Provided by: pandoc_3.1.11.1+ds-2_amd64 bug

NAME

       pandoc - general markup converter

SYNOPSIS

       pandoc [options] [input-file]...

DESCRIPTION

       Pandoc  is  a  Haskell  library for converting from one markup format to another, and a command-line tool
       that uses this library.

       Pandoc can convert between numerous markup and word processing formats, including, but  not  limited  to,
       various  flavors of Markdown, HTML, LaTeX and Word docx.  For the full lists of input and output formats,
       see the --from and --to options below.  Pandoc can also produce PDF output: see creating a PDF, below.

       Pandoc’s enhanced version of Markdown includes syntax for  tables,  definition  lists,  metadata  blocks,
       footnotes, citations, math, and much more.  See below under Pandoc’s Markdown.

       Pandoc  has  a  modular  design:  it consists of a set of readers, which parse text in a given format and
       produce a native representation of the document (an abstract syntax tree or AST), and a set  of  writers,
       which  convert  this  native representation into a target format.  Thus, adding an input or output format
       requires only adding a reader or writer.  Users  can  also  run  custom  pandoc  filters  to  modify  the
       intermediate AST.

       Because pandoc’s intermediate representation of a document is less expressive than many of the formats it
       converts between, one should not expect perfect conversions between every format and every other.  Pandoc
       attempts  to  preserve  the  structural elements of a document, but not formatting details such as margin
       size.  And some document elements, such as complex tables, may not  fit  into  pandoc’s  simple  document
       model.   While  conversions  from pandoc’s Markdown to all formats aspire to be perfect, conversions from
       formats more expressive than pandoc’s Markdown can be expected to be lossy.

   Using pandoc
       If no input-files are specified, input is read from stdin.  Output goes to stdout by default.  For output
       to a file, use the -o option:

              pandoc -o output.html input.txt

       By default, pandoc produces a document fragment.  To produce a standalone  document  (e.g. a  valid  HTML
       file including <head> and <body>), use the -s or --standalone flag:

              pandoc -s -o output.html input.txt

       For more information on how standalone documents are produced, see Templates below.

       If  multiple  input  files  are  given,  pandoc will concatenate them all (with blank lines between them)
       before parsing.  (Use --file-scope to parse files individually.)

   Specifying formats
       The format of the input and output can be specified explicitly using  command-line  options.   The  input
       format can be specified using the -f/--from option, the output format using the -t/--to option.  Thus, to
       convert hello.txt from Markdown to LaTeX, you could type:

              pandoc -f markdown -t latex hello.txt

       To convert hello.html from HTML to Markdown:

              pandoc -f html -t markdown hello.html

       Supported  input  and  output formats are listed below under Options (see -f for input formats and -t for
       output formats).  You can also use pandoc --list-input-formats and pandoc --list-output-formats to  print
       lists of supported formats.

       If  the  input  or  output  format  is not specified explicitly, pandoc will attempt to guess it from the
       extensions of the filenames.  Thus, for example,

              pandoc -o hello.tex hello.txt

       will convert hello.txt from Markdown to LaTeX.  If no output file is specified (so that  output  goes  to
       stdout),  or  if  the  output file’s extension is unknown, the output format will default to HTML.  If no
       input file is specified (so that input comes from stdin), or if the input files’ extensions are  unknown,
       the input format will be assumed to be Markdown.

   Character encoding
       Pandoc  uses the UTF-8 character encoding for both input and output.  If your local character encoding is
       not UTF-8, you should pipe input and output through iconv:

              iconv -t utf-8 input.txt | pandoc | iconv -f utf-8

       Note that in some output formats (such as  HTML,  LaTeX,  ConTeXt,  RTF,  OPML,  DocBook,  and  Texinfo),
       information  about the character encoding is included in the document header, which will only be included
       if you use the -s/--standalone option.

   Creating a PDF
       To produce a PDF, specify an output file with a .pdf extension:

              pandoc test.txt -o test.pdf

       By default, pandoc will use LaTeX to create the PDF, which requires that a LaTeX engine be installed (see
       --pdf-engine below).  Alternatively, pandoc can use ConTeXt, roff ms, or HTML as an intermediate  format.
       To  do  this, specify an output file with a .pdf extension, as before, but add the --pdf-engine option or
       -t context, -t html, or -t ms to the  command  line.   The  tool  used  to  generate  the  PDF  from  the
       intermediate format may be specified using --pdf-engine.

       You  can  control the PDF style using variables, depending on the intermediate format used: see variables
       for LaTeX, variables for ConTeXt, variables for wkhtmltopdf, variables for ms.  When HTML is used  as  an
       intermediate format, the output can be styled using --css.

       To  debug  the  PDF  creation, it can be useful to look at the intermediate representation: instead of -o
       test.pdf, use for example -s -o test.tex to output the generated  LaTeX.   You  can  then  test  it  with
       pdflatex test.tex.

       When using LaTeX, the following packages need to be available (they are included with all recent versions
       of  TeX  Live):  amsfonts, amsmath, lm, unicode-math, iftex, listings (if the --listings option is used),
       fancyvrb, longtable, booktabs, graphicx (if  the  document  contains  images),  bookmark,  xcolor,  soul,
       geometry  (with  the  geometry  variable  set),  setspace  (with linestretch), and babel (with lang).  If
       CJKmainfont is set, xeCJK is needed.  The use of xelatex or lualatex as the PDF engine requires fontspec.
       lualatex uses selnolig.  xelatex uses bidi (with the dir variable set).  If the mathspec variable is set,
       xelatex will use mathspec instead of unicode-math.  The  upquote  and  microtype  packages  are  used  if
       available,  and csquotes will be used for typography if the csquotes variable or metadata field is set to
       a true value.  The natbib, biblatex, bibtex, and biber packages  can  optionally  be  used  for  citation
       rendering.  The following packages will be used to improve output quality if present, but pandoc does not
       require them to be present: upquote (for straight quotes in verbatim environments), microtype (for better
       spacing adjustments), parskip (for better inter-paragraph spaces), xurl (for better line breaks in URLs),
       and footnotehyper or footnote (to allow footnotes in tables).

   Reading from the Web
       Instead of an input file, an absolute URI may be given.  In this case pandoc will fetch the content using
       HTTP:

              pandoc -f html -t markdown https://www.fsf.org

       It  is  possible  to  supply a custom User-Agent string or other header when requesting a document from a
       URL:

              pandoc -f html -t markdown --request-header User-Agent:"Mozilla/5.0" \
                https://www.fsf.org

OPTIONS

   General options
       -f FORMAT, -r FORMAT, --from=FORMAT, --read=FORMAT
              Specify input format.  FORMAT can be:

              • bibtex (BibTeX bibliography)

              • biblatex (BibLaTeX bibliography)

              • bits (BITS XML, alias for jats)

              • commonmark (CommonMark Markdown)

              • commonmark_x (CommonMark Markdown with extensions)

              • creole (Creole 1.0)

              • csljson (CSL JSON bibliography)

              • csv (CSV table)

              • tsv (TSV table)

              • docbook (DocBook)

              • docx (Word docx)

              • dokuwiki (DokuWiki markup)

              • endnotexml (EndNote XML bibliography)

              • epub (EPUB)

              • fb2 (FictionBook2 e-book)

              • gfm (GitHub-Flavored Markdown),  or  the  deprecated  and  less  accurate  markdown_github;  use
                markdown_github only if you need extensions not supported in gfm.

              • haddock (Haddock markup)

              • html (HTML)

              • ipynb (Jupyter notebook)

              • jats (JATS XML)

              • jira (Jira/Confluence wiki markup)

              • json (JSON version of native AST)

              • latex (LaTeX)

              • markdown (Pandoc’s Markdown)

              • markdown_mmd (MultiMarkdown)

              • markdown_phpextra (PHP Markdown Extra)

              • markdown_strict (original unextended Markdown)

              • mediawiki (MediaWiki markup)

              • man (roff man)

              • muse (Muse)

              • native (native Haskell)

              • odt (ODT)

              • opml (OPML)

              • org (Emacs Org mode)

              • ris (RIS bibliography)

              • rtf (Rich Text Format)

              • rst (reStructuredText)

              • t2t (txt2tags)

              • textile (Textile)

              • tikiwiki (TikiWiki markup)

              • twiki (TWiki markup)

              • typst (typst)

              • vimwiki (Vimwiki)

              • the path of a custom Lua reader, see Custom readers and writers below

              Extensions  can  be  individually enabled or disabled by appending +EXTENSION or -EXTENSION to the
              format  name.   See  Extensions  below,  for  a  list  of  extensions  and   their   names.    See
              --list-input-formats and --list-extensions, below.

       -t FORMAT, -w FORMAT, --to=FORMAT, --write=FORMAT
              Specify output format.  FORMAT can be:

              • asciidoc (modern AsciiDoc as interpreted by AsciiDoctor)

              • asciidoc_legacy (AsciiDoc as interpreted by asciidoc-py).

              • asciidoctor (deprecated synonym for asciidoc)

              • beamer (LaTeX beamer slide show)

              • bibtex (BibTeX bibliography)

              • biblatex (BibLaTeX bibliography)

              • chunkedhtml (zip archive of multiple linked HTML files)

              • commonmark (CommonMark Markdown)

              • commonmark_x (CommonMark Markdown with extensions)

              • context (ConTeXt)

              • csljson (CSL JSON bibliography)

              • docbook or docbook4 (DocBook 4)

              • docbook5 (DocBook 5)

              • docx (Word docx)

              • dokuwiki (DokuWiki markup)

              • epub or epub3 (EPUB v3 book)

              • epub2 (EPUB v2)

              • fb2 (FictionBook2 e-book)

              • gfm  (GitHub-Flavored  Markdown),  or  the  deprecated  and  less  accurate markdown_github; use
                markdown_github only if you need extensions not supported in gfm.

              • haddock (Haddock markup)

              • html or html5 (HTML, i.e. HTML5/XHTML polyglot markup)

              • html4 (XHTML 1.0 Transitional)

              • icml (InDesign ICML)

              • ipynb (Jupyter notebook)

              • jats_archiving (JATS XML, Archiving and Interchange Tag Set)

              • jats_articleauthoring (JATS XML, Article Authoring Tag Set)

              • jats_publishing (JATS XML, Journal Publishing Tag Set)

              • jats (alias for jats_archiving)

              • jira (Jira/Confluence wiki markup)

              • json (JSON version of native AST)

              • latex (LaTeX)

              • man (roff man)

              • markdown (Pandoc’s Markdown)

              • markdown_mmd (MultiMarkdown)

              • markdown_phpextra (PHP Markdown Extra)

              • markdown_strict (original unextended Markdown)

              • markua (Markua)

              • mediawiki (MediaWiki markup)

              • ms (roff ms)

              • muse (Muse)

              • native (native Haskell)

              • odt (OpenOffice text document)

              • opml (OPML)

              • opendocument (OpenDocument)

              • org (Emacs Org mode)

              • pdf (PDF)

              • plain (plain text)

              • pptx (PowerPoint slide show)

              • rst (reStructuredText)

              • rtf (Rich Text Format)

              • texinfo (GNU Texinfo)

              • textile (Textile)

              • slideous (Slideous HTML and JavaScript slide show)

              • slidy (Slidy HTML and JavaScript slide show)

              • dzslides (DZSlides HTML5 + JavaScript slide show)

              • revealjs (reveal.js HTML5 + JavaScript slide show)

              • s5 (S5 HTML and JavaScript slide show)

              • tei (TEI Simple)

              • typst (typst)

              • xwiki (XWiki markup)

              • zimwiki (ZimWiki markup)

              • the path of a custom Lua writer, see Custom readers and writers below

              Note that odt, docx, epub, and pdf output will not be directed to stdout unless forced with -o -.

              Extensions can be individually enabled or disabled by appending +EXTENSION or  -EXTENSION  to  the
              format   name.    See   Extensions  below,  for  a  list  of  extensions  and  their  names.   See
              --list-output-formats and --list-extensions, below.

       -o FILE, --output=FILE
              Write output to FILE instead of stdout.  If FILE is -,  output  will  go  to  stdout,  even  if  a
              non-textual  format  (docx,  odt, epub2, epub3) is specified.  If the output format is chunkedhtml
              and FILE has no extension, then instead of producing a .zip file pandoc will  create  a  directory
              FILE  and unpack the zip archive there (unless FILE already exists, in which case an error will be
              raised).

       --data-dir=DIRECTORY
              Specify the user data directory to search for pandoc data files.  If this option is not specified,
              the default user data directory will be used.  On *nix and macOS systems this will be  the  pandoc
              subdirectory of the XDG data directory (by default, $HOME/.local/share, overridable by setting the
              XDG_DATA_HOME  environment  variable).  If that directory does not exist and $HOME/.pandoc exists,
              it will be used (for backwards compatibility).  On Windows the  default  user  data  directory  is
              %APPDATA%\pandoc.   You  can find the default user data directory on your system by looking at the
              output of pandoc --version.  Data files placed in  this  directory  (for  example,  reference.odt,
              reference.docx,  epub.css, templates) will override pandoc’s normal defaults.  (Note that the user
              data directory is not created by pandoc, so you will need to create it yourself  if  you  want  to
              make use of it.)

       -d FILE, --defaults=FILE
              Specify  a  set  of  default  option  settings.   FILE  is  a YAML file whose fields correspond to
              command-line option settings.  All options for document conversion,  including  input  and  output
              files,  can  be  set  using  a  defaults file.  The file will be searched for first in the working
              directory, and then in the defaults subdirectory of the user data directory (see --data-dir).  The
              .yaml extension may be omitted.  See the section Defaults files for more information on  the  file
              format.   Settings  from  the defaults file may be overridden or extended by subsequent options on
              the command line.

       --bash-completion
              Generate a bash completion script.  To enable bash  completion  with  pandoc,  add  this  to  your
              .bashrc:

                     eval "$(pandoc --bash-completion)"

       --verbose
              Give verbose debugging output.

       --quiet
              Suppress warning messages.

       --fail-if-warnings[=true|false]
              Exit with error status if there are any warnings.

       --log=FILE
              Write  log  messages in machine-readable JSON format to FILE.  All messages above DEBUG level will
              be written, regardless of verbosity settings (--verbose, --quiet).

       --list-input-formats
              List supported input formats, one per line.

       --list-output-formats
              List supported output formats, one per line.

       --list-extensions[=FORMAT]
              List supported extensions for FORMAT, one per line, preceded by a + or - indicating whether it  is
              enabled  by  default  in  FORMAT.   If FORMAT is not specified, defaults for pandoc’s Markdown are
              given.

       --list-highlight-languages
              List supported languages for syntax highlighting, one per line.

       --list-highlight-styles
              List supported styles for syntax highlighting, one per line.  See --highlight-style.

       -v, --version
              Print version.

       -h, --help
              Show usage message.

   Reader options
       --shift-heading-level-by=NUMBER
              Shift   heading   levels   by   a   positive   or   negative   integer.    For    example,    with
              --shift-heading-level-by=-1, level 2 headings become level 1 headings, and level 3 headings become
              level  2  headings.   Headings cannot have a level less than 1, so a heading that would be shifted
              below level 1 becomes a regular paragraph.  Exception: with a shift of -N, a  level-N  heading  at
              the  beginning of the document replaces the metadata title.  --shift-heading-level-by=-1 is a good
              choice when converting HTML or Markdown documents that use an  initial  level-1  heading  for  the
              document  title  and  level-2+  headings  for  sections.  --shift-heading-level-by=1 may be a good
              choice for converting Markdown documents that use level-1 headings for  sections  to  HTML,  since
              pandoc uses a level-1 heading to render the document title.

       --base-header-level=NUMBER
              Deprecated.   Use --shift-heading-level-by=X instead, where X = NUMBER - 1. Specify the base level
              for headings (defaults to 1).

       --indented-code-classes=CLASSES
              Specify classes to  use  for  indented  code  blocks–for  example,  perl,numberLines  or  haskell.
              Multiple classes may be separated by spaces or commas.

       --default-image-extension=EXTENSION
              Specify  a  default  extension to use when image paths/URLs have no extension.  This allows you to
              use the same source for formats that require different kinds of  images.   Currently  this  option
              only affects the Markdown and LaTeX readers.

       --file-scope[=true|false]
              Parse  each file individually before combining for multifile documents.  This will allow footnotes
              in different files with the same identifiers  to  work  as  expected.   If  this  option  is  set,
              footnotes  and  links  will not work across files.  Reading binary files (docx, odt, epub) implies
              --file-scope.

              If two or more files are processed using --file-scope, prefixes based on  the  filenames  will  be
              added  to  identifiers  in  order  to  disambiguate  them,  and  internal  links  will be adjusted
              accordingly.  For example, a  header  with  identifier  foo  in  subdir/file1.txt  will  have  its
              identifier changed to subdir__file1.txt__foo.

              In  addition,  a  Div  with  an  identifier  based on the filename will be added around the file’s
              content, so that internal links to the filename will point to this Div’s identifier.

       -F PROGRAM, --filter=PROGRAM
              Specify an executable to be used as a filter transforming the pandoc AST after the input is parsed
              and before the output is written.  The executable should read JSON from stdin and  write  JSON  to
              stdout.   The  JSON  must  be  formatted like pandoc’s own JSON input and output.  The name of the
              output format will be passed to the filter as the first argument.  Hence,

                     pandoc --filter ./caps.py -t latex

              is equivalent to

                     pandoc -t json | ./caps.py latex | pandoc -f json -t latex

              The latter form may be useful for debugging filters.

              Filters may be written in any  language.   Text.Pandoc.JSON  exports  toJSONFilter  to  facilitate
              writing  filters in Haskell.  Those who would prefer to write filters in python can use the module
              pandocfilters, installable from PyPI.  There are also pandoc filter libraries in  PHP,  perl,  and
              JavaScript/node.js.

              In order of preference, pandoc will look for filters in

              1. a specified full or relative path (executable or non-executable),

              2. $DATADIR/filters  (executable or non-executable) where $DATADIR is the user data directory (see
                 --data-dir, above),

              3. $PATH (executable only).

              Filters, Lua-filters, and citeproc processing are applied in the order specified  on  the  command
              line.

       -L SCRIPT, --lua-filter=SCRIPT
              Transform  the  document  in  a  similar  fashion as JSON filters (see --filter), but use pandoc’s
              built-in Lua filtering system.  The given Lua script is expected to return a list of  Lua  filters
              which  will  be  applied  in  order.   Each Lua filter must contain element-transforming functions
              indexed by the name of the AST element on which the filter function should be applied.

              The pandoc Lua module provides helper functions for element creation.  It is  always  loaded  into
              the script’s Lua environment.

              See the Lua filters documentation for further details.

              In order of preference, pandoc will look for Lua filters in

              1. a specified full or relative path,

              2. $DATADIR/filters where $DATADIR is the user data directory (see --data-dir, above).

              Filters,  Lua  filters,  and citeproc processing are applied in the order specified on the command
              line.

       -M KEY[=VAL], --metadata=KEY[:VAL]
              Set the metadata field KEY to the value VAL.  A value specified on the command  line  overrides  a
              value specified in the document using YAML metadata blocks.  Values will be parsed as YAML boolean
              or  string  values.   If  no  value is specified, the value will be treated as Boolean true.  Like
              --variable, --metadata causes template variables to be set.   But  unlike  --variable,  --metadata
              affects  the  metadata  of  the  underlying  document (which is accessible from filters and may be
              printed in some output formats) and metadata  values  will  be  escaped  when  inserted  into  the
              template.

       --metadata-file=FILE
              Read  metadata  from  the  supplied YAML (or JSON) file.  This option can be used with every input
              format, but string scalars in the metadata file will always be parsed as Markdown.  (If the  input
              format is Markdown or a Markdown variant, then the same variant will be used to parse the metadata
              file;  if  it  is a non-Markdown format, pandoc’s default Markdown extensions will be used.)  This
              option can be used repeatedly to include multiple metadata files; values in files specified  later
              on  the  command  line  will  be preferred over those specified in earlier files.  Metadata values
              specified inside the document, or by using -M, overwrite values specified with this  option.   The
              file will be searched for first in the working directory, and then in the metadata subdirectory of
              the user data directory (see --data-dir).

       -p, --preserve-tabs[=true|false]
              Preserve  tabs  instead of converting them to spaces.  (By default, pandoc converts tabs to spaces
              before parsing its input.)  Note that this will only affect tabs in literal code  spans  and  code
              blocks.  Tabs in regular text are always treated as spaces.

       --tab-stop=NUMBER
              Specify the number of spaces per tab (default is 4).

       --track-changes=accept|reject|all
              Specifies  what  to  do  with  insertions,  deletions, and comments produced by the MS Word “Track
              Changes” feature.  accept (the default)  processes  all  the  insertions  and  deletions.   reject
              ignores  them.   Both  accept and reject ignore comments.  all includes all insertions, deletions,
              and comments, wrapped in spans with insertion, deletion, comment-start, and  comment-end  classes,
              respectively.   The  author  and  time  of  change is included.  all is useful for scripting: only
              accepting changes from a certain reviewer, say, or before a  certain  date.   If  a  paragraph  is
              inserted     or     deleted,    track-changes=all    produces    a    span    with    the    class
              paragraph-insertion/paragraph-deletion before the affected  paragraph  break.   This  option  only
              affects the docx reader.

       --extract-media=DIR
              Extract  images  and  other media contained in or linked from the source document to the path DIR,
              creating it if necessary, and adjust the images references in the document so they  point  to  the
              extracted  files.   Media  are  downloaded,  read from the file system, or extracted from a binary
              container (e.g. docx), as needed.  The original file paths are used if they are relative paths not
              containing ...  Otherwise filenames are constructed from the SHA1 hash of the contents.

       --abbreviations=FILE
              Specifies a custom abbreviations file, with abbreviations one to a line.  If this  option  is  not
              specified,  pandoc will read the data file abbreviations from the user data directory or fall back
              on    a     system     default.      To     see     the     system     default,     use     pandoc
              --print-default-data-file=abbreviations.   The  only  use  pandoc  makes  of  this  list is in the
              Markdown reader.  Strings found in this list will be followed by  a  nonbreaking  space,  and  the
              period  will not produce sentence-ending space in formats like LaTeX.  The strings may not contain
              spaces.

       --trace[=true|false]
              Print diagnostic output tracing parser progress to stderr.  This option is  intended  for  use  by
              developers in diagnosing performance issues.

   General writer options
       -s, --standalone
              Produce  output  with an appropriate header and footer (e.g. a standalone HTML, LaTeX, TEI, or RTF
              file, not a fragment).  This option is set automatically for pdf, epub, epub3, fb2, docx, and  odt
              output.   For  native  output,  this option causes metadata to be included; otherwise, metadata is
              suppressed.

       --template=FILE|URL
              Use the specified file as a custom template for the  generated  document.   Implies  --standalone.
              See  Templates,  below,  for  a  description of template syntax.  If no extension is specified, an
              extension corresponding to the  writer  will  be  added,  so  that  --template=special  looks  for
              special.html  for  HTML  output.   If  the template is not found, pandoc will search for it in the
              templates subdirectory of the user data directory (see --data-dir).  If this option is not used, a
              default template appropriate for the output format will be used (see -D/--print-default-template).

       -V KEY[=VAL], --variable=KEY[:VAL]
              Set the template variable KEY to the value VAL when rendering the document in standalone mode.  If
              no VAL is specified, the key will be given the value true.

       --sandbox[=true|false]
              Run pandoc in a sandbox, limiting IO operations in  readers  and  writers  to  reading  the  files
              specified  on  the command line.  Note that this option does not limit IO operations by filters or
              in the production of PDF documents.  But it does offer security against, for  example,  disclosure
              of  files  through  the  use  of  include directives.  Anyone using pandoc on untrusted user input
              should use this option.

              Note: some readers and writers (e.g., docx) need access to data files.  If these are stored on the
              file system, then pandoc will not be able to find them when run in --sandbox mode and  will  raise
              an  error.   For  these  applications,  we  recommend  using  a  pandoc  binary  compiled with the
              embed_data_files option, which causes the data files to be baked into the binary instead of  being
              stored on the file system.

       -D FORMAT, --print-default-template=FORMAT
              Print  the system default template for an output FORMAT.  (See -t for a list of possible FORMATs.)
              Templates in the user data directory are ignored.  This option may be  used  with  -o/--output  to
              redirect  output  to  a  file,  but  -o/--output  must come before --print-default-template on the
              command line.

              Note that some of the default templates use partials,  for  example  styles.html.   To  print  the
              partials,             use            --print-default-data-file:            for            example,
              --print-default-data-file=templates/styles.html.

       --print-default-data-file=FILE
              Print a system default data file.  Files in the user data directory are ignored.  This option  may
              be  used  with  -o/--output  to  redirect  output  to  a  file,  but  -o/--output must come before
              --print-default-data-file on the command line.

       --eol=crlf|lf|native
              Manually specify line endings: crlf (Windows), lf  (macOS/Linux/UNIX),  or  native  (line  endings
              appropriate to the OS on which pandoc is being run).  The default is native.

       --dpi=NUMBER
              Specify  the  default dpi (dots per inch) value for conversion from pixels to inch/centimeters and
              vice versa.  (Technically, the correct term would be ppi: pixels per inch.)  The default is 96dpi.
              When images contain information about dpi internally, the encoded value is  used  instead  of  the
              default specified by this option.

       --wrap=auto|none|preserve
              Determine  how  text  is  wrapped in the output (the source code, not the rendered version).  With
              auto (the default), pandoc will attempt to wrap lines to the column width specified  by  --columns
              (default  72).   With none, pandoc will not wrap lines at all.  With preserve, pandoc will attempt
              to preserve the wrapping from the source document (that is, where there are  nonsemantic  newlines
              in  the  source, there will be nonsemantic newlines in the output as well).  In ipynb output, this
              option affects wrapping of the contents of markdown cells.

       --columns=NUMBER
              Specify length of lines in characters.  This affects text wrapping in the  generated  source  code
              (see  --wrap).   It  also  affects  calculation of column widths for plain text tables (see Tables
              below).

       --toc[=true|false], --table-of-contents[=true|false]
              Include an automatically generated table of contents (or, in the case  of  latex,  context,  docx,
              odt,  opendocument, rst, or ms, an instruction to create one) in the output document.  This option
              has no effect unless -s/--standalone is used, and it has no effect on man, docbook4, docbook5,  or
              jats output.

              Note that if you are producing a PDF via ms, the table of contents will appear at the beginning of
              the  document, before the title.  If you would prefer it to be at the end of the document, use the
              option --pdf-engine-opt=--no-toc-relocation.

       --toc-depth=NUMBER
              Specify the number of section levels to include in the table of contents.  The default is 3 (which
              means that level-1, 2, and 3 headings will be listed in the contents).

       --strip-comments[=true|false]
              Strip out HTML comments in the Markdown  or  Textile  source,  rather  than  passing  them  on  to
              Markdown,  Textile  or  HTML  output as raw HTML.  This does not apply to HTML comments inside raw
              HTML blocks when the markdown_in_html_blocks extension is not set.

       --no-highlight
              Disables syntax highlighting for code blocks and inlines, even when a language attribute is given.

       --highlight-style=STYLE|FILE
              Specifies the coloring style to be used in highlighted source code.   Options  are  pygments  (the
              default),  kate,  monochrome,  breezeDark,  espresso,  zenburn,  haddock,  and  tango.   For  more
              information  on  syntax  highlighting  in  pandoc,  see  Syntax  highlighting,  below.   See  also
              --list-highlight-styles.

              Instead  of  a STYLE name, a JSON file with extension .theme may be supplied.  This will be parsed
              as a KDE syntax highlighting theme and (if valid) used as the highlighting style.

              To generate the JSON version of an existing style, use --print-highlight-style.

       --print-highlight-style=STYLE|FILE
              Prints a JSON version of a highlighting  style,  which  can  be  modified,  saved  with  a  .theme
              extension,  and used with --highlight-style.  This option may be used with -o/--output to redirect
              output to a file, but -o/--output must come before --print-highlight-style on the command line.

       --syntax-definition=FILE
              Instructs pandoc to load a KDE  XML  syntax  definition  file,  which  will  be  used  for  syntax
              highlighting  of  appropriately  marked  code  blocks.   This  can  be used to add support for new
              languages or to use altered syntax  definitions  for  existing  languages.   This  option  may  be
              repeated to add multiple syntax definitions.

       -H FILE, --include-in-header=FILE|URL
              Include  contents  of FILE, verbatim, at the end of the header.  This can be used, for example, to
              include special CSS or JavaScript in HTML documents.   This  option  can  be  used  repeatedly  to
              include  multiple  files  in  the  header.  They will be included in the order specified.  Implies
              --standalone.

       -B FILE, --include-before-body=FILE|URL
              Include contents of FILE, verbatim, at the beginning of the document body (e.g. after  the  <body>
              tag  in  HTML,  or the \begin{document} command in LaTeX).  This can be used to include navigation
              bars or banners in HTML documents.  This option can be used repeatedly to include multiple  files.
              They will be included in the order specified.  Implies --standalone.

       -A FILE, --include-after-body=FILE|URL
              Include  contents  of  FILE,  verbatim, at the end of the document body (before the </body> tag in
              HTML, or the \end{document} command in LaTeX).  This option can  be  used  repeatedly  to  include
              multiple files.  They will be included in the order specified.  Implies --standalone.

       --resource-path=SEARCHPATH
              List  of  paths  to  search for images and other resources.  The paths should be separated by : on
              Linux, UNIX, and macOS systems, and by ; on Windows.  If --resource-path  is  not  specified,  the
              default  resource  path is the working directory.  Note that, if --resource-path is specified, the
              working  directory  must  be  explicitly  listed  or  it  will  not  be  searched.   For  example:
              --resource-path=.:test will search the working directory and the test subdirectory, in that order.
              This  option  can  be used repeatedly.  Search path components that come later on the command line
              will be searched before those  that  come  earlier,  so  --resource-path  foo:bar  --resource-path
              baz:bim is equivalent to --resource-path baz:bim:foo:bar.

       --request-header=NAME:VAL
              Set the request header NAME to the value VAL when making HTTP requests (for example, when a URL is
              given  on  the  command line, or when resources used in a document must be downloaded).  If you’re
              behind a proxy, you also need to set the environment variable http_proxy to http://....

       --no-check-certificate[=true|false]
              Disable the certificate verification to allow access to unsecure HTTP resources (for example  when
              the certificate is no longer valid or self signed).

   Options affecting specific writers
       --self-contained[=true|false]
              Deprecated synonym for --embed-resources --standalone.

       --embed-resources[=true|false]
              Produce  a standalone HTML file with no external dependencies, using data: URIs to incorporate the
              contents of linked scripts, stylesheets,  images,  and  videos.   The  resulting  file  should  be
              “self-contained,”  in  the sense that it needs no external files and no net access to be displayed
              properly by a browser.  This option works only with HTML output formats, including  html4,  html5,
              html+lhs,   html5+lhs,  s5,  slidy,  slideous,  dzslides,  and  revealjs.   Scripts,  images,  and
              stylesheets at absolute URLs will be downloaded; those at relative URLs will be sought relative to
              the working directory (if the first source file is local) or relative to  the  base  URL  (if  the
              first  source  file is remote).  Elements with the attribute data-external="1" will be left alone;
              the documents they link to will not be incorporated in the document.  Limitation:  resources  that
              are  loaded  dynamically  through  JavaScript  cannot  be  incorporated; as a result, fonts may be
              missing when --mathjax is used, and some advanced features (e.g. zoom or speaker  notes)  may  not
              work in an offline “self-contained” reveal.js slide show.

       --html-q-tags[=true|false]
              Use  <q>  tags  for  quotes  in  HTML.   (This option only has an effect if the smart extension is
              enabled for the input format used.)

       --ascii[=true|false]
              Use only ASCII characters in output.  Currently supported for XML  and  HTML  formats  (which  use
              entities  instead of UTF-8 when this option is selected), CommonMark, gfm, and Markdown (which use
              entities), roff man and ms (which use hexadecimal escapes), and to a limited degree  LaTeX  (which
              uses standard commands for accented characters when possible).

       --reference-links[=true|false]
              Use  reference-style links, rather than inline links, in writing Markdown or reStructuredText.  By
              default  inline  links  are  used.   The  placement  of  link  references  is  affected   by   the
              --reference-location option.

       --reference-location=block|section|document
              Specify whether footnotes (and references, if reference-links is set) are placed at the end of the
              current  (top-level)  block,  the  current  section,  or  the  document.  The default is document.
              Currently this option only affects the markdown, muse, html, epub, slidy, s5, slideous,  dzslides,
              and  revealjs writers.  In slide formats, specifying --reference-location=section will cause notes
              to be rendered at the bottom of a slide.

       --markdown-headings=setext|atx
              Specify whether to use ATX-style (#-prefixed) or Setext-style (underlined) headings  for  level  1
              and  2 headings in Markdown output.  (The default is atx.)  ATX-style headings are always used for
              levels 3+.  This option also affects Markdown cells in ipynb output.

       --list-tables[=true|false]
              Render tables as list tables in RST output.

       --top-level-division=default|section|chapter|part
              Treat top-level headings as the given division type in LaTeX, ConTeXt, DocBook,  and  TEI  output.
              The  hierarchy  order  is  part,  chapter,  then  section;  all headings are shifted such that the
              top-level heading becomes the specified type.  The default  behavior  is  to  determine  the  best
              division  type  via  heuristics:  unless  other  conditions  apply,  section  is chosen.  When the
              documentclass variable is set to report, book, or memoir (unless the article option is specified),
              chapter is implied as the setting for this option.  If beamer is  the  output  format,  specifying
              either  chapter  or  part  will  cause  top-level headings to become \part{..}, while second-level
              headings remain as their default type.

       -N, --number-sections
              Number section headings in LaTeX, ConTeXt, HTML, Docx, ms, or EPUB output.  By  default,  sections
              are   not   numbered.    Sections   with   class  unnumbered  will  never  be  numbered,  even  if
              --number-sections is specified.

       --number-offset=NUMBER[,NUMBER,...]
              Offset for section headings in HTML output (ignored in other output formats).  The first number is
              added to the section number for top-level headings, the second for second-level headings,  and  so
              on.  So, for example, if you want the first top-level heading in your document to be numbered “6”,
              specify  --number-offset=5.   If  your document starts with a level-2 heading which you want to be
              numbered   “1.5”,   specify   --number-offset=1,4.    Offsets   are   0   by   default.    Implies
              --number-sections.

       --listings[=true|false]
              Use  the listings package for LaTeX code blocks.  The package does not support multi-byte encoding
              for source code.  To handle UTF-8 you would need to use a custom template.  This  issue  is  fully
              documented here: Encoding issue with the listings package.

       -i, --incremental[=true|false]
              Make list items in slide shows display incrementally (one by one).  The default is for lists to be
              displayed all at once.

       --slide-level=NUMBER
              Specifies  that  headings with the specified level create slides (for beamer, s5, slidy, slideous,
              dzslides).  Headings above this level in the hierarchy are used to  divide  the  slide  show  into
              sections;  headings  below this level create subheads within a slide.  Valid values are 0-6.  If a
              slide level of 0 is specified, slides will not be split automatically on headings, and  horizontal
              rules  must  be  used to indicate slide boundaries.  If a slide level is not specified explicitly,
              the slide level will be set automatically based on the contents of the document;  see  Structuring
              the slide show.

       --section-divs[=true|false]
              Wrap sections in <section> tags (or <div> tags for html4), and attach identifiers to the enclosing
              <section> (or <div>) rather than the heading itself (see Heading identifiers, below).  This option
              only affects HTML output (and does not affect HTML slide formats).

       --email-obfuscation=none|javascript|references
              Specify  a  method  for obfuscating mailto: links in HTML documents.  none leaves mailto: links as
              they are.  javascript obfuscates them using JavaScript.  references obfuscates  them  by  printing
              their letters as decimal or hexadecimal character references.  The default is none.

       --id-prefix=STRING
              Specify a prefix to be added to all identifiers and internal links in HTML and DocBook output, and
              to  footnote  numbers  in  Markdown  and  Haddock output.  This is useful for preventing duplicate
              identifiers when generating fragments to be included in other pages.

       -T STRING, --title-prefix=STRING
              Specify STRING as a prefix at the beginning of the title that appears in the HTML header (but  not
              in the title as it appears at the beginning of the HTML body).  Implies --standalone.

       -c URL, --css=URL
              Link  to  a  CSS style sheet.  This option can be used repeatedly to include multiple files.  They
              will be included in the order specified.  This option only  affects  HTML  (including  HTML  slide
              shows)  and EPUB output.  It should be used together with -s/--standalone, because the link to the
              stylesheet goes in the document header.

              A stylesheet is required for generating EPUB.  If none is provided using this option (or  the  css
              or  stylesheet  metadata  fields), pandoc will look for a file epub.css in the user data directory
              (see --data-dir).  If it is not found there, sensible defaults will be used.

       --reference-doc=FILE|URL
              Use the specified file as a style reference in producing a docx or ODT file.

              Docx   For best results, the reference docx should be a modified version of a docx  file  produced
                     using  pandoc.   The  contents  of  the reference docx are ignored, but its stylesheets and
                     document properties (including margins, page size, header, and footer) are used in the  new
                     docx.   If  no reference docx is specified on the command line, pandoc will look for a file
                     reference.docx in the user data directory (see --data-dir).  If this is not  found  either,
                     sensible defaults will be used.

                     To  produce a custom reference.docx, first get a copy of the default reference.docx: pandoc
                     -o   custom-reference.docx    --print-default-data-file    reference.docx.     Then    open
                     custom-reference.docx  in Word, modify the styles as you wish, and save the file.  For best
                     results, do not make changes to this file other than modifying the styles used by pandoc:

                     Paragraph styles:

                     • Normal

                     • Body Text

                     • First Paragraph

                     • Compact

                     • Title

                     • Subtitle

                     • Author

                     • Date

                     • Abstract

                     • AbstractTitle

                     • Bibliography

                     • Heading 1

                     • Heading 2

                     • Heading 3

                     • Heading 4

                     • Heading 5

                     • Heading 6

                     • Heading 7

                     • Heading 8

                     • Heading 9

                     • Block Text [for block quotes]

                     • Footnote Block Text [for block quotes in footnotes]

                     • Source Code

                     • Footnote Text

                     • Definition Term

                     • Definition

                     • Caption

                     • Table Caption

                     • Image Caption

                     • Figure

                     • Captioned Figure

                     • TOC Heading

                     Character styles:

                     • Default Paragraph Font

                     • Body Text Char

                     • Verbatim Char

                     • Footnote Reference

                     • Hyperlink

                     • Section Number

                     Table style:

                     • Table

              ODT    For best results, the reference ODT should be a modified version of an ODT  produced  using
                     pandoc.  The contents of the reference ODT are ignored, but its stylesheets are used in the
                     new ODT.  If no reference ODT is specified on the command line, pandoc will look for a file
                     reference.odt  in  the  user data directory (see --data-dir).  If this is not found either,
                     sensible defaults will be used.

                     To produce a custom reference.odt, first get a copy of the default reference.odt: pandoc -o
                     custom-reference.odt     --print-default-data-file      reference.odt.       Then      open
                     custom-reference.odt in LibreOffice, modify the styles as you wish, and save the file.

              PowerPoint
                     Templates  included  with  Microsoft PowerPoint 2013 (either with .pptx or .potx extension)
                     are known to work, as are most templates derived from these.

                     The specific requirement is that the template should contain  layouts  with  the  following
                     names (as seen within PowerPoint):

                     • Title Slide

                     • Title and Content

                     • Section Header

                     • Two Content

                     • Comparison

                     • Content with Caption

                     • Blank

                     For  each  name, the first layout found with that name will be used.  If no layout is found
                     with one of the names, pandoc will output a warning and use the layout with that name  from
                     the  default reference doc instead.  (How these layouts are used is described in PowerPoint
                     layout choice.)

                     All templates included with a recent version of MS  PowerPoint  will  fit  these  criteria.
                     (You can click on Layout under the Home menu to check.)

                     You  can  also modify the default reference.pptx: first run pandoc -o custom-reference.pptx
                     --print-default-data-file reference.pptx,  and  then  modify  custom-reference.pptx  in  MS
                     PowerPoint (pandoc will use the layouts with the names listed above).

       --split-level=NUMBER
              Specify  the heading level at which to split an EPUB or chunked HTML document into separate files.
              The default is to split into chapters at level-1 headings.  In the case of EPUB, this option  only
              affects  the  internal composition of the EPUB, not the way chapters and sections are displayed to
              users.  Some readers may be slow if the chapter files are too large, so for large  documents  with
              few  level-1  headings,  one  might want to use a chapter level of 2 or 3.  For chunked HTML, this
              option determines how much content goes in each “chunk.”

       --chunk-template=PATHTEMPLATE
              Specify a template for the filenames in a chunkedhtml document.   In  the  template,  %n  will  be
              replaced  by  the chunk number (padded with leading 0s to 3 digits), %s with the section number of
              the chunk, %h with the heading text (with formatting removed), %i  with  the  section  identifier.
              For   example,  %section-%s-%i.html  might  be  resolved  to  section-1.1-introduction.html.   The
              characters / and \ are not allowed in chunk  templates  and  will  be  ignored.   The  default  is
              %s-%i.html.

       --epub-chapter-level=NUMBER
              Deprecated synonym for --split-level.

       --epub-cover-image=FILE
              Use  the  specified image as the EPUB cover.  It is recommended that the image be less than 1000px
              in width and height.  Note that in a Markdown source document you can also specify cover-image  in
              a YAML metadata block (see EPUB Metadata, below).

       --epub-title-page=true|false
              Determines whether a the title page is included in the EPUB (default is true).

       --epub-metadata=FILE
              Look  in  the  specified  XML file for metadata for the EPUB.  The file should contain a series of
              Dublin Core elements.  For example:

                      <dc:rights>Creative Commons</dc:rights>
                      <dc:language>es-AR</dc:language>

              By default, pandoc will include the following metadata elements:  <dc:title>  (from  the  document
              title),  <dc:creator> (from the document authors), <dc:date> (from the document date, which should
              be in ISO 8601 format), <dc:language> (from the lang variable, or, if is not set, the locale), and
              <dc:identifier id="BookId"> (a randomly generated UUID).   Any  of  these  may  be  overridden  by
              elements in the metadata file.

              Note:  if  the  source  document  is  Markdown,  a YAML metadata block in the document can be used
              instead.  See below under EPUB Metadata.

       --epub-embed-font=FILE
              Embed the specified font in the EPUB.  This option  can  be  repeated  to  embed  multiple  fonts.
              Wildcards  can  also be used: for example, DejaVuSans-*.ttf.  However, if you use wildcards on the
              command line, be sure to escape them or put the whole filename in single quotes, to  prevent  them
              from being interpreted by the shell.  To use the embedded fonts, you will need to add declarations
              like the following to your CSS (see --css):

                     @font-face {
                        font-family: DejaVuSans;
                        font-style: normal;
                        font-weight: normal;
                        src:url("../fonts/DejaVuSans-Regular.ttf");
                     }
                     @font-face {
                        font-family: DejaVuSans;
                        font-style: normal;
                        font-weight: bold;
                        src:url("../fonts/DejaVuSans-Bold.ttf");
                     }
                     @font-face {
                        font-family: DejaVuSans;
                        font-style: italic;
                        font-weight: normal;
                        src:url("../fonts/DejaVuSans-Oblique.ttf");
                     }
                     @font-face {
                        font-family: DejaVuSans;
                        font-style: italic;
                        font-weight: bold;
                        src:url("../fonts/DejaVuSans-BoldOblique.ttf");
                     }
                     body { font-family: "DejaVuSans"; }

       --epub-subdirectory=DIRNAME
              Specify  the  subdirectory  in  the OCF container that is to hold the EPUB-specific contents.  The
              default is EPUB.  To put the EPUB contents in the top level, use an empty string.

       --ipynb-output=all|none|best
              Determines how ipynb output cells are treated.  all means that all of the data formats included in
              the original are preserved.  none means that the contents of data cells are omitted.  best  causes
              pandoc  to  try  to  pick  the  richest data block in each output cell that is compatible with the
              output format.  The default is best.

       --pdf-engine=PROGRAM
              Use the specified engine when producing PDF output.  Valid values are pdflatex, lualatex, xelatex,
              latexmk, tectonic, wkhtmltopdf, weasyprint, pagedjs-cli, prince, context, pdfroff, and typst.   If
              the engine is not in your PATH, the full path of the engine may be specified here.  If this option
              is  not  specified,  pandoc  uses  the following defaults depending on the output format specified
              using -t/--to:

              • -t latex or none: pdflatex (other options: xelatex, lualatex, tectonic, latexmk)

              • -t context: context

              • -t html: wkhtmltopdf (other options: prince, weasyprint, pagedjs-cli; see print-css.rocks for  a
                good introduction to PDF generation from HTML/CSS)

              • -t ms: pdfroff

              • -t typst: typst

       --pdf-engine-opt=STRING
              Use  the  given  string  as  a  command-line  argument  to  the pdf-engine.  For example, to use a
              persistent directory foo for latexmk’s auxiliary files,  use  --pdf-engine-opt=-outdir=foo.   Note
              that no check for duplicate options is done.

   Citation rendering
       -C, --citeproc
              Process  the  citations  in  the  file,  replacing  them  with  rendered  citations  and  adding a
              bibliography.  Citation processing will not take place  unless  bibliographic  data  is  supplied,
              either  through  an  external  file  specified using the --bibliography option or the bibliography
              field in metadata, or via a references section in metadata containing a list of citations  in  CSL
              YAML format with Markdown formatting.  The style is controlled by a CSL stylesheet specified using
              the   --csl  option  or  the  csl  field  in  metadata.   (If  no  stylesheet  is  specified,  the
              chicago-author-date style will be used by default.)  The citation processing transformation may be
              applied before or after filters or Lua filters (see --filter, --lua-filter): these transformations
              are applied in the order they appear on the command line.  For more information, see  the  section
              on Citations.

       --bibliography=FILE
              Set  the  bibliography  field  in the document’s metadata to FILE, overriding any value set in the
              metadata.  If you supply this argument multiple times, each FILE will be  added  to  bibliography.
              If  FILE  is  a  URL,  it  will be fetched via HTTP.  If FILE is not found relative to the working
              directory, it will be sought in the resource path (see --resource-path).

       --csl=FILE
              Set the csl field in the document’s metadata to FILE, overriding any value set  in  the  metadata.
              (This  is  equivalent to --metadata csl=FILE.)  If FILE is a URL, it will be fetched via HTTP.  If
              FILE is not found relative to the working directory, it will be sought in the resource  path  (see
              --resource-path) and finally in the csl subdirectory of the pandoc user data directory.

       --citation-abbreviations=FILE
              Set  the citation-abbreviations field in the document’s metadata to FILE, overriding any value set
              in the metadata.  (This is equivalent to --metadata citation-abbreviations=FILE.)  If  FILE  is  a
              URL, it will be fetched via HTTP.  If FILE is not found relative to the working directory, it will
              be  sought  in  the resource path (see --resource-path) and finally in the csl subdirectory of the
              pandoc user data directory.

       --natbib
              Use natbib for citations in LaTeX output.  This option is not for use with the  --citeproc  option
              or  with  PDF output.  It is intended for use in producing a LaTeX file that can be processed with
              bibtex.

       --biblatex
              Use biblatex for citations in LaTeX output.  This option is not for use with the --citeproc option
              or with PDF output.  It is intended for use in producing a LaTeX file that can be  processed  with
              bibtex or biber.

   Math rendering in HTML
       The default is to render TeX math as far as possible using Unicode characters.  Formulas are put inside a
       span  with  class="math",  so  that  they  may be styled differently from the surrounding text if needed.
       However, this gives acceptable results only for basic math, usually you will want  to  use  --mathjax  or
       another of the following options.

       --mathjax[=URL]
              Use  MathJax  to  display  embedded TeX math in HTML output.  TeX math will be put between \(...\)
              (for inline math) or \[...\] (for display math) and wrapped in <span> tags with class math.   Then
              the  MathJax JavaScript will render it.  The URL should point to the MathJax.js load script.  If a
              URL is not provided, a link to the Cloudflare CDN will be inserted.

       --mathml
              Convert TeX math to MathML (in epub3, docbook4, docbook5, jats, html4 and  html5).   This  is  the
              default  in  odt  output.  MathML is supported natively by the main web browsers and select e-book
              readers.

       --webtex[=URL]
              Convert TeX formulas to <img> tags that link to an  external  script  that  converts  formulas  to
              images.   The  formula will be URL-encoded and concatenated with the URL provided.  For SVG images
              you can for example use --webtex https://latex.codecogs.com/svg.latex?.  If no URL  is  specified,
              the  CodeCogs URL generating PNGs will be used (https://latex.codecogs.com/png.latex?).  Note: the
              --webtex option will affect Markdown output as well as HTML, which is useful if you’re targeting a
              version of Markdown without native math support.

       --katex[=URL]
              Use KaTeX to display embedded TeX math in HTML output.  The URL is the  base  URL  for  the  KaTeX
              library.   That directory should contain a katex.min.js and a katex.min.css file.  If a URL is not
              provided, a link to the KaTeX CDN will be inserted.

       --gladtex
              Enclose TeX math in <eq> tags in HTML output.  The resulting HTML can then be processed by GladTeX
              to produce SVG images of the typeset formulas and an HTML file with these images embedded.

                     pandoc -s --gladtex input.md -o myfile.htex
                     gladtex -d image_dir myfile.htex
                     # produces myfile.html and images in image_dir

   Options for wrapper scripts
       --dump-args[=true|false]
              Print information about command-line arguments to stdout, then  exit.   This  option  is  intended
              primarily  for  use  in wrapper scripts.  The first line of output contains the name of the output
              file specified with the -o option, or - (for  stdout)  if  no  output  file  was  specified.   The
              remaining lines contain the command-line arguments, one per line, in the order they appear.  These
              do  not  include  regular pandoc options and their arguments, but do include any options appearing
              after a -- separator at the end of the line.

       --ignore-args[=true|false]
              Ignore command-line arguments (for use in  wrapper  scripts).   Regular  pandoc  options  are  not
              ignored.  Thus, for example,

                     pandoc --ignore-args -o foo.html -s foo.txt -- -e latin1

              is equivalent to

                     pandoc -o foo.html -s

EXIT CODES

       If  pandoc  completes  successfully,  it  will return exit code 0.  Nonzero exit codes have the following
       meanings:

    Code Error
  ------ -------------------------------------
       1 PandocIOError
       3 PandocFailOnWarningError
       4 PandocAppError
       5 PandocTemplateError
       6 PandocOptionError
      21 PandocUnknownReaderError
      22 PandocUnknownWriterError
      23 PandocUnsupportedExtensionError
      24 PandocCiteprocError
      25 PandocBibliographyError
      31 PandocEpubSubdirectoryError
      43 PandocPDFError
      44 PandocXMLError
      47 PandocPDFProgramNotFoundError
      61 PandocHttpError
      62 PandocShouldNeverHappenError
      63 PandocSomeError
      64 PandocParseError
      66 PandocMakePDFError
      67 PandocSyntaxMapError
      83 PandocFilterError
      84 PandocLuaError
      89 PandocNoScriptingEngine
      91 PandocMacroLoop
      92 PandocUTF8DecodingError
      93 PandocIpynbDecodingError
      94 PandocUnsupportedCharsetError
      97 PandocCouldNotFindDataFileError
      98 PandocCouldNotFindMetadataFileError
      99 PandocResourceNotFound

DEFAULTS FILES

       The --defaults option may be used to specify a package of options, in the form of a YAML file.

       Fields that are omitted will just have their regular default values.  So a defaults file can be as simple
       as one line:

              verbosity: INFO

       In fields that expect a file path (or  list  of  file  paths),  the  following  syntax  may  be  used  to
       interpolate environment variables:

              csl:  ${HOME}/mycsldir/special.csl

       ${USERDATA}  may  also  be used; this will always resolve to the user data directory that is current when
       the defaults file is parsed, regardless of the setting of the environment variable USERDATA.

