.e.\ slides containing a div+with class \f[CR]columns\f[R] which contains at least two divs with+class \f[CR]column\f[R].+.TP+Comparison+This layout is used instead of \[lq]Two Content\[rq] for any two-column+slides in which at least one column contains text followed by non-text+(e.g.\ an image or a table).+.TP+Content with Caption+This layout is used for any non-two-column slides which contain text+followed by non-text (e.g.\ an image or a table).+.TP+Blank+This layout is used for any slides which only contain blank content,+e.g.\ a slide containing only speaker notes, or a slide containing only+a non-breaking space.+.TP+Title and Content+This layout is used for all slides which do not match the criteria for+another layout.+.PP+These layouts are chosen from the default pptx reference doc included+with pandoc, unless an alternative reference doc is specified using+\f[CR]--reference-doc\f[R].+.SS Incremental lists+By default, these writers produce lists that display \[lq]all at+once.\[rq] If you want your lists to display incrementally (one item at+a time), use the \f[CR]-i\f[R] option.+If you want a particular list to depart from the default, put it in a+\f[CR]div\f[R] block with class \f[CR]incremental\f[R] or+\f[CR]nonincremental\f[R].+So, for example, using the \f[CR]fenced div\f[R] syntax, the following+would be incremental regardless of the document default:+.IP+.EX+::: incremental++- Eat spaghetti+- Drink wine++:::+.EE+.PP+or+.IP+.EX+::: nonincremental++- Eat spaghetti+- Drink wine++:::+.EE+.PP+While using \f[CR]incremental\f[R] and \f[CR]nonincremental\f[R] divs is+the recommended method of setting incremental lists on a per-case basis,+an older method is also supported: putting lists inside a blockquote+will depart from the document default (that is, it will display+incrementally without the \f[CR]-i\f[R] option and all at once with the+\f[CR]-i\f[R] option):+.IP+.EX+> - Eat spaghetti+> - Drink wine+.EE+.PP+Both methods allow incremental and nonincremental lists to be mixed in a+single document.+.PP+If you want to include a block-quoted list, you can work around this+behavior by putting the list inside a fenced div, so that it is not the+direct child of the block quote:+.IP+.EX+> ::: wrapper+> - a+> - list in a quote+> :::+.EE+.SS Inserting pauses+You can add \[lq]pauses\[rq] within a slide by including a paragraph+containing three dots, separated by spaces:+.IP+.EX+# Slide with a pause++content before the pause++\&. . .++content after the pause+.EE+.PP+Note: this feature is not yet implemented for PowerPoint output.+.SS Styling the slides+You can change the style of HTML slides by putting customized CSS files+in \f[CR]$DATADIR/s5/default\f[R] (for S5), \f[CR]$DATADIR/slidy\f[R]+(for Slidy), or \f[CR]$DATADIR/slideous\f[R] (for Slideous), where+\f[CR]$DATADIR\f[R] is the user data directory (see+\f[CR]--data-dir\f[R], above).+The originals may be found in pandoc\[cq]s system data directory+(generally \f[CR]$CABALDIR/pandoc-VERSION/s5/default\f[R]).+Pandoc will look there for any files it does not find in the user data+directory.+.PP+For dzslides, the CSS is included in the HTML file itself, and may be+modified there.+.PP+All reveal.js configuration options can be set through variables.+For example, themes can be used by setting the \f[CR]theme\f[R]+variable:+.IP+.EX+-V theme=moon+.EE+.PP+Or you can specify a custom stylesheet using the \f[CR]--css\f[R]+option.+.PP+To style beamer slides, you can specify a \f[CR]theme\f[R],+\f[CR]colortheme\f[R], \f[CR]fonttheme\f[R], \f[CR]innertheme\f[R], and+\f[CR]outertheme\f[R], using the \f[CR]-V\f[R] option:+.IP+.EX+pandoc -t beamer habits.txt -V theme:Warsaw -o habits.pdf+.EE+.PP+Note that heading attributes will turn into slide attributes (on a+\f[CR]<div>\f[R] or \f[CR]<section>\f[R]) in HTML slide formats,+allowing you to style individual slides.+In beamer, a number of heading classes and attributes are recognized as+frame options and will be passed through as options to the frame: see+Frame attributes in beamer, below.+.SS Speaker notes+Speaker notes are supported in reveal.js, PowerPoint (pptx), and beamer+output.+You can add notes to your Markdown document thus:+.IP+.EX+::: notes++This is my note.++- It can contain Markdown+- like this list++:::+.EE+.PP+To show the notes window in reveal.js, press \f[CR]s\f[R] while viewing+the presentation.+Speaker notes in PowerPoint will be available, as usual, in handouts and+presenter view.+.PP+Notes are not yet supported for other slide formats, but the notes will+not appear on the slides themselves.+.SS Columns+To put material in side by side columns, you can use a native div+container with class \f[CR]columns\f[R], containing two or more div+containers with class \f[CR]column\f[R] and a \f[CR]width\f[R]+attribute:+.IP+.EX+:::::::::::::: {.columns}+::: {.column width=\[dq]40%\[dq]}+contents...+:::+::: {.column width=\[dq]60%\[dq]}+contents...+:::+::::::::::::::+.EE+.SS Additional columns attributes in beamer+The div containers with classes \f[CR]columns\f[R] and \f[CR]column\f[R]+can optionally have an \f[CR]align\f[R] attribute.+The class \f[CR]columns\f[R] can optionally have a \f[CR]totalwidth\f[R]+attribute or an \f[CR]onlytextwidth\f[R] class.+.IP+.EX+:::::::::::::: {.columns align=center totalwidth=8em}+::: {.column width=\[dq]40%\[dq]}+contents...+:::+::: {.column width=\[dq]60%\[dq] align=bottom}+contents...+:::+::::::::::::::+.EE+.PP+The \f[CR]align\f[R] attributes on \f[CR]columns\f[R] and+\f[CR]column\f[R] can be used with the values \f[CR]top\f[R],+\f[CR]top-baseline\f[R], \f[CR]center\f[R] and \f[CR]bottom\f[R] to+vertically align the columns.+It defaults to \f[CR]top\f[R] in \f[CR]columns\f[R].+.PP+The \f[CR]totalwidth\f[R] attribute limits the width of the columns to+the given value.+.IP+.EX+:::::::::::::: {.columns align=top .onlytextwidth}+::: {.column width=\[dq]40%\[dq] align=center}+contents...+:::+::: {.column width=\[dq]60%\[dq]}+contents...+:::+::::::::::::::+.EE+.PP+The class \f[CR]onlytextwidth\f[R] sets the \f[CR]totalwidth\f[R] to+\f[CR]\[rs]textwidth\f[R].+.PP+See Section 12.7 of the Beamer User\[cq]s Guide for more details.+.SS Frame attributes in beamer+Sometimes it is necessary to add the LaTeX \f[CR][fragile]\f[R] option+to a frame in beamer (for example, when using the \f[CR]minted\f[R]+environment).+This can be forced by adding the \f[CR]fragile\f[R] class to the heading+introducing the slide:+.IP+.EX+# Fragile slide {.fragile}+.EE+.PP+All of the other frame attributes described in Section 8.1 of the Beamer+User\[cq]s Guide may also be used: \f[CR]allowdisplaybreaks\f[R],+\f[CR]allowframebreaks\f[R], \f[CR]b\f[R], \f[CR]c\f[R], \f[CR]s\f[R],+\f[CR]t\f[R], \f[CR]environment\f[R], \f[CR]label\f[R],+\f[CR]plain\f[R], \f[CR]shrink\f[R], \f[CR]standout\f[R],+\f[CR]noframenumbering\f[R], \f[CR]squeeze\f[R].+\f[CR]allowframebreaks\f[R] is recommended especially for+bibliographies, as it allows multiple slides to be created if the+content overfills the frame:+.IP+.EX+# References {.allowframebreaks}+.EE+.PP+In addition, the \f[CR]frameoptions\f[R] attribute may be used to pass+arbitrary frame options to a beamer slide:+.IP+.EX+# Heading {frameoptions=\[dq]squeeze,shrink,customoption=foobar\[dq]}+.EE+.SS Background in reveal.js, beamer, and pptx+Background images can be added to self-contained reveal.js slide shows,+beamer slide shows, and pptx slide shows.+.SS On all slides (beamer, reveal.js, pptx)+With beamer and reveal.js, the configuration option+\f[CR]background-image\f[R] can be used either in the YAML metadata+block or as a command-line variable to get the same image on every+slide.+.PP+Note that for reveal.js, the \f[CR]background-image\f[R] will be used as+a \f[CR]parallaxBackgroundImage\f[R] (see below).+.PP+For pptx, you can use a reference doc in which background images have+been set on the relevant layouts.+.SS \f[CR]parallaxBackgroundImage\f[R] (reveal.js)+For reveal.js, there is also the reveal.js-native option+\f[CR]parallaxBackgroundImage\f[R], which produces a parallax scrolling+background.