emacs-orgmode
[Top][All Lists]
Advanced

[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index]

Re: [O] [ANN] Merge export-block type within special-block


From: KDr2
Subject: Re: [O] [ANN] Merge export-block type within special-block
Date: Fri, 29 Aug 2014 22:02:47 +0800


Hi Nicolas,

This is nice, but it brought a bug, `[N]' in HTML block is recognized as footnote, e.g.:

#+BEGIN_HTML
ONE[1]
<script>
console.log(v1[0]);
</script>
#+END_HTML

There are two footnotes in the generated HTML. Would you fix this please?

Thanks.




On Sun, Jul 27, 2014 at 8:37 PM, Nicolas Goaziou <address@hidden> wrote:
Hello,

Export blocks are blocks dedicated to export back-ends, e.g.,
"#+BEGIN_LATEX". The way they are currently parsed is flawed.

Export blocks are back-end dependent. At the moment, back-ends register
their own export block in a variable, `org-element-block-name-alist', so
the parser can know if it needs to parse an export block or not. As
a consequence, the same block can be parsed differently if a given
export back-end is loaded or not. E.g.,

  #+BEGIN_HTML
  ...
  #+END_HTML

will be parsed as a `special-block' if "ox-html.el" is not loaded, or an
`export-block' otherwise. This is slightly... ugly. And it gets worse if
we include the cache, which will not update the block if it is not
modified.

I just committed a set of patches that solve the problem: `export-block'
elements do not exist anymore. Instead, such blocks are now parsed as
`special-block', always. This does not depend on the libraries loaded so
far.

Of course, special blocks are not treated exactly as export blocks. The
latter's contents are included as-is in the output whereas the former's
are interpreted. Therefore, special blocks now include another
property, :raw-value, which stores the pristine initial contents of the
block, and "ox.el" provides a new function,
`org-export-raw-special-block-p', which tells the difference between
a former export block and a special block. This makes sense since an
"export-block" is clearly, and only, an export concept. This is not
related to Org syntax.

This is more simple to handle than it sounds, and can be described with
two steps:

  1. `export-block' elements, translators and filters are now ignored.
     These can be removed from export back-ends (unless you want to
     preserve compatibility with Org 8.2, in which case leaving them
     will not hurt: they will be used in Org 8.2 and ignored in Org
     8.3).

  2. Translators for special blocks, e.g. `org-BACKEND-special-block'
     need to be updated and check first if current block is a raw
     special block or not. The following template is a suggestion.

     #+BEGIN_SRC emacs-lisp
     (defun org-latex-special-block (special-block contents info)
       (if (org-export-raw-special-block-p special-block info)
           (org-element-property :raw-value special-block)
         ;; Usual handling for special blocks goes here.
         ))
     #+END_SRC

     Note that if BACKEND is a derived back-end and doesn't implement
     its own special block translator already, there is nothing to
     change. The parent back-end will take care of such blocks.

     All back-ends in core and in contrib have been updated this way
     already.

I included `org-export-raw-special-block-p' in Org 8.2, as
a forward-compatibility measure, so back-end maintainers do not have to
do the `fboundp' dance.

BTW, for those in the back of the room: I didn't remove
"#+BEGIN_LATEX"-like constructs.


Regards,

--
Nicolas Goaziou                                                0x80A93738




--
-- 

KDr2, http://kdr2.com

reply via email to

[Prev in Thread] Current Thread [Next in Thread]