[−][src]Crate aldoc
(some of the following information may be subject to change)
Aldoc
aldoc is a markup language, which takes heavy inspiration from Markdown. Its main goal is to provide the beauty and control of LaTeX documents with Markdown's pretty syntax.
Another one of its goals is to remove the quirks that Markdown brings with its original design, such as:
- Different versions and editions of Markdown which mildly in syntax, thus making it unreliable for posting on multiple platforms (GitHub Markdown, original HTML Markdown, Pandoc Markdown, etc.)
- Markdown was not intended for use outside of small documents, such as small notes or READMEs (this one), which led to decisions that impacted the ergonomics in the syntax (pandoc filters) and ended up in the creation of the different variants.
Syntax
The syntax of aldoc is still WIP: what syntax will be the most beneficious has not yet been decided, but still, the one used for testing temporarily is the following:
- Paragraphs are spaced with a blank line between them. (this example cannot be shown on the Rustdoc)
- Unnumbered lists can be written with the
-
or the+
character.- Alement - Belement - Celement
- Enumerated lists can be written in many ways. Aldoc's design allow you to use
any combination of enumerator (
1
,a
,III
) and symbol (.
,)
,-
).- With numbers:
1. Alement 2. Belement 3. Celement
- With letters (uppercase or lowercase):
a) Alement b) Belement c) Celement
- With roman numbers (uppercase or lowercase):
I- Alement II- Belement III- Celement
- With numbers:
- Bold text is written with asterisks around it.
Normal text is written *until the asterisks come around*.
Tool
As a tool, library and Cargo package, it provides an abstraction for the language and also a way to compile the documents to PDF. To do that the following processes takes place:
- The aldoc source is parsed into a Rust abstraction.
- The abstraction is compiled to LaTeX.
- The LaTeX code is compiled to PDF via LatexMk (this step is planned to change)
Usage
To actually compile the document, you only need to provide it with the input file path (.ald) and the output pdf path, like this:
$ aldoc doc.ald compile out.pdf
You may even omit the output file, in which case, aldoc will output a pdf with the same name as the document.
$ aldoc doc.ald compile # outputs pdf as "doc.pdf"
Structs
Document | An Aldoc document abstraction. |
IntoLatex | Compiles into LaTeX. |
IntoPrintable | Compiles into terminal friendly text. |
Enums
AldocError | |
PdfError |
Traits
Compiler | Compiles a document to a different format. |
Functions
parse | Parses raw Aldoc text into a document abstraction. |
save_as_pdf | Saves a document as a PDF with LatexMk. |