% Using the pandoc API % John MacFarlane
Pandoc can be used as a Haskell library, to write your own conversion tools or power a web application. This document offers an introduction to using the pandoc API.
Detailed API documentation at the level of individual functions and types is available at https://hackage.haskell.org/package/pandoc.
Pandoc is structured as a set of readers, which translate various input formats into an abstract syntax tree (the Pandoc AST) representing a structured document, and a set of writers, which render this AST into various input formats. Pictorially:
[input format] ==reader==> [Pandoc AST] ==writer==> [output format]
This architecture allows pandoc to perform
The Pandoc AST is defined in the
pandoc-types
package. You should start by looking at the Haddock
documentation for Text.Pandoc.Definition. As you'll see, a
Pandoc
is composed of some metadata and a list of Block
s.
There are various kinds of Block
, including Para
(paragraph), Header
(section heading), and BlockQuote
. Some
of the Block
s (like BlockQuote
) contain lists of Block
s,
while others (like Para
) contain lists of Inline
s, and still
others (like CodeBlock
) contain plain text or nothing.
Inline
s are the basic elements of paragraphs. The distinction
between Block
and Inline
in the type system makes it
impossible to represent, for example, a link (Inline
) whose
link text is a block quote (Block
). This expressive
limitation is mostly a help rather than a hindrance, since many
of the formats pandoc supports have similar limitations.
The best way to explore the pandoc AST is to use pandoc -t native
, which will display the AST corresponding to some
Markdown input:
% echo -e "1. *foo*\n2. bar" | pandoc -t native
[OrderedList (1,Decimal,Period)
[[Plain [Emph [Str "foo"]]]
,[Plain [Str "bar"]]]]
Here is a simple example of the use of a pandoc reader and writer to perform a conversion:
import Text.Pandoc
import qualified Data.Text as T
import qualified Data.Text.IO as TIO
main :: IO ()
main = do
result <- runIO $ do
doc <- readMarkdown def (T.pack "[testing](url)")
writeRST def doc
rst <- handleError result
TIO.putStrLn rst
Some notes:
-
The first part constructs a conversion pipeline: the input string is passed to
readMarkdown
, and the resulting Pandoc AST (doc
) is then rendered bywriteRST
. The conversion pipeline is "run" byrunIO
---more on that below. -
result
has the typeEither PandocError Text
. We could pattern-match on this manually, but it's simpler in this context to use thehandleError
function from Text.Pandoc.Error. This exits with an appropriate error code and message if the value is aLeft
, and returns theText
if the value is aRight
.
Let's look at the types of readMarkdown
and writeRST
:
readMarkdown :: PandocMonad m => ReaderOptions -> Text -> m Pandoc
writeRST :: PandocMonad m => WriterOptions -> Pandoc -> m Text
The PandocMonad m =>
part is a typeclass constraint.
It says that readMarkdown
and writeRST
define computations
that can be used in any instance of the PandocMonad
type class. PandocMonad
is defined in the module
Text.Pandoc.Class.
Two instances of PandocMonad
are provided: PandocIO
and
PandocPure
. The difference is that computations run in
PandocIO
are allowed to do IO (for example, read a file),
while computations in PandocPure
are free of any side effects.
PandocPure
is useful for sandboxed environments, when you want
to prevent users from doing anything malicious. To run the
conversion in PandocIO
, use runIO
(as above). To run it in
PandocPure
, use runPure
.
As you can see from the Haddocks, Text.Pandoc.Class
exports many auxiliary functions that can be used in any
instance of PandocMonad
. For example:
-- | Get the verbosity level.
getVerbosity :: PandocMonad m => m Verbosity
-- | Set the verbosity level.
setVerbosity :: PandocMonad m => Verbosity -> m ()
-- Get the accumulated log messages (in temporal order).
getLog :: PandocMonad m => m [LogMessage]
getLog = reverse <$> getsCommonState stLog
-- | Log a message using 'logOutput'. Note that 'logOutput' is
-- called only if the verbosity level exceeds the level of the
-- message, but the message is added to the list of log messages
-- that will be retrieved by 'getLog' regardless of its verbosity level.
report :: PandocMonad m => LogMessage -> m ()
-- | Fetch an image or other item from the local filesystem or the net.
-- Returns raw content and maybe mime type.
fetchItem :: PandocMonad m
=> String
-> m (B.ByteString, Maybe MimeType)
-- Set the resource path searched by 'fetchItem'.
setResourcePath :: PandocMonad m => [FilePath] -> m ()
If we wanted more verbose informational messages during the conversion we defined in the previous section, we could do this:
result <- runIO $ do
setVerbosity INFO
doc <- readMarkdown def (T.pack "[testing](url)")
writeRST def doc
Note that PandocIO
is an instance of MonadIO
, so you can
use liftIO
to perform arbitrary IO operations inside a pandoc
conversion chain.
The first argument of each reader or writer is for
options controlling the behavior of the reader or writer:
ReaderOptions
for readers and WriterOptions
for writers. These are defined in Text.Pandoc.Options. It is
a good idea to study these options to see what can be adjusted.
def
(from Data.Default) denotes a default value for
each kind of option. (You can also use defaultWriterOptions
and defaultReaderOptions
.) Generally you'll want to use
the defaults and modify them only when needed, for example:
writeRST def{ writerReferenceLinks = True }
Some particularly important options to know about:
-
writerTemplate
: By default, this isNothing
, which means that a document fragment will be produced. If you want a full document, you need to specifyJust template
, wheretemplate
is aTemplate Text
from Text.Pandoc.Templates containing the template's contents (not the path). -
readerExtensions
andwriterExtensions
: These specify the extensions to be used in parsing and rendering. Extensions are defined in Text.Pandoc.Extensions.
Sometimes it's useful to construct a Pandoc document
programmatically. To make this easier we provide the
module Text.Pandoc.Builder pandoc-types
.
Because concatenating lists is slow, we use special
types Inlines
and Blocks
that wrap a Sequence
of
Inline
and Block
elements. These are instances
of the Monoid typeclass and can easily be concatenated:
import Text.Pandoc.Builder
mydoc :: Pandoc
mydoc = doc $ header 1 (text "Hello!")
<> para (emph (text "hello world") <> text ".")
main :: IO ()
main = print mydoc
If you use the OverloadedStrings
pragma, you can
simplify this further:
mydoc = doc $ header 1 "Hello!"
<> para (emph "hello world" <> ".")
Here's a more realistic example. Suppose your boss says: write
me a letter in Word listing all the filling stations in Chicago
that take the Voyager card. You find some JSON data in this
format (fuel.json
):
[ {
"state" : "IL",
"city" : "Chicago",
"fuel_type_code" : "CNG",
"zip" : "60607",
"station_name" : "Clean Energy - Yellow Cab",
"cards_accepted" : "A D M V Voyager Wright_Exp CleanEnergy",
"street_address" : "540 W Grenshaw"
}, ...
And then use aeson and pandoc to parse the JSON and create the Word document:
{-# LANGUAGE OverloadedStrings #-}
import Text.Pandoc.Builder
import Text.Pandoc
import Data.Monoid ((<>), mempty, mconcat)
import Data.Aeson
import Control.Applicative
import Control.Monad (mzero)
import qualified Data.ByteString.Lazy as BL
import qualified Data.Text as T
import Data.List (intersperse)
data Station = Station{
address :: String
, name :: String
, cardsAccepted :: [String]
} deriving Show
instance FