| Commit message (Collapse) | Author | Age | Files | Lines |
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We started with the numbers before HTML5 was a thing and we thought
there might be an XHTML2. Today, we know that all we have are HTML style
tags and XHTML style tags. Nothing else really matters in the real
world.
Note that if '(x)html1' '(x)html4' or '(x)html5' are passed in, the
number is stripped/ignored. Users shouldn't need to change their code
for this.
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Deprecated naming support is removed:
* Removed special treatment for modules in `markdown.extensions`
* Removed support for `mdx_` prefixes.
Support for Entry Point names added:
Support for "short names" are now implemented with entry points.
Therefore all the users who call extension names as `toc` will not
get errors as the builtin extensions all have entry points defined
which match the old "short names" for modules in
`markdown.extensions`. The benefit is that any extension can offer
the same support without requiring the user to manually copy a file
to that location on the file system (way to many extension authors
have included such instructions in their installation documentation).
The one odd thing about this is that we have been issuing a
DeprecationWarning for short names and now they are fully supported
again. But I think it's the right thing to do.
Support for using dot notation is not removed. After all, it was never
deprecated. And we shouldn't "force" entry points. There are plenty of
reasons why users may not want that and not all of them can be
resolved by using class instances instead.
All of the following ways to load an extension are valid:
# Class instance
from markdown.extensions.toc import TocExtension
markdown.markdown(src, extensions=[TocExtension()]
# Entry point name
markdown.markdown(src, extensions=['toc'])
# Dot notation with class
markdown.markdown(src, extensions=['markdown.extensions.toc:TocExtension'])
# Dot notation without class
markdown.markdown(src, extensions=['markdown.extensions.toc'])
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Fixes #601. Merged in 6f87b32 from the md3 branch and did a lot of cleanup.
Changes include:
* Removed old docs build tool, templates, etc.
* Added MkDocs config file, etc.
* filename.txt => filename.md
* pythonhost.org/Markdown => Python-Markdown.github.io
* Markdown lint and other cleanup.
* Automate pages deployment in makefile with `mkdocs gh-deploy`
Assumes a git remote is set up named "pages". Do
git remote add pages https://github.com/Python-Markdown/Python-Markdown.github.io.git
... before running `make deploy` the first time.
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The documentation uses features of Python-Markdown that are not supported on
GitHub and it's better to get a source view of the docs anyway. For example,
that way comments and bug reports can reference a specific line of a file.
Of course, it makes sense for Github to render the README, so that is left
with the `.md` file extension.
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