Difference between revisions of "Convert text documents with Pandoc"

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<code>-o</code> or <code>--output</code> Option for file output
<code>-o</code> or <code>--output</code> Option for file output


For example, using the command tells pandoc to use the file example.md, change it from markdown to html, with the file output to be example.html:
For example, using the command tells pandoc to use the file <code>example.md</code>, change it from <code>markdown</code> to <code>html</code>, with the output file to be named <code>example.html</code>:


<pre>pandoc example.md -f markdown -t html -o example.html</pre>
<pre>pandoc example.md -f markdown -t html -o example.html</pre>


This will save a new version of the file, in html in the same directory the command is run from.
This will save a new version of the file <code>example.html</code>, in html in the same directory the command is run from.


== Convert plain text Markdown to PDF ==
== Convert plain text Markdown to PDF ==

Revision as of 15:27, 11 October 2021

https://pandoc.org

Pandoc is a "universal document converter" which converts from one markup language to another. Here are some basic recipes for converting documents.

You can find instructions for installation on the Pandoc website for your particular operating system. Once you have pandoc installed, open a terminal session to use its command line interface.

More extensive documentation is available in the official Pandoc manual or through the command line by typing

man pandoc

Common pandoc arguments

-f or --from Option which is followed by the input format;

-t or --to Option which is followed by the output format;

-o or --output Option for file output

For example, using the command tells pandoc to use the file example.md, change it from markdown to html, with the output file to be named example.html:

pandoc example.md -f markdown -t html -o example.html

This will save a new version of the file example.html, in html in the same directory the command is run from.

Convert plain text Markdown to PDF

Markdown-formatted files can be saved in either .txt or .md formats. Both are plain text formats. You can easily convert these pages into PDFs with flowing text, using a pdf engine.

For this, you need to have an up-to-date version of BasicTeX installed. On Mac, first install with homebrew:

brew install BasicTex

This may take a while, and after installing BasicTex, you should close the terminal session and then begin a new one. Once you are in a directory that contains a plain text you want to convert (e.g. MANUAL.txt or example.md), you can run commands to convert these into PDF using the pdf engine xelatex.

Using a .md file

pandoc MANUAL.md --pdf-engine=xelatex -o example13.pdf

Using a .txt file

pandoc MANUAL.txt --pdf-engine=xelatex -o example13.pdf

Convert HTML files

Example 1: Convert an HTML string to Markdown

Enter a string of HTML and pipe it to pandoc:

echo "<h1>Hello Pandoc</h1><p>from html to markdown</p>" | pandoc -f html -t markdown

Example 2: Convert a MediaWiki file to HTML

  1. Save the content of a wiki page on to a plain-text file, example: page.wiki
  2. Convert:
pandoc page.wiki -f mediawiki -t html -o page.html