pandoc-internal-references

Image attributes and internal referencing in markdown


License
BSD-2-Clause
Install
pip install pandoc-internal-references==0.5.1

Documentation

This pandoc filter implements an internal reference manager for pandoc, making it possible to reference images and sections that have attribute tags.

This filter uses the same @ syntax as citations, with priority given to internal references if there is a key clash.

This filter allows both \ref and \autoref referencing styles to be used, toggled with a metadata switch.

Supported output formats are latex, html, html5 and markdown. The markdown output format can be used to convert markdown-with-figure-attributes into currently valid pandoc markdown.

This allows you to write something like this:

Look at @fig:thing.

![some caption](image.png){#fig:thing}

and get this markdown:

Look at [Figure 1](#fig:thing).

<div id='#fig:thing' class='figure'>
![Figure 1: some caption](image.png)

</div>

this latex:

Look at \autoref{fig:thing}.

\begin{figure}[htbp]
\centering
\includegraphics{image.png}
\caption{some caption}
\label{fig:thing}
\end{figure}

or this html:

<p>Look at <a href="#fig:thing">Figure 1</a>.</p>

<div class="figure" id="fig:thing">
<img src="image.png" alt="some caption" />
<p class="caption">Figure 1: some caption</p>
</div>

For example input see the spec and for the output see markdown, html, html5 or latex.

Usage:

pandoc spec.md --filter internal-references.py --to latex

alternately you can install it and use the command line link:

python setup.py install
pandoc spec.md --filter internal-references --to latex

Requires pandocfilters and pandoc.

How it works:

In order to manage references we need to maintain some internal state that tracks the objects that can be referenced in the document. This is implemented with the ReferenceManager.

pandocfilters contains a function toJSONFilter that passes a given function over the entire document syntax tree and interfaces with pandoc via stdin/stdout.

However, we need to walk the document tree twice, once to capture all of the objects (figures, sections, whatever) and again to change all of the internal links to the appropriate output. This requires a modified toJSONFilter that accepts a list of functions to pass the tree through sequentially.

It is easy to determine the type of a reference object as we go along (whether figure, section or whatever) on the first pass and we can use this information to let us choose the right text for internal links on the second pass. This allows us to avoid being constrained to ids like '#fig:somefigure' to indicate a figure.

TODO:

  • allow switching off figure / section text replacement (perhaps using document metadata as the switch)

  • implement implicit internal reference link syntax for links to figures, i.e. [](#ref) == [#ref]

Contributing:

Very welcome. Make sure you add appropriate tests and use verbose commit messages and pull requests. Explain what you are trying to do in English so that I don't have to work it out through the code.