       ${.} will resolve to the directory containing the defaults file itself.  This  allows  you  to  refer  to
       resources contained in that directory:

              epub-cover-image: ${.}/cover.jpg
              epub-metadata: ${.}/meta.xml
              resource-path:
              - .             # the working directory from which pandoc is run
              - ${.}/images   # the images subdirectory of the directory
                              # containing this defaults file

       This environment variable interpolation syntax only works in fields that expect file paths.

       Defaults  files  can  be placed in the defaults subdirectory of the user data directory and used from any
       directory.  For example, one could create a file specifying defaults for  writing  letters,  save  it  as
       letter.yaml  in the defaults subdirectory of the user data directory, and then invoke these defaults from
       any directory using pandoc --defaults letter or pandoc -dletter.

       When multiple defaults are used, their contents will be combined.

       Note that, where command-line arguments may be  repeated  (--metadata-file,  --css,  --include-in-header,
       --include-before-body,  --include-after-body,  --variable,  --metadata,  --syntax-definition), the values
       specified on the command line will combine with values  specified  in  the  defaults  file,  rather  than
       replacing them.

       The following tables show the mapping between the command line and defaults file entries.

 command line                      defaults file
 --------------------------------- ----------------------------------
 foo.md                            input-file: foo.md

 foo.md bar.md                     input-files:
                                     - foo.md
                                     - bar.md

       The  value of input-files may be left empty to indicate input from stdin, and it can be an empty sequence
       [] for no input.

   General options
 command line                      defaults file
 --------------------------------- ----------------------------------
 --from markdown+emoji             from: markdown+emoji

                                   reader: markdown+emoji

                                   to: markdown+hard_line_breaks
   --to markdown+hard_line_breaks

                               writer: markdown+hard_line_breaks

 --output foo.pdf                  output-file: foo.pdf

 --output -                        output-file:

 --data-dir dir                    data-dir: dir

 --defaults file                   defaults:
                                   - file

 --verbose                         verbosity: INFO

 --quiet                           verbosity: ERROR

 --fail-if-warnings                fail-if-warnings: true

 --sandbox                         sandbox: true

 --log=FILE                        log-file: FILE

       Options specified in a defaults file itself always have priority over those in another file included with
       a defaults: entry.

       verbosity can have the values ERROR, WARNING, or INFO.

   Reader options
 command line                      defaults file
 --------------------------------- ----------------------------------
 --shift-heading-level-by -1       shift-heading-level-by: -1

                                   indented-code-classes:
   --indented-code-classes python        - python

 --default-image-extension ".jpg"    default-image-extension: '.jpg'

 --file-scope                      file-scope: true

 --citeproc \                      filters:
                                     - citeproc
   --lua-filter count-words.lua \        - count-words.lua
  --filter special.lua               - type: json
                                       path: special.lua

 --metadata key=value \            metadata:
  --metadata key2                    key: value
                                     key2: true

 --metadata-file meta.yaml         metadata-files:
                                     - meta.yaml

                                   metadata-file: meta.yaml

 --preserve-tabs                   preserve-tabs: true

 --tab-stop 8                      tab-stop: 8

 --track-changes accept            track-changes: accept

 --extract-media dir               extract-media: dir

 --abbreviations abbrevs.txt       abbreviations: abbrevs.txt

 --trace                           trace: true

       Metadata values specified in a defaults file are parsed as literal string text, not Markdown.

       Filters will be assumed to be Lua filters if they have the .lua extension, and  JSON  filters  otherwise.
       But  the filter type can also be specified explicitly, as shown.  Filters are run in the order specified.
       To include the built-in citeproc filter, use either citeproc or {type: citeproc}.

   General writer options
 command line                      defaults file
 --------------------------------- ----------------------------------
 --standalone                      standalone: true

 --template letter                 template: letter

 --variable key=val \              variables:
   --variable key2                   key: val
                                     key2: true

 --eol nl                          eol: nl

 --dpi 300                         dpi: 300

 --wrap 60                         wrap: 60

 --columns 72                      columns: 72

 --table-of-contents               table-of-contents: true

 --toc                             toc: true

 --toc-depth 3                     toc-depth: 3

 --strip-comments                  strip-comments: true

 --no-highlight                    highlight-style: null

 --highlight-style kate            highlight-style: kate

                                   syntax-definitions:
   --syntax-definition mylang.xml        - mylang.xml

                                   syntax-definition: mylang.xml

 --include-in-header inc.tex       include-in-header:
                                     - inc.tex

                                   include-before-body:
--include-before-body inc.tex        - inc.tex

 --include-after-body inc.tex      include-after-body:
                                     - inc.tex

 --resource-path .:foo             resource-path: ['.','foo']

 --request-header foo:bar          request-headers:

                                 - ["User-Agent", "Mozilla/5.0"]

 --no-check-certificate            no-check-certificate: true

   Options affecting specific writers
 command line                      defaults file
 --------------------------------- ----------------------------------
 --self-contained                  self-contained: true

 --html-q-tags                     html-q-tags: true

 --ascii                           ascii: true

 --reference-links                 reference-links: true

 --reference-location block        reference-location: block

 --markdown-headings atx           markdown-headings: atx

 --list-tables                     list-tables: true

 --top-level-division chapter      top-level-division: chapter

 --number-sections                 number-sections: true

 --number-offset=1,4               number-offset: \[1,4\]

 --listings                        listings: true

 --incremental                     incremental: true

 --slide-level 2                   slide-level: 2

 --section-divs                    section-divs: true

                                   email-obfuscation: references
   --email-obfuscation references

 --id-prefix ch1                   identifier-prefix: ch1

 --title-prefix MySite             title-prefix: MySite

 --css styles/screen.css  \        css:
   --css styles/special.css          - styles/screen.css
                                     - styles/special.css

 --reference-doc my.docx           reference-doc: my.docx

 --epub-cover-image cover.jpg      epub-cover-image: cover.jpg

 --epub-title-page=false           epub-title-page: false

 --epub-metadata meta.xml          epub-metadata: meta.xml

                                   epub-fonts:
  --epub-embed-font special.otf \        - special.otf
                                     - headline.otf
   --epub-embed-font headline.otf

 --split-level 2                   split-level: 2

 --chunk-template="%i.html"        chunk-template: "%i.html"

 --epub-subdirectory=""            epub-subdirectory: ''

 --ipynb-output best               ipynb-output: best

 --pdf-engine xelatex              pdf-engine: xelatex

                                   pdf-engine-opts:
  --pdf-engine-opt=--shell-escape        - '-shell-escape'

                                 pdf-engine-opt: '-shell-escape'

   Citation rendering
 command line                      defaults file
 --------------------------------- ----------------------------------
 --citeproc                        citeproc: true

 --bibliography logic.bib          bibliography: logic.bib

 --csl ieee.csl                    csl: ieee.csl

 --citation-abbreviations ab.json    citation-abbreviations: ab.json

 --natbib                          cite-method: natbib

 --biblatex                        cite-method: biblatex

       cite-method can be citeproc, natbib, or biblatex.  This only affects LaTeX output.  If you  want  to  use
       citeproc to format citations, you should also set `citeproc: true'.

       If  you  need  control  over  when  the citeproc processing is done relative to other filters, you should
       instead use citeproc in the list of filters (see Reader options).

   Math rendering in HTML
 command line                      defaults file
 --------------------------------- ----------------------------------
 --mathjax                         html-math-method:
                                     method: mathjax

 --mathml                          html-math-method:
                                     method: mathml

 --webtex                          html-math-method:
                                     method: webtex

 --katex                           html-math-method:
                                     method: katex

 --gladtex                         html-math-method:
                                     method: gladtex

       In addition to the values listed above, method can have the value plain.

       If the command line option accepts a URL argument, an url: field can be added to html-math-method:.

   Options for wrapper scripts
 command line                      defaults file
 --------------------------------- ----------------------------------
 --dump-args                       dump-args: true

 --ignore-args                     ignore-args: true

TEMPLATES

       When the -s/--standalone option is used, pandoc uses a template to add header and footer material that is
       needed for a self-standing document.  To see the default template that is used, just type

              pandoc -D *FORMAT*

       where FORMAT is the name of the output format.  A custom template can be specified using  the  --template
       option.  You can also override the system default templates for a given output format FORMAT by putting a
       file templates/default.*FORMAT* in the user data directory (see --data-dir, above).  Exceptions:

       • For odt output, customize the default.opendocument template.

       • For  pdf  output,  customize the default.latex template (or the default.context template, if you use -t
         context, or the default.ms template, if you use -t ms, or the default.html  template,  if  you  use  -t
         html).

       • docx and pptx have no template (however, you can use --reference-doc to customize the output).

       Templates  contain  variables, which allow for the inclusion of arbitrary information at any point in the
       file.  They may be set at the command line using the -V/--variable option.  If a  variable  is  not  set,
       pandoc  will  look  for  the  key in the document’s metadata, which can be set using either YAML metadata
       blocks or with the -M/--metadata option.  In addition, some variables are given default values by pandoc.
       See Variables below for a list of variables used in pandoc’s default templates.

       If you use custom templates, you may need to revise them as pandoc changes.  We  recommend  tracking  the
       changes  in  the  default  templates, and modifying your custom templates accordingly.  An easy way to do
       this is to fork the pandoc-templates repository and merge in changes after each pandoc release.

   Template syntax
   Comments
       Anything between the sequence $-- and the end of the line will be treated as a comment and  omitted  from
       the output.

   Delimiters
       To  mark  variables  and  control  structures  in  the  template,  either  $...$ or ${...} may be used as
       delimiters.  The styles may also be mixed in the same template, but the  opening  and  closing  delimiter
       must match in each case.  The opening delimiter may be followed by one or more spaces or tabs, which will
       be ignored.  The closing delimiter may be preceded by one or more spaces or tabs, which will be ignored.

       To include a literal $ in the document, use $$.

   Interpolated variables
       A  slot for an interpolated variable is a variable name surrounded by matched delimiters.  Variable names
       must begin with a letter and can contain letters, numbers, _, -, and  ..   The  keywords  it,  if,  else,
       endif, for, sep, and endfor may not be used as variable names.  Examples:

              $foo$
              $foo.bar.baz$
              $foo_bar.baz-bim$
              $ foo $
              ${foo}
              ${foo.bar.baz}
              ${foo_bar.baz-bim}
              ${ foo }

       Variable  names  with  periods  are  used  to  get  at  structured  variable  values.   So,  for example,
       employee.salary will return the value of the salary field of the object that is the value of the employee
       field.

       • If the value of the variable is a simple value, it will be rendered verbatim.  (Note that  no  escaping
         is  done;  the  assumption  is  that  the calling program will escape the strings appropriately for the
         output format.)

       • If the value is a list, the values will be concatenated.

       • If the value is a map, the string true will be rendered.

       • Every other value will be rendered as the empty string.

   Conditionals
       A conditional begins with if(variable) (enclosed in matched delimiters) and ends with endif (enclosed  in
       matched delimiters).  It may optionally contain an else (enclosed in matched delimiters).  The if section
       is used if variable has a non-empty value, otherwise the else section is used (if present).  Examples:

              $if(foo)$bar$endif$

              $if(foo)$
                $foo$
              $endif$

              $if(foo)$
              part one
              $else$
              part two
              $endif$

              ${if(foo)}bar${endif}

              ${if(foo)}
                ${foo}
              ${endif}

              ${if(foo)}
              ${ foo.bar }
              ${else}
              no foo!
              ${endif}

       The keyword elseif may be used to simplify complex nested conditionals:

              $if(foo)$
              XXX
              $elseif(bar)$
              YYY
              $else$
              ZZZ
              $endif$

   For loops
       A  for  loop begins with for(variable) (enclosed in matched delimiters) and ends with endfor (enclosed in
       matched delimiters).

       • If variable is an array, the material inside the loop will be evaluated repeatedly, with variable being
         set to each value of the array in turn, and concatenated.

       • If variable is a map, the material inside will be set to the map.

       • If the value of the associated variable is not an array or a map, a single iteration will be  performed
         on its value.

       Examples:

              $for(foo)$$foo$$sep$, $endfor$

              $for(foo)$
                - $foo.last$, $foo.first$
              $endfor$

              ${ for(foo.bar) }
                - ${ foo.bar.last }, ${ foo.bar.first }
              ${ endfor }

              $for(mymap)$
              $it.name$: $it.office$
              $endfor$

       You  may  optionally  specify  a  separator  between  consecutive  values  using sep (enclosed in matched
       delimiters).  The material between sep and the endfor is the separator.

              ${ for(foo) }${ foo }${ sep }, ${ endfor }

       Instead of using variable inside the loop, the special anaphoric keyword it may be used.

              ${ for(foo.bar) }
                - ${ it.last }, ${ it.first }
              ${ endfor }

   Partials
       Partials (subtemplates stored in different files) may be included by  using  the  name  of  the  partial,
       followed by (), for example:

              ${ styles() }

       Partials  will be sought in the directory containing the main template.  The file name will be assumed to
       have the same extension as the main template if it lacks an extension.  When  calling  the  partial,  the
       full name including file extension can also be used:

              ${ styles.html() }

       (If  a partial is not found in the directory of the template and the template path is given as a relative
       path, it will also be sought in the templates subdirectory of the user data directory.)

       Partials may optionally be applied to variables using a colon:

              ${ date:fancy() }

              ${ articles:bibentry() }

       If articles is an array, this will iterate over its values, applying the partial bibentry() to each  one.
       So the second example above is equivalent to

              ${ for(articles) }
              ${ it:bibentry() }
              ${ endfor }

       Note that the anaphoric keyword it must be used when iterating over partials.  In the above examples, the
       bibentry partial should contain it.title (and so on) instead of articles.title.

       Final newlines are omitted from included partials.

       Partials may include other partials.

       A  separator  between  values  of  an  array  may  be specified in square brackets, immediately after the
       variable name or partial:

              ${months[, ]}$

              ${articles:bibentry()[; ]$

       The separator in this case is literal and (unlike with sep  in  an  explicit  for  loop)  cannot  contain
       interpolated variables or other template directives.

   Nesting
       To ensure that content is “nested,” that is, subsequent lines indented, use the ^ directive:

              $item.number$  $^$$item.description$ ($item.price$)

       In  this  example,  if item.description has multiple lines, they will all be indented to line up with the
       first line:

              00123  A fine bottle of 18-year old
                     Oban whiskey. ($148)

       To nest multiple lines to the same level, align them with the ^ directive in the template.  For example:

              $item.number$  $^$$item.description$ ($item.price$)
                             (Available til $item.sellby$.)

       will produce

              00123  A fine bottle of 18-year old
                     Oban whiskey. ($148)
                     (Available til March 30, 2020.)

       If a variable occurs by itself on a line, preceded by whitespace and not  followed  by  further  text  or
       directives  on  the  same  line,  and  the  variable’s  value  contains multiple lines, it will be nested
       automatically.

   Breakable spaces
       Normally, spaces in the template itself (as opposed to values of  the  interpolated  variables)  are  not
       breakable,  but  they  can  be  made breakable in part of the template by using the ~ keyword (ended with
       another ~).

              $~$This long line may break if the document is rendered
              with a short line length.$~$

   Pipes
       A pipe transforms the value of a variable or partial.  Pipes are specified using a slash (/) between  the
       variable name (or partial) and the pipe name.  Example:

              $for(name)$
              $name/uppercase$
              $endfor$

              $for(metadata/pairs)$
              - $it.key$: $it.value$
              $endfor$

              $employee:name()/uppercase$

       Pipes may be chained:

              $for(employees/pairs)$
              $it.key/alpha/uppercase$. $it.name$
              $endfor$

       Some pipes take parameters:

              |----------------------|------------|
              $for(employee)$
              $it.name.first/uppercase/left 20 "| "$$it.name.salary/right 10 " | " " |"$
              $endfor$
              |----------------------|------------|

       Currently the following pipes are predefined:

       • pairs:  Converts  a  map or array to an array of maps, each with key and value fields.  If the original
         value was an array, the key will be the array index, starting with 1.

       • uppercase: Converts text to uppercase.

       • lowercase: Converts text to lowercase.

       • length: Returns the length of the value: number of characters for a textual value, number  of  elements
         for a map or array.

       • reverse: Reverses a textual value or array, and has no effect on other values.

       • first:  Returns  the  first  value  of an array, if applied to a non-empty array; otherwise returns the
         original value.

       • last: Returns the last value of an array, if applied  to  a  non-empty  array;  otherwise  returns  the
         original value.

       • rest:  Returns  all but the first value of an array, if applied to a non-empty array; otherwise returns
         the original value.

       • allbutlast: Returns all but the last value of an array, if applied  to  a  non-empty  array;  otherwise
         returns the original value.

       • chomp: Removes trailing newlines (and breakable space).

       • nowrap: Disables line wrapping on breakable spaces.

       • alpha: Converts textual values that can be read as an integer into lowercase alphabetic characters a..z
         (mod  26).  This can be used to get lettered enumeration from array indices.  To get uppercase letters,
         chain with uppercase.

       • roman: Converts textual values that can be read as an integer into lowercase roman numerals.  This  can
         be used to get lettered enumeration from array indices.  To get uppercase roman, chain with uppercase.

       • left  n "leftborder" "rightborder": Renders a textual value in a block of width n, aligned to the left,
         with an optional left and right border.  Has no effect on other values.  This  can  be  used  to  align
         material  in  tables.   Widths  are positive integers indicating the number of characters.  Borders are
         strings inside double quotes; literal " and \ characters must be backslash-escaped.

       • right n "leftborder" "rightborder": Renders a textual value in a block  of  width  n,  aligned  to  the
         right, and has no effect on other values.

       • center  n  "leftborder"  "rightborder":  Renders  a textual value in a block of width n, aligned to the
         center, and has no effect on other values.

   Variables
   Metadata variables
       title, author, date
              allow identification of basic aspects of the document.  Included in PDF metadata through LaTeX and
              ConTeXt.  These can be set through a pandoc title block, which allows  for  multiple  authors,  or
              through a YAML metadata block:

                     ---
                     author:
                     - Aristotle
                     - Peter Abelard
                     ...

              Note  that  if  you  just want to set PDF or HTML metadata, without including a title block in the
              document itself, you can set the title-meta, author-meta, and date-meta  variables.   (By  default
              these  are set automatically, based on title, author, and date.)  The page title in HTML is set by
              pagetitle, which is equal to title by default.

       subtitle
              document subtitle, included in HTML, EPUB, LaTeX, ConTeXt, and docx documents

       abstract
              document summary, included in HTML, LaTeX, ConTeXt, AsciiDoc, and docx documents

       abstract-title
              title of abstract, currently used only in HTML, EPUB, and docx.  This will be set automatically to
              a localized value, depending on lang, but can be manually overridden.

       keywords
              list of keywords to be included in HTML, PDF, ODT, pptx, docx and AsciiDoc metadata; repeat as for
              author, above

       subject
              document subject, included in ODT, PDF, docx, EPUB, and pptx metadata

       description
              document description, included in ODT, docx and pptx metadata.  Some  applications  show  this  as
              Comments metadata.

       category
              document category, included in docx and pptx metadata

       Additionally,  any  root-level  string metadata, not included in ODT, docx or pptx metadata is added as a
       custom property.  The following YAML metadata block for instance:

              ---
              title:  'This is the title'
              subtitle: "This is the subtitle"
              author:
              - Author One
              - Author Two
              description: |
                  This is a long
                  description.

                  It consists of two paragraphs
              ...

       will include title, author and description as standard document  properties  and  subtitle  as  a  custom
       property when converting to docx, ODT or pptx.

   Language variables
       lang   identifies  the  main  language  of  the  document  using IETF language tags (following the BCP 47
              standard), such as en or en-GB.  The Language subtag lookup tool can look up or verify these tags.
              This affects most formats, and controls hyphenation in PDF output when using LaTeX (through  babel
              and polyglossia) or ConTeXt.

              Use native pandoc Divs and Spans with the lang attribute to switch the language:

                     ---
                     lang: en-GB
                     ...

                     Text in the main document language (British English).

                     ::: {lang=fr-CA}
                     > Cette citation est écrite en français canadien.
                     :::

                     More text in English. ['Zitat auf Deutsch.']{lang=de}

       dir    the base script direction, either rtl (right-to-left) or ltr (left-to-right).

              For  bidirectional  documents,  native  pandoc spans and divs with the dir attribute (value rtl or
              ltr) can be used to override the base direction in some output formats.  This may  not  always  be
              necessary  if  the  final  renderer  (e.g. the browser, when generating HTML) supports the Unicode
              Bidirectional Algorithm.

              When using LaTeX for bidirectional documents, only the xelatex  engine  is  fully  supported  (use
              --pdf-engine=xelatex).

   Variables for HTML
       document-css
              Enables  inclusion  of  most  of  the  CSS  in  the  styles.html  partial (have a look with pandoc
              --print-default-data-file=templates/styles.html).  Unless you use --css, this variable is  set  to
              true by default.  You can disable it with e.g. pandoc -M document-css=false.

       mainfont
              sets the CSS font-family property on the html element.

       fontsize
              sets  the base CSS font-size, which you’d usually set to e.g. 20px, but it also accepts pt (12pt =
              16px in most browsers).

       fontcolor
              sets the CSS color property on the html element.

       linkcolor
              sets the CSS color property on all links.

       monofont
              sets the CSS font-family property on code elements.

       monobackgroundcolor
              sets the CSS background-color property on code elements and adds extra padding.

       linestretch
              sets the CSS line-height property on the html element, which is preferred to be unitless.

       maxwidth
              sets the CSS max-width property (default is 32em).

       backgroundcolor
              sets the CSS background-color property on the html element.

       margin-left, margin-right, margin-top, margin-bottom
              sets the corresponding CSS padding properties on the body element.

       To override or extend some CSS for just one document, include for example:

              ---
              header-includes: |
                <style>
                blockquote {
                  font-style: italic;
                }
                tr.even {
                  background-color: #f0f0f0;
                }
                td, th {
                  padding: 0.5em 2em 0.5em 0.5em;
                }
                tbody {
                  border-bottom: none;
                }
                </style>
              ---

   Variables for HTML math
       classoption
              when using KaTeX, you can render display math equations flush left using YAML metadata or with  -M
              classoption=fleqn.

   Variables for HTML slides
       These affect HTML output when producing slide shows with pandoc.

       institute
              author affiliations: can be a list when there are multiple authors

       revealjs-url
              base URL for reveal.js documents (defaults to https://unpkg.com/reveal.js@^4/)

       s5-url base URL for S5 documents (defaults to s5/default)

       slidy-url
              base URL for Slidy documents (defaults to https://www.w3.org/Talks/Tools/Slidy2)

       slideous-url
              base URL for Slideous documents (defaults to slideous)

       title-slide-attributes
              additional  attributes for the title slide of reveal.js slide shows.  See background in reveal.js,
              beamer, and pptx for an example.

       All reveal.js configuration options are available as variables.  To turn off boolean flags  that  default
       to true in reveal.js, use 0.

   Variables for Beamer slides
       These variables change the appearance of PDF slides using beamer.

       aspectratio
              slide  aspect  ratio  (43  for  4:3 [default], 169 for 16:9, 1610 for 16:10, 149 for 14:9, 141 for
              1.41:1, 54 for 5:4, 32 for 3:2)

       beameroption
              add extra beamer option with \setbeameroption{}

       institute
              author affiliations: can be a list when there are multiple authors

       logo   logo image for slides

       navigation
              controls navigation symbols (default is empty for no navigation symbols; other  valid  values  are
              frame, vertical, and horizontal)

       section-titles
              enables “title pages” for new sections (default is true)

       theme, colortheme, fonttheme, innertheme, outertheme
              beamer themes

       themeoptions
              options for LaTeX beamer themes (a list).

       titlegraphic
              image for title slide

   Variables for PowerPoint
       These variables control the visual aspects of a slide show that are not easily controlled via templates.

       monofont
              font to use for code.

   Variables for LaTeX
       Pandoc uses these variables when creating a PDF with a LaTeX engine.

   Layout
       block-headings
              make  \paragraph  and  \subparagraph  (fourth- and fifth-level headings, or fifth- and sixth-level
              with book classes) free-standing rather than run-in; requires further  formatting  to  distinguish
              from  \subsubsection (third- or fourth-level headings).  Instead of using this option, KOMA-Script
              can adjust headings more extensively:

                     ---
                     documentclass: scrartcl
                     header-includes: |
                       \RedeclareSectionCommand[
                         beforeskip=-10pt plus -2pt minus -1pt,
                         afterskip=1sp plus -1sp minus 1sp,
                         font=\normalfont\itshape]{paragraph}
                       \RedeclareSectionCommand[
                         beforeskip=-10pt plus -2pt minus -1pt,
                         afterskip=1sp plus -1sp minus 1sp,
                         font=\normalfont\scshape,
                         indent=0pt]{subparagraph}
                     ...

       classoption
              option for document class, e.g. oneside; repeat for multiple options:

                     ---
                     classoption:
                     - twocolumn
                     - landscape
                     ...

       documentclass
              document class: usually one of the standard classes, article, book, and  report;  the  KOMA-Script
              equivalents, scrartcl, scrbook, and scrreprt, which default to smaller margins; or memoir

       geometry
              option for geometry package, e.g. margin=1in; repeat for multiple options:

                     ---
                     geometry:
                     - top=30mm
                     - left=20mm
                     - heightrounded
                     ...

       hyperrefoptions
              option for hyperref package, e.g. linktoc=all; repeat for multiple options:

                     ---
                     hyperrefoptions:
                     - linktoc=all
                     - pdfwindowui
                     - pdfpagemode=FullScreen
                     ...

       indent if  true,  pandoc  will  use  document  class settings for indentation (the default LaTeX template
              otherwise removes indentation and adds space between paragraphs)

       linestretch
              adjusts line spacing using the setspace package, e.g. 1.25, 1.5

       margin-left, margin-right, margin-top, margin-bottom
              sets margins if geometry is not used (otherwise geometry overrides these)

       pagestyle
              control \pagestyle{}: the default article class supports plain (default), empty (no running  heads
              or page numbers), and headings (section titles in running heads)

       papersize
              paper size, e.g. letter, a4

       secnumdepth
              numbering depth for sections (with --number-sections option or numbersections variable)

       beamerarticle
              produce an article from Beamer slides

   Fonts
       fontenc
              allows  font  encoding to be specified through fontenc package (with pdflatex); default is T1 (see
              LaTeX font encodings guide)

       fontfamily
              font package for use with pdflatex: TeX Live includes many options, documented in the  LaTeX  Font
              Catalogue.  The default is Latin Modern.

       fontfamilyoptions
              options  for  package  used  as  fontfamily; repeat for multiple options.  For example, to use the
              Libertine font with proportional lowercase (old-style) figures through the libertinus package:

                     ---
                     fontfamily: libertinus
                     fontfamilyoptions:
                     - osf
                     - p
                     ...

       fontsize
              font size for body text.  The standard classes allow 10pt, 11pt, and 12pt.  To use  another  size,
              set documentclass to one of the KOMA-Script classes, such as scrartcl or scrbook.

       mainfont, sansfont, monofont, mathfont, CJKmainfont, CJKsansfont, CJKmonofont
              font  families  for  use  with  xelatex  or  lualatex: take the name of any system font, using the
              fontspec package.  CJKmainfont uses the xecjk package.

       mainfontoptions, sansfontoptions, monofontoptions, mathfontoptions, CJKoptions
              options to use with mainfont, sansfont, monofont, mathfont, CJKmainfont in xelatex  and  lualatex.
              Allow  for  any  choices available through fontspec; repeat for multiple options.  For example, to
              use the TeX Gyre version of Palatino with lowercase figures:

                     ---
                     mainfont: TeX Gyre Pagella
                     mainfontoptions:
                     - Numbers=Lowercase
                     - Numbers=Proportional
                     ...

       babelfonts
              a map of Babel language names (e.g. chinese) to the font to be used with the language:

                 *   *   *   *   *

              babelfonts: chinese-hant: “Noto Serif CJK TC” russian: “Noto Serif” ...

       microtypeoptions
              options to pass to the microtype package

   Links
       colorlinks
              add color to link text; automatically enabled if any of linkcolor, filecolor, citecolor, urlcolor,
              or toccolor are set

       boxlinks
              add visible box around links (has no effect if colorlinks is set)

       linkcolor, filecolor, citecolor, urlcolor, toccolor
              color for internal links, external links, citation links, linked  URLs,  and  links  in  table  of
              contents,  respectively:  uses  options allowed by xcolor, including the dvipsnames, svgnames, and
              x11names lists

       links-as-notes
              causes links to be printed as footnotes

       urlstyle
              style for URLs (e.g., tt, rm, sf, and, the default, same)

   Front matter
       lof, lot
              include list of figures, list of tables

       thanks contents of acknowledgments footnote after document title

       toc    include table of contents (can also be set using --toc/--table-of-contents)

       toc-depth
              level of section to include in table of contents

   BibLaTeX Bibliographies
       These variables function when using BibLaTeX for citation rendering.

       biblatexoptions
              list of options for biblatex

       biblio-style
              bibliography style, when used with --natbib and --biblatex

       biblio-title
              bibliography title, when used with --natbib and --biblatex

       bibliography
              bibliography to use for resolving references

       natbiboptions
              list of options for natbib

   Variables for ConTeXt
       Pandoc uses these variables when creating a PDF with ConTeXt.

       fontsize
              font size for body text (e.g. 10pt, 12pt)

       headertext, footertext
              text to be placed in running header or footer (see ConTeXt Headers and Footers); repeat up to four
              times for different placement

       indenting
              controls indentation of paragraphs, e.g. yes,small,next  (see  ConTeXt  Indentation);  repeat  for
              multiple options

       interlinespace
              adjusts line spacing, e.g. 4ex (using setupinterlinespace); repeat for multiple options

       layout options for page margins and text arrangement (see ConTeXt Layout); repeat for multiple options

       linkcolor, contrastcolor
              color for links outside and inside a page, e.g. red, blue (see ConTeXt Color)

       linkstyle
              typeface style for links, e.g. normal, bold, slanted, boldslanted, type, cap, small

       lof, lot
              include list of figures, list of tables

       mainfont, sansfont, monofont, mathfont
              font families: take the name of any system font (see ConTeXt Font Switching)

       margin-left, margin-right, margin-top, margin-bottom
              sets margins, if layout is not used (otherwise layout overrides these)

       pagenumbering
              page number style and location (using setuppagenumbering); repeat for multiple options

       papersize
              paper size, e.g. letter, A4, landscape (see ConTeXt Paper Setup); repeat for multiple options

       pdfa   adds  to  the  preamble the setup necessary to generate PDF/A of the type specified, e.g. 1a:2005,
              2a.  If no type is specified (i.e. the value is set to True, by  e.g.   --metadata=pdfa  or  pdfa:
              true  in  a  YAML  metadata  block),  1b:2005  will  be  used as default, for reasons of backwards
              compatibility.  Using --variable=pdfa without specified value is not supported.   To  successfully
              generate  PDF/A  the  required  ICC  color  profiles  have to be available and the content and all
              included files (such as images) have to be  standard-conforming.   The  ICC  profiles  and  output
              intent  may be specified using the variables pdfaiccprofile and pdfaintent.  See also ConTeXt PDFA
              for more details.

       pdfaiccprofile
              when  used  in  conjunction  with  pdfa,  specifies  the  ICC  profile  to   use   in   the   PDF,
              e.g. default.cmyk.   If left unspecified, sRGB.icc is used as default.  May be repeated to include
              multiple profiles.  Note that the profiles have to be  available  on  the  system.   They  can  be
              obtained from ConTeXt ICC Profiles.

       pdfaintent
              when used in conjunction with pdfa, specifies the output intent for the colors, e.g. ISO coated v2
              300\letterpercent\space (ECI) If left unspecified, sRGB IEC61966-2.1 is used as default.

       toc    include table of contents (can also be set using --toc/--table-of-contents)

       urlstyle
              typeface  style  for  links without link text, e.g. normal, bold, slanted, boldslanted, type, cap,
              small

       whitespace
              spacing between paragraphs, e.g. none, small (using setupwhitespace)

       includesource
              include all source documents as file attachments in the PDF file

   Variables for wkhtmltopdf
       Pandoc uses these variables when creating a PDF with wkhtmltopdf.  The  --css  option  also  affects  the
       output.

       footer-html, header-html
              add information to the header and footer

       margin-left, margin-right, margin-top, margin-bottom
              set the page margins

       papersize
              sets the PDF paper size

   Variables for man pages
       adjusting
              adjusts text to left (l), right (r), center (c), or both (b) margins

       footer footer in man pages

       header header in man pages

       section
              section number in man pages

   Variables for Typst
       margin A dictionary with the fields defined in the Typst documentation: x, y, top, bottom, left, right.

       papersize
              Paper size: a4, us-letter, etc.

       mainfont
              Name of system font to use for the main font.

       fontsize
              Font size (e.g., 12pt).

       section-numbering
              Schema to use for numbering sections, e.g. 1.A.1.

       columns
              Number of columns for body text.

   Variables for ms
       fontfamily
              A  (Avant Garde), B (Bookman), C (Helvetica), HN (Helvetica Narrow), P (Palatino), or T (Times New
              Roman).  This setting does not affect source code,  which  is  always  displayed  using  monospace
              Courier.   These built-in fonts are limited in their coverage of characters.  Additional fonts may
              be installed using the script install-font.sh provided by Peter Schaffter and documented in detail
              on his web site.

       indent paragraph indent (e.g. 2m)

       lineheight
              line height (e.g. 12p)

       pointsize
              point size (e.g. 10p)

   Variables set automatically
       Pandoc sets these variables automatically in response to options or document  contents;  users  can  also
       modify them.  These vary depending on the output format, and include the following:

       body   body of document

       date-meta
              the  date variable converted to ISO 8601 YYYY-MM-DD, included in all HTML based formats (dzslides,
              epub, html, html4, html5, revealjs, s5, slideous, slidy).  The recognized formats  for  date  are:
              mm/dd/yyyy,  mm/dd/yy,  yyyy-mm-dd  (ISO  8601),  dd  MM yyyy (e.g. either 02 Apr 2018 or 02 April
              2018), MM dd, yyyy (e.g. Apr. 02, 2018 or April  02,  2018),yyyy[mm[dd]](e.g.20180402,  201804  or
              2018).

       header-includes
              contents specified by -H/--include-in-header (may have multiple values)

       include-before
              contents specified by -B/--include-before-body (may have multiple values)

       include-after
              contents specified by -A/--include-after-body (may have multiple values)

       meta-json
              JSON  representation  of  all  of  the  document’s  metadata.  Field values are transformed to the
              selected output format.

       numbersections
              non-null value if -N/--number-sections was specified

       sourcefile, outputfile
              source and destination filenames, as given on the command line.  sourcefile can also be a list  if
              input  comes  from  multiple  files,  or  empty if input is from stdin.  You can use the following
              snippet in your template to distinguish them:

                     $if(sourcefile)$
                     $for(sourcefile)$
                     $sourcefile$
                     $endfor$
                     $else$
                     (stdin)
                     $endif$

              Similarly, outputfile can be - if output goes to the terminal.

              If you need absolute paths, use e.g. $curdir$/$sourcefile$.

       curdir working directory from which pandoc is run.

       pandoc-version
              pandoc version.

       toc    non-null value if --toc/--table-of-contents was specified

       toc-title
              title of table of contents (works only with EPUB, HTML, revealjs, opendocument, odt,  docx,  pptx,
              beamer, LaTeX)

EXTENSIONS

       The  behavior  of  some  of  the  readers  and  writers  can be adjusted by enabling or disabling various
       extensions.

       An extension can be enabled by adding +EXTENSION to the format name and disabled  by  adding  -EXTENSION.
       For  example,  --from  markdown_strict+footnotes  is strict Markdown with footnotes enabled, while --from
       markdown-footnotes-pipe_tables is pandoc’s Markdown without footnotes or pipe tables.

       The markdown reader and writer make by far the most use of extensions.  Extensions only used by them  are
       therefore  covered in the section Pandoc’s Markdown below (see Markdown variants for commonmark and gfm).
       In the following, extensions that also work for other formats are covered.

       Note that markdown extensions added to the ipynb format affect Markdown cells in Jupyter notebooks (as do
       command-line options like --markdown-headings).

   Typography
   Extension: smart
       Interpret straight quotes as curly quotes, --- as em-dashes,  --  as  en-dashes,  and  ...  as  ellipses.
       Nonbreaking spaces are inserted after certain abbreviations, such as “Mr.”

       This extension can be enabled/disabled for the following formats:

       input formats
              markdown, commonmark, latex, mediawiki, org, rst, twiki, html

       output formats
              markdown, latex, context, rst

       enabled by default in
              markdown, latex, context (both input and output)

       Note:  If you are writing Markdown, then the smart extension has the reverse effect: what would have been
       curly quotes comes out straight.

       In LaTeX, smart means to use the standard TeX ligatures for quotation marks (`` and '' for double quotes,
       ` and ' for single quotes) and dashes (-- for en-dash and --- for em-dash).  If smart is  disabled,  then
       in  reading  LaTeX  pandoc will parse these characters literally.  In writing LaTeX, enabling smart tells
       pandoc to use the ligatures when possible; if smart is disabled pandoc will use  unicode  quotation  mark
       and dash characters.

   Headings and sections
   Extension: auto_identifiers
       A  heading  without an explicitly specified identifier will be automatically assigned a unique identifier
       based on the heading text.

       This extension can be enabled/disabled for the following formats:

       input formats
              markdown, latex, rst, mediawiki, textile

       output formats
              markdown, muse

       enabled by default in
              markdown, muse

       The default algorithm used to derive the identifier from the heading text is:

       • Remove all formatting, links, etc.

       • Remove all footnotes.

       • Remove all non-alphanumeric characters, except underscores, hyphens, and periods.

       • Replace all spaces and newlines with hyphens.

       • Convert all alphabetic characters to lowercase.

       • Remove everything up to the first letter (identifiers may not begin with a number or punctuation mark).

       • If nothing is left after this, use the identifier section.

       Thus, for example,

  Heading                       Identifier
  ----------------------------- -----------------------------
  Heading identifiers in HTML   heading-identifiers-in-html
  Maître d'hôtel                maître-dhôtel
  *Dogs*?--in *my* house?       dogs--in-my-house
  [HTML], [S5], or [RTF]?       html-s5-or-rtf
  3. Applications               applications
  33                            section

       These rules should, in most cases, allow one to determine the identifier  from  the  heading  text.   The
       exception  is when several headings have the same text; in this case, the first will get an identifier as
       described above; the second will get the same identifier with -1 appended; the third with -2; and so on.

       (However, a different algorithm is used if gfm_auto_identifiers is enabled; see below.)

       These identifiers are  used  to  provide  link  targets  in  the  table  of  contents  generated  by  the
       --toc|--table-of-contents option.  They also make it easy to provide links from one section of a document
       to another.  A link to this section, for example, might look like this:

              See the section on
              [heading identifiers](#heading-identifiers-in-html-latex-and-context).

       Note,  however,  that  this  method of providing links to sections works only in HTML, LaTeX, and ConTeXt
       formats.

       If the --section-divs option is specified, then each section will be wrapped in a section (or a  div,  if
       html4  was  specified),  and  the  identifier  will be attached to the enclosing <section> (or <div>) tag
       rather than the heading itself.  This allows entire  sections  to  be  manipulated  using  JavaScript  or
       treated differently in CSS.

   Extension: ascii_identifiers
       Causes  the  identifiers  produced  by  auto_identifiers  to  be pure ASCII.  Accents are stripped off of
       accented Latin letters, and non-Latin letters are omitted.

   Extension: gfm_auto_identifiers
       Changes the algorithm used by auto_identifiers to conform to GitHub’s method.  Spaces  are  converted  to
       dashes  (-),  uppercase characters to lowercase characters, and punctuation characters other than - and _
       are removed.  Emojis are replaced by their names.

   Math Input
       The extensions tex_math_dollars, tex_math_gfm, tex_math_single_backslash,  and  tex_math_double_backslash
       are described in the section about Pandoc’s Markdown.

       However,  they  can  also  be  used with HTML input.  This is handy for reading web pages formatted using
       MathJax, for example.

   Raw HTML/TeX
       The following extensions are described in more detail in their respective sections of Pandoc’s Markdown:

       • raw_html allows HTML elements which are not representable in pandoc’s AST to be parsed as raw HTML.  By
         default, this is disabled for HTML input.

       • raw_tex allows raw LaTeX, TeX, and ConTeXt to be  included  in  a  document.   This  extension  can  be
         enabled/disabled for the following formats (in addition to markdown):

         input formats
                latex, textile, html (environments, \ref, and \eqref only), ipynb

         output formats
                textile, commonmark

         Note:  as  applied  to  ipynb, raw_html and raw_tex affect not only raw TeX in markdown cells, but data
         with mime type text/html in output cells.  Since the ipynb reader  attempts  to  preserve  the  richest
         possible  outputs when several options are given, you will get best results if you disable raw_html and
         raw_tex when converting to formats like docx which don’t allow raw html or tex.

       • native_divs causes HTML div elements to be parsed as native pandoc Div blocks.  If you want them to  be
         parsed as raw HTML, use -f html-native_divs+raw_html.

       • native_spans causes HTML span elements to be parsed as native pandoc Span inlines.  If you want them to
         be  parsed as raw HTML, use -f html-native_spans+raw_html.  If you want to drop all divs and spans when
         converting HTML to Markdown, you can use pandoc -f html-native_divs-native_spans -t markdown.

   Literate Haskell support
   Extension: literate_haskell
       Treat the document as literate Haskell source.

       This extension can be enabled/disabled for the following formats:

       input formats
              markdown, rst, latex

       output formats
              markdown, rst, latex, html

       If you append +lhs (or +literate_haskell) to one of the formats above, pandoc will treat the document  as
       literate Haskell source.  This means that

       • In  Markdown  input, “bird track” sections will be parsed as Haskell code rather than block quotations.
         Text between \begin{code} and \end{code} will also be treated as Haskell code.  For ATX-style  headings
         the character `=' will be used instead of `#'.

       • In  Markdown  output, code blocks with classes haskell and literate will be rendered using bird tracks,
         and block quotations will be indented one space, so they will not  be  treated  as  Haskell  code.   In
         addition,  headings  will  be  rendered  setext-style (with underlines) rather than ATX-style (with `#'
         characters).  (This is because ghc treats `#' characters in column 1 as introducing line numbers.)

       • In restructured text input, “bird track” sections will be parsed as Haskell code.

       • In restructured text output, code blocks with class haskell will be rendered using bird tracks.

       • In LaTeX input, text in code environments will be parsed as Haskell code.

       • In LaTeX output, code blocks with class haskell will be rendered inside code environments.

       • In HTML output, code blocks with class haskell will be rendered with  class  literatehaskell  and  bird
         tracks.

       Examples:

              pandoc -f markdown+lhs -t html

       reads  literate Haskell source formatted with Markdown conventions and writes ordinary HTML (without bird
       tracks).

              pandoc -f markdown+lhs -t html+lhs

       writes HTML with the Haskell code in bird tracks, so it can be copied  and  pasted  as  literate  Haskell
       source.

       Note  that GHC expects the bird tracks in the first column, so indented literate code blocks (e.g. inside
       an itemized environment) will not be picked up by the Haskell compiler.

   Other extensions
   Extension: empty_paragraphs
       Allows empty paragraphs.  By default empty paragraphs are omitted.

       This extension can be enabled/disabled for the following formats:

       input formats
              docx, html

       output formats
              docx, odt, opendocument, html

   Extension: native_numbering
       Enables native numbering of figures and tables.  Enumeration starts at 1.

       This extension can be enabled/disabled for the following formats:

       output formats
              odt, opendocument, docx

   Extension: xrefs_name
       Links to headings, figures and tables inside the document are substituted with cross-references that will
       use the name or caption of the referenced item.  The original link text is replaced  once  the  generated
       document  is  refreshed.   This  extension  can  be combined with xrefs_number in which case numbers will
       appear before the name.

       Text in cross-references is only made consistent with the referenced item  once  the  document  has  been
       refreshed.

       This extension can be enabled/disabled for the following formats:

       output formats
              odt, opendocument

   Extension: xrefs_number
       Links to headings, figures and tables inside the document are substituted with cross-references that will
       use  the  number  of  the  referenced  item.  The original link text is discarded.  This extension can be
       combined with xrefs_name in which case the name or caption numbers will appear after the number.

       For the xrefs_number to be useful heading numbers must be enabled in the generated document,  also  table
       and figure captions must be enabled using for example the native_numbering extension.

       Numbers in cross-references are only visible in the final document once it has been refreshed.

       This extension can be enabled/disabled for the following formats:

       output formats
              odt, opendocument

   Extension: styles
       When  converting  from docx, read all docx styles as divs (for paragraph styles) and spans (for character
       styles) regardless of whether pandoc understands the meaning of these styles.  This can be used with docx
       custom styles.  Disabled by default.

       input formats
              docx

   Extension: amuse
       In the muse input format, this enables Text::Amuse extensions to Emacs Muse markup.

   Extension: raw_markdown
       In the ipynb input format, this causes Markdown cells to be included as  raw  Markdown  blocks  (allowing
       lossless  round-tripping)  rather  than  being  parsed.   Use this only when you are targeting ipynb or a
       markdown-based output format.

   Extension: citations
       When the citations extension is enabled in org, org-cite and org-ref style citations will  be  parsed  as
       native pandoc citations.

       When  citations  is  enabled in docx, citations inserted by Zotero or Mendeley or EndNote plugins will be
       parsed as native pandoc citations.  (Otherwise, the formatted citations generated  by  the  bibliographic
       software will be parsed as regular text.)

   Extension: fancy_lists
       Some  aspects  of  Pandoc’s  Markdown  fancy  lists  are also accepted in org input, mimicking the option
       org-list-allow-alphabetical in Emacs.  As in Org Mode,  enabling  this  extension  allows  lowercase  and
       uppercase  alphabetical markers for ordered lists to be parsed in addition to arabic ones.  Note that for
       Org, this does not include roman numerals or the # placeholder that  are  enabled  by  the  extension  in
       Pandoc’s Markdown.

   Extension: element_citations
       In  the jats output formats, this causes reference items to be replaced with <element-citation> elements.
       These elements are not influenced by CSL styles, but all information on the item is included in tags.

   Extension: ntb
       In the context output format this enables the use of  Natural  Tables  (TABLE)  instead  of  the  default
       Extreme  Tables  (xtables).   Natural  tables  allow more fine-grained global customization but come at a
       performance penalty compared to extreme tables.

   Extension: tagging
       Enabling this extension with context output will produce markup suitable for  the  production  of  tagged
       PDFs.   This  includes additional markers for paragraphs and alternative markup for emphasized text.  The
       emphasis-command template variable is set if the extension is enabled.

PANDOC’S MARKDOWN

       Pandoc understands an extended and slightly revised version  of  John  Gruber’s  Markdown  syntax.   This
       document  explains  the  syntax,  noting  differences  from original Markdown.  Except where noted, these
       differences can be suppressed by using the markdown_strict format instead of markdown.  Extensions can be
       enabled or disabled to specify the behavior more granularly.  They are described in the  following.   See
       also Extensions above, for extensions that work also on other formats.

   Philosophy
       Markdown is designed to be easy to write, and, even more importantly, easy to read:

              A  Markdown-formatted  document  should  be publishable as-is, as plain text, without looking like
              it’s been marked up with tags or formatting instructions.  – John Gruber

       This principle has guided  pandoc’s  decisions  in  finding  syntax  for  tables,  footnotes,  and  other
       extensions.

       There  is,  however, one respect in which pandoc’s aims are different from the original aims of Markdown.
       Whereas Markdown was originally designed with HTML generation in mind, pandoc is  designed  for  multiple
       output  formats.   Thus,  while  pandoc allows the embedding of raw HTML, it discourages it, and provides
       other, non-HTMLish ways of representing  important  document  elements  like  definition  lists,  tables,
       mathematics, and footnotes.

   Paragraphs
       A  paragraph  is  one or more lines of text followed by one or more blank lines.  Newlines are treated as
       spaces, so you can reflow your paragraphs as you like.  If you need a hard line break, put  two  or  more
       spaces at the end of a line.

   Extension: escaped_line_breaks
       A  backslash  followed  by a newline is also a hard line break.  Note: in multiline and grid table cells,
       this is the only way to create a hard line break, since trailing spaces in the cells are ignored.

   Headings
       There are two kinds of headings: Setext and ATX.

   Setext-style headings
       A setext-style heading is a line of text “underlined” with a row of = signs (for a level-one heading)  or
       - signs (for a level-two heading):

              A level-one heading
              ===================

              A level-two heading
              -------------------

       The heading text can contain inline formatting, such as emphasis (see Inline formatting, below).

   ATX-style headings
       An ATX-style heading consists of one to six # signs and a line of text, optionally followed by any number
       of # signs.  The number of # signs at the beginning of the line is the heading level:

              ## A level-two heading

              ### A level-three heading ###

       As with setext-style headings, the heading text can contain formatting:

              # A level-one heading with a [link](/url) and *emphasis*

   Extension: blank_before_header
       Original  Markdown  syntax  does  not  require  a  blank line before a heading.  Pandoc does require this
       (except, of course, at the beginning of the document).  The reason for the requirement is that it is  all
       too  easy  for  a  #  to  end  up at the beginning of a line by accident (perhaps through line wrapping).
       Consider, for example:

              I like several of their flavors of ice cream:
              #22, for example, and #5.

   Extension: space_in_atx_header
       Many Markdown implementations do not require a space between the opening #s of an  ATX  heading  and  the
       heading  text,  so that #5 bolt and #hashtag count as headings.  With this extension, pandoc does require
       the space.

   Heading identifiers
       See also the auto_identifiers extension above.

   Extension: header_attributes
       Headings can be assigned attributes using this syntax at the end of the line containing the heading text:

              {#identifier .class .class key=value key=value}

       Thus, for example, the following headings will all be assigned the identifier foo:

              # My heading {#foo}

              ## My heading ##    {#foo}

              My other heading   {#foo}
              ---------------

       (This syntax is compatible with PHP Markdown Extra.)

       Note that although this syntax allows assignment of classes and key/value attributes,  writers  generally
       don’t  use  all of this information.  Identifiers, classes, and key/value attributes are used in HTML and
       HTML-based formats such as EPUB and slidy.  Identifiers are used for  labels  and  link  anchors  in  the
       LaTeX, ConTeXt, Textile, Jira markup, and AsciiDoc writers.

       Headings  with  the  class  unnumbered  will  not be numbered, even if --number-sections is specified.  A
       single hyphen (-) in an attribute context is equivalent to .unnumbered,  and  preferable  in  non-English
       documents.  So,

              # My heading {-}

       is just the same as

              # My heading {.unnumbered}

       If  the  unlisted class is present in addition to unnumbered, the heading will not be included in a table
       of contents.  (Currently this feature is only implemented for certain formats: those based on  LaTeX  and
       HTML, PowerPoint, and RTF.)

   Extension: implicit_header_references
       Pandoc behaves as if reference links have been defined for each heading.  So, to link to a heading

              # Heading identifiers in HTML

       you can simply write

              [Heading identifiers in HTML]

       or

              [Heading identifiers in HTML][]

       or

              [the section on heading identifiers][heading identifiers in
              HTML]

       instead of giving the identifier explicitly:

              [Heading identifiers in HTML](#heading-identifiers-in-html)

       If  there  are  multiple headings with identical text, the corresponding reference will link to the first
       one only, and you will need to use explicit links to link to the others, as described above.

       Like regular reference links, these references are case-insensitive.

       Explicit link reference definitions always take priority over implicit heading references.   So,  in  the
       following example, the link will point to bar, not to #foo:

              # Foo

              [foo]: bar

              See [foo]

   Block quotations
       Markdown  uses email conventions for quoting blocks of text.  A block quotation is one or more paragraphs
       or other block elements (such as lists or headings), with each line preceded by  a  >  character  and  an
       optional  space.  (The > need not start at the left margin, but it should not be indented more than three
       spaces.)

              > This is a block quote. This
              > paragraph has two lines.
              >
              > 1. This is a list inside a block quote.
              > 2. Second item.

       A “lazy” form, which requires the > character only on the first line of each block, is also allowed:

              > This is a block quote. This
              paragraph has two lines.

              > 1. This is a list inside a block quote.
              2. Second item.

       Among the block elements that can be contained in a block quote are other block quotes.  That  is,  block
       quotes can be nested:

              > This is a block quote.
              >
              > > A block quote within a block quote.

       If  the  >  character  is  followed by an optional space, that space will be considered part of the block
       quote marker and not part of the indentation of the contents.  Thus, to put an indented code block  in  a
       block quote, you need five spaces after the >:

              >     code

   Extension: blank_before_blockquote
       Original  Markdown  syntax  does not require a blank line before a block quote.  Pandoc does require this
       (except, of course, at the beginning of the document).  The reason for the requirement is that it is  all
       too  easy  for a > to end up at the beginning of a line by accident (perhaps through line wrapping).  So,
       unless the markdown_strict format is used, the following does not produce a nested block quote in pandoc:

              > This is a block quote.
              >> Not nested, since `blank_before_blockquote` is enabled by default

   Verbatim (code) blocks
   Indented code blocks
       A block of text indented four spaces (or  one  tab)  is  treated  as  verbatim  text:  that  is,  special
       characters do not trigger special formatting, and all spaces and line breaks are preserved.  For example,

                  if (a > 3) {
                    moveShip(5 * gravity, DOWN);
                  }

       The  initial  (four  space  or  one  tab) indentation is not considered part of the verbatim text, and is
       removed in the output.

       Note: blank lines in the verbatim text need not begin with four spaces.

   Fenced code blocks
   Extension: fenced_code_blocks
       In addition to standard indented code blocks, pandoc supports fenced code blocks.  These begin with a row
       of three or more tildes (~) and end with a row of tildes that must be at least as long  as  the  starting
       row.  Everything between these lines is treated as code.  No indentation is necessary:

              ~~~~~~~
              if (a > 3) {
                moveShip(5 * gravity, DOWN);
              }
              ~~~~~~~

       Like regular code blocks, fenced code blocks must be separated from surrounding text by blank lines.

       If the code itself contains a row of tildes or backticks, just use a longer row of tildes or backticks at
       the start and end:

              ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
              ~~~~~~~~~~
              code including tildes
              ~~~~~~~~~~
              ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

   Extension: backtick_code_blocks
       Same as fenced_code_blocks, but uses backticks (`) instead of tildes (~).

   Extension: fenced_code_attributes
       Optionally, you may attach attributes to fenced or backtick code block using this syntax:

              ~~~~ {#mycode .haskell .numberLines startFrom="100"}
              qsort []     = []
              qsort (x:xs) = qsort (filter (< x) xs) ++ [x] ++
                             qsort (filter (>= x) xs)
              ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

       Here  mycode  is  an  identifier, haskell and numberLines are classes, and startFrom is an attribute with
       value 100.  Some output formats can use this information to do syntax highlighting.  Currently, the  only
       output  formats  that use this information are HTML, LaTeX, Docx, Ms, and PowerPoint.  If highlighting is
       supported for your output format and language, then the code block above will  appear  highlighted,  with
       numbered  lines.   (To  see  which  languages  are  supported,  type  pandoc --list-highlight-languages.)
       Otherwise, the code block above will appear as follows:

              <pre id="mycode" class="haskell numberLines" startFrom="100">
                <code>
                ...
                </code>
              </pre>

       The numberLines (or number-lines) class will cause the lines of the code block to be  numbered,  starting
       with  1  or the value of the startFrom attribute.  The lineAnchors (or line-anchors) class will cause the
       lines to be clickable anchors in HTML output.

       A shortcut form can also be used for specifying the language of the code block:

              ```haskell
              qsort [] = []
              ```

       This is equivalent to:

              ``` {.haskell}
              qsort [] = []
              ```

       This shortcut form may be combined with attributes:

              ```haskell {.numberLines}
              qsort [] = []
              ```

       Which is equivalent to:

              ``` {.haskell .numberLines}
              qsort [] = []
              ```

       If the fenced_code_attributes extension is disabled, but input contains class attribute(s) for  the  code
       block, the first class attribute will be printed after the opening fence as a bare word.

       To  prevent  all  highlighting,  use  the  --no-highlight  flag.   To  set  the  highlighting  style, use
       --highlight-style.  For more information on highlighting, see Syntax highlighting, below.

   Line blocks
   Extension: line_blocks
       A line block is a sequence of lines beginning with a vertical bar (|) followed by a space.  The  division
       into  lines  will  be  preserved  in the output, as will any leading spaces; otherwise, the lines will be
       formatted as Markdown.  This is useful for verse and addresses:

              | The limerick packs laughs anatomical
              | In space that is quite economical.
              |    But the good ones I've seen
              |    So seldom are clean
              | And the clean ones so seldom are comical

              | 200 Main St.
              | Berkeley, CA 94718

       The lines can be hard-wrapped if needed, but the continuation line must begin with a space.

              | The Right Honorable Most Venerable and Righteous Samuel L.
                Constable, Jr.
              | 200 Main St.
              | Berkeley, CA 94718

       Inline formatting (such as emphasis) is allowed in the content (though it can’t cross  line  boundaries).
       Block-level formatting (such as block quotes or lists) is not recognized.

       This syntax is borrowed from reStructuredText.

   Lists
   Bullet lists
       A  bullet list is a list of bulleted list items.  A bulleted list item begins with a bullet (*, +, or -).
       Here is a simple example:

              * one
              * two
              * three

       This will produce a “compact” list.  If you want a “loose” list, in which each item  is  formatted  as  a
       paragraph, put spaces between the items:

              * one

              * two

              * three

       The  bullets need not be flush with the left margin; they may be indented one, two, or three spaces.  The
       bullet must be followed by whitespace.

       List items look best if subsequent lines are flush with the first line (after the bullet):

              * here is my first
                list item.
              * and my second.

       But Markdown also allows a “lazy” format:

              * here is my first
              list item.
              * and my second.

   Block content in list items
       A list item  may  contain  multiple  paragraphs  and  other  block-level  content.   However,  subsequent
       paragraphs  must  be  preceded  by  a blank line and indented to line up with the first non-space content
       after the list marker.

                * First paragraph.

                  Continued.

                * Second paragraph. With a code block, which must be indented
                  eight spaces:

                      { code }

       Exception: if the list marker is followed by an indented code block, which must begin 5 spaces after  the
       list  marker,  then  subsequent  paragraphs  must  begin two columns after the last character of the list
       marker:

              *     code

                continuation paragraph

       List items may include other lists.  In this case the preceding blank line is optional.  The nested  list
       must  be  indented  to line up with the first non-space character after the list marker of the containing
       list item.

              * fruits
                + apples
                  - macintosh
                  - red delicious
                + pears
                + peaches
              * vegetables
                + broccoli
                + chard

       As noted above, Markdown allows you to write list  items  “lazily,”  instead  of  indenting  continuation
       lines.   However, if there are multiple paragraphs or other blocks in a list item, the first line of each
       must be indented.

              + A lazy, lazy, list
              item.

              + Another one; this looks
              bad but is legal.

                  Second paragraph of second
              list item.

   Ordered lists
       Ordered lists work just like bulleted lists, except that the items begin  with  enumerators  rather  than
       bullets.

       In  original  Markdown,  enumerators  are  decimal numbers followed by a period and a space.  The numbers
       themselves are ignored, so there is no difference between this list:

              1.  one
              2.  two
              3.  three

       and this one:

              5.  one
              7.  two
              1.  three

   Extension: fancy_lists
       Unlike original Markdown, pandoc allows ordered list items to be  marked  with  uppercase  and  lowercase
       letters  and roman numerals, in addition to Arabic numerals.  List markers may be enclosed in parentheses
       or followed by a single right-parenthesis or period.  They must be separated from the text  that  follows
       by at least one space, and, if the list marker is a capital letter with a period, by at least two spaces.

       The fancy_lists extension also allows `#' to be used as an ordered list marker in place of a numeral:

              #. one
              #. two

       Note: the `#' ordered list marker doesn’t work with commonmark.

   Extension: startnum
       Pandoc also pays attention to the type of list marker used, and to the starting number, and both of these
       are  preserved  where  possible  in  the  output  format.  Thus, the following yields a list with numbers
       followed by a single parenthesis, starting with 9, and a sublist with lowercase roman numerals:

               9)  Ninth
              10)  Tenth
              11)  Eleventh
                     i. subone
                    ii. subtwo
                   iii. subthree

       Pandoc will start a new list each time a different type of list marker is used.  So, the  following  will
       create three lists:

              (2) Two
              (5) Three
              1.  Four
              *   Five

       If default list markers are desired, use #.:

              #.  one
              #.  two
              #.  three

   Extension: task_lists
       Pandoc supports task lists, using the syntax of GitHub-Flavored Markdown.

              - [ ] an unchecked task list item
              - [x] checked item

   Definition lists
   Extension: definition_lists
       Pandoc supports definition lists, using the syntax of PHP Markdown Extra with some extensions.

              Term 1

              :   Definition 1

              Term 2 with *inline markup*

              :   Definition 2

                      { some code, part of Definition 2 }

                  Third paragraph of definition 2.

       Each term must fit on one line, which may optionally be followed by a blank line, and must be followed by
       one  or  more  definitions.   A definition begins with a colon or tilde, which may be indented one or two
       spaces.

       A term may have multiple definitions, and each definition may consist  of  one  or  more  block  elements
       (paragraph,  code  block,  list,  etc.),  each  indented  four  spaces  or one tab stop.  The body of the
       definition (not including the first line) should  be  indented  four  spaces.   However,  as  with  other
       Markdown  lists,  you can “lazily” omit indentation except at the beginning of a paragraph or other block
       element:

              Term 1

              :   Definition
              with lazy continuation.

                  Second paragraph of the definition.

       If you leave space before the definition (as in the example above), the text of the  definition  will  be
       treated  as  a paragraph.  In some output formats, this will mean greater spacing between term/definition
       pairs.  For a more compact definition list, omit the space before the definition:

              Term 1
                ~ Definition 1

              Term 2
                ~ Definition 2a
                ~ Definition 2b

       Note that space between  items  in  a  definition  list  is  required.   (A  variant  that  loosens  this
       requirement,  but  disallows  “lazy”  hard  wrapping,  can be activated with the compact_definition_lists
       extension.)

   Numbered example lists
   Extension: example_lists
       The special list marker @ can be used for sequentially numbered examples.  The first list item with  a  @
       marker  will  be  numbered  `1', the next `2', and so on, throughout the document.  The numbered examples
       need not occur in a single list; each new list using @ will take up where  the  last  stopped.   So,  for
       example:

              (@)  My first example will be numbered (1).
              (@)  My second example will be numbered (2).

              Explanation of examples.

              (@)  My third example will be numbered (3).

       Numbered examples can be labeled and referred to elsewhere in the document:

              (@good)  This is a good example.

              As (@good) illustrates, ...

       The label can be any string of alphanumeric characters, underscores, or hyphens.

       Note:  continuation  paragraphs  in  example lists must always be indented four spaces, regardless of the
       length of the list marker.  That is, example lists always behave as if the four_space_rule  extension  is
       set.   This  is  because  example  labels  tend  to be long, and indenting content to the first non-space
       character after the label would be awkward.

   Ending a list
       What if you want to put an indented code block after a list?

              -   item one
              -   item two

                  { my code block }

       Trouble!  Here pandoc (like other Markdown implementations) will treat { my code block }  as  the  second
       paragraph of item two, and not as a code block.

       To  “cut  off”  the  list after item two, you can insert some non-indented content, like an HTML comment,
       which won’t produce visible output in any format:

              -   item one
              -   item two

              <!-- end of list -->

                  { my code block }

       You can use the same trick if you want two consecutive lists instead of one big list:

              1.  one
              2.  two
              3.  three

              <!-- -->

              1.  uno
              2.  dos
              3.  tres

   Horizontal rules
       A line containing a row of three or more *, -, or _ characters (optionally separated by spaces)  produces
       a horizontal rule:

              *  *  *  *

              ---------------

       We  strongly  recommend  that  horizontal  rules be separated from surrounding text by blank lines.  If a
       horizontal rule is not followed by a blank line, pandoc may try to interpret the lines that follow  as  a
       YAML metadata block or a table.

   Tables
       Four  kinds  of tables may be used.  The first three kinds presuppose the use of a fixed-width font, such
       as Courier.  The fourth kind can be used with proportionally spaced fonts, as it does not require  lining
       up columns.

   Extension: table_captions
       A  caption  may optionally be provided with all 4 kinds of tables (as illustrated in the examples below).
       A caption is a paragraph beginning with the string Table: (or table: or just :), which will  be  stripped
       off.  It may appear either before or after the table.

   Extension: simple_tables
       Simple tables look like this:

                Right     Left     Center     Default
              -------     ------ ----------   -------
                   12     12        12            12
                  123     123       123          123
                    1     1          1             1

              Table:  Demonstration of simple table syntax.

       The header and table rows must each fit on one line.  Column alignments are determined by the position of
       the header text relative to the dashed line below it:

       • If  the  dashed line is flush with the header text on the right side but extends beyond it on the left,
         the column is right-aligned.

       • If the dashed line is flush with the header text on the left side but extends beyond it on  the  right,
         the column is left-aligned.

       • If the dashed line extends beyond the header text on both sides, the column is centered.

       • If  the dashed line is flush with the header text on both sides, the default alignment is used (in most
         cases, this will be left).

       The table must end with a blank line, or a line of dashes followed by a blank line.

       The column header row may be omitted, provided a dashed line is used to end the table.  For example:

              -------     ------ ----------   -------
                   12     12        12             12
                  123     123       123           123
                    1     1          1              1
              -------     ------ ----------   -------

       When the header row is omitted, column alignments are determined on the basis of the first  line  of  the
       table  body.   So,  in  the  tables  above,  the columns would be right, left, center, and right aligned,
       respectively.

   Extension: multiline_tables
       Multiline tables allow header and table rows to span multiple lines of text (but cells that span multiple
       columns or rows of the table are not supported).  Here is an example:

              -------------------------------------------------------------
               Centered   Default           Right Left
                Header    Aligned         Aligned Aligned
              ----------- ------- --------------- -------------------------
                 First    row                12.0 Example of a row that
                                                  spans multiple lines.

                Second    row                 5.0 Here's another one. Note
                                                  the blank line between
                                                  rows.
              -------------------------------------------------------------

              Table: Here's the caption. It, too, may span
              multiple lines.

       These work like simple tables, but with the following differences:

       • They must begin with a row of dashes, before the header text (unless the header row is omitted).

       • They must end with a row of dashes, then a blank line.

       • The rows must be separated by blank lines.

       In multiline tables, the table parser pays attention to the widths of the columns, and the writers try to
       reproduce these relative widths in the output.  So, if you find that one of the columns is too narrow  in
       the output, try widening it in the Markdown source.

       The header may be omitted in multiline tables as well as simple tables:

              ----------- ------- --------------- -------------------------
                 First    row                12.0 Example of a row that
                                                  spans multiple lines.

                Second    row                 5.0 Here's another one. Note
                                                  the blank line between
                                                  rows.
              ----------- ------- --------------- -------------------------

              : Here's a multiline table without a header.

       It is possible for a multiline table to have just one row, but the row should be followed by a blank line
       (and then the row of dashes that ends the table), or the table may be interpreted as a simple table.

   Extension: grid_tables
       Grid tables look like this:

              : Sample grid table.

              +---------------+---------------+--------------------+
              | Fruit         | Price         | Advantages         |
              +===============+===============+====================+
              | Bananas       | $1.34         | - built-in wrapper |
              |               |               | - bright color     |
              +---------------+---------------+--------------------+
              | Oranges       | $2.10         | - cures scurvy     |
              |               |               | - tasty            |
              +---------------+---------------+--------------------+

       The  row  of =s separates the header from the table body, and can be omitted for a headerless table.  The
       cells of grid tables may contain arbitrary block  elements  (multiple  paragraphs,  code  blocks,  lists,
       etc.).

       Cells can span multiple columns or rows:

              +---------------------+----------+
              | Property            | Earth    |
              +=============+=======+==========+
              |             | min   | -89.2 °C |
              | Temperature +-------+----------+
              | 1961-1990   | mean  | 14 °C    |
              |             +-------+----------+
              |             | max   | 56.7 °C  |
              +-------------+-------+----------+

       A table header may contain more than one row:

              +---------------------+-----------------------+
              | Location            | Temperature 1961-1990 |
              |                     | in degree Celsius     |
              |                     +-------+-------+-------+
              |                     | min   | mean  | max   |
              +=====================+=======+=======+=======+
              | Antarctica          | -89.2 | N/A   | 19.8  |
              +---------------------+-------+-------+-------+
              | Earth               | -89.2 | 14    | 56.7  |
              +---------------------+-------+-------+-------+

       Alignments  can  be  specified  as with pipe tables, by putting colons at the boundaries of the separator
       line after the header:

              +---------------+---------------+--------------------+
              | Right         | Left          | Centered           |
              +==============:+:==============+:==================:+
              | Bananas       | $1.34         | built-in wrapper   |
              +---------------+---------------+--------------------+

       For headerless tables, the colons go on the top line instead:

              +--------------:+:--------------+:------------------:+
              | Right         | Left          | Centered           |
              +---------------+---------------+--------------------+

       A table foot can be defined by enclosing it with separator lines that use = instead of -:

               +---------------+---------------+
               | Fruit         | Price         |
               +===============+===============+
               | Bananas       | $1.34         |
               +---------------+---------------+
               | Oranges       | $2.10         |
               +===============+===============+
               | Sum           | $3.44         |
               +===============+===============+

       The foot must always be placed at the very bottom of the table.

       Grid tables can be created easily using Emacs’ table-mode (M-x table-insert).

   Extension: pipe_tables
       Pipe tables look like this:

              | Right | Left | Default | Center |
              |------:|:-----|---------|:------:|
              |   12  |  12  |    12   |    12  |
              |  123  |  123 |   123   |   123  |
              |    1  |    1 |     1   |     1  |

                : Demonstration of pipe table syntax.

       The syntax is identical to PHP Markdown Extra tables.  The  beginning  and  ending  pipe  characters  are
       optional,  but  pipes  are  required between all columns.  The colons indicate column alignment as shown.
       The header cannot be omitted.  To simulate a headerless table, include a header with blank cells.

       Since the pipes indicate column boundaries, columns need not be vertically aligned, as they  are  in  the
       above example.  So, this is a perfectly legal (though ugly) pipe table:

              fruit| price
              -----|-----:
              apple|2.05
              pear|1.37
              orange|3.09

       The  cells  of  pipe  tables  cannot  contain  block  elements like paragraphs and lists, and cannot span
       multiple lines.  If any line of the markdown source is longer than the column width (see --columns), then
       the table will take up the full text width and the cell contents will wrap, with the relative cell widths
       determined by the number of dashes in the line separating the table header from  the  table  body.   (For
       example  ---|- would make the first column 3/4 and the second column 1/4 of the full text width.)  On the
       other hand, if no lines are wider than column width, then cell contents will  not  be  wrapped,  and  the
       cells will be sized to their contents.

       Note: pandoc also recognizes pipe tables of the following form, as can be produced by Emacs’ orgtbl-mode:

              | One | Two   |
              |-----+-------|
              | my  | table |
              | is  | nice  |

       The  difference is that + is used instead of |.  Other orgtbl features are not supported.  In particular,
       to get non-default column alignment, you’ll need to add colons as above.

   Metadata blocks
   Extension: pandoc_title_block
       If the file begins with a title block

              % title
              % author(s) (separated by semicolons)
              % date

       it will be parsed as bibliographic information, not regular text.  (It will be used, for example, in  the
       title of standalone LaTeX or HTML output.)  The block may contain just a title, a title and an author, or
       all  three elements.  If you want to include an author but no title, or a title and a date but no author,
       you need a blank line:

              %
              % Author

              % My title
              %
              % June 15, 2006

       The title may occupy multiple lines, but continuation lines must begin with leading space, thus:

              % My title
                on multiple lines

       If a document has multiple authors, the authors may be put on  separate  lines  with  leading  space,  or
       separated by semicolons, or both.  So, all of the following are equivalent:

              % Author One
                Author Two

              % Author One; Author Two

              % Author One;
                Author Two

       The date must fit on one line.

       All three metadata fields may contain standard inline formatting (italics, links, footnotes, etc.).

       Title  blocks  will  always  be  parsed,  but they will affect the output only when the --standalone (-s)
       option is chosen.  In HTML output, titles will appear twice: once in the document  head  –  this  is  the
       title  that will appear at the top of the window in a browser – and once at the beginning of the document
       body.  The title in the document head can have an optional prefix attached (--title-prefix or -T option).
       The title in the body appears as an H1 element with class “title”, so it can be suppressed or reformatted
       with CSS.  If a title prefix is specified with -T and no title block appears in the document,  the  title
       prefix will be used by itself as the HTML title.

       The  man  page  writer extracts a title, man page section number, and other header and footer information
       from the title line.  The title is assumed to be the first word on the title line, which  may  optionally
       end with a (single-digit) section number in parentheses.  (There should be no space between the title and
       the parentheses.)  Anything after this is assumed to be additional footer and header text.  A single pipe
       character (|) should be used to separate the footer text from the header text.  Thus,

              % PANDOC(1)

       will yield a man page with the title PANDOC and section 1.

              % PANDOC(1) Pandoc User Manuals

       will also have “Pandoc User Manuals” in the footer.

              % PANDOC(1) Pandoc User Manuals | Version 4.0

       will also have “Version 4.0” in the header.

   Extension: yaml_metadata_block
       A YAML metadata block is a valid YAML object, delimited by a line of three hyphens (---) at the top and a
       line of three hyphens (---) or three dots (...) at the bottom.  The initial line --- must not be followed
       by  a  blank  line.   A  YAML  metadata block may occur anywhere in the document, but if it is not at the
       beginning, it must be preceded by a blank line.

       Note that, because of the way pandoc concatenates input files when several are  provided,  you  may  also
       keep  the metadata in a separate YAML file and pass it to pandoc as an argument, along with your Markdown
       files:

              pandoc chap1.md chap2.md chap3.md metadata.yaml -s -o book.html

       Just be sure that the YAML file begins with --- and ends with --- or ....  Alternatively, you can use the
       --metadata-file option.  Using that approach however, you cannot reference content (like footnotes)  from
       the main markdown input document.

       Metadata  will  be  taken from the fields of the YAML object and added to any existing document metadata.
       Metadata can contain lists and objects (nested arbitrarily), but all string scalars will  be  interpreted
       as  Markdown.  Fields with names ending in an underscore will be ignored by pandoc.  (They may be given a
       role by external processors.)  Field names must not be interpretable as YAML numbers  or  boolean  values
       (so, for example, yes, True, and 15 cannot be used as field names).

       A  document  may contain multiple metadata blocks.  If two metadata blocks attempt to set the same field,
       the value from the second block will be taken.

       Each metadata block is handled internally as an independent YAML document.  This means, for example, that
       any YAML anchors defined in a block cannot be referenced in another block.

       When pandoc is used with -t markdown to create a  Markdown  document,  a  YAML  metadata  block  will  be
       produced  only  if the -s/--standalone option is used.  All of the metadata will appear in a single block
       at the beginning of the document.

       Note that YAML escaping rules must be followed.  Thus, for example, if a title contains a colon, it  must
       be  quoted,  and  if  it contains a backslash escape, then it must be ensured that it is not treated as a
       YAML escape sequence.  The pipe character (|) can be used  to  begin  an  indented  block  that  will  be
       interpreted  literally,  without need for escaping.  This form is necessary when the field contains blank
       lines or block-level formatting:

              ---
              title:  'This is the title: it contains a colon'
              author:
              - Author One
              - Author Two
              keywords: [nothing, nothingness]
              abstract: |
                This is the abstract.

                It consists of two paragraphs.
              ...

       The literal block after the | must be indented relative to the line containing the |.  If it is not,  the
       YAML  will be invalid and pandoc will not interpret it as metadata.  For an overview of the complex rules
       governing YAML, see the Wikipedia entry on YAML syntax.

       Template variables will be set automatically from the metadata.  Thus, for example, in writing HTML,  the
       variable abstract will be set to the HTML equivalent of the Markdown in the abstract field:

              <p>This is the abstract.</p>
              <p>It consists of two paragraphs.</p>

       Variables  can contain arbitrary YAML structures, but the template must match this structure.  The author
       variable in the default templates expects a simple list or string, but can be  changed  to  support  more
       complicated  structures.   The following combination, for example, would add an affiliation to the author
       if one is given:

              ---
              title: The document title
              author:
              - name: Author One
                affiliation: University of Somewhere
              - name: Author Two
                affiliation: University of Nowhere
              ...

       To use the structured authors in the example above, you would need a custom template:

              $for(author)$
              $if(author.name)$
              $author.name$$if(author.affiliation)$ ($author.affiliation$)$endif$
              $else$
              $author$
              $endif$
              $endfor$

       Raw content to include in the document’s header may be specified using header-includes;  however,  it  is
       important  to  mark  up  this content as raw code for a particular output format, using the raw_attribute
       extension, or it will be interpreted as markdown.  For example:

              header-includes:
              - |
                ```{=latex}
                \let\oldsection\section
                \renewcommand{\section}[1]{\clearpage\oldsection{#1}}
                ```

       Note: the yaml_metadata_block extension works with commonmark as well as markdown (and it is  enabled  by
       default in gfm and commonmark_x).  However, in these formats the following restrictions apply:

       • The  YAML  metadata  block must occur at the beginning of the document (and there can be only one).  If
         multiple files are given as arguments to pandoc, only the first can be a YAML metadata block.

       • The leaf nodes of the YAML structure are parsed in isolation from each other and from the rest  of  the
         document.   So, for example, you can’t use a reference link in these contexts if the link definition is
         somewhere else in the document.

   Backslash escapes
   Extension: all_symbols_escapable
       Except inside a code block or inline code, any punctuation or space character  preceded  by  a  backslash
       will  be  treated  literally,  even  if it would normally indicate formatting.  Thus, for example, if one
       writes

              *\*hello\**

       one will get

              <em>*hello*</em>

       instead of

              <strong>hello</strong>

       This rule is easier to remember than original Markdown’s rule, which allows only the following characters
       to be backslash-escaped:

              \`*_{}[]()>#+-.!

       (However, if the markdown_strict format is used, the original Markdown rule will be used.)

       A backslash-escaped space is parsed as a nonbreaking space.  In TeX output, it will appear as ~.  In HTML
       and XML output, it will appear as a literal unicode nonbreaking space character (note that it  will  thus
       actually look “invisible” in the generated HTML source; you can still use the --ascii command-line option
       to make it appear as an explicit entity).

       A  backslash-escaped  newline  (i.e. a backslash occurring at the end of a line) is parsed as a hard line
       break.  It will appear in TeX output as \\ and in HTML  as  <br  />.   This  is  a  nice  alternative  to
       Markdown’s “invisible” way of indicating hard line breaks using two trailing spaces on a line.

       Backslash escapes do not work in verbatim contexts.

   Inline formatting
   Emphasis
       To emphasize some text, surround it with *s or _, like this:

              This text is _emphasized with underscores_, and this
              is *emphasized with asterisks*.

       Double * or _ produces strong emphasis:

              This is **strong emphasis** and __with underscores__.

       A * or _ character surrounded by spaces, or backslash-escaped, will not trigger emphasis:

              This is * not emphasized *, and \*neither is this\*.

   Extension: intraword_underscores
       Because  _  is  sometimes  used inside words and identifiers, pandoc does not interpret a _ surrounded by
       alphanumeric characters as an emphasis marker.  If you want to emphasize just part of a word, use *:

              feas*ible*, not feas*able*.

   Strikeout
   Extension: strikeout
       To strike out a section of text with a horizontal line, begin and end it with ~~.  Thus, for example,

              This ~~is deleted text.~~

   Superscripts and subscripts
   Extension: superscript, subscript
       Superscripts may be written by surrounding the superscripted text by  ^  characters;  subscripts  may  be
       written by surrounding the subscripted text by ~ characters.  Thus, for example,

              H~2~O is a liquid.  2^10^ is 1024.

       The  text between ^...^ or ~...~ may not contain spaces or newlines.  If the superscripted or subscripted
       text contains spaces, these spaces must be escaped with backslashes.   (This  is  to  prevent  accidental
       superscripting  and  subscripting  through  the  ordinary  use of ~ and ^, and also bad interactions with
       footnotes.)  Thus, if you want the letter P with `a cat' in subscripts, use P~a\ cat~, not P~a cat~.

   Verbatim
       To make a short span of text verbatim, put it inside backticks:

              What is the difference between `>>=` and `>>`?

       If the verbatim text includes a backtick, use double backticks:

              Here is a literal backtick `` ` ``.

       (The spaces after the opening backticks and before the closing backticks will be ignored.)

       The general rule is that a verbatim span starts  with  a  string  of  consecutive  backticks  (optionally
       followed  by  a  space)  and ends with a string of the same number of backticks (optionally preceded by a
       space).

       Note that backslash-escapes (and other Markdown constructs) do not work in verbatim contexts:

              This is a backslash followed by an asterisk: `\*`.

   Extension: inline_code_attributes
       Attributes can be attached to verbatim text, just as with fenced code blocks:

              `<$>`{.haskell}

   Underline
       To underline text, use the underline class:

              [Underline]{.underline}

       Or, without the bracketed_spans extension (but with native_spans):

              <span class="underline">Underline</span>

       This will work in all output formats that support underline.

   Small caps
       To write small caps, use the smallcaps class:

              [Small caps]{.smallcaps}

       Or, without the bracketed_spans extension:

              <span class="smallcaps">Small caps</span>

       For compatibility with other Markdown flavors, CSS is also supported:

              <span style="font-variant:small-caps;">Small caps</span>

       This will work in all output formats that support small caps.

   Highlighting
       To highlight text, use the mark class:

              [Mark]{.mark}

       Or, without the bracketed_spans extension (but with native_spans):

              <span class="mark">Mark</span>

       This will work in all output formats that support highlighting.

   Math
   Extension: tex_math_dollars
       Anything between two $ characters will be treated as TeX math.  The  opening  $  must  have  a  non-space
       character  immediately  to  its right, while the closing $ must have a non-space character immediately to
       its left, and must not be followed immediately by a digit.  Thus, $20,000  and  $30,000  won’t  parse  as
       math.   If  for  some  reason you need to enclose text in literal $ characters, backslash-escape them and
       they won’t be treated as math delimiters.

       For display math, use $$ delimiters.  (In this case, the delimiters may be separated from the formula  by
       whitespace.  However, there can be no blank lines between the opening and closing $$ delimiters.)

       TeX math will be printed in all output formats.  How it is rendered depends on the output format:

       LaTeX  It will appear verbatim surrounded by \(...\) (for inline math) or \[...\] (for display math).

       Markdown, Emacs Org mode, ConTeXt, ZimWiki
              It will appear verbatim surrounded by $...$ (for inline math) or $$...$$ (for display math).

       XWiki  It will appear verbatim surrounded by {{formula}}..{{/formula}}.

       reStructuredText
              It will be rendered using an interpreted text role :math:.

       AsciiDoc
              For  AsciiDoc output math will appear verbatim surrounded by latexmath:[...].  For asciidoc_legacy
              the bracketed material will also include inline or display math delimiters.

       Texinfo
              It will be rendered inside a @math command.

       roff man, Jira markup
              It will be rendered verbatim without $’s.

       MediaWiki, DokuWiki
              It will be rendered inside <math> tags.

       Textile
              It will be rendered inside <span class="math"> tags.

       RTF, OpenDocument
              It will be rendered, if possible, using Unicode characters, and will otherwise appear verbatim.

       ODT    It will be rendered, if possible, using MathML.

       DocBook
              If the --mathml flag  is  used,  it  will  be  rendered  using  MathML  in  an  inlineequation  or
              informalequation tag.  Otherwise it will be rendered, if possible, using Unicode characters.

       Docx and PowerPoint
              It will be rendered using OMML math markup.

       FictionBook2
              If the --webtex option is used, formulas are rendered as images using CodeCogs or other compatible
              web service, downloaded and embedded in the e-book.  Otherwise, they will appear verbatim.

       HTML, Slidy, DZSlides, S5, EPUB
              The  way math is rendered in HTML will depend on the command-line options selected.  Therefore see
              Math rendering in HTML above.

   Raw HTML
   Extension: raw_html
       Markdown allows you to insert raw HTML (or DocBook) anywhere in a  document  (except  verbatim  contexts,
       where  <,  >,  and  &  are interpreted literally).  (Technically this is not an extension, since standard
       Markdown allows it, but it has been made an extension so that it can be disabled if desired.)

       The raw HTML is passed through  unchanged  in  HTML,  S5,  Slidy,  Slideous,  DZSlides,  EPUB,  Markdown,
       CommonMark, Emacs Org mode, and Textile output, and suppressed in other formats.

       For a more explicit way of including raw HTML in a Markdown document, see the raw_attribute extension.

       In the CommonMark format, if raw_html is enabled, superscripts, subscripts, strikeouts and small capitals
       will  be  represented as HTML.  Otherwise, plain-text fallbacks will be used.  Note that even if raw_html
       is disabled, tables will be rendered with HTML syntax if they cannot use pipe syntax.

   Extension: markdown_in_html_blocks
       Original Markdown allows you to include HTML “blocks”: blocks of HTML  between  balanced  tags  that  are
       separated from the surrounding text with blank lines, and start and end at the left margin.  Within these
       blocks, everything is interpreted as HTML, not Markdown; so (for example), * does not signify emphasis.

       Pandoc  behaves  this  way  when  the  markdown_strict  format is used; but by default, pandoc interprets
       material between HTML block tags as Markdown.  Thus, for example, pandoc will turn

              <table>
              <tr>
              <td>*one*</td>
              <td>[a link](https://google.com)</td>
              </tr>
              </table>

       into

              <table>
              <tr>
              <td><em>one</em></td>
              <td><a href="https://google.com">a link</a></td>
              </tr>
              </table>

       whereas Markdown.pl will preserve it as is.

       There is one exception to this  rule:  text  between  <script>,  <style>,  and  <textarea>  tags  is  not
       interpreted as Markdown.

       This  departure  from  original  Markdown should make it easier to mix Markdown with HTML block elements.
       For example, one can surround a block of Markdown text with <div> tags without preventing it  from  being
       interpreted as Markdown.

   Extension: native_divs
       Use  native pandoc Div blocks for content inside <div> tags.  For the most part this should give the same
       output as markdown_in_html_blocks, but it makes it easier to write pandoc filters to manipulate groups of
       blocks.

   Extension: native_spans
       Use native pandoc Span blocks for content inside <span> tags.  For the most part  this  should  give  the
       same output as raw_html, but it makes it easier to write pandoc filters to manipulate groups of inlines.

   Extension: raw_tex
       In  addition to raw HTML, pandoc allows raw LaTeX, TeX, and ConTeXt to be included in a document.  Inline
       TeX commands will be preserved and passed unchanged to the LaTeX and ConTeXt writers.  Thus, for example,
       you can use LaTeX to include BibTeX citations:

              This result was proved in \cite{jones.1967}.

       Note that in LaTeX environments, like

              \begin{tabular}{|l|l|}\hline
              Age & Frequency \\ \hline
              18--25  & 15 \\
              26--35  & 33 \\
              36--45  & 22 \\ \hline
              \end{tabular}

       the material between the begin and end tags will be interpreted as raw LaTeX, not as Markdown.

       For a more explicit and flexible way of including raw TeX in a Markdown document, see  the  raw_attribute
       extension.

       Inline LaTeX is ignored in output formats other than Markdown, LaTeX, Emacs Org mode, and ConTeXt.

   Generic raw attribute
   Extension: raw_attribute
       Inline  spans  and fenced code blocks with a special kind of attribute will be parsed as raw content with
       the designated format.  For example, the following produces a raw roff ms block:

              ```{=ms}
              .MYMACRO
              blah blah
              ```

       And the following produces a raw html inline element:

              This is `<a>html</a>`{=html}

       This can be useful to insert raw xml into docx documents, e.g.  a pagebreak:

              ```{=openxml}
              <w:p>
                <w:r>
                  <w:br w:type="page"/>
                </w:r>
              </w:p>
              ```

       The format name should match the target format name (see -t/--to,  above,  for  a  list,  or  use  pandoc
       --list-output-formats).   Use  openxml  for  docx  output,  opendocument  for odt output, html5 for epub3
       output, html4 for epub2 output, and latex, beamer, ms, or html5 for pdf output (depending on what you use
       for --pdf-engine).

       This extension presupposes that the relevant kind of inline code or fenced code block is enabled.   Thus,
       for example, to use a raw attribute with a backtick code block, backtick_code_blocks must be enabled.

       The raw attribute cannot be combined with regular attributes.

   LaTeX macros
   Extension: latex_macros
       When  this extension is enabled, pandoc will parse LaTeX macro definitions and apply the resulting macros
       to all LaTeX math and raw LaTeX.  So, for example, the following will work in  all  output  formats,  not
       just LaTeX:

              \newcommand{\tuple}[1]{\langle #1 \rangle}

              $\tuple{a, b, c}$

       Note  that  LaTeX  macros  will  not  be applied if they occur inside a raw span or block marked with the
       raw_attribute extension.

       When latex_macros is disabled, the raw LaTeX and math will not have macros applied.  This  is  usually  a
       better approach when you are targeting LaTeX or PDF.

       Macro  definitions  in  LaTeX  will  be  passed through as raw LaTeX only if latex_macros is not enabled.
       Macro definitions in Markdown  source  (or  other  formats  allowing  raw_tex)  will  be  passed  through
       regardless of whether latex_macros is enabled.

   Links
       Markdown allows links to be specified in several ways.

   Automatic links
       If you enclose a URL or email address in pointy brackets, it will become a link:

              <https://google.com>
              <sam@green.eggs.ham>

   Inline links
       An  inline  link  consists  of  the  link  text  in  square brackets, followed by the URL in parentheses.
       (Optionally, the URL can be followed by a link title, in quotes.)

              This is an [inline link](/url), and here's [one with
              a title](https://fsf.org "click here for a good time!").

       There can be no space between the bracketed part and the parenthesized part.  The link text  can  contain
       formatting (such as emphasis), but the title cannot.

       Email addresses in inline links are not autodetected, so they have to be prefixed with mailto:

              [Write me!](mailto:sam@green.eggs.ham)

   Reference links
       An  explicit  reference  link  has  two  parts,  the link itself and the link definition, which may occur
       elsewhere in the document (either before or after the link).

       The link consists of link text in square brackets, followed by a label in square brackets.  (There cannot
       be space between the two unless the spaced_reference_links extension is enabled.)   The  link  definition
       consists  of  the  bracketed  label, followed by a colon and a space, followed by the URL, and optionally
       (after a space) a link title either in quotes or in parentheses.  The label must not be  parseable  as  a
       citation (assuming the citations extension is enabled): citations take precedence over link labels.

       Here are some examples:

              [my label 1]: /foo/bar.html  "My title, optional"
              [my label 2]: /foo
              [my label 3]: https://fsf.org (The Free Software Foundation)
              [my label 4]: /bar#special  'A title in single quotes'

       The URL may optionally be surrounded by angle brackets:

              [my label 5]: <http://foo.bar.baz>

       The title may go on the next line:

              [my label 3]: https://fsf.org
                "The Free Software Foundation"

       Note that link labels are not case sensitive.  So, this will work:

              Here is [my link][FOO]

              [Foo]: /bar/baz

       In an implicit reference link, the second pair of brackets is empty:

              See [my website][].

              [my website]: http://foo.bar.baz

       Note:  In Markdown.pl and most other Markdown implementations, reference link definitions cannot occur in
       nested  constructions  such  as  list  items  or  block  quotes.   Pandoc  lifts  this  arbitrary-seeming
       restriction.  So the following is fine in pandoc, though not in most other implementations:

              > My block [quote].
              >
              > [quote]: /foo

   Extension: shortcut_reference_links
       In a shortcut reference link, the second pair of brackets may be omitted entirely:

              See [my website].

              [my website]: http://foo.bar.baz

   Internal links
       To  link to another section of the same document, use the automatically generated identifier (see Heading
       identifiers).  For example:

              See the [Introduction](#introduction).

       or

              See the [Introduction].

              [Introduction]: #introduction

       Internal links are currently supported for HTML formats (including HTML slide shows and EPUB), LaTeX, and
       ConTeXt.

   Images
       A link immediately preceded by a ! will be treated as an image.  The  link  text  will  be  used  as  the
       image’s alt text:

              ![la lune](lalune.jpg "Voyage to the moon")

              ![movie reel]

              [movie reel]: movie.gif

   Extension: implicit_figures
       An  image with nonempty alt text, occurring by itself in a paragraph, will be rendered as a figure with a
       caption.  The image’s alt text will be used as the caption.

              ![This is the caption](/url/of/image.png)

       How this is rendered depends on the output format.  Some output formats (e.g. RTF)  do  not  yet  support
       figures.  In those formats, you’ll just get an image in a paragraph by itself, with no caption.

       If  you  just want a regular inline image, just make sure it is not the only thing in the paragraph.  One
       way to do this is to insert a nonbreaking space after the image:

              ![This image won't be a figure](/url/of/image.png)\

       Note that in reveal.js slide shows, an image in a paragraph by itself that has the r-stretch  class  will
       fill the screen, and the caption and figure tags will be omitted.

   Extension: link_attributes
       Attributes can be set on links and images:

              An inline ![image](foo.jpg){#id .class width=30 height=20px}
              and a reference ![image][ref] with attributes.

              [ref]: foo.jpg "optional title" {#id .class key=val key2="val 2"}

       (This syntax is compatible with PHP Markdown Extra when only #id and .class are used.)

       For  HTML  and  EPUB, all known HTML5 attributes except width and height (but including srcset and sizes)
       are passed through as is.  Unknown attributes  are  passed  through  as  custom  attributes,  with  data-
       prepended.   The  other  writers  ignore  attributes  that are not specifically supported by their output
       format.

       The width and height attributes on images are treated specially.  When used without a unit, the  unit  is
       assumed  to  be pixels.  However, any of the following unit identifiers can be used: px, cm, mm, in, inch
       and %.  There must not be any spaces between the number and the unit.  For example:

              ![](file.jpg){ width=50% }

       • Dimensions may be converted to a  form  that  is  compatible  with  the  output  format  (for  example,
         dimensions  given  in  pixels  will  be converted to inches when converting HTML to LaTeX).  Conversion
         between pixels and physical measurements is affected by  the  --dpi  option  (by  default,  96  dpi  is
         assumed, unless the image itself contains dpi information).

       • The % unit is generally relative to some available space.  For example the above example will render to
         the following.

         • HTML: <img href="file.jpg" style="width: 50%;" />

         • LaTeX:  \includegraphics[width=0.5\textwidth,height=\textheight]{file.jpg}  (If you’re using a custom
           template, you need to configure graphicx as in the default template.)

         • ConTeXt: \externalfigure[file.jpg][width=0.5\textwidth]

       • Some output formats have a notion of a class (ConTeXt) or a unique identifier (LaTeX \caption), or both
         (HTML).

       • When no width or height attributes are specified, the fallback is to look at the image  resolution  and
         the dpi metadata embedded in the image file.

   Divs and Spans
       Using  the  native_divs  and  native_spans  extensions  (see  above),  HTML syntax can be used as part of
       markdown to create native Div and Span elements in the pandoc AST (as opposed  to  raw  HTML).   However,
       there is also nicer syntax available:

   Extension: fenced_divs
       Allow  special  fenced syntax for native Div blocks.  A Div starts with a fence containing at least three
       consecutive colons plus some attributes.  The attributes may optionally be followed by another string  of
       consecutive colons.

       Note: the commonmark parser doesn’t permit colons after the attributes.

       The  attribute  syntax  is  exactly as in fenced code blocks (see Extension: fenced_code_attributes).  As
       with fenced code blocks, one can use either attributes in curly braces or a single unbraced  word,  which
       will  be  treated  as a class name.  The Div ends with another line containing a string of at least three
       consecutive colons.  The fenced Div should be separated by  blank  lines  from  preceding  and  following
       blocks.

       Example:

              ::::: {#special .sidebar}
              Here is a paragraph.

              And another.
              :::::

       Fenced divs can be nested.  Opening fences are distinguished because they must have attributes:

              ::: Warning ::::::
              This is a warning.

              ::: Danger
              This is a warning within a warning.
              :::
              ::::::::::::::::::

       Fences  without  attributes  are  always  closing  fences.  Unlike with fenced code blocks, the number of
       colons in the closing fence need not match the number in the opening fence.  However, it can  be  helpful
       for visual clarity to use fences of different lengths to distinguish nested divs from their parents.

   Extension: bracketed_spans
       A  bracketed  sequence  of  inlines,  as  one  would  use to begin a link, will be treated as a Span with
       attributes if it is followed immediately by attributes:

              [This is *some text*]{.class key="val"}

   Footnotes
   Extension: footnotes
       Pandoc’s Markdown allows footnotes, using the following syntax:

              Here is a footnote reference,[^1] and another.[^longnote]

              [^1]: Here is the footnote.

              [^longnote]: Here's one with multiple blocks.

                  Subsequent paragraphs are indented to show that they
              belong to the previous footnote.

                      { some.code }

                  The whole paragraph can be indented, or just the first
                  line.  In this way, multi-paragraph footnotes work like
                  multi-paragraph list items.

              This paragraph won't be part of the note, because it
              isn't indented.

       The identifiers in footnote references may not contain spaces, tabs, newlines, or the characters ^, [, or
       ].  These identifiers are used only to correlate the footnote reference with  the  note  itself;  in  the
       output, footnotes will be numbered sequentially.

       The  footnotes themselves need not be placed at the end of the document.  They may appear anywhere except
       inside other block elements (lists, block quotes, tables, etc.).  Each footnote should be separated  from
       surrounding content (including other footnotes) by blank lines.

   Extension: inline_notes
       Inline  footnotes  are  also  allowed  (though,  unlike  regular  notes,  they  cannot  contain  multiple
       paragraphs).  The syntax is as follows:

              Here is an inline note.^[Inline notes are easier to write, since
              you don't have to pick an identifier and move down to type the
              note.]

       Inline and regular footnotes may be mixed freely.

   Citation syntax
   Extension: citations
       To cite a bibliographic item with an identifier foo, use the syntax @foo.   Normal  citations  should  be
       included in square brackets, with semicolons separating distinct items:

              Blah blah [@doe99; @smith2000; @smith2004].

       How this is rendered depends on the citation style.  In an author-date style, it might render as

              Blah blah (Doe 1999, Smith 2000, 2004).

       In a footnote style, it might render as

              Blah blah.[^1]

              [^1]:  John Doe, "Frogs," *Journal of Amphibians* 44 (1999);
              Susan Smith, "Flies," *Journal of Insects* (2000);
              Susan Smith, "Bees," *Journal of Insects* (2004).

       See the CSL user documentation for more information about CSL styles and how they affect rendering.

       Unless  a  citation  key  starts  with  a letter, digit, or _, and contains only alphanumerics and single
       internal punctuation characters (:.#$%&-+?<>~/), it must be surrounded by curly  braces,  which  are  not
       considered  part  of  the  key.  In @Foo_bar.baz., the key is Foo_bar.baz because the final period is not
       internal punctuation, so it is not included in the key.  In @{Foo_bar.baz.},  the  key  is  Foo_bar.baz.,
       including  the  final  period.   In  @Foo_bar--baz,  the  key  is  Foo_bar  because the repeated internal
       punctuation characters terminate the key.  The curly braces are recommended if  you  use  URLs  as  keys:
       [@{https://example.com/bib?name=foobar&date=2000}, p.  33].

       Citation items may optionally include a prefix, a locator, and a suffix.  In

              Blah blah [see @doe99, pp. 33-35 and *passim*; @smith04, chap. 1].

       the  first  item  (doe99)  has  prefix see, locator pp.  33-35, and suffix and *passim*.  The second item
       (smith04) has locator chap. 1 and no prefix or suffix.

       Pandoc uses some heuristics to separate the locator from the rest of the subject.  It is sensitive to the
       locator terms defined in the CSL locale files.  Either abbreviated or unabbreviated forms  are  accepted.
       In  the en-US locale, locator terms can be written in either singular or plural forms, as book, bk./bks.;
       chapter, chap./chaps.; column, col./cols.; figure, fig./figs.; folio, fol./fols.; number, no./nos.; line,
       l./ll.; note, n./nn.; opus, op./opp.; page, p./pp.; paragraph,  para./paras.;  part,  pt./pts.;  section,
       sec./secs.;  sub verbo, s.v./s.vv.; verse, v./vv.; volume, vol./vols.; ¶/¶¶; §/§§.  If no locator term is
       used, “page” is assumed.

       In complex cases, you can force something to be treated as a locator by enclosing it in curly  braces  or
       prevent parsing the suffix as locator by prepending curly braces:

              [@smith{ii, A, D-Z}, with a suffix]
              [@smith, {pp. iv, vi-xi, (xv)-(xvii)} with suffix here]
              [@smith{}, 99 years later]

       A  minus  sign  (-) before the @ will suppress mention of the author in the citation.  This can be useful
       when the author is already mentioned in the text:

              Smith says blah [-@smith04].

       You can also write an author-in-text citation, by omitting the square brackets:

              @smith04 says blah.

              @smith04 [p. 33] says blah.

       This will cause the author’s name to be rendered, followed by the bibliographical details.  Use this form
       when you want to make the citation the subject of a sentence.

       When you are using a note style, it is usually better to let citeproc create the footnotes from citations
       rather than writing an explicit note.  If you do write an explicit note that contains  a  citation,  note
       that  normal  citations  will  be  put in parentheses, while author-in-text citations will not.  For this
       reason, it is sometimes preferable to use the author-in-text style inside notes when using a note style.

   Non-default extensions
       The following Markdown syntax extensions are not enabled by default in pandoc,  but  may  be  enabled  by
       adding  +EXTENSION  to the format name, where EXTENSION is the name of the extension.  Thus, for example,
       markdown+hard_line_breaks is Markdown with hard line breaks.

   Extension: rebase_relative_paths
       Rewrite relative paths for Markdown links and images, depending on the path of the  file  containing  the
       link  or  image  link.  For each link or image, pandoc will compute the directory of the containing file,
       relative to the working directory, and prepend the resulting path to the link or image path.

       The use of this extension is best understood by example.   Suppose  you  have  a  subdirectory  for  each
       chapter  of a book, chap1, chap2, chap3.  Each contains a file text.md and a number of images used in the
       chapter.  You would like to have ![image](spider.jpg) in  chap1/text.md  refer  to  chap1/spider.jpg  and
       ![image](spider.jpg) in chap2/text.md refer to chap2/spider.jpg.  To do this, use

              pandoc chap*/*.md -f markdown+rebase_relative_paths

       Without   this  extension,  you  would  have  to  use  ![image](chap1/spider.jpg)  in  chap1/text.md  and
       ![image](chap2/spider.jpg) in chap2/text.md.  Links with relative paths will be rewritten in the same way
       as images.

       Absolute paths and URLs are not changed.  Neither are empty paths  or  paths  consisting  entirely  of  a
       fragment, e.g., #foo.

       Note  that relative paths in reference links and images will be rewritten relative to the file containing
       the link reference definition, not the file containing the reference  link  or  image  itself,  if  these
       differ.

   Extension: mark
       To highlight out a section of text, begin and end it with with ==.  Thus, for example,

              This ==is deleted text.==

   Extension: attributes
       Allows  attributes  to  be  attached  to  any inline or block-level element when parsing commonmark.  The
       syntax for the attributes is the same as that used in header_attributes.

       • Attributes that occur immediately after an inline element affect that element.  If they follow a space,
         then  they  belong  to  the  space.   (Hence,   this   option   subsumes   inline_code_attributes   and
         link_attributes.)

       • Attributes that occur immediately before a block element, on a line by themselves, affect that element.

       • Consecutive  attribute specifiers may be used, either for blocks or for inlines.  Their attributes will
         be combined.

       • Attributes that occur at the end of the text of a Setext or ATX heading (separated by  whitespace  from
         the text) affect the heading element.  (Hence, this option subsumes header_attributes.)

       • Attributes  that  occur  after  the opening fence in a fenced code block affect the code block element.
         (Hence, this option subsumes fenced_code_attributes.)

       • Attributes that occur at the end of a reference  link  definition  affect  links  that  refer  to  that
         definition.

       Note that pandoc’s AST does not currently allow attributes to be attached to arbitrary elements.  Hence a
       Span or Div container will be added if needed.

   Extension: old_dashes
       Selects the pandoc <= 1.8.2.1 behavior for parsing smart dashes: - before a numeral is an en-dash, and --
       is  an  em-dash.   This  option only has an effect if smart is enabled.  It is selected automatically for
       textile input.

   Extension: angle_brackets_escapable
       Allow < and > to be backslash-escaped, as they can be  in  GitHub  flavored  Markdown  but  not  original
       Markdown.  This is implied by pandoc’s default all_symbols_escapable.

   Extension: lists_without_preceding_blankline
       Allow a list to occur right after a paragraph, with no intervening blank space.

   Extension: four_space_rule
       Selects the pandoc <= 2.0 behavior for parsing lists, so that four spaces indent are needed for list item
       continuation paragraphs.

   Extension: spaced_reference_links
       Allow whitespace between the two components of a reference link, for example,

              [foo] [bar].

   Extension: hard_line_breaks
       Causes all newlines within a paragraph to be interpreted as hard line breaks instead of spaces.

   Extension: ignore_line_breaks
       Causes  newlines  within  a  paragraph to be ignored, rather than being treated as spaces or as hard line
       breaks.  This option is intended for use with East Asian languages where  spaces  are  not  used  between
       words, but text is divided into lines for readability.

   Extension: east_asian_line_breaks
       Causes  newlines  within  a  paragraph to be ignored, rather than being treated as spaces or as hard line
       breaks, when they occur  between  two  East  Asian  wide  characters.   This  is  a  better  choice  than
       ignore_line_breaks for texts that include a mix of East Asian wide characters and other characters.

   Extension: emoji
       Parses textual emojis like :smile: as Unicode emoticons.

   Extension: tex_math_gfm
       Supports two GitHub-specific formats for math.  Inline math: $`e=mc^2`$.

       Display math:

              ``` math
              e=mc^2
              ```

   Extension: tex_math_single_backslash
       Causes anything between \( and \) to be interpreted as inline TeX math, and anything between \[ and \] to
       be  interpreted  as display TeX math.  Note: a drawback of this extension is that it precludes escaping (
       and [.

   Extension: tex_math_double_backslash
       Causes anything between \\( and \\) to be interpreted as inline TeX math, and anything  between  \\[  and
       \\] to be interpreted as display TeX math.

   Extension: markdown_attribute
       By  default,  pandoc interprets material inside block-level tags as Markdown.  This extension changes the
       behavior so that Markdown is only  parsed  inside  block-level  tags  if  the  tags  have  the  attribute
       markdown=1.

   Extension: mmd_title_block
       Enables a MultiMarkdown style title block at the top of the document, for example:

              Title:   My title
              Author:  John Doe
              Date:    September 1, 2008
              Comment: This is a sample mmd title block, with
                       a field spanning multiple lines.

       See  the  MultiMarkdown  documentation  for  details.   If  pandoc_title_block  or yaml_metadata_block is
       enabled, it will take precedence over mmd_title_block.

   Extension: abbreviations
       Parses PHP Markdown Extra abbreviation keys, like

              *[HTML]: Hypertext Markup Language

       Note that the pandoc document model does not support abbreviations, so  if  this  extension  is  enabled,
       abbreviation keys are simply skipped (as opposed to being parsed as paragraphs).

   Extension: alerts
       Supports GitHub-style markdown alerts, like

              > [!INFO]
              > This is an informational message.

   Extension: autolink_bare_uris
       Makes all absolute URIs into links, even when not surrounded by pointy braces <...>.

   Extension: mmd_link_attributes
       Parses  multimarkdown style key-value attributes on link and image references.  This extension should not
       be confused with the link_attributes extension.

              This is a reference ![image][ref] with multimarkdown attributes.

              [ref]: https://path.to/image "Image title" width=20px height=30px
                     id=myId class="myClass1 myClass2"

   Extension: mmd_header_identifiers
       Parses multimarkdown style heading identifiers (in square brackets, after  the  heading  but  before  any
       trailing #s in an ATX heading).

   Extension: compact_definition_lists
       Activates  the  definition  list  syntax  of pandoc 1.12.x and earlier.  This syntax differs from the one
       described above under Definition lists in several respects:

       • No blank line is required between consecutive items of the definition list.

       • To get a “tight” or “compact” list, omit space between consecutive items; the space between a term  and
         its definition does not affect anything.

       • Lazy wrapping of paragraphs is not allowed: the entire definition must be indented four spaces.

   Extension: gutenberg
       Use Project Gutenberg conventions for plain output: all-caps for strong emphasis, surround by underscores
       for regular emphasis, add extra blank space around headings.

   Extension: sourcepos
       Include  source  position  attributes  when  parsing  commonmark.  For elements that accept attributes, a
       data-pos attribute is added; other elements are placed in a  surrounding  Div  or  Span  element  with  a
       data-pos attribute.

   Extension: short_subsuperscripts
       Parse  multimarkdown  style  subscripts  and  superscripts,  which  start  with  a  `~' or `^' character,
       respectively, and include the alphanumeric sequence that follows.  For example:

              x^2 = 4

       or

              Oxygen is O~2.

   Extension: wikilinks_title_after_pipe
       Pandoc supports multiple markdown wikilink syntaxes, regardless of whether the title is before  or  after
       the pipe.

       Using --from=markdown+wikilinks_title_after_pipe results in

              [[URL|title]]

       while using --from=markdown+wikilinks_title_before_pipe results in

              [[title|URL]]

   Markdown variants
       In addition to pandoc’s extended Markdown, the following Markdown variants are supported:

       • markdown_phpextra (PHP Markdown Extra)

       • markdown_github (deprecated GitHub-Flavored Markdown)

       • markdown_mmd (MultiMarkdown)

       • markdown_strict (Markdown.pl)

       • commonmark (CommonMark)

       • gfm (Github-Flavored Markdown)

       • commonmark_x (CommonMark with many pandoc extensions)

       To  see  which extensions are supported for a given format, and which are enabled by default, you can use
       the command

              pandoc --list-extensions=FORMAT

       where FORMAT is replaced with the name of the format.

       Note that the list of extensions for commonmark, gfm, and commonmark_x are defined  relative  to  default
       commonmark.   So,  for example, backtick_code_blocks does not appear as an extension, since it is enabled
       by default and cannot be disabled.

CITATIONS

       When the --citeproc option is used, pandoc can automatically generate citations and a bibliography  in  a
       number of styles.  Basic usage is

              pandoc --citeproc myinput.txt

       To use this feature, you will need to have

       • a document containing citations (see Citation syntax);

       • a  source  of  bibliographic  data: either an external bibliography file or a list of references in the
         document’s YAML metadata;

       • optionally, a CSL citation style.

   Specifying bibliographic data
       You can specify an external bibliography using the bibliography metadata field in a YAML metadata section
       or the --bibliography command line argument.  If you want to use multiple  bibliography  files,  you  can
       supply  multiple  --bibliography  arguments  or  set  bibliography  metadata  field  to  YAML  array.   A
       bibliography may have any of these formats:

  Format     File extension
  ---------- ----------------
  BibLaTeX   .bib
  BibTeX     .bibtex
  CSL JSON   .json
  CSL YAML   .yaml
  RIS        .ris

       Note that .bib can be used with both BibTeX and BibLaTeX  files;  use  the  extension  .bibtex  to  force
       interpretation as BibTeX.

       In  BibTeX  and  BibLaTeX  databases, pandoc parses LaTeX markup inside fields such as title; in CSL YAML
       databases, pandoc Markdown; and in CSL JSON databases, an HTML-like markup:

       <i>...</i>
              italics

       <b>...</b>
              bold

       <span style="font-variant:small-caps;">...</span> or <sc>...</sc>
              small capitals

       <sub>...</sub>
              subscript

       <sup>...</sup>
              superscript

       <span class="nocase">...</span>
              prevent a phrase from being capitalized as title case

       As an alternative to specifying a bibliography file using  --bibliography  or  the  YAML  metadata  field
       bibliography,  you  can include the citation data directly in the references field of the document’s YAML
       metadata.  The field should contain an array of YAML-encoded references, for example:

              ---
              references:
              - type: article-journal
                id: WatsonCrick1953
                author:
                - family: Watson
                  given: J. D.
                - family: Crick
                  given: F. H. C.
                issued:
                  date-parts:
                  - - 1953
                    - 4
                    - 25
                title: 'Molecular structure of nucleic acids: a structure for
                  deoxyribose nucleic acid'
                title-short: Molecular structure of nucleic acids
                container-title: Nature
                volume: 171
                issue: 4356
                page: 737-738
                DOI: 10.1038/171737a0
                URL: https://www.nature.com/articles/171737a0
                language: en-GB
              ...

       If both an external bibliography and inline (YAML metadata) references are provided, both will  be  used.
       In case of conflicting ids, the inline references will take precedence.

       Note that pandoc can be used to produce such a YAML metadata section from a BibTeX, BibLaTeX, or CSL JSON
       bibliography:

              pandoc chem.bib -s -f biblatex -t markdown
              pandoc chem.json -s -f csljson -t markdown

       Indeed, pandoc can convert between any of these citation formats:

              pandoc chem.bib -s -f biblatex -t csljson
              pandoc chem.yaml -s -f markdown -t biblatex

       Running  pandoc on a bibliography file with the --citeproc option will create a formatted bibliography in
       the format of your choice:

              pandoc chem.bib -s --citeproc -o chem.html
              pandoc chem.bib -s --citeproc -o chem.pdf

   Capitalization in titles
       If you are using a bibtex or biblatex bibliography, then observe the following rules:

       • English titles should be in title case.  Non-English titles should be in sentence case, and the  langid
         field  in  biblatex  should  be  set  to  the  relevant language.  (The following values are treated as
         English: american, british, canadian, english, australian, newzealand, USenglish, or UKenglish.)

       • As is standard with bibtex/biblatex, proper names should be protected with curly braces  so  that  they
         won’t be lowercased in styles that call for sentence case.  For example:

                title = {My Dinner with {Andre}}

       • In addition, words that should remain lowercase (or camelCase) should be protected:

                title = {Spin Wave Dispersion on the {nm} Scale}

         Though  this  is  not  necessary in bibtex/biblatex, it is necessary with citeproc, which stores titles
         internally in sentence case, and converts to title case in styles that require  it.   Here  we  protect
         “nm” so that it doesn’t get converted to “Nm” at this stage.

       If you are using a CSL bibliography (either JSON or YAML), then observe the following rules:

       • All titles should be in sentence case.

       • Use  the language field for non-English titles to prevent their conversion to title case in styles that
         call for this.  (Conversion happens only if language begins with en or is left empty.)

       • Protect words that should not be converted to title case using this syntax:

                Spin wave dispersion on the <span class="nocase">nm</span> scale

   Conference Papers, Published vs. Unpublished
       For a formally published conference paper, use the biblatex  entry  type  inproceedings  (which  will  be
       mapped to CSL paper-conference).

       For  an unpublished manuscript, use the biblatex entry type unpublished without an eventtitle field (this
       entry type will be mapped to CSL manuscript).

       For a talk, an unpublished conference paper, or a  poster  presentation,  use  the  biblatex  entry  type
       unpublished  with  an  eventtitle field (this entry type will be mapped to CSL speech).  Use the biblatex
       type field to indicate the type, e.g. “Paper”, or “Poster”.  venue  and  eventdate  may  be  useful  too,
       though  eventdate  will  not  be  rendered by most CSL styles.  Note that venue is for the event’s venue,
       unlike location which describes the publisher’s location; do  not  use  the  latter  for  an  unpublished
       conference paper.

   Specifying a citation style
       Citations  and  references  can  be  formatted  using any style supported by the Citation Style Language,
       listed in the Zotero Style Repository.  These files are specified using the --csl option or the  csl  (or
       citation-style)  metadata  field.   By  default,  pandoc will use the Chicago Manual of Style author-date
       format.  (You can override this default by copying a CSL style of your choice to default.csl in your user
       data directory.)  The CSL project provides further information on finding and editing styles.

       The --citation-abbreviations option (or the citation-abbreviations metadata field) may be used to specify
       a JSON file containing abbreviations of journals that should be used  in  formatted  bibliographies  when
       form="short" is specified.  The format of the file can be illustrated with an example:

              { "default": {
                  "container-title": {
                          "Lloyd's Law Reports": "Lloyd's Rep",
                          "Estates Gazette": "EG",
                          "Scots Law Times": "SLT"
                  }
                }
              }

   Citations in note styles
       Pandoc’s  citation  processing  is designed to allow you to move between author-date, numerical, and note
       styles without modifying the markdown source.  When you’re using a note style, avoid inserting  footnotes
       manually.  Instead, insert citations just as you would in an author-date style—for example,

              Blah blah [@foo, p. 33].

       The  footnote  will be created automatically.  Pandoc will take care of removing the space and moving the
       note before or after the period, depending on the setting of notes-after-punctuation, as described  below
       in Other relevant metadata fields.

       In  some  cases  you may need to put a citation inside a regular footnote.  Normal citations in footnotes
       (such as [@foo, p. 33]) will be rendered in parentheses.  In-text citations (such as @foo [p.  33])  will
       be rendered without parentheses.  (A comma will be added if appropriate.)  Thus:

              [^1]:  Some studies [@foo; @bar, p. 33] show that
              frubulicious zoosnaps are quantical.  For a survey
              of the literature, see @baz [chap. 1].

   Placement of the bibliography
       If the style calls for a list of works cited, it will be placed in a div with id refs, if one exists:

              ::: {#refs}
              :::

       Otherwise,  it  will  be  placed  at  the  end  of  the  document.  Generation of the bibliography can be
       suppressed by setting suppress-bibliography: true in the YAML metadata.

       If you wish the bibliography to have a section  heading,  you  can  set  reference-section-title  in  the
       metadata, or put the heading at the beginning of the div with id refs (if you are using it) or at the end
       of your document:

              last paragraph...

              # References

       The  bibliography  will  be inserted after this heading.  Note that the unnumbered class will be added to
       this heading, so that the section will not be numbered.

       If you want to put the bibliography into a variable in your template, one way to do that is  to  put  the
       div with id refs into a metadata field, e.g.

              ---
              refs: |
                 ::: {#refs}
                 :::
              ...

       You can then put the variable $refs$ into your template where you want the bibliography to be placed.

   Including uncited items in the bibliography
       If  you  want to include items in the bibliography without actually citing them in the body text, you can
       define a dummy nocite metadata field and put the citations there:

              ---
              nocite: |
                @item1, @item2
              ...

              @item3

       In this example, the document will contain a citation for item3 only, but the bibliography  will  contain
       entries for item1, item2, and item3.

       It  is  possible  to  create  a  bibliography  with  all the citations, whether or not they appear in the
       document, by using a wildcard:

              ---
              nocite: |
                @*
              ...

       For LaTeX output, you can also use natbib or biblatex to render the bibliography.  In  order  to  do  so,
       specify  bibliography  files  as  outlined  above,  and  add  --natbib  or  --biblatex argument to pandoc
       invocation.  Bear in mind that bibliography files have to be in either BibTeX (for --natbib) or  BibLaTeX
       (for --biblatex) format.

   Other relevant metadata fields
       A few other metadata fields affect bibliography formatting:

       link-citations
              If  true, citations will be hyperlinked to the corresponding bibliography entries (for author-date
              and numerical styles only).  Defaults to false.

       link-bibliography
              If true, DOIs, PMCIDs, PMID, and URLs in bibliographies will be rendered as  hyperlinks.   (If  an
              entry  contains  a  DOI,  PMCID, PMID, or URL, but none of these fields are rendered by the style,
              then the title, or in the absence of a title the whole entry, will be hyperlinked.)   Defaults  to
              true.

       lang   The  lang  field will affect how the style is localized, for example in the translation of labels,
              the use of quotation marks, and the way items are sorted.  (For  backwards  compatibility,  locale
              may be used instead of lang, but this use is deprecated.)

              A  BCP  47  language  tag  is  expected:  for example, en, de, en-US, fr-CA, ug-Cyrl.  The unicode
              extension syntax (after -u-)  may  be  used  to  specify  options  for  collation  (sorting)  more
              precisely.  Here are some examples:

              • zh-u-co-pinyin – Chinese with the Pinyin collation.

              • es-u-co-trad – Spanish with the traditional collation (with Ch sorting after C).

              • fr-u-kb – French with “backwards” accent sorting (with coté sorting after côte).

              • en-US-u-kf-upper  – English with uppercase letters sorting before lower (default is lower before
                upper).

       notes-after-punctuation
              If true (the default for note styles),  pandoc  will  put  footnote  references  or  superscripted
              numerical  citations  after  following punctuation.  For example, if the source contains blah blah
              [@jones99]., the result will look like blah blah.[^1], with the note moved after  the  period  and
              the  space  collapsed.   If false, the space will still be collapsed, but the footnote will not be
              moved after the  punctuation.   The  option  may  also  be  used  in  numerical  styles  that  use
              superscripts for citation numbers (but for these styles the default is not to move the citation).

SLIDE SHOWS

       You  can  use  pandoc  to  produce  an  HTML + JavaScript slide presentation that can be viewed via a web
       browser.  There are five ways to do this, using S5, DZSlides, Slidy, Slideous,  or  reveal.js.   You  can
       also produce a PDF slide show using LaTeX beamer, or slide shows in Microsoft PowerPoint format.

       Here’s the Markdown source for a simple slide show, habits.txt:

              % Habits
              % John Doe
              % March 22, 2005

              # In the morning

              ## Getting up

              - Turn off alarm
              - Get out of bed

              ## Breakfast

              - Eat eggs
              - Drink coffee

              # In the evening

              ## Dinner

              - Eat spaghetti
              - Drink wine

              ------------------

              ![picture of spaghetti](images/spaghetti.jpg)

              ## Going to sleep

              - Get in bed
              - Count sheep

       To produce an HTML/JavaScript slide show, simply type

              pandoc -t FORMAT -s habits.txt -o habits.html

       where FORMAT is either s5, slidy, slideous, dzslides, or revealjs.

       For  Slidy,  Slideous,  reveal.js,  and  S5,  the file produced by pandoc with the -s/--standalone option
       embeds a link to JavaScript and CSS files, which are  assumed  to  be  available  at  the  relative  path
       s5/default  (for  S5),  slideous  (for  Slideous),  reveal.js (for reveal.js), or at the Slidy website at
       w3.org (for Slidy).  (These paths can be changed by setting the slidy-url, slideous-url, revealjs-url, or
       s5-url variables; see Variables for HTML slides, above.)  For DZSlides, the (relatively short) JavaScript
       and CSS are included in the file by default.

       With all HTML slide formats, the --self-contained option can be  used  to  produce  a  single  file  that
       contains  all  of  the  data  necessary to display the slide show, including linked scripts, stylesheets,
       images, and videos.

       To produce a PDF slide show using beamer, type

              pandoc -t beamer habits.txt -o habits.pdf

       Note that a reveal.js slide show can also be converted to a PDF  by  printing  it  to  a  file  from  the
       browser.

       To produce a PowerPoint slide show, type

              pandoc habits.txt -o habits.pptx

   Structuring the slide show
       By default, the slide level is the highest heading level in the hierarchy that is followed immediately by
       content,  and not another heading, somewhere in the document.  In the example above, level-1 headings are
       always followed by level-2 headings, which are followed by content,  so  the  slide  level  is  2.   This
       default can be overridden using the --slide-level option.

       The document is carved up into slides according to the following rules:

       • A horizontal rule always starts a new slide.

       • A heading at the slide level always starts a new slide.

       • Headings  below the slide level in the hierarchy create headings within a slide.  (In beamer, a “block”
         will be created.  If the heading has the class example, an exampleblock environment will be used; if it
         has the class alert, an alertblock will be used; otherwise a regular block will be used.)

       • Headings above the slide level in the hierarchy create “title slides,” which just contain  the  section
         title  and  help to break the slide show into sections.  Non-slide content under these headings will be
         included on the title slide (for HTML slide shows) or in a subsequent slide with the  same  title  (for
         beamer).

       • A title page is constructed automatically from the document’s title block, if present.  (In the case of
         beamer, this can be disabled by commenting out some lines in the default template.)

       These  rules  are  designed  to  support  many  different  styles of slide show.  If you don’t care about
       structuring your slides into sections and subsections, you can either just use level-1 headings  for  all
       slides (in that case, level 1 will be the slide level) or you can set --slide-level=0.

       Note:  in  reveal.js  slide  shows,  if slide level is 2, a two-dimensional layout will be produced, with
       level-1 headings building horizontally and level-2 headings building vertically.  It is  not  recommended
       that  you  use deeper nesting of section levels with reveal.js unless you set --slide-level=0 (which lets
       reveal.js produce a one-dimensional layout and only interprets horizontal rules as slide boundaries).

   PowerPoint layout choice
       When creating slides, the pptx writer chooses from a number of pre-defined layouts, based on the  content
       of the slide:

       Title Slide
              This  layout is used for the initial slide, which is generated and filled from the metadata fields
              date, author, and title, if they are present.

       Section Header
              This layout is used for what pandoc calls “title slides”, i.e.  slides which start with  a  header
              which is above the slide level in the hierarchy.

       Two Content
              This  layout  is used for two-column slides, i.e. slides containing a div with class columns which
              contains at least two divs with class column.

       Comparison
              This layout is used instead of “Two Content” for any two-column  slides  in  which  at  least  one
              column contains text followed by non-text (e.g. an image or a table).

       Content with Caption
              This layout is used for any non-two-column slides which contain text followed by non-text (e.g. an
              image or a table).

       Blank  This  layout is used for any slides which only contain blank content, e.g. a slide containing only
              speaker notes, or a slide containing only a non-breaking space.

       Title and Content
              This layout is used for all slides which do not match the criteria for another layout.

       These layouts are chosen from the default pptx reference doc included with pandoc, unless an  alternative
       reference doc is specified using --reference-doc.

   Incremental lists
       By  default,  these  writers  produce lists that display “all at once.” If you want your lists to display
       incrementally (one item at a time), use the -i option.  If you want a particular list to depart from  the
       default,  put  it  in  a  div block with class incremental or nonincremental.  So, for example, using the
       fenced div syntax, the following would be incremental regardless of the document default:

              ::: incremental

              - Eat spaghetti
              - Drink wine

              :::

       or

              ::: nonincremental

              - Eat spaghetti
              - Drink wine

              :::

       While using incremental and nonincremental divs is the recommended method of setting incremental lists on
       a per-case basis, an older method is also supported: putting lists inside a blockquote will  depart  from
       the  document  default (that is, it will display incrementally without the -i option and all at once with
       the -i option):

              > - Eat spaghetti
              > - Drink wine

       Both methods allow incremental and nonincremental lists to be mixed in a single document.

       If you want to include a block-quoted list, you can work around this behavior by putting the list  inside
       a fenced div, so that it is not the direct child of the block quote:

              > ::: wrapper
              > - a
              > - list in a quote
              > :::

   Inserting pauses
       You can add “pauses” within a slide by including a paragraph containing three dots, separated by spaces:

              # Slide with a pause

              content before the pause

              . . .

              content after the pause

       Note: this feature is not yet implemented for PowerPoint output.

   Styling the slides
       You  can change the style of HTML slides by putting customized CSS files in $DATADIR/s5/default (for S5),
       $DATADIR/slidy (for Slidy), or  $DATADIR/slideous  (for  Slideous),  where  $DATADIR  is  the  user  data
       directory  (see  --data-dir,  above).   The  originals  may  be  found  in pandoc’s system data directory
       (generally $CABALDIR/pandoc-VERSION/s5/default).  Pandoc will look there for any files it does  not  find
       in the user data directory.

       For dzslides, the CSS is included in the HTML file itself, and may be modified there.

       All  reveal.js  configuration  options  can be set through variables.  For example, themes can be used by
       setting the theme variable:

              -V theme=moon

       Or you can specify a custom stylesheet using the --css option.

       To style beamer slides, you can specify a theme, colortheme, fonttheme, innertheme, and outertheme, using
       the -V option:

              pandoc -t beamer habits.txt -V theme:Warsaw -o habits.pdf

       Note that heading attributes will turn into slide attributes (on a <div>  or  <section>)  in  HTML  slide
       formats,  allowing you to style individual slides.  In beamer, a number of heading classes and attributes
       are recognized as frame options and will be passed through as options to the frame: see Frame  attributes
       in beamer, below.

   Speaker notes
       Speaker  notes  are  supported  in reveal.js, PowerPoint (pptx), and beamer output.  You can add notes to
       your Markdown document thus:

              ::: notes

              This is my note.

              - It can contain Markdown
              - like this list

              :::

       To show the notes window in reveal.js,  press  s  while  viewing  the  presentation.   Speaker  notes  in
       PowerPoint will be available, as usual, in handouts and presenter view.

       Notes  are  not  yet  supported  for  other  slide  formats,  but the notes will not appear on the slides
       themselves.

