@hackage scholdoc0.1.3

Converts ScholarlyMarkdown documents to HTML5/LaTeX/Docx format

  • Installation

    Custom

  • Dependencies (42)

  • Dependents (2)

    @hackage/acme-everything, @hackage/scholdoc-citeproc
  • Package Flags

      embed_data_files
       (off by default)

      Embed data files in binary for relocatable executable.

      tryscholdoc
       (off by default)

      Build tryscholdoc cgi executable.

      https
       (on by default)

      Enable support for downloading of resources over https.

      make-pandoc-man-pages
       (off by default)

      Included to prevent errors, but currently useless for Scholdoc

      network-uri
       (on by default)

      Get Network.URI from the network-uri package

Scholdoc

Converts ScholarlyMarkdown documents into HTML5, LaTeX, or Docx

Current stable version: 0.1.3

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Scholdoc is a command-line utility that converts ScholarlyMarkdown documents into the HTML5, LaTeX, and Docx (OOML) formats. It is intended to facilitate academic writing in a cross-platform, semantic-aware, plaintext format that can be quickly used in modern publishing pipelines.

Scholdoc is implemented as fork of Pandoc, and mostly retains the same user interface (including the custom template and filter system). It essentially understands a new input format markdown_scholarly (implemented in the markdown reader a superset of markdown_pandoc features), and limits itself to HTML5/LaTeX/Docx output. Scholdoc defaults to standalone output and has its own custom templates to ensure output compatibility with ScholarlyMarkdown.

See the Pandoc Guide for more about Pandoc, its usage, and the Markdown dialect that Pandoc (and hence Scholdoc) understands.

Scholdoc is currently up to date with Pandoc version 1.13.1 (commit 8b60d430)

HTML output

Important: A ScholarlyMarkdown core CSS is required for proper formatting of most HTML files output by Scholdoc.

Scholdoc's HTML output is strictly limited to HTML5 due to its enhanced semantic capabilities (such as the figure and figcaption element), and relies on some CSS3 features for layout (mostly for multi-image figures with subcaptions). It adheres to a fairly straightforward schema. No formatting information is written to the HTML by Scholdoc, so a ScholarlyMarkdown core CSS is required for bare minimum proper formatting. You can also write your own CSS that target the schema.

By default, the html output format generates a complete (but bare-bones) HTML5 document that can be used immediately. To have Scholdoc generate just the bare content (everything inside scholmd-content), use the html_bodyonly output format. By default, Scholdoc will always include proper MathJax settings for the way ScholarlyMarkdown prescribes math content in HTML.

Docx output

The Docx writer currently isn't fully functional yet. It does not yet output structures specific to ScholarlyMarkdown (such as figures).