+You must also set \f[CR]parallaxBackgroundSize\f[R], and can optionally+set \f[CR]parallaxBackgroundHorizontal\f[R] and+\f[CR]parallaxBackgroundVertical\f[R] to configure the scrolling+behaviour.+See the reveal.js documentation for more details about the meaning of+these options.+.PP+In reveal.js\[cq]s overview mode, the parallaxBackgroundImage will show+up only on the first slide.+.SS On individual slides (reveal.js, pptx)+To set an image for a particular reveal.js or pptx slide, add+\f[CR]{background-image=\[dq]/path/to/image\[dq]}\f[R] to the first+slide-level heading on the slide (which may even be empty).+.PP+As the HTML writers pass unknown attributes through, other reveal.js+background settings also work on individual slides, including+\f[CR]background-size\f[R], \f[CR]background-repeat\f[R],+\f[CR]background-color\f[R], \f[CR]transition\f[R], and+\f[CR]transition-speed\f[R].+(The \f[CR]data-\f[R] prefix will automatically be added.)+.PP+Note: \f[CR]data-background-image\f[R] is also supported in pptx for+consistency with reveal.js \[en] if \f[CR]background-image\f[R]+isn\[cq]t found, \f[CR]data-background-image\f[R] will be checked.+.SS On the title slide (reveal.js, pptx)+To add a background image to the automatically generated title slide for+reveal.js, use the \f[CR]title-slide-attributes\f[R] variable in the+YAML metadata block.+It must contain a map of attribute names and values.+(Note that the \f[CR]data-\f[R] prefix is required here, as it isn\[cq]t+added automatically.)+.PP+For pptx, pass a reference doc with the background image set on the+\[lq]Title Slide\[rq] layout.+.SS Example (reveal.js)+.IP+.EX+---+title: My Slide Show+parallaxBackgroundImage: /path/to/my/background_image.png+title-slide-attributes:+    data-background-image: /path/to/title_image.png+    data-background-size: contain+---++## Slide One++Slide 1 has background_image.png as its background.++## {background-image=\[dq]/path/to/special_image.jpg\[dq]}++Slide 2 has a special image for its background, even though the heading has no content.+.EE+.SH EPUBS+.SS EPUB Metadata+EPUB metadata may be specified using the \f[CR]--epub-metadata\f[R]+option, but if the source document is Markdown, it is better to use a+YAML metadata block.+Here is an example:+.IP+.EX+---+title:+- type: main+  text: My Book+- type: subtitle+  text: An investigation of metadata+creator:+- role: author+  text: John Smith+- role: editor+  text: Sarah Jones+identifier:+- scheme: DOI+  text: doi:10.234234.234/33+publisher:  My Press+rights: © 2007 John Smith, CC BY-NC+ibooks:+  version: 1.3.4+\&...+.EE+.PP+The following fields are recognized:+.TP+\f[CR]identifier\f[R]+Either a string value or an object with fields \f[CR]text\f[R] and+\f[CR]scheme\f[R].+Valid values for \f[CR]scheme\f[R] are \f[CR]ISBN-10\f[R],+\f[CR]GTIN-13\f[R], \f[CR]UPC\f[R], \f[CR]ISMN-10\f[R], \f[CR]DOI\f[R],+\f[CR]LCCN\f[R], \f[CR]GTIN-14\f[R], \f[CR]ISBN-13\f[R],+\f[CR]Legal deposit number\f[R], \f[CR]URN\f[R], \f[CR]OCLC\f[R],+\f[CR]ISMN-13\f[R], \f[CR]ISBN-A\f[R], \f[CR]JP\f[R], \f[CR]OLCC\f[R].+.TP+\f[CR]title\f[R]+Either a string value, or an object with fields \f[CR]file-as\f[R] and+\f[CR]type\f[R], or a list of such objects.+Valid values for \f[CR]type\f[R] are \f[CR]main\f[R],+\f[CR]subtitle\f[R], \f[CR]short\f[R], \f[CR]collection\f[R],+\f[CR]edition\f[R], \f[CR]extended\f[R].+.TP+\f[CR]creator\f[R]+Either a string value, or an object with fields \f[CR]role\f[R],+\f[CR]file-as\f[R], and \f[CR]text\f[R], or a list of such objects.+Valid values for \f[CR]role\f[R] are MARC relators, but pandoc will+attempt to translate the human-readable versions (like \[lq]author\[rq]+and \[lq]editor\[rq]) to the appropriate marc relators.+.TP+\f[CR]contributor\f[R]+Same format as \f[CR]creator\f[R].+.TP+\f[CR]date\f[R]+A string value in \f[CR]YYYY-MM-DD\f[R] format.+(Only the year is necessary.)+Pandoc will attempt to convert other common date formats.+.TP+\f[CR]lang\f[R] (or legacy: \f[CR]language\f[R])+A string value in BCP 47 format.+Pandoc will default to the local language if nothing is specified.+.TP+\f[CR]subject\f[R]+Either a string value, or an object with fields \f[CR]text\f[R],+\f[CR]authority\f[R], and \f[CR]term\f[R], or a list of such objects.+Valid values for \f[CR]authority\f[R] are either a reserved authority+value (currently \f[CR]AAT\f[R], \f[CR]BIC\f[R], \f[CR]BISAC\f[R],+\f[CR]CLC\f[R], \f[CR]DDC\f[R], \f[CR]CLIL\f[R], \f[CR]EuroVoc\f[R],+\f[CR]MEDTOP\f[R], \f[CR]LCSH\f[R], \f[CR]NDC\f[R], \f[CR]Thema\f[R],+\f[CR]UDC\f[R], and \f[CR]WGS\f[R]) or an absolute IRI identifying a+custom scheme.+Valid values for \f[CR]term\f[R] are defined by the scheme.+.TP+\f[CR]description\f[R]+A string value.+.TP+\f[CR]type\f[R]+A string value.+.TP+\f[CR]format\f[R]+A string value.+.TP+\f[CR]relation\f[R]+A string value.+.TP+\f[CR]coverage\f[R]+A string value.+.TP+\f[CR]rights\f[R]+A string value.+.TP+\f[CR]belongs-to-collection\f[R]+A string value.+Identifies the name of a collection to which the EPUB Publication+belongs.+.TP+\f[CR]group-position\f[R]+The \f[CR]group-position\f[R] field indicates the numeric position in+which the EPUB Publication belongs relative to other works belonging to+the same \f[CR]belongs-to-collection\f[R] field.+.TP+\f[CR]cover-image\f[R]+A string value (path to cover image).+.TP+\f[CR]css\f[R] (or legacy: \f[CR]stylesheet\f[R])+A string value (path to CSS stylesheet).+.TP+\f[CR]page-progression-direction\f[R]+Either \f[CR]ltr\f[R] or \f[CR]rtl\f[R].+Specifies the \f[CR]page-progression-direction\f[R] attribute for the+\f[CR]spine\f[R] element.+.TP+\f[CR]ibooks\f[R]+iBooks-specific metadata, with the following fields:+.RS+.IP \[bu] 2+\f[CR]version\f[R]: (string)+.IP \[bu] 2+\f[CR]specified-fonts\f[R]: \f[CR]true\f[R]|\f[CR]false\f[R] (default+\f[CR]false\f[R])+.IP \[bu] 2+\f[CR]ipad-orientation-lock\f[R]:+\f[CR]portrait-only\f[R]|\f[CR]landscape-only\f[R]+.IP \[bu] 2+\f[CR]iphone-orientation-lock\f[R]:+\f[CR]portrait-only\f[R]|\f[CR]landscape-only\f[R]+.IP \[bu] 2+\f[CR]binding\f[R]: \f[CR]true\f[R]|\f[CR]false\f[R] (default+\f[CR]true\f[R])+.IP \[bu] 2+\f[CR]scroll-axis\f[R]:+\f[CR]vertical\f[R]|\f[CR]horizontal\f[R]|\f[CR]default\f[R]+.RE+.SS The \f[CR]epub:type\f[R] attribute+For \f[CR]epub3\f[R] output, you can mark up the heading that+corresponds to an EPUB chapter using the \f[CR]epub:type\f[R] attribute.+For example, to set the attribute to the value \f[CR]prologue\f[R], use+this markdown:+.IP+.EX+# My chapter {epub:type=prologue}+.EE+.PP+Which will result in:+.IP+.EX+<body epub:type=\[dq]frontmatter\[dq]>+  <section epub:type=\[dq]prologue\[dq]>+    <h1>My chapter</h1>+.EE+.PP+Pandoc will output \f[CR]<body epub:type=\[dq]bodymatter\[dq]>\f[R],+unless you use one of the following values, in which case either+\f[CR]frontmatter\f[R] or \f[CR]backmatter\f[R] will be output.+.RS -14n+.IP+.EX+  epub:type of first section   epub:type of body+  ---------------------------- -------------------+  prologue                     frontmatter+  abstract                     frontmatter+  acknowledgments              frontmatter+  copyright-page               frontmatter+  dedication                   frontmatter+  credits                      frontmatter+  keywords                     frontmatter+  imprint                      frontmatter+  contributors                 frontmatter+  other-credits                frontmatter+  errata                       frontmatter+  revision-history             frontmatter+  titlepage                    frontmatter+  halftitlepage                frontmatter+  seriespage                   frontmatter+  foreword                     frontmatter+  preface                      frontmatter+  frontispiece                 frontmatter+  appendix                     backmatter+  colophon                     backmatter+  bibliography                 backmatter+  index                        backmatter+.EE+.RE+.SS Linked media+By default, pandoc will download media referenced from any+\f[CR]<img>\f[R], \f[CR]<audio>\f[R], \f[CR]<video>\f[R] or+\f[CR]<source>\f[R] element present in the generated EPUB, and include+it in the EPUB container, yielding a completely self-contained EPUB.+If you want to link to external media resources instead, use raw HTML in+your source and add \f[CR]data-external=\[dq]1\[dq]\f[R] to the tag with+the \f[CR]src\f[R] attribute.+For example:+.IP+.EX+<audio controls=\[dq]1\[dq]>+  <source src=\[dq]https://example.com/music/toccata.mp3\[dq]+          data-external=\[dq]1\[dq] type=\[dq]audio/mpeg\[dq]>+  </source>+</audio>+.EE+.PP+If the input format already is HTML then+\f[CR]data-external=\[dq]1\[dq]\f[R] will work as expected for+\f[CR]<img>\f[R] elements.+Similarly, for Markdown, external images can be declared with+\f[CR]![img](url){external=1}\f[R].+Note that this only works for images; the other media elements have no+native representation in pandoc\[cq]s AST and require the use of raw+HTML.+.SS EPUB styling+By default, pandoc will include some basic styling contained in its+\f[CR]epub.css\f[R] data file.+(To see this, use \f[CR]pandoc --print-default-data-file epub.css\f[R].)+To use a different CSS file, just use the \f[CR]--css\f[R] command line+option.+A few inline styles are defined in addition; these are essential for+correct formatting of pandoc\[cq]s HTML output.+.PP+The \f[CR]document-css\f[R] variable may be set if the more opinionated+styling of pandoc\[cq]s default HTML templates is desired (and in that+case the variables defined in Variables for HTML may be used to+fine-tune the style).+.SH CHUNKED HTML+\f[CR]pandoc -t chunkedhtml\f[R] will produce a zip archive of linked+HTML files, one for each section of the original document.+Internal links will automatically be adjusted to point to the right+place, images linked to under the working directory will be+incorporated, and navigation links will be added.+In addition, a JSON file \f[CR]sitemap.json\f[R] will be included+describing the hierarchical structure of the files.+.PP+If an output file without an extension is specified, then it will be+interpreted as a directory and the zip archive will be automatically+unpacked into it (unless it already exists, in which case an error will+be raised).+Otherwise a \f[CR].zip\f[R] file will be produced.+.PP+The navigation links can be customized by adjusting the template.+By default, a table of contents is included only on the top page.+To include it on every page, set the \f[CR]toc\f[R] variable manually.+.SH JUPYTER NOTEBOOKS+When creating a Jupyter notebook, pandoc will try to infer the notebook+structure.+Code blocks with the class \f[CR]code\f[R] will be taken as code cells,+and intervening content will be taken as Markdown cells.+Attachments will automatically be created for images in Markdown cells.+Metadata will be taken from the \f[CR]jupyter\f[R] metadata field.+For example:+.IP+.EX+---+title: My notebook+jupyter:+  nbformat: 4+  nbformat_minor: 5+  kernelspec:+     display_name: Python 2+     language: python+     name: python2+  language_info:+     codemirror_mode:+       name: ipython+       version: 2+     file_extension: \[dq].py\[dq]+     mimetype: \[dq]text/x-python\[dq]+     name: \[dq]python\[dq]+     nbconvert_exporter: \[dq]python\[dq]+     pygments_lexer: \[dq]ipython2\[dq]+     version: \[dq]2.7.15\[dq]+---++# Lorem ipsum++**Lorem ipsum** dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit. Nunc luctus+bibendum felis dictum sodales.++\[ga]\[ga]\[ga] code+print(\[dq]hello\[dq])+\[ga]\[ga]\[ga]++## Pyout++\[ga]\[ga]\[ga] code+from IPython.display import HTML+HTML(\[dq]\[dq]\[dq]+<script>+console.log(\[dq]hello\[dq]);+</script>+<b>HTML</b>+\[dq]\[dq]\[dq])+\[ga]\[ga]\[ga]++## Image++This image ![image](myimage.png) will be+included as a cell attachment.+.EE+.PP+If you want to add cell attributes, group cells differently, or add+output to code cells, then you need to include divs to indicate the+structure.+You can use either fenced divs or native divs for this.+Here is an example:+.IP+.EX+:::::: {.cell .markdown}+# Lorem++**Lorem ipsum** dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit. Nunc luctus+bibendum felis dictum sodales.+::::::++:::::: {.cell .code execution_count=1}+\[ga]\[ga]\[ga] {.python}+print(\[dq]hello\[dq])+\[ga]\[ga]\[ga]++::: {.output .stream .stdout}+\[ga]\[ga]\[ga]+hello+\[ga]\[ga]\[ga]+:::+::::::++:::::: {.cell .code execution_count=2}+\[ga]\[ga]\[ga] {.python}+from IPython.display import HTML+HTML(\[dq]\[dq]\[dq]+<script>+console.log(\[dq]hello\[dq]);+</script>+<b>HTML</b>+\[dq]\[dq]\[dq])+\[ga]\[ga]\[ga]++::: {.output .execute_result execution_count=2}+\[ga]\[ga]\[ga]{=html}+<script>+console.log(\[dq]hello\[dq]);+</script>+<b>HTML</b>+hello+\[ga]\[ga]\[ga]+:::+::::::+.EE+.PP+If you include raw HTML or TeX in an output cell, use the raw attribute,+as shown in the last cell of the example above.+Although pandoc can process \[lq]bare\[rq] raw HTML and TeX, the result+is often interspersed raw elements and normal textual elements, and in+an output cell pandoc expects a single, connected raw block.+To avoid using raw HTML or TeX except when marked explicitly using raw+attributes, we recommend specifying the extensions+\f[CR]-raw_html-raw_tex+raw_attribute\f[R] when translating between+Markdown and ipynb notebooks.+.PP+Note that options and extensions that affect reading and writing of+Markdown will also affect Markdown cells in ipynb notebooks.+For example, \f[CR]--wrap=preserve\f[R] will preserve soft line breaks+in Markdown cells; \f[CR]--markdown-headings=setext\f[R] will cause+Setext-style headings to be used; and \f[CR]--preserve-tabs\f[R] will+prevent tabs from being turned to spaces.+.SH SYNTAX HIGHLIGHTING+Pandoc will automatically highlight syntax in fenced code blocks that+are marked with a language name.+The Haskell library skylighting is used for highlighting.+Currently highlighting is supported only for HTML, EPUB, Docx, Ms, and+LaTeX/PDF output.+To see a list of language names that pandoc will recognize, type+\f[CR]pandoc --list-highlight-languages\f[R].+.PP+The color scheme can be selected using the \f[CR]--highlight-style\f[R]+option.+The default color scheme is \f[CR]pygments\f[R], which imitates the+default color scheme used by the Python library pygments (though+pygments is not actually used to do the highlighting).+To see a list of highlight styles, type+\f[CR]pandoc --list-highlight-styles\f[R].+.PP+If you are not satisfied with the predefined styles, you can use+\f[CR]--print-highlight-style\f[R] to generate a JSON \f[CR].theme\f[R]+file which can be modified and used as the argument to+\f[CR]--highlight-style\f[R].+To get a JSON version of the \f[CR]pygments\f[R] style, for example:+.IP+.EX+pandoc --print-highlight-style pygments > my.theme+.EE+.PP+Then edit \f[CR]my.theme\f[R] and use it like this:+.IP+.EX+pandoc --highlight-style my.theme+.EE+.PP+If you are not satisfied with the built-in highlighting, or you want to+highlight a language that isn\[cq]t supported, you can use the+\f[CR]--syntax-definition\f[R] option to load a KDE-style XML syntax+definition file.+Before writing your own, have a look at KDE\[cq]s repository of syntax+definitions.+.PP+To disable highlighting, use the \f[CR]--no-highlight\f[R] option.+.SH CUSTOM STYLES+Custom styles can be used in the docx and ICML formats.+.SS Output+By default, pandoc\[cq]s docx and ICML output applies a predefined set+of styles for blocks such as paragraphs and block quotes, and uses+largely default formatting (italics, bold) for inlines.+This will work for most purposes, especially alongside a+\f[CR]reference.docx\f[R] file.+However, if you need to apply your own styles to blocks, or match a+preexisting set of styles, pandoc allows you to define custom styles for+blocks and text using \f[CR]div\f[R]s and \f[CR]span\f[R]s,+respectively.+.PP+If you define a \f[CR]div\f[R] or \f[CR]span\f[R] with the attribute+\f[CR]custom-style\f[R], pandoc will apply your specified style to the+contained elements (with the exception of elements whose function+depends on a style, like headings, code blocks, block quotes, or links).+So, for example, using the \f[CR]bracketed_spans\f[R] syntax,+.IP+.EX+[Get out]{custom-style=\[dq]Emphatically\[dq]}, he said.+.EE+.PP+would produce a docx file with \[lq]Get out\[rq] styled with character+style \f[CR]Emphatically\f[R].