Greetings is a friendly Lua filter that adds a welcoming message to the document.
This repository serves as a template intended to make publishing of pandoc Lua filters easy and convenient. Just click "use this template" and then make modifications in your new repository. See also the GitHub documentation on creating a repository from a template.
This section describes how to use the template.
A few things should be updated in the repository after cloning this template. You can use the checklist below to ensure that you get the most out of it. We recommend that you perform at least the first two steps, everything else is up to you.
-
Use template: Create a new repo from this template. Use the name that you want to give your filter as a repository name. E.g., a repository for filter
greetings.lua
should be namedgreetings
. -
Clone your new repository: Run
git clone
to fetch your new repository. -
Setup the filter: the easiest way to setup the repository is to run
make setup
This will update the README, remove the template-specific documentation, and rename the filter; the repository name is used to determine the new filter name.
-
Update the README: Describe your filter, so people will know what to expect. You may also want to update the URLs in the links above to match your repository.
-
(optional) Setup Quarto extension: This step is recommended if you want to make it easy for Quarto users to install and use your filter: Quarto expects the filter to be placed in the
_extensions
folder, packed together with a YAML file containing relevant metadata. Runmake quarto-extension
to generate the necessary files and directories. You should commit the generated files to source control. See also the
quarto-extension
documentation below. -
(optional) Tag a release: The easiest way to create a new release is to run
make release VERSION=0.0.1
. This will update the Quarto extension, commit the changes, then tag the resulting commit with the given VERSION. This step is recommended if the filter is distributed as a Quarto extension.
The repository comes with a Makefile
intended to make developing
a filter a pleasant experience. You may want to adjust some of the
targets while keeping the general structure.
Use the Makefile with make ...
, where ...
denotes one of the
targets listed in this section.
Tests the filter. This target runs your filter on file
test/input.md
and compares the result with
test/expected.native
. The latter file is also a valid make
target; invoke it to regenerate the expected output.
You may want to modify this target if your filter is intended for
a specific output format. E.g., if the filter only works for HTML
output, you may choose to replace test/expected.native
with
test/expected.html
, and to compare that file instead.
The test configs are kept in file test/test.yaml
. The file is
generated on demand, but you may want to check it into source
control and modify it as needed.
This target sets the repository up to be used as a Quarto
extension. The target will create the directory structure expected
by quarto. It will also generate a _extension.yml
metadata file.
Invoking this target will move the main .lua
file below the
_extensions
directory; the the original file will be replaced
with a symlink.
Creates a new release for the given version. The version must be passed as a variable:
make release VERSION=1.0.0
The release
target depends on quarto-extension
.
Run this target after renaming the filter file. It will update the name in all other files.
Generates a website for this filter. The website will contain the
contents of this README, an example generated from the test input,
as well as the full filter code. The page components are combined
with the .tools/docs.lua
filter.
The repository template comes with a GitHub Action to publish a website via GitHub pages. It expects the new "GitHub Actions" source to be used for Pages.
Remove the file .github/workflows/website.lua
to disable this
feature.
The filter modifies the internal document representation; it can be used with many publishing systems that are based on pandoc.
Pass the filter to pandoc via the --lua-filter
(or -L
) command
line option.
pandoc --lua-filter greetings.lua ...
Users of Quarto can install this filter as an extension with
quarto install extension tarleb/greetings
and use it by adding greetings
to the filters
entry
in their YAML header.
---
filters:
- greetings
---
Use pandoc_args
to invoke the filter. See the R Markdown
Cookbook
for details.
---
output:
word_document:
pandoc_args: ['--lua-filter=greetings.lua']
---
This pandoc Lua filter is published under the MIT license, see
file LICENSE
for details.