Syntax is the same as {{#include}} except with a shift value and colon
before the remaining arguments, e.g.
{{#include -2:somefile.rs:myanchor}}
A positive value for the shift prepends spaces to each line.
A negative value for the shift removes chars from the beginning of each
line (including non-whitespace chars, although this will emit an error
log).
* Removed the itertools dependency
* Removed an unused feature flag
* Stubbed out a toml_query replacement
* Update dependencies.
* Bump env_logger.
* Use warp instead of iron for http server.
Iron does not appear to be maintained anymore. warp/hyper seems to be
reasonably maintained. Unfortunately this takes a few seconds more
to compile, but shouldn't be too bad.
One benefit is that there is no longer a need for a separate websocket
port, which makes it easier to run multiple servers at once.
* Update pulldown-cmark to 0.7
* Switch from error-chain to anyhow.
* Bump MSRV to 1.39.
* Update elasticlunr-rs.
Co-authored-by: Michael Bryan <michaelfbryan@gmail.com>
* Allow underscores in the link type name
* Add some tests for include anchors
* Include parts of Rust files and hide the rest
Fixes#618.
* Increase min supported Rust version to 1.35
* Add a test for a behavior of rustdoc_include I want to depend on
At first I thought this was a bug, but then I looked at some use cases
we have in TRPL and decided this was a feature that I'd like to use.
* Add index preprocessor
README.md is a de facto index file in markdown-based documentation.
Hence, we respect to README.md and convert it into index.html.
* Fix warning for unused variables
* Update tests for config
* Match file stem case-insensitively for IndexPreprocessor
* Add tests for IndexPreprocessor
* Update book example to fit index preprocessor
* Add search with elasticlunr.js
This commit adds search functionality to mdBook, based on work done by @phaiax. The in-browser search code uses elasticlunr.js to execute the search, using an index generated at book build time by elasticlunr-rs.
* Add generator comment
Someone on Reddit was wondering how the rust book was generated and said they checked the source. Thought I'd put this here. Might be a good idea to have a little footer "made with mdBook", but this'll do for now.
* Remove search/editor file override behavior
* Use for loop for book iterator
* Improve HTML regex
* Fix search CORS in file URIs
* Use ammonia to sanitize HTML
* Filter html5ever log messages
* Created regression tests for the table of contents
* Refactoring to make the test more readable
* Fixed some bitrot and removed the (now redundant) tests/helper module
* Removed the include_str!() stuff and use just the dummy book for testing
* Regression tests now pass again!
* Pinned a `*` dependency to use a particular version
* Made sure test mocks return errors instead of panicking
* Addressed the rest of @budziq's review
* Replaced a file open/read with file_to_string