+Similarly, using the \f[CR]fenced_divs\f[R] syntax,+.IP+.EX+Dickinson starts the poem simply:++::: {custom-style=\[dq]Poetry\[dq]}+| A Bird came down the Walk---+| He did not know I saw---+:::+.EE+.PP+would style the two contained lines with the \f[CR]Poetry\f[R] paragraph+style.+.PP+For docx output, styles will be defined in the output file as inheriting+from normal text, if the styles are not yet in your reference.docx.+If they are already defined, pandoc will not alter the definition.+.PP+This feature allows for greatest customization in conjunction with+pandoc filters.+If you want all paragraphs after block quotes to be indented, you can+write a filter to apply the styles necessary.+If you want all italics to be transformed to the \f[CR]Emphasis\f[R]+character style (perhaps to change their color), you can write a filter+which will transform all italicized inlines to inlines within an+\f[CR]Emphasis\f[R] custom-style \f[CR]span\f[R].+.PP+For docx output, you don\[cq]t need to enable any extensions for custom+styles to work.+.SS Input+The docx reader, by default, only reads those styles that it can convert+into pandoc elements, either by direct conversion or interpreting the+derivation of the input document\[cq]s styles.+.PP+By enabling the \f[CR]styles\f[R] extension in the docx reader+(\f[CR]-f docx+styles\f[R]), you can produce output that maintains the+styles of the input document, using the \f[CR]custom-style\f[R] class.+Paragraph styles are interpreted as divs, while character styles are+interpreted as spans.+.PP+For example, using the \f[CR]custom-style-reference.docx\f[R] file in+the test directory, we have the following different outputs:+.PP+Without the \f[CR]+styles\f[R] extension:+.IP+.EX+$ pandoc test/docx/custom-style-reference.docx -f docx -t markdown+This is some text.++This is text with an *emphasized* text style. And this is text with a+**strengthened** text style.++> Here is a styled paragraph that inherits from Block Text.+.EE+.PP+And with the extension:+.IP+.EX+$ pandoc test/docx/custom-style-reference.docx -f docx+styles -t markdown++::: {custom-style=\[dq]First Paragraph\[dq]}+This is some text.+:::++::: {custom-style=\[dq]Body Text\[dq]}+This is text with an [emphasized]{custom-style=\[dq]Emphatic\[dq]} text style.+And this is text with a [strengthened]{custom-style=\[dq]Strengthened\[dq]}+text style.+:::++::: {custom-style=\[dq]My Block Style\[dq]}+> Here is a styled paragraph that inherits from Block Text.+:::+.EE+.PP+With these custom styles, you can use your input document as a+reference-doc while creating docx output (see below), and maintain the+same styles in your input and output files.+.SH CUSTOM READERS AND WRITERS+Pandoc can be extended with custom readers and writers written in Lua.+(Pandoc includes a Lua interpreter, so Lua need not be installed+separately.)+.PP+To use a custom reader or writer, simply specify the path to the Lua+script in place of the input or output format.+For example:+.IP+.EX+pandoc -t data/sample.lua+pandoc -f my_custom_markup_language.lua -t latex -s+.EE+.PP+If the script is not found relative to the working directory, it will be+sought in the \f[CR]custom\f[R] subdirectory of the user data directory+(see \f[CR]--data-dir\f[R]).+.PP+A custom reader is a Lua script that defines one function, Reader, which+takes a string as input and returns a Pandoc AST.+See the Lua filters documentation for documentation of the functions+that are available for creating pandoc AST elements.+For parsing, the lpeg parsing library is available by default.+To see a sample custom reader:+.IP+.EX+pandoc --print-default-data-file creole.lua+.EE+.PP+If you want your custom reader to have access to reader options+(e.g.\ the tab stop setting), you give your Reader function a second+\f[CR]options\f[R] parameter.+.PP+A custom writer is a Lua script that defines a function that specifies+how to render each element in a Pandoc AST.+See the djot-writer.lua for a full-featured example.+.PP+Note that custom writers have no default template.+If you want to use \f[CR]--standalone\f[R] with a custom writer, you+will need to specify a template manually using \f[CR]--template\f[R] or+add a new default template with the name+\f[CR]default.NAME_OF_CUSTOM_WRITER.lua\f[R] to the \f[CR]templates\f[R]+subdirectory of your user data directory (see Templates).+.SH REPRODUCIBLE BUILDS+Some of the document formats pandoc targets (such as EPUB, docx, and+ODT) include build timestamps in the generated document.+That means that the files generated on successive builds will differ,+even if the source does not.+To avoid this, set the \f[CR]SOURCE_DATE_EPOCH\f[R] environment+variable, and the timestamp will be taken from it instead of the current+time.+\f[CR]SOURCE_DATE_EPOCH\f[R] should contain an integer unix timestamp+(specifying the number of seconds since midnight UTC January 1, 1970).+.PP+Some document formats also include a unique identifier.+For EPUB, this can be set explicitly by setting the+\f[CR]identifier\f[R] metadata field (see EPUB Metadata, above).+.SH ACCESSIBLE PDFS AND PDF ARCHIVING STANDARDS+PDF is a flexible format, and using PDF in certain contexts requires+additional conventions.+For example, PDFs are not accessible by default; they define how+characters are placed on a page but do not contain semantic information+on the content.+However, it is possible to generate accessible PDFs, which use tagging+to add semantic information to the document.+.PP+Pandoc defaults to LaTeX to generate PDF.+Tagging support in LaTeX is in development and not readily available, so+PDFs generated in this way will always be untagged and not accessible.+This means that alternative engines must be used to generate accessible+PDFs.+.PP+The PDF standards PDF/A and PDF/UA define further restrictions intended+to optimize PDFs for archiving and accessibility.+Tagging is commonly used in combination with these standards to ensure+best results.+.PP+Note, however, that standard compliance depends on many things,+including the colorspace of embedded images.+Pandoc cannot check this, and external programs must be used to ensure+that generated PDFs are in compliance.+.SS ConTeXt+ConTeXt always produces tagged PDFs, but the quality depends on the+input.+The default ConTeXt markup generated by pandoc is optimized for+readability and reuse, not tagging.+Enable the \f[CR]tagging\f[R] format extension to force markup that is+optimized for tagging.+This can be combined with the \f[CR]pdfa\f[R] variable to generate+standard-compliant PDFs.+E.g.:+.IP+.EX+pandoc --to=context+tagging -V pdfa=3a+.EE+.PP+A recent \f[CR]context\f[R] version should be used, as older versions+contained a bug that lead to invalid PDF metadata.+.SS WeasyPrint+The HTML-based engine WeasyPrint includes experimental support for PDF/A+and PDF/UA since version 57.+Tagged PDFs can created with+.IP+.EX+pandoc --pdf-engine=weasyprint \[rs]+       --pdf-engine-opt=--pdf-variant=pdf/ua-1 ...+.EE+.PP+The feature is experimental and standard compliance should not be+assumed.+.SS Prince XML+The non-free HTML-to-PDf converter \f[CR]prince\f[R] has extensive+support for various PDF standards as well as tagging.+E.g.:+.IP+.EX+pandoc --pdf-engine=prince \[rs]+       --pdf-engine-opt=--tagged-pdf ...+.EE+.PP+See the prince documentation for more info.+.SS Word Processors+Word processors like LibreOffice and MS Word can also be used to+generate standardized and tagged PDF output.+Pandoc does not support direct conversions via these tools.+However, pandoc can convert a document to a \f[CR]docx\f[R] or+\f[CR]odt\f[R] file, which can then be opened and converted to PDF with+the respective word processor.+See the documentation for Word and LibreOffice.+.SH RUNNING PANDOC AS A WEB SERVER+If you rename (or symlink) the pandoc executable to+\f[CR]pandoc-server\f[R], or if you call pandoc with \f[CR]server\f[R]+as the first argument, it will start up a web server with a JSON API.+This server exposes most of the conversion functionality of pandoc.+For full documentation, see the pandoc-server man page.+.PP+If you rename (or symlink) the pandoc executable to+\f[CR]pandoc-server.cgi\f[R], it will function as a CGI program exposing+the same API as \f[CR]pandoc-server\f[R].+.PP+\f[CR]pandoc-server\f[R] is designed to be maximally secure; it uses+Haskell\[cq]s type system to provide strong guarantees that no I/O will+be performed on the server during pandoc conversions.+.SH RUNNING PANDOC AS A LUA INTERPRETER+Calling the pandoc executable under the name \f[CR]pandoc-lua\f[R] or+with \f[CR]lua\f[R] as the first argument will make it function as a+standalone Lua interpreter.+The behavior is mostly identical to that of the standalone+\f[CR]lua\f[R] executable, version 5.4.+However, there is no REPL yet, and the \f[CR]-i\f[R] option has no+effect.+For full documentation, see the pandoc-lua man page.+.SH A NOTE ON SECURITY+.IP "1." 3+Although pandoc itself will not create or modify any files other than+those you explicitly ask it create (with the exception of temporary+files used in producing PDFs), a filter or custom writer could in+principle do anything on your file system.+Please audit filters and custom writers very carefully before using+them.+.IP "2." 3+Several input formats (including HTML, Org, and RST) support+\f[CR]include\f[R] directives that allow the contents of a file to be+included in the output.+An untrusted attacker could use these to view the contents of files on+the file system.+(Using the \f[CR]--sandbox\f[R] option can protect against this threat.)+.IP "3." 3+Several output formats (including RTF, FB2, HTML with+\f[CR]--self-contained\f[R], EPUB, Docx, and ODT) will embed encoded or+raw images into the output file.+An untrusted attacker could exploit this to view the contents of+non-image files on the file system.+(Using the \f[CR]--sandbox\f[R] option can protect against this threat,+but will also prevent including images in these formats.)+.IP "4." 3+If your application uses pandoc as a Haskell library (rather than+shelling out to the executable), it is possible to use it in a mode that+fully isolates pandoc from your file system, by running the pandoc+operations in the \f[CR]PandocPure\f[R] monad.+See the document Using the pandoc API for more details.+(This corresponds to the use of the \f[CR]--sandbox\f[R] option on the+command line.)+.IP "5." 3+Pandoc\[cq]s parsers can exhibit pathological performance on some corner+cases.+It is wise to put any pandoc operations under a timeout, to avoid DOS+attacks that exploit these issues.+If you are using the pandoc executable, you can add the command line+options \f[CR]+RTS -M512M -RTS\f[R] (for example) to limit the heap size+to 512MB.+Note that the \f[CR]commonmark\f[R] parser (including+\f[CR]commonmark_x\f[R] and \f[CR]gfm\f[R]) is much less vulnerable to+pathological performance than the \f[CR]markdown\f[R] parser, so it is a+better choice when processing untrusted input.+.IP "6." 3+The HTML generated by pandoc is not guaranteed to be safe.+If \f[CR]raw_html\f[R] is enabled for the Markdown input, users can+inject arbitrary HTML.+Even if \f[CR]raw_html\f[R] is disabled, users can include dangerous+content in URLs and attributes.+To be safe, you should run all HTML generated from untrusted user input+through an HTML sanitizer.+.SH AUTHORS Copyright 2006\[en]2022 John MacFarlane (jgm\[at]berkeley.edu). Released under the GPL, version 2 or greater. This software carries no warranty of any kind.
pandoc.cabal view
@@ -1,6 +1,6 @@ cabal-version:   2.4 name:            pandoc-version:         3.1.7+version:         3.1.8 build-type:      Simple license:         GPL-2.0-or-later license-file:    COPYING.md@@ -11,8 +11,8 @@ stability:       alpha homepage:        https://pandoc.org category:        Text-tested-with:     GHC == 8.6.5, GHC == 8.8.4, GHC == 8.10.7, GHC == 9.0.2,-                 GHC == 9.2.5, GHC == 9.4.4+tested-with:     GHC == 8.10.7, GHC == 9.0.2,+                 GHC == 9.2.5, GHC == 9.4.4, GHC == 9.6.1 synopsis:        Conversion between markup formats description:     Pandoc is a Haskell library for converting from one markup                  format to another.  The formats it can handle include@@ -514,7 +514,7 @@                  syb                   >= 0.1      && < 0.8,                  tagsoup               >= 0.14.6   && < 0.15,                  temporary             >= 1.1      && < 1.4,-                 texmath               >= 0.12.8.1 && < 0.13,+                 texmath               >= 0.12.8.2 && < 0.13,                  text                  >= 1.1.1.0  && < 2.2,                  text-conversions      >= 0.3      && < 0.4,                  time                  >= 1.5      && < 1.14,
src/Text/Pandoc/Citeproc.hs view
@@ -87,7 +87,7 @@                 "csl-bib-body" :                 ["hanging-indent" | styleHangingIndent sopts]   let refkvs = (case styleEntrySpacing sopts of-                   Just es | es > 0 -> (("entry-spacing",T.pack $ show es):)+                   Just es -> (("entry-spacing",T.pack $ show es):)                    _ -> id) .                (case styleLineSpacing sopts of                    Just ls | ls > 1 -> (("line-spacing",T.pack $ show ls):)
src/Text/Pandoc/Readers/JATS.hs view
@@ -39,6 +39,7 @@ import Data.Set ((\\)) import Text.Pandoc.Sources (ToSources(..), sourcesToText) import Safe (headMay)+import Text.Printf (printf)  type JATS m = StateT JATSState m @@ -201,6 +202,7 @@         "journal-meta" -> parseMetadata e         "article-meta" -> parseMetadata e         "custom-meta" -> parseMetadata e+        "processing-meta" -> return mempty         "title" -> return mempty -- processed by header         "label" -> return mempty -- processed by header         "table" -> parseTable@@ -436,15 +438,27 @@ getPubDate :: PandocMonad m => Element -> JATS m () getPubDate e =   case filterElement (named "pub-date") e of-    Just d -> do-      case maybeAttrValue "iso-8601-date" d of-        Just isod -> addMeta "date" (text isod)-        Nothing -> do-          let yr = strContent <$> filterElement (named "year") d-          let mon = strContent <$> filterElement (named "month") d-          let day = strContent <$> filterElement (named "day") d-          addMeta "date" $ text $ T.intercalate "-" $ catMaybes [yr, mon, day]+    Just d -> getDate d >>= addMeta "date" . text     Nothing -> pure ()++-- extract a structured date and create an ISO-8901 string date from it+getDate :: PandocMonad m => Element -> JATS m Text+getDate e =+  case maybeAttrValue "iso-8601-date" e of+    Just isod -> pure isod+    Nothing -> do+      let extractDate :: Element -> Maybe Int+          extractDate = safeRead . strContent+      let yr = filterElement (named "year") e >>= extractDate+      let mon = filterElement (named "month") e >>= extractDate+      let day = filterElement (named "day") e >>= extractDate+      let stringDate = strContent <$> filterElement (named "string-date") e+      pure $+        case (yr, mon, day) of+          (Just y, Just m, Just d) -> T.pack $ printf "%04d-%02d-%02d" y m d+          (Just y, Just m, Nothing) -> T.pack $ printf "%04d-%02d" y m+          (Just y, Nothing, Nothing) -> T.pack $ printf "%04d" y+          _ -> fromMaybe mempty stringDate  getPermissions :: PandocMonad m => Element -> JATS m () getPermissions e = do
src/Text/Pandoc/Readers/Org/Inlines.hs view
@@ -42,10 +42,6 @@ -- -- Functions acting on the parser state ---recordAnchorId :: PandocMonad m => Text -> OrgParser m ()-recordAnchorId i = updateState $ \s ->-  s{ orgStateAnchorIds = i : orgStateAnchorIds s }- pushToInlineCharStack :: PandocMonad m => Char -> OrgParser m () pushToInlineCharStack c = updateState $ \s ->   s{ orgStateEmphasisCharStack = c:orgStateEmphasisCharStack s }@@ -513,15 +509,9 @@ -- @anchor-id@ contains spaces, we are more restrictive in what is accepted as -- an anchor. anchor :: PandocMonad m => OrgParser m (F Inlines)-anchor =  try $ do-  anchorId <- parseAnchor-  recordAnchorId anchorId+anchor =  do+  anchorId <- orgAnchor   returnF $ B.spanWith (solidify anchorId, [], []) mempty- where-       parseAnchor = string "<<"-                     *> many1Char (noneOf "\t\n\r<>\"' ")-                     <* string ">>"-                     <* skipSpaces  -- | Replace every char but [a-zA-Z0-9_.-:] with a hyphen '-'.  This mirrors -- the org function @org-export-solidify-link-text@.
src/Text/Pandoc/Readers/Org/Parsing.hs view
@@ -29,6 +29,7 @@   , orgArgWordChar   , orgTagWord   , orgTagWordChar+  , orgAnchor   -- * Re-exports from Text.Pandoc.Parser   , ParserContext (..)   , textStr@@ -216,3 +217,16 @@  orgTagWordChar :: Monad m => OrgParser m Char orgTagWordChar = alphaNum <|> oneOf "@%#_"++orgAnchor :: Monad m => OrgParser m Text+orgAnchor = try $ do+  string "<<"+  anchorId <- many1Char (noneOf "\t\n\r<>\"' ")+  string ">>"+  skipSpaces+  recordAnchorId anchorId+  return anchorId++recordAnchorId :: Monad m => Text -> OrgParser m ()+recordAnchorId i = updateState $ \s ->+  s{ orgStateAnchorIds = i : orgStateAnchorIds s }
src/Text/Pandoc/Writers/HTML.hs view
@@ -299,7 +299,7 @@     if null (stNotes st)       then return mempty       else do-        notes <- footnoteSection EndOfDocument (stEmittedNotes st + 1) (reverse (stNotes st))+        notes <- footnoteSection opts EndOfDocument (stEmittedNotes st + 1) (reverse (stNotes st))         modify (\st' -> st'{ stNotes = mempty, stEmittedNotes = stEmittedNotes st' + length (stNotes st') })         return notes   st <- get@@ -356,7 +356,6 @@                       then defField "csl-css" True .                            (case stCslEntrySpacing st of                               Nothing -> id-                              Just 0  -> id                               Just n  ->                                 defField "csl-entry-spacing"                                   (literal $ tshow n <> "em"))@@ -524,8 +523,8 @@ -- | Convert list of Note blocks to a footnote <div>. -- Assumes notes are sorted. footnoteSection ::-  PandocMonad m => ReferenceLocation -> Int -> [Html] -> StateT WriterState m Html-footnoteSection refLocation startCounter notes = do+  PandocMonad m => WriterOptions -> ReferenceLocation -> Int -> [Html] -> StateT WriterState m Html+footnoteSection opts refLocation startCounter notes = do   html5 <- gets stHtml5   slideVariant <- gets stSlideVariant   let hrtag = if refLocation /= EndOfBlock@@ -550,7 +549,7 @@                              ! A5.class_ className                              ! A5.role "doc-endnotes"                              $ x-        | html5 = H5.aside   ! A5.id "footnotes"+        | html5 = H5.aside   ! prefixedId opts "footnotes"                              ! A5.class_ className                              ! A5.role "doc-endnotes"                              $ x@@ -805,7 +804,7 @@     if emitNotes       then do         st <- get-        renderedNotes <- footnoteSection (writerReferenceLocation opts)+        renderedNotes <- footnoteSection opts (writerReferenceLocation opts)                            (stEmittedNotes st + 1) (reverse notes)         modify (\st' -> st'{ stNotes = mempty,                              stEmittedNotes = stEmittedNotes st' + length notes })@@ -1084,7 +1083,8 @@     then do       notes <- if null (stNotes st)         then return mempty-        else footnoteSection (writerReferenceLocation opts) (stEmittedNotes st + 1) (reverse (stNotes st))+        else footnoteSection opts (writerReferenceLocation opts)+                             (stEmittedNotes st + 1) (reverse (stNotes st))       modify (\st' -> st'{ stNotes = mempty, stEmittedNotes = stEmittedNotes st' + length (stNotes st') })       return (doc <> notes)     else return doc
src/Text/Pandoc/Writers/LaTeX.hs view
@@ -339,14 +339,13 @@                then do                  modify $ \st -> st{ stHasCslRefs = True }                  inner <- blockListToLaTeX bs-                 return $ (if "hanging-indent" `notElem` classes-                               then "\\setlength{\\cslhangindent}{0em}"-                               else mempty)-                          $$ ("\\setlength{\\cslentryspacing}" <> braces-                               (case lookup "entry-spacing" kvs of-                                  Nothing -> "0em"-                                  Just s  -> (literal s <> "\\baselineskip")))-                          $$ "\\begin{CSLReferences}"+                 return $ ("\\begin{CSLReferences}"+                            <> braces+                                (if "hanging-indent" `elem` classes+                                    then "1"+                                    else "0")+                            <> braces+                               (maybe "1" literal (lookup "entry-spacing" kvs)))                           $$ inner                           $+$ "\\end{CSLReferences}"                else blockListToLaTeX bs@@ -569,8 +568,7 @@     [b] -> blockToLaTeX b     bs  -> mconcat . intersperse (cr <> "\\hfill") <$>            mapM (toSubfigure (length bs)) bs-  target <- hypertarget ident-  let innards = target $$ "\\centering" $$ contents $$ caption <> cr+  let innards = "\\centering" $$ contents $$ caption <> cr   modify $ \st ->     st{ stInFigure = isSubfigure       , stSubfigure = stSubfigure st || isSubfigure
test/command/4235.md view
@@ -4,7 +4,7 @@ ^D <p>This.<a href="#foofn1" class="footnote-ref" id="foofnref1" role="doc-noteref"><sup>1</sup></a></p>-<aside id="footnotes" class="footnotes footnotes-end-of-document"+<aside id="foofootnotes" class="footnotes footnotes-end-of-document" role="doc-endnotes"> <hr /> <ol>
test/command/6723.md view
@@ -22,7 +22,7 @@  # References {#references .unnumbered} -::: {#refs .references .csl-bib-body .hanging-indent}+::: {#refs .references .csl-bib-body .hanging-indent entry-spacing="0"} ::: {#ref-doe .csl-entry} Doe, John. "An Article," 2020. <https://doi.org/10.1109/5.771073>. :::
test/command/6890.md view
@@ -81,7 +81,7 @@ , Div     ( "refs"     , [ "references" , "csl-bib-body" , "hanging-indent" ]-    , []+    , [ ( "entry-spacing" , "0" ) ]     )     [ Div         ( "ref-fruchtel-sozialer-2013a" , [ "csl-entry" ] , [] )
test/command/8354.md view
@@ -26,7 +26,7 @@ ^D <h2 class="unnumbered" id="references">References</h2> <div id="refs" class="references csl-bib-body hanging-indent"-role="list">+data-entry-spacing="0" role="list"> <div id="ref-feketeExploringReproducibilityVisualization2020" class="csl-entry" role="listitem"> Fekete, Jean-Daniel, and Juliana Freire. 2020. <span>“Exploring
+ test/command/9045.md view
@@ -0,0 +1,10 @@+```+% pandoc -t latex+![hi](there.jpg){#foo}+^D+\begin{figure}+\centering+\includegraphics{there.jpg}+\caption{hi}\label{foo}+\end{figure}+```
test/command/citeproc-7a.md view
@@ -26,7 +26,7 @@  Test.[^4] -::: {#refs .references .csl-bib-body .hanging-indent}+::: {#refs .references .csl-bib-body .hanging-indent entry-spacing="0"} ::: {#ref-test .csl-entry} Doe, John. "Test," n.d. :::
test/command/pandoc-citeproc-118.md view
@@ -19,7 +19,7 @@ ^D (Hitchcock 1959) is a spy thriller film. -::: {#refs .references .csl-bib-body .hanging-indent}+::: {#refs .references .csl-bib-body .hanging-indent entry-spacing="0"} ::: {#ref-nbn .csl-entry} Hitchcock, Alfred, dir. 1959. *North by Northwest*. USA: Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer.