   Columns
       To put material in side by side columns,  you  can  use  a  native  div  container  with  class  columns,
       containing two or more div containers with class column and a width attribute:

              :::::::::::::: {.columns}
              ::: {.column width="40%"}
              contents...
              :::
              ::: {.column width="60%"}
              contents...
              :::
              ::::::::::::::

   Additional columns attributes in beamer
       The  div  containers  with  classes columns and column can optionally have an align attribute.  The class
       columns can optionally have a totalwidth attribute or an onlytextwidth class.

              :::::::::::::: {.columns align=center totalwidth=8em}
              ::: {.column width="40%"}
              contents...
              :::
              ::: {.column width="60%" align=bottom}
              contents...
              :::
              ::::::::::::::

       The align attributes on columns and column can be used with the  values  top,  top-baseline,  center  and
       bottom to vertically align the columns.  It defaults to top in columns.

       The totalwidth attribute limits the width of the columns to the given value.

              :::::::::::::: {.columns align=top .onlytextwidth}
              ::: {.column width="40%" align=center}
              contents...
              :::
              ::: {.column width="60%"}
              contents...
              :::
              ::::::::::::::

       The class onlytextwidth sets the totalwidth to \textwidth.

       See Section 12.7 of the Beamer User’s Guide for more details.

   Frame attributes in beamer
       Sometimes it is necessary to add the LaTeX [fragile] option to a frame in beamer (for example, when using
       the  minted  environment).  This can be forced by adding the fragile class to the heading introducing the
       slide:

              # Fragile slide {.fragile}

       All of the other frame attributes described in Section 8.1 of the Beamer User’s Guide may also  be  used:
       allowdisplaybreaks,   allowframebreaks,  b,  c,  s,  t,  environment,  label,  plain,  shrink,  standout,
       noframenumbering, squeeze.  allowframebreaks is recommended especially for bibliographies, as  it  allows
       multiple slides to be created if the content overfills the frame:

              # References {.allowframebreaks}

       In addition, the frameoptions attribute may be used to pass arbitrary frame options to a beamer slide:

              # Heading {frameoptions="squeeze,shrink,customoption=foobar"}

   Background in reveal.js, beamer, and pptx
       Background  images  can  be  added  to self-contained reveal.js slide shows, beamer slide shows, and pptx
       slide shows.

   On all slides (beamer, reveal.js, pptx)
       With beamer and reveal.js, the configuration option background-image can  be  used  either  in  the  YAML
       metadata block or as a command-line variable to get the same image on every slide.

       Note that for reveal.js, the background-image will be used as a parallaxBackgroundImage (see below).

       For pptx, you can use a reference doc in which background images have been set on the relevant layouts.

   parallaxBackgroundImage (reveal.js)
       For  reveal.js,  there  is  also  the  reveal.js-native  option parallaxBackgroundImage, which produces a
       parallax scrolling background.   You  must  also  set  parallaxBackgroundSize,  and  can  optionally  set
       parallaxBackgroundHorizontal  and  parallaxBackgroundVertical  to configure the scrolling behaviour.  See
       the reveal.js documentation for more details about the meaning of these options.

       In reveal.js’s overview mode, the parallaxBackgroundImage will show up only on the first slide.

   On individual slides (reveal.js, pptx)
       To set an image for a particular reveal.js or pptx slide, add {background-image="/path/to/image"} to  the
       first slide-level heading on the slide (which may even be empty).

       As  the  HTML  writers  pass unknown attributes through, other reveal.js background settings also work on
       individual  slides,  including  background-size,  background-repeat,  background-color,  transition,  and
       transition-speed.  (The data- prefix will automatically be added.)

       Note:   data-background-image   is   also   supported  in  pptx  for  consistency  with  reveal.js  –  if
       background-image isn’t found, data-background-image will be checked.

   On the title slide (reveal.js, pptx)
       To  add  a  background  image  to  the  automatically  generated  title  slide  for  reveal.js,  use  the
       title-slide-attributes variable in the YAML metadata block.  It must contain a map of attribute names and
       values.  (Note that the data- prefix is required here, as it isn’t added automatically.)

       For pptx, pass a reference doc with the background image set on the “Title Slide” layout.

   Example (reveal.js)
              ---
              title: My Slide Show
              parallaxBackgroundImage: /path/to/my/background_image.png
              title-slide-attributes:
                  data-background-image: /path/to/title_image.png
                  data-background-size: contain
              ---

              ## Slide One

              Slide 1 has background_image.png as its background.

              ## {background-image="/path/to/special_image.jpg"}

              Slide 2 has a special image for its background, even though the heading has no content.

EPUBS

   EPUB Metadata
       EPUB  metadata may be specified using the --epub-metadata option, but if the source document is Markdown,
       it is better to use a YAML metadata block.  Here is an example:

              ---
              title:
              - type: main
                text: My Book
              - type: subtitle
                text: An investigation of metadata
              creator:
              - role: author
                text: John Smith
              - role: editor
                text: Sarah Jones
              identifier:
              - scheme: DOI
                text: doi:10.234234.234/33
              publisher:  My Press
              rights: © 2007 John Smith, CC BY-NC
              ibooks:
                version: 1.3.4
              ...

       The following fields are recognized:

       identifier
              Either a string value or an object with fields text and  scheme.   Valid  values  for  scheme  are
              ISBN-10,  GTIN-13,  UPC,  ISMN-10,  DOI,  LCCN, GTIN-14, ISBN-13, Legal deposit number, URN, OCLC,
              ISMN-13, ISBN-A, JP, OLCC.

       title  Either a string value, or an object with fields file-as and type,  or  a  list  of  such  objects.
              Valid values for type are main, subtitle, short, collection, edition, extended.

       creator
              Either  a  string  value,  or  an  object  with  fields role, file-as, and text, or a list of such
              objects.  Valid values for role are MARC relators,  but  pandoc  will  attempt  to  translate  the
              human-readable versions (like “author” and “editor”) to the appropriate marc relators.

       contributor
              Same format as creator.

       date   A  string  value  in  YYYY-MM-DD  format.   (Only  the year is necessary.)  Pandoc will attempt to
              convert other common date formats.

       lang (or legacy: language)
              A string value in BCP 47 format.  Pandoc  will  default  to  the  local  language  if  nothing  is
              specified.

       subject
              Either  a  string  value,  or  an  object with fields text, authority, and term, or a list of such
              objects.  Valid values for authority are either a reserved authority value  (currently  AAT,  BIC,
              BISAC,  CLC,  DDC,  CLIL,  EuroVoc,  MEDTOP,  LCSH,  NDC,  Thema, UDC, and WGS) or an absolute IRI
              identifying a custom scheme.  Valid values for term are defined by the scheme.

       description
              A string value.

       type   A string value.

       format A string value.

       relation
              A string value.

       coverage
              A string value.

       rights A string value.

       belongs-to-collection
              A string value.  Identifies the name of a collection to which the EPUB Publication belongs.

       group-position
              The group-position field indicates the numeric position in  which  the  EPUB  Publication  belongs
              relative to other works belonging to the same belongs-to-collection field.

       cover-image
              A string value (path to cover image).

       css (or legacy: stylesheet)
              A string value (path to CSS stylesheet).

       page-progression-direction
              Either ltr or rtl.  Specifies the page-progression-direction attribute for the spine element.

       ibooks iBooks-specific metadata, with the following fields:

              • version: (string)

              • specified-fonts: true|false (default false)

              • ipad-orientation-lock: portrait-only|landscape-only

              • iphone-orientation-lock: portrait-only|landscape-only

              • binding: true|false (default true)

              • scroll-axis: vertical|horizontal|default

   The epub:type attribute
       For  epub3  output,  you  can mark up the heading that corresponds to an EPUB chapter using the epub:type
       attribute.  For example, to set the attribute to the value prologue, use this markdown:

              # My chapter {epub:type=prologue}

       Which will result in:

              <body epub:type="frontmatter">
                <section epub:type="prologue">
                  <h1>My chapter</h1>

       Pandoc will output <body epub:type="bodymatter">, unless you use one of the following  values,  in  which
       case either frontmatter or backmatter will be output.

  epub:type of first section   epub:type of body
  ---------------------------- -------------------
  prologue                     frontmatter
  abstract                     frontmatter
  acknowledgments              frontmatter
  copyright-page               frontmatter
  dedication                   frontmatter
  credits                      frontmatter
  keywords                     frontmatter
  imprint                      frontmatter
  contributors                 frontmatter
  other-credits                frontmatter
  errata                       frontmatter
  revision-history             frontmatter
  titlepage                    frontmatter
  halftitlepage                frontmatter
  seriespage                   frontmatter
  foreword                     frontmatter
  preface                      frontmatter
  frontispiece                 frontmatter
  appendix                     backmatter
  colophon                     backmatter
  bibliography                 backmatter
  index                        backmatter

   Linked media
       By  default,  pandoc  will download media referenced from any <img>, <audio>, <video> or <source> element
       present in the generated EPUB, and include it in the EPUB container, yielding a completely self-contained
       EPUB.  If you want to link to external media resources instead, use raw  HTML  in  your  source  and  add
       data-external="1" to the tag with the src attribute.  For example:

              <audio controls="1">
                <source src="https://example.com/music/toccata.mp3"
                        data-external="1" type="audio/mpeg">
                </source>
              </audio>

       If  the  input  format  already  is HTML then data-external="1" will work as expected for <img> elements.
       Similarly, for Markdown, external images can be declared with ![img](url){external=1}.   Note  that  this
       only works for images; the other media elements have no native representation in pandoc’s AST and require
       the use of raw HTML.

   EPUB styling
       By  default,  pandoc  will include some basic styling contained in its epub.css data file.  (To see this,
       use pandoc --print-default-data-file epub.css.)  To use a different CSS file, just use the --css  command
       line  option.  A few inline styles are defined in addition; these are essential for correct formatting of
       pandoc’s HTML output.

       The document-css variable may be set if the more opinionated styling of pandoc’s default  HTML  templates
       is  desired  (and  in  that case the variables defined in Variables for HTML may be used to fine-tune the
       style).

CHUNKED HTML

       pandoc -t chunkedhtml will produce a zip archive of linked HTML  files,  one  for  each  section  of  the
       original  document.   Internal  links  will automatically be adjusted to point to the right place, images
       linked to under the working directory will be incorporated, and  navigation  links  will  be  added.   In
       addition, a JSON file sitemap.json will be included describing the hierarchical structure of the files.

       If  an  output file without an extension is specified, then it will be interpreted as a directory and the
       zip archive will be automatically unpacked into it (unless it already exists, in which case an error will
       be raised).  Otherwise a .zip file will be produced.

       The navigation links can be customized by adjusting the template.  By default, a  table  of  contents  is
       included only on the top page.  To include it on every page, set the toc variable manually.

JUPYTER NOTEBOOKS

       When  creating a Jupyter notebook, pandoc will try to infer the notebook structure.  Code blocks with the
       class code will be taken as code cells,  and  intervening  content  will  be  taken  as  Markdown  cells.
       Attachments  will automatically be created for images in Markdown cells.  Metadata will be taken from the
       jupyter metadata field.  For example:

              ---
              title: My notebook
              jupyter:
                nbformat: 4
                nbformat_minor: 5
                kernelspec:
                   display_name: Python 2
                   language: python
                   name: python2
                language_info:
                   codemirror_mode:
                     name: ipython
                     version: 2
                   file_extension: ".py"
                   mimetype: "text/x-python"
                   name: "python"
                   nbconvert_exporter: "python"
                   pygments_lexer: "ipython2"
                   version: "2.7.15"
              ---

              # Lorem ipsum

              **Lorem ipsum** dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit. Nunc luctus
              bibendum felis dictum sodales.

              ``` code
              print("hello")
              ```

              ## Pyout

              ``` code
              from IPython.display import HTML
              HTML("""
              <script>
              console.log("hello");
              </script>
              <b>HTML</b>
              """)
              ```

              ## Image

              This image ![image](myimage.png) will be
              included as a cell attachment.

       If you want to add cell attributes, group cells differently, or add output to code cells, then  you  need
       to include divs to indicate the structure.  You can use either fenced divs or native divs for this.  Here
       is an example:

              :::::: {.cell .markdown}
              # Lorem

              **Lorem ipsum** dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit. Nunc luctus
              bibendum felis dictum sodales.
              ::::::

              :::::: {.cell .code execution_count=1}
              ``` {.python}
              print("hello")
              ```

              ::: {.output .stream .stdout}
              ```
              hello
              ```
              :::
              ::::::

              :::::: {.cell .code execution_count=2}
              ``` {.python}
              from IPython.display import HTML
              HTML("""
              <script>
              console.log("hello");
              </script>
              <b>HTML</b>
              """)
              ```

              ::: {.output .execute_result execution_count=2}
              ```{=html}
              <script>
              console.log("hello");
              </script>
              <b>HTML</b>
              hello
              ```
              :::
              ::::::

       If you include raw HTML or TeX in an output cell, use the raw attribute, as shown in the last cell of the
       example above.  Although pandoc can process “bare” raw HTML and TeX, the result is often interspersed raw
       elements and normal textual elements, and in an output cell pandoc expects a single, connected raw block.
       To  avoid  using  raw  HTML  or  TeX  except  when  marked  explicitly using raw attributes, we recommend
       specifying the extensions -raw_html-raw_tex+raw_attribute when translating  between  Markdown  and  ipynb
       notebooks.

       Note  that  options  and extensions that affect reading and writing of Markdown will also affect Markdown
       cells in ipynb notebooks.  For example, --wrap=preserve will preserve soft line breaks in Markdown cells;
       --markdown-headings=setext will cause Setext-style headings to be used; and --preserve-tabs will  prevent
       tabs from being turned to spaces.

SYNTAX HIGHLIGHTING

       Pandoc  will  automatically  highlight syntax in fenced code blocks that are marked with a language name.
       The Haskell library skylighting is used for highlighting.  Currently highlighting is supported  only  for
       HTML,  EPUB, Docx, Ms, and LaTeX/PDF output.  To see a list of language names that pandoc will recognize,
       type pandoc --list-highlight-languages.

       The color scheme can be selected using  the  --highlight-style  option.   The  default  color  scheme  is
       pygments, which imitates the default color scheme used by the Python library pygments (though pygments is
       not  actually  used  to  do  the  highlighting).   To  see  a  list  of  highlight  styles,  type  pandoc
       --list-highlight-styles.

       If you are not satisfied with the predefined styles, you can use --print-highlight-style  to  generate  a
       JSON  .theme  file  which  can  be modified and used as the argument to --highlight-style.  To get a JSON
       version of the pygments style, for example:

              pandoc --print-highlight-style pygments > my.theme

       Then edit my.theme and use it like this:

              pandoc --highlight-style my.theme

       If you are not satisfied with the built-in highlighting, or you want to highlight a language  that  isn’t
       supported,  you  can  use  the --syntax-definition option to load a KDE-style XML syntax definition file.
       Before writing your own, have a look at KDE’s repository of syntax definitions.

       To disable highlighting, use the --no-highlight option.

CUSTOM STYLES

       Custom styles can be used in the docx and ICML formats.

   Output
       By default, pandoc’s docx and ICML output  applies  a  predefined  set  of  styles  for  blocks  such  as
       paragraphs  and block quotes, and uses largely default formatting (italics, bold) for inlines.  This will
       work for most purposes, especially alongside a reference.docx file.  However, if you need to  apply  your
       own styles to blocks, or match a preexisting set of styles, pandoc allows you to define custom styles for
       blocks and text using divs and spans, respectively.

       If  you  define  a div or span with the attribute custom-style, pandoc will apply your specified style to
       the contained elements (with the exception of elements whose function depends on a style, like  headings,
       code blocks, block quotes, or links).  So, for example, using the bracketed_spans syntax,

              [Get out]{custom-style="Emphatically"}, he said.

       would  produce a docx file with “Get out” styled with character style Emphatically.  Similarly, using the
       fenced_divs syntax,

              Dickinson starts the poem simply:

              ::: {custom-style="Poetry"}
              | A Bird came down the Walk---
              | He did not know I saw---
              :::

       would style the two contained lines with the Poetry paragraph style.

       For docx output, styles will be defined in the output file as inheriting from normal text, if the  styles
       are not yet in your reference.docx.  If they are already defined, pandoc will not alter the definition.

       This  feature  allows  for  greatest  customization  in conjunction with pandoc filters.  If you want all
       paragraphs after block quotes to be indented, you can write a filter to apply the styles  necessary.   If
       you  want  all italics to be transformed to the Emphasis character style (perhaps to change their color),
       you can write a filter which will  transform  all  italicized  inlines  to  inlines  within  an  Emphasis
       custom-style span.

       For docx output, you don’t need to enable any extensions for custom styles to work.

   Input
       The  docx reader, by default, only reads those styles that it can convert into pandoc elements, either by
       direct conversion or interpreting the derivation of the input document’s styles.

       By enabling the styles extension in the docx  reader  (-f  docx+styles),  you  can  produce  output  that
       maintains  the  styles  of  the  input  document,  using  the  custom-style  class.  Paragraph styles are
       interpreted as divs, while character styles are interpreted as spans.

       For example, using the custom-style-reference.docx file in the test  directory,  we  have  the  following
       different outputs:

       Without the +styles extension:

              $ pandoc test/docx/custom-style-reference.docx -f docx -t markdown
              This is some text.

              This is text with an *emphasized* text style. And this is text with a
              **strengthened** text style.

              > Here is a styled paragraph that inherits from Block Text.

       And with the extension:

              $ pandoc test/docx/custom-style-reference.docx -f docx+styles -t markdown

              ::: {custom-style="First Paragraph"}
              This is some text.
              :::

              ::: {custom-style="Body Text"}
              This is text with an [emphasized]{custom-style="Emphatic"} text style.
              And this is text with a [strengthened]{custom-style="Strengthened"}
              text style.
              :::

              ::: {custom-style="My Block Style"}
              > Here is a styled paragraph that inherits from Block Text.
              :::

       With  these  custom styles, you can use your input document as a reference-doc while creating docx output
       (see below), and maintain the same styles in your input and output files.

CUSTOM READERS AND WRITERS

       Pandoc can be extended with  custom  readers  and  writers  written  in  Lua.   (Pandoc  includes  a  Lua
       interpreter, so Lua need not be installed separately.)

       To  use  a  custom  reader  or writer, simply specify the path to the Lua script in place of the input or
       output format.  For example:

              pandoc -t data/sample.lua
              pandoc -f my_custom_markup_language.lua -t latex -s

       If the script is not found  relative  to  the  working  directory,  it  will  be  sought  in  the  custom
       subdirectory of the user data directory (see --data-dir).

       A  custom  reader  is  a  Lua script that defines one function, Reader, which takes a string as input and
       returns a Pandoc AST.  See the Lua filters documentation for documentation  of  the  functions  that  are
       available  for  creating  pandoc  AST  elements.   For  parsing, the lpeg parsing library is available by
       default.  To see a sample custom reader:

              pandoc --print-default-data-file creole.lua

       If you want your custom reader to have access to reader options (e.g. the tab  stop  setting),  you  give
       your Reader function a second options parameter.

       A  custom  writer  is a Lua script that defines a function that specifies how to render each element in a
       Pandoc AST.  See the djot-writer.lua for a full-featured example.

       Note that custom writers have no default template.  If you want to use --standalone with a custom writer,
       you will need to specify a template manually using --template or add a new default template with the name
       default.NAME_OF_CUSTOM_WRITER.lua to  the  templates  subdirectory  of  your  user  data  directory  (see
       Templates).

REPRODUCIBLE BUILDS

       Some of the document formats pandoc targets (such as EPUB, docx, and ODT) include build timestamps in the
       generated  document.   That  means that the files generated on successive builds will differ, even if the
       source does not.  To avoid this, set the SOURCE_DATE_EPOCH environment variable, and the  timestamp  will
       be taken from it instead of the current time.  SOURCE_DATE_EPOCH should contain an integer unix timestamp
       (specifying the number of seconds since midnight UTC January 1, 1970).

       Some  document formats also include a unique identifier.  For EPUB, this can be set explicitly by setting
       the identifier metadata field (see EPUB Metadata, above).

ACCESSIBLE PDFS AND PDF ARCHIVING STANDARDS

       PDF is a flexible format, and using  PDF  in  certain  contexts  requires  additional  conventions.   For
       example,  PDFs  are not accessible by default; they define how characters are placed on a page but do not
       contain semantic information on the content.  However, it is possible to generate accessible PDFs,  which
       use tagging to add semantic information to the document.

       Pandoc  defaults  to  LaTeX  to generate PDF.  Tagging support in LaTeX is in development and not readily
       available, so PDFs generated in this way will always be untagged and not  accessible.   This  means  that
       alternative engines must be used to generate accessible PDFs.

       The  PDF  standards  PDF/A and PDF/UA define further restrictions intended to optimize PDFs for archiving
       and accessibility.  Tagging is commonly used in combination with these standards to ensure best results.

       Note, however, that standard compliance depends on many things,  including  the  colorspace  of  embedded
       images.   Pandoc  cannot check this, and external programs must be used to ensure that generated PDFs are
       in compliance.

   ConTeXt
       ConTeXt always produces tagged PDFs, but the quality depends on the input.  The  default  ConTeXt  markup
       generated  by  pandoc  is  optimized  for  readability and reuse, not tagging.  Enable the tagging format
       extension to force markup that is optimized for tagging.  This can be combined with the pdfa variable  to
       generate standard-compliant PDFs.  E.g.:

              pandoc --to=context+tagging -V pdfa=3a

       A  recent  context  version  should  be  used, as older versions contained a bug that lead to invalid PDF
       metadata.

   WeasyPrint
       The HTML-based engine WeasyPrint includes experimental support for PDF/A and  PDF/UA  since  version  57.
       Tagged PDFs can created with

              pandoc --pdf-engine=weasyprint \
                     --pdf-engine-opt=--pdf-variant=pdf/ua-1 ...

       The feature is experimental and standard compliance should not be assumed.

   Prince XML
       The  non-free  HTML-to-PDf  converter  prince  has extensive support for various PDF standards as well as
       tagging.  E.g.:

              pandoc --pdf-engine=prince \
                     --pdf-engine-opt=--tagged-pdf ...

       See the prince documentation for more info.

   Word Processors
       Word processors like LibreOffice and MS Word can also be used to generate  standardized  and  tagged  PDF
       output.   Pandoc  does  not  support  direct  conversions via these tools.  However, pandoc can convert a
       document to a docx or odt file, which can then be opened and converted to PDF with  the  respective  word
       processor.  See the documentation for Word and LibreOffice.

RUNNING PANDOC AS A WEB SERVER

       If  you  rename (or symlink) the pandoc executable to pandoc-server, or if you call pandoc with server as
       the first argument, it will start up a web server with a JSON API.   This  server  exposes  most  of  the
       conversion functionality of pandoc.  For full documentation, see the pandoc-server man page.

       If  you rename (or symlink) the pandoc executable to pandoc-server.cgi, it will function as a CGI program
       exposing the same API as pandoc-server.

       pandoc-server is designed to be maximally secure;  it  uses  Haskell’s  type  system  to  provide  strong
       guarantees that no I/O will be performed on the server during pandoc conversions.

RUNNING PANDOC AS A LUA INTERPRETER

       Calling  the  pandoc  executable under the name pandoc-lua or with lua as the first argument will make it
       function as a standalone Lua interpreter.  The behavior is mostly identical to that of the standalone lua
       executable, version 5.4.  However, there is no REPL yet, and the -i  option  has  no  effect.   For  full
       documentation, see the pandoc-lua man page.

A NOTE ON SECURITY

       1. Although  pandoc  itself  will  not  create or modify any files other than those you explicitly ask it
          create (with the exception of temporary files used in producing PDFs), a filter or custom writer could
          in principle do anything on your file system.  Please audit filters and custom writers very  carefully
          before using them.

       2. Several  input  formats  (including  HTML,  Org,  and  RST)  support include directives that allow the
          contents of a file to be included in the output.  An untrusted attacker could use these  to  view  the
          contents of files on the file system.  (Using the --sandbox option can protect against this threat.)

       3. Several  output  formats  (including  RTF,  FB2, HTML with --self-contained, EPUB, Docx, and ODT) will
          embed encoded or raw images into the output file.  An untrusted attacker could exploit  this  to  view
          the  contents  of non-image files on the file system.  (Using the --sandbox option can protect against
          this threat, but will also prevent including images in these formats.)

       4. If your application uses pandoc as a Haskell library (rather than shelling out to the executable),  it
          is  possible  to  use  it  in  a mode that fully isolates pandoc from your file system, by running the
          pandoc operations in the PandocPure monad.  See the document Using the pandoc API  for  more  details.
          (This corresponds to the use of the --sandbox option on the command line.)

       5. Pandoc’s  parsers  can  exhibit  pathological performance on some corner cases.  It is wise to put any
          pandoc operations under a timeout, to avoid DOS attacks that exploit these issues.  If you  are  using
          the  pandoc  executable,  you can add the command line options +RTS -M512M -RTS (for example) to limit
          the heap size to 512MB.  Note that the commonmark parser (including commonmark_x and gfm) is much less
          vulnerable to pathological performance than the markdown  parser,  so  it  is  a  better  choice  when
          processing untrusted input.

       6. The  HTML  generated  by pandoc is not guaranteed to be safe.  If raw_html is enabled for the Markdown
          input, users can inject arbitrary HTML.  Even if raw_html is disabled,  users  can  include  dangerous
          content  in  URLs  and  attributes.  To be safe, you should run all HTML generated from untrusted user
          input through an HTML sanitizer.

AUTHORS

       Copyright 2006–2022 John MacFarlane (jgm@berkeley.edu).  Released under the GPL, version  2  or  greater.
       This  software carries no warranty of any kind.  (See COPYRIGHT for full copyright and warranty notices.)
       For a full list of contributors, see the file AUTHORS.md in the pandoc source code.

       The  Pandoc  source  code  may  be  downloaded   from   <https://hackage.haskell.org/package/pandoc>   or
       <https://github.com/jgm/pandoc/releases>.  Further documentation is available at <https://pandoc.org>.

pandoc 3.1.11.1                                  January 5, 2024                                       pandoc(1)