This file tests the Pandoc reader for Haddock. We've borrowed examples from Haddock's documentation: . The following characters have special meanings in Haddock, \/, \', \`, \", \@, \<, so they must be escaped. \* This is a paragraph, not a list item. \> This sentence is not code. \>\>\> This is not an example. The references λ, λ and λ all represent the lower-case letter lambda. This is a code block: > map :: (a -> b) -> [a] -> [b] > map _ [] = [] > map f (x:xs) = f x : map f xs This is another code block: @ f x = x + x. The \@...\@ code block /interprets markup normally/. "Module.Foo" \"Hello World\" @ Haddock supports REPL examples: >>> fib 10 55 >>> putStrLn "foo\nbar" foo bar That was /really cool/! I had no idea @fib 10 = 55@. This module defines the type 'T'. The identifier 'M.T' is not in scope I don't have to escape my apostrophes; great, isn't it? This is a reference to the "Foo" module. This is a bulleted list: * first item * second item This is an enumerated list: (1) first item 2. second item This is a definition list: [@foo@] The description of @foo@. [@bar@] The description of @bar@. Here is a link: is a fun language!