This is a set of tests for pandoc Textile Reader. Part of it comes from John Gruber's markdown test suite. ----- h1. Headers h2. Level 2 with an "embeded link":http://www.example.com h3. Level 3 with *emphasis* h4. Level 4 h5. Level 5 h6. Level 6 h1. Paragraphs Here's a regular paragraph. Line breaks are preserved in textile, so you can not wrap your very long paragraph with your favourite text editor and have it rendered with no break. Here's one with a bullet. * criminey. There should be a paragraph break between here and here. pandoc converts textile. h1. Block Quotes bq. This is a famous quote from somebody. He had a lot of things to say, so the text is really really long and spans on multiple lines. And a following paragraph. h1. Code Blocks Code:
    ---- (should be four hyphens)

    sub status {
        print "working";
    }

	this code block is indented by one tab
And:
		this code block is indented by two tabs

    These should not be escaped:  \$ \\ \> \[ \{
bc. Code block with .bc continued @@, @. h1. Notextile A block of text can be protected with notextile : No *bold* and * no bullet and inlines can be protected with ==double *equals (=)* markup==. h1. Lists h2. Unordered Asterisks tight: * asterisk 1 * asterisk 2 * asterisk 3 h2. Ordered Tight: # First # Second # Third h2. Nested * ui 1 ** ui 1.1 ### oi 1.1.1 ### oi 1.1.2 ** ui 1.2 * ui 2 ## oi 2.1 *** ui 2.1.1 *** ui 2.1.2 h2. Definition List - coffee := Hot and black - tea := Also hot, but a little less black - milk := Nourishing beverage for baby cows. Cold drink that goes great with cookies.=: - beer := fresh and bitter h1. Inline Markup This is _emphasized_, and so __is this__. This is *strong*, and so **is this**. Hyphenated-words-are-ok, as well as strange_underscore_notation. A "*strong link*":http://www.foobar.com. _*This is strong and em.*_ So is *_this_* word and __**that one**__. -This is strikeout and *strong*- Superscripts: a[^bc^]d a^*hello*^ a[^hello there^]. Subscripts: ~here~ H[~2~]O, H[~23~]O, H[~many of them~]O. Dashes : How cool -- automatic dashes. Elipses : He thought and thought ... and then thought some more. Quotes and apostrophes : "I'd like to thank you" for example. h1. Links h2. Explicit Just a "url":http://www.url.com "Email link":mailto:nobody@nowhere.net Automatic linking to http://www.example.com and foobar@example.com. "Example":http://www.example.com/: Example of a link followed by a colon. h1. Tables Textile allows tables with and without headers : h2. Without headers | name | age | sex | | joan | 24 | f | | archie | 29 | m | | bella | 45 | f | and some text following ... h2. With headers |_. name |_. age |_. sex | | joan | 24 | f | | archie | 29 | m | | bella | 45 | f | h1. Images Textile inline image syntax, like here !this_is_an_image.png(this is the alt text)! and here !this_is_an_image.png!. h1. Attributes h2{color:red}. HTML and CSS attributes are ignored as well as *(foo)inline attributes* of %{color:red} all kind% p{color:green}. and paragraph attributes, and table attributes. table{foo:bar}. | name | age | sex | | joan | 24 | f | h1. Raw HTML However, raw HTML inlines are accepted, as well as :
any *Raw HTML Block* with bold
Html blocks can be
inlined
as well. * this
won't produce raw html blocks
* but this will produce inline html Can you prove that 2 < 3 ? h1. Raw LaTeX This Textile reader also accepts raw LaTeX for blocks : \begin{itemize} \item one \item two \end{itemize} and for \emph{inlines}. h1. Acronyms and marks PBS(Public Broadcasting System) Hi(tm) Hi (TM) (r) Hi(r) Hi(c)2008 (C) 2008 h1. Footnotes A note.[1] fn1. The note is here!