test/command/pandoc-citeproc-119.md view
@@ -14,7 +14,7 @@  # References {#references .unnumbered} -::: {#refs .references .csl-bib-body .hanging-indent line-spacing="2"}+::: {#refs .references .csl-bib-body .hanging-indent entry-spacing="0" line-spacing="2"} ::: {#ref-averroes/hercz .csl-entry} Averroes. (1869). *Drei Abhandlungen über die Conjunction des separaten Intellects mit dem Menschen: Von Averroes (Vater und Sohn), aus dem
test/command/pandoc-citeproc-13.md view
@@ -19,7 +19,7 @@ ^D Foo.[^1] -::: {#refs .references .csl-bib-body .hanging-indent}+::: {#refs .references .csl-bib-body .hanging-indent entry-spacing="0"} ::: {#ref-item1 .csl-entry} Author, Ann. "Title." *Journal*, 2011. :::
test/command/pandoc-citeproc-136.md view
@@ -15,7 +15,7 @@ ^D *Stanze in lode della donna brutta* (1547) is an anoynymous work. -::: {#refs .references .csl-bib-body .hanging-indent}+::: {#refs .references .csl-bib-body .hanging-indent entry-spacing="0"} ::: {#ref-stanze .csl-entry} *Stanze in lode della donna brutta*. 1547. Florence. :::
test/command/pandoc-citeproc-14.md view
@@ -56,7 +56,7 @@  # References {#references .unnumbered} -::: {#refs .references .csl-bib-body .hanging-indent}+::: {#refs .references .csl-bib-body .hanging-indent entry-spacing="0"} ::: {#ref-CTv1c2 .csl-entry} Pelikan, Jaroslav. 1971a. "Chapter Two." In *The Christian Tradition: A History of the Development of Doctrine*, 1:34--56. Chicago: University
test/command/pandoc-citeproc-152.md view
@@ -49,7 +49,7 @@  # References {#references .unnumbered} -::: {#refs .references .csl-bib-body .hanging-indent line-spacing="2"}+::: {#refs .references .csl-bib-body .hanging-indent entry-spacing="0" line-spacing="2"} ::: {#ref-Feminism2011ces .csl-entry} Communities. (2011, August 14). In *Geek Feminism*. Retrieved from <http://geekfeminism.wikia.com/wiki/Category:Communities>
test/command/pandoc-citeproc-175.md view
@@ -35,7 +35,7 @@  > Doe, Jane. 2011. "A Title." *A Magazine*, January--February. -::: {#refs .references .csl-bib-body .hanging-indent}+::: {#refs .references .csl-bib-body .hanging-indent entry-spacing="0"} ::: {#ref-item1 .csl-entry} Doe, Jane. 2011. "A Title." *A Magazine*, January--February 2011. :::
test/command/pandoc-citeproc-197.md view
@@ -21,7 +21,7 @@ ^D This is a test.[^1] -::: {#refs .references .csl-bib-body .hanging-indent}+::: {#refs .references .csl-bib-body .hanging-indent entry-spacing="0"} ::: {#ref-test .csl-entry} Abelard, Peter, ed. *Test*. Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1989. :::
test/command/pandoc-citeproc-25.md view
@@ -22,7 +22,7 @@  # References {#references .unnumbered} -::: {#refs .references .csl-bib-body .hanging-indent}+::: {#refs .references .csl-bib-body .hanging-indent entry-spacing="0"} ::: {#ref-item1 .csl-entry} Author, Al. 1998. "Foo Bar Baz: Bazbaz Foo." :::
test/command/pandoc-citeproc-250.md view
@@ -13,7 +13,7 @@ ^D ([Doe, n.d.](#ref-doe)) -::: {#refs .references .csl-bib-body .hanging-indent}+::: {#refs .references .csl-bib-body .hanging-indent entry-spacing="0"} ::: {#ref-doe .csl-entry} Doe. n.d. "Title." :::
test/command/pandoc-citeproc-301.md view
@@ -13,7 +13,7 @@ "Essays Presented to N.R. Ker (On Art)" (n.d.); "*Test:* An Experiment: An Abridgement" (n.d.) -::: {#refs .references .csl-bib-body .hanging-indent}+::: {#refs .references .csl-bib-body .hanging-indent entry-spacing="0"} ::: {#ref-test .csl-entry} "Essays Presented to N.R. Ker (On Art)." n.d. :::
test/command/pandoc-citeproc-307.md view
@@ -22,7 +22,7 @@ ^D Bonjour(Bazin 1954) ! -::: {#refs .references .csl-bib-body .hanging-indent}+::: {#refs .references .csl-bib-body .hanging-indent entry-spacing="0"} ::: {#ref-bazin_cybernetique_1954 .csl-entry} Bazin, André. 1954. « La Cybernétique d'André Cayatte ». *Cahiers du cinéma*, nᵒ 36 (juin): 22‑27.
test/command/pandoc-citeproc-312.md view
@@ -122,7 +122,7 @@ ---  ^D-::: {#refs .references .csl-bib-body .hanging-indent line-spacing="2"}+::: {#refs .references .csl-bib-body .hanging-indent entry-spacing="0" line-spacing="2"} ::: {#ref-Y .csl-entry} NN. (1950). Date: Year. :::
test/command/pandoc-citeproc-320.md view
@@ -138,7 +138,7 @@ Foo (Sainte-Beuve, n.d.; Saint-Gaudens, n.d.; Saint-Saëns, n.d.; San Martin, n.d.; St. Denis, n.d.; St. Laurent, n.d.). -::: {#refs .references .csl-bib-body .hanging-indent line-spacing="2"}+::: {#refs .references .csl-bib-body .hanging-indent entry-spacing="0" line-spacing="2"} ::: {#ref-itemA2 .csl-entry} ben Yaakov, D. (n.d.). :::
test/command/pandoc-citeproc-320a.md view
@@ -51,7 +51,7 @@ Foo (al-ʾUdhrī, n.d.; al-ʿUdhrī, n.d.; al-\'Udhrī, n.d.; al-'Udhrī, n.d.a, n.d.b; Uch, n.d.; Uebel, n.d.; Zzz, n.d.). -::: {#refs .references .csl-bib-body .hanging-indent}+::: {#refs .references .csl-bib-body .hanging-indent entry-spacing="0"} ::: {#ref-item6 .csl-entry} Uch, Ann. n.d. :::
test/command/pandoc-citeproc-325.md view
@@ -18,7 +18,7 @@ ^D (Smith, n.d.a, n.d.b) -::: {#refs .references .csl-bib-body .hanging-indent}+::: {#refs .references .csl-bib-body .hanging-indent entry-spacing="0"} ::: {#ref-item1 .csl-entry} Smith, John. n.d.a. :::
test/command/pandoc-citeproc-327.md view
@@ -41,7 +41,7 @@ ^D I referenced something here^\[1\]^ -::: {#refs .references .csl-bib-body}+::: {#refs .references .csl-bib-body entry-spacing="0"} ::: {#ref-LiLiaoDongWanHaiYuDiQiDongWuCiJiShengChanLiYanJiuJiShengJingGuaYiXingPingJie2017 .csl-entry} [\[1\] ]{.csl-left-margin}[李轶平, 于旭光, 孙明, 等. [辽东湾海域底栖动物次级生产力研究及生境适宜性评价](http://kns.cnki.net/kns/detail/detail.aspx?QueryID=4&CurRec=4&recid=&FileName=CHAN201706006&DbName=CJFDLAST2018&DbCode=CJFQ&yx=Y&pr=&URLID=21.1110.S.20171129.1725.006)\[J\].
test/command/pandoc-citeproc-351.md view
@@ -17,7 +17,7 @@ ^D Friedrich Nietzsche (ed.)[^1] -::: {#refs .references .csl-bib-body .hanging-indent}+::: {#refs .references .csl-bib-body .hanging-indent entry-spacing="0"} ::: {#ref-Nie72 .csl-entry} Nietzsche, Friedrich (ed.), *Die geburt*, 1872. :::
test/command/pandoc-citeproc-360.md view
@@ -23,7 +23,7 @@ ^D [^1] -::: {#refs .references .csl-bib-body .hanging-indent}+::: {#refs .references .csl-bib-body .hanging-indent entry-spacing="0"} ::: {#ref-lestrange2017 .csl-entry} L'Estrange, Michael, and Stephen Merchant. "2017 Independent Intelligence Review," July 18, 2017.
test/command/pandoc-citeproc-371.md view
@@ -28,7 +28,7 @@  # References {#references .unnumbered} -::: {#refs .references .csl-bib-body .hanging-indent}+::: {#refs .references .csl-bib-body .hanging-indent entry-spacing="0"} ::: {#ref-item2 .csl-entry} Doe, Jane. 2018. *Title Two*. :::
test/command/pandoc-citeproc-38.md view
@@ -21,7 +21,7 @@ ^D Doe, Doe, and Roe (2007) -::: {#refs .references .csl-bib-body .hanging-indent}+::: {#refs .references .csl-bib-body .hanging-indent entry-spacing="0"} ::: {#ref-a .csl-entry} Doe, Ann, Ben Doe, and Ron Roe. 2007. "Title." :::
test/command/pandoc-citeproc-386.md view
@@ -26,7 +26,7 @@ ^D ^\[1\]^ -::: {#refs .references .csl-bib-body line-spacing="2"}+::: {#refs .references .csl-bib-body entry-spacing="0" line-spacing="2"} ::: {#ref-ding_metallic_2012 .csl-entry} [\[1\] ]{.csl-left-margin}[[K. Ding, C. Z. Ning, *Light Sci. Appl.* **2012**, *1*,
test/command/pandoc-citeproc-401.md view
@@ -43,7 +43,7 @@ ^D Haslanger (\[2003\] 2012, \[2000\] 2012) says... -::: {#refs .references .csl-bib-body .hanging-indent}+::: {#refs .references .csl-bib-body .hanging-indent entry-spacing="0"} ::: {#ref-haslanger2012FeminismMetaphysicsNegotiating .csl-entry} Haslanger, Sally. (2000) 2012. "Feminism in Metaphysics: Negotiating the Natural." In *Resisting Reality: Social Construction and Social
test/command/pandoc-citeproc-408.md view
@@ -27,7 +27,7 @@ ^D (Smith and Smith 2019; Smith 2019) -::: {#refs .references .csl-bib-body .hanging-indent}+::: {#refs .references .csl-bib-body .hanging-indent entry-spacing="0"} ::: {#ref-smith1 .csl-entry} Smith, Mary. 2019. "Foo." :::
test/command/pandoc-citeproc-416.md view
@@ -44,7 +44,7 @@  # References {#references .unnumbered} -::: {#refs .references .csl-bib-body .hanging-indent}+::: {#refs .references .csl-bib-body .hanging-indent entry-spacing="0"} ::: {#ref-item2 .csl-entry} Doe, J. 2007. "The Title," December 12--13, 2007. :::
test/command/pandoc-citeproc-47.md view
@@ -92,7 +92,7 @@  # References {#references .unnumbered} -::: {#refs .references .csl-bib-body .hanging-indent}+::: {#refs .references .csl-bib-body .hanging-indent entry-spacing="0"} ::: {#ref-doe .csl-entry} Doe, A. 2000a. *Title*. :::
test/command/pandoc-citeproc-51.md view
@@ -33,7 +33,7 @@ ^D Doe (1987--1988); Roe (1987) -::: {#refs .references .csl-bib-body .hanging-indent}+::: {#refs .references .csl-bib-body .hanging-indent entry-spacing="0"} ::: {#ref-item1 .csl-entry} Doe, John. 1987--1988. "The Title." *Journal of Something* 3: 12--34. :::
test/command/pandoc-citeproc-57.md view
@@ -27,7 +27,7 @@  # References {#references .unnumbered} -::: {#refs .references .csl-bib-body .hanging-indent}+::: {#refs .references .csl-bib-body .hanging-indent entry-spacing="0"} ::: {#ref-Faraday-forthcoming .csl-entry} Faraday, Carry. Forthcoming. "Protean Photography." In *Seven Trips Beyond the Asteroid Belt*, edited by James Oring. Cape Canaveral, FL:
test/command/pandoc-citeproc-58.md view
@@ -24,7 +24,7 @@  # References {#references .unnumbered} -::: {#refs .references .csl-bib-body .hanging-indent}+::: {#refs .references .csl-bib-body .hanging-indent entry-spacing="0"} ::: {#ref-stanze .csl-entry} *Stanze in lode della donna brutta*. 1547. Florence. :::
test/command/pandoc-citeproc-64.md view
@@ -7,7 +7,7 @@ ---  ^D-::: {#refs .references .csl-bib-body .hanging-indent}+::: {#refs .references .csl-bib-body .hanging-indent entry-spacing="0"} ::: {#ref-item1 .csl-entry} Doe, John. 2005. *First Book*. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. :::
test/command/pandoc-citeproc-65.md view
@@ -28,7 +28,7 @@ ^D (Stotz 1996--2004) -::: {#refs .references .csl-bib-body .hanging-indent}+::: {#refs .references .csl-bib-body .hanging-indent entry-spacing="0"} ::: {#ref-stotz:1996handbuch .csl-entry} Stotz, Peter. 1996--2004. *Handbuch zur lateinischen Sprache des Mittelalters*. 5 vols. Handbuch der Altertumswissenschaft 2.5. Munich:
test/command/pandoc-citeproc-68.md view
@@ -36,7 +36,7 @@ prose commentary[^2] \... and finally a note starting with a citation.[^3] -::: {#refs .references .csl-bib-body .hanging-indent}+::: {#refs .references .csl-bib-body .hanging-indent entry-spacing="0"} ::: {#ref-goering:1992william .csl-entry} Goering, Joseph. *William de Montibus (c. 1140--1213): The Schools and the Literature of Pastoral Care*. Studies and Texts 108. Toronto:
test/command/pandoc-citeproc-7.md view
@@ -23,7 +23,7 @@ ^D Author (2011) -::: {#refs .references .csl-bib-body .hanging-indent}+::: {#refs .references .csl-bib-body .hanging-indent entry-spacing="0"} ::: {#ref-item1 .csl-entry} Author, Ann. 2011. "Title." *Journal*, September 24--26, 2011. :::
test/command/pandoc-citeproc-70.md view
@@ -56,7 +56,7 @@ ^D (Thorndike 1955; Dinkova-Bruun 2009) -::: {#refs .references .csl-bib-body .hanging-indent}+::: {#refs .references .csl-bib-body .hanging-indent entry-spacing="0"} ::: {#ref-bruun:2009samuel .csl-entry} Dinkova-Bruun, Greti. 2009. "Samuel Presbyter and the Glosses to His Versification of Psalm 1: An Anti-Church Invective?" In *Florilegium
test/command/pandoc-citeproc-75.md view
@@ -59,7 +59,7 @@  (Doe, 2006, no. 6 and 7) -::: {#refs .references .csl-bib-body .hanging-indent line-spacing="2"}+::: {#refs .references .csl-bib-body .hanging-indent entry-spacing="0" line-spacing="2"} ::: {#ref-test .csl-entry} Doe, J. (2006). Test, *81*. :::
test/command/pandoc-citeproc-76.md view
@@ -44,7 +44,7 @@ ^D Author (1998c), Author (1998d), Author (1998a), Author (1998b) -::: {#refs .references .csl-bib-body .hanging-indent}+::: {#refs .references .csl-bib-body .hanging-indent entry-spacing="0"} ::: {#ref-item3 .csl-entry} Author, Al. 1998a. "Foo Bar Baz: A Bazbaz Bar Foo." :::
test/command/pandoc-citeproc-77.md view
@@ -39,7 +39,7 @@ ^D [^1] -::: {#refs .references .csl-bib-body .hanging-indent}+::: {#refs .references .csl-bib-body .hanging-indent entry-spacing="0"} ::: {#ref-item4 .csl-entry} Bennett, Frank G., Jr., n.d. :::
test/command/pandoc-citeproc-82.md view
@@ -28,7 +28,7 @@  Some text.[^1] -::: {#refs .references .csl-bib-body .hanging-indent}+::: {#refs .references .csl-bib-body .hanging-indent entry-spacing="0"} ::: {#ref-OCLC_i1099 .csl-entry} OCLC. "WorldCat." Accessed September 19, 2014. <https://www.worldcat.org/>.
test/command/pandoc-citeproc-87.md view
@@ -122,7 +122,7 @@  # References {#references .unnumbered} -::: {#refs .references .csl-bib-body .hanging-indent}+::: {#refs .references .csl-bib-body .hanging-indent entry-spacing="0"} ::: {#ref-item2a .csl-entry} Doe, John. 2006a. "Title." The Web Site. October--November 2006. <http://www.example.com>.
test/command/pandoc-citeproc-chicago-author-date.md view
@@ -83,7 +83,7 @@  # References {#references .unnumbered} -::: {#refs .references .csl-bib-body .hanging-indent}+::: {#refs .references .csl-bib-body .hanging-indent entry-spacing="0"} ::: {#ref-item1 .csl-entry} Doe, John. 2005. *First Book*. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. :::
test/command/pandoc-citeproc-chicago-fullnote-bibliography.md view
@@ -81,7 +81,7 @@  # References {#references .unnumbered} -::: {#refs .references .csl-bib-body .hanging-indent}+::: {#refs .references .csl-bib-body .hanging-indent entry-spacing="0"} ::: {#ref-item2 .csl-entry} Doe, John. "Article." *Journal of Generic Studies* 6 (2006): 33--34. :::
test/command/pandoc-citeproc-ieee.md view
@@ -84,7 +84,7 @@  # References {#references .unnumbered} -::: {#refs .references .csl-bib-body}+::: {#refs .references .csl-bib-body entry-spacing="0"} ::: {#ref-item1 .csl-entry} [\[1\] ]{.csl-left-margin}[J. Doe, *First book*. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2005.]{.csl-right-inline}
test/command/pandoc-citeproc-no-author.md view
@@ -45,7 +45,7 @@ *Magazine* (2012a, 3), *Magazine* (2012b), *Magazine* (2012c), *Magazine* (2012d), *Newspaper* (2012a), *Newspaper* (2012b) -::: {#refs .references .csl-bib-body .hanging-indent}+::: {#refs .references .csl-bib-body .hanging-indent entry-spacing="0"} ::: {#ref-item1 .csl-entry} *Magazine*. 2012a. "Title A," 2012. :::
test/command/pandoc-citeproc-number-of-volumes.md view
@@ -21,7 +21,7 @@ ^D Author (2013) -::: {#refs .references .csl-bib-body .hanging-indent}+::: {#refs .references .csl-bib-body .hanging-indent entry-spacing="0"} ::: {#ref-item1 .csl-entry} Author, Al. 2013. *Title*. 2 vols. Location: Publisher. :::
test/jats-reader.xml view
@@ -2,6 +2,9 @@ <!DOCTYPE article PUBLIC "-//NLM//DTD JATS (Z39.96) Journal Archiving and Interchange DTD v1.2 20190208//EN"                   "JATS-archivearticle1.dtd"> <article xmlns:mml="http://www.w3.org/1998/Math/MathML" xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" dtd-version="1.2" article-type="other">+<processing-meta base-tagset="archiving" mathml-version="3.0" table-model="xhtml" tagset-family="jats">+    <restricted-by>pmc</restricted-by>+</processing-meta> <front> <journal-meta> <journal-title-group>