Files
John MacFarlane 532bbc875b Use latest commonmark-extensions.
This fixes `auto_identifiers` and `ascii_auto_identifiers`
extensions so that they substitute aliases for emojis,
as documented.

See #9876.
2024-06-17 19:57:33 -07:00

1.2 KiB

Check that the commonmark reader handles the ascii_identifiers extension properly.

% pandoc -f commonmark+gfm_auto_identifiers+ascii_identifiers -t native
# non ascii ⚠️ räksmörgås
^D
[ Header
    1
    ( "non-ascii-warning-raksmorgas" , [] , [] )
    [ Str "non"
    , Space
    , Str "ascii"
    , Space
    , Str "\9888\65039"
    , Space
    , Str "r\228ksm\246rg\229s"
    ]
]

Note that the emoji here is actually a composite character, formed from \9888 and \65039. The latter is a combining mark, so it survives...

% pandoc -f commonmark+gfm_auto_identifiers-ascii_identifiers -t native
# non ascii ⚠️ räksmörgås
^D
[ Header
    1
    ( "non-ascii-warning-r\228ksm\246rg\229s" , [] , [] )
    [ Str "non"
    , Space
    , Str "ascii"
    , Space
    , Str "\9888\65039"
    , Space
    , Str "r\228ksm\246rg\229s"
    ]
]

gfm should have ascii_identifiers disabled by default.

% pandoc -f gfm -t native
# non ascii ⚠️ räksmörgås
^D
[ Header
    1
    ( "non-ascii-warning-r\228ksm\246rg\229s" , [] , [] )
    [ Str "non"
    , Space
    , Str "ascii"
    , Space
    , Str "\9888\65039"
    , Space
    , Str "r\228ksm\246rg\229s"
    ]
]