| Commit message (Collapse) | Author | Age | Files | Lines |
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Except were "short names" are explained in the docs, all references
to the buitlin extensions now use `markdown.extensions.*` in
anticipation of #336.
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All named extensions now use python dot notation in the tests - including
all builtin extensions (eg: 'extra' => 'markdown.extensions.extra'). This
is in anticipation of #336.
Note there are a few tests (in the error tests) that will still need
updating, but not till we make the change as they will test for the
new error message.
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This needs to work with the JSON lib if PyYaml isn't available.
Therefore, we can't catch a yaml specific exception.
The tests are fine using a yaml specific exception as the yaml lib
is required by the testing framework anyway. So yaml is always
available when running the tests.
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If you were to import the class like this:
from path.to.module import SomeExtensionClass
Then the named extension would be the string:
"path.to.module:SomeExtensionClass"
This should simplify loading extensions from the command line or
template filters -- expecially when multiple extensions are defined
in a single python module.
The docs still need updating. I'm waiting to update the docs after
implementing #335 and #336 as that will require a major refactor of
that section of the docs anyway.
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We now use importlib which means we no longer support Python 2.6.
Also, this refactor properly imports third party extensions which reside
at the root of PYTHONPATH. Previously, either `markdown.extensions.` or
`mdx_` would be appended to any extension name that did not contain a
dot, which required third party extensions to either be in submodules or
use the old `mdx_` naming convention.
This commit is also in preperation for #336. It will now be much easier to
deprecate (and later remove) support for the old ways of handling extension
names.
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These couple lines were from an old - no longer used - method of
stashing inlines. There is no need for it today. The if statement would
never evaluate True.
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markdown/inlinepatterns.py is now at 99% coverage.
I have no idea why the two remaining lines are not not covered.
I it not clear to me under what circumstances this two if statements
would ever evaluate to True. I'm inclined to just remove them, but perhaps
there is an edge case I'm missing. I'll take another look later.
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A couple scenarios with "None" were previously not accounted for.
Also updated tests which guives us 100% for markdown/util.py
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This should give us 100% coverage of postprocessors.py.
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The `--extension_configs` option must point to a YAML or JSON file.
The contents of the file must parse to a Python Dict which will be
passed to the `extension_configs` keyword of the `markdown.Markdown`
class.
Also added tests for all of the CLI option parsing options and updated
documentation.
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'https://pythonhosted.org/Markdown/'. The former redirects to the latter anyway. Might as well point to the actual destination.
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Related to #325
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allows to overwrite all substitution strings. Fixed line length in docs.
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to replace quotes. This makes it possible to use the correct quotes in languages other than English.
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Relates to #325.
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Dicts don't preserve order but still will be equal while lists of tuples always preserve order.
When we use a dict to create a list of tuples, the results are unpredictable - especially for
a equality test. so we need to compare dicts, not lists. Related to #325
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Noted that using keywords it the prefered method of passing config options to extensions. Also updated the example sto demonstrate the new prefered way as discussed in #325.
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Fixes #325. All extensions can now accept a dict of configs or
**kwargs, not just a list of tuples. Third party extensions may want
to follow suite. Extensions may only accept keyword arguments
in the future. These changes still need to be documented.
A couple things of note:
The CodeHilite extension previously issued a DeprecationWarning
if the old config key `force_linenos` was used. With thins change,
a KeyError will now be raised.
The `markdown.util.parseBoolValue` function gained a new argument:
`preserve_none` (defaults to False), which when set to True, will
pass None through unaltered (will not convert it to False).
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As pointed out in #325, setting up Extension configs is kind of a
mess. Some places pass a list of tuples on initialization, others
a dict. And sometimes they're passed as an arg, othertimes a kwarg.
Addiitonaly, the docs are just as inconsistant.
This refactor addresses all those sinerios with tests included.
The existing extensions still need refactored. But the fact that
their tests still pass means we havn't broken third party extensions
either.
This refactor also introduces a new API, which is the prefered
method going forward. All docs should be updated to match.
Whereas previously one might do:
```python
MyExtension(configs={'key': 'foo', 'otherkey': 'bar'})
```
This can now be done:
```python
MyExtension(key='foo', otherkey='bar')
```
Of course, the old way still works for backward compatability.
But that means the `configs` keyword has special status and cannot
be used for another purpose.
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tox.ini: install pytidylib from PyPI
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PyTidyLib Python 3 issues have been fixed in 0.2.3 release
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The rest should have test cases added.
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smarty: add support for angled quotes
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See <http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Guillemet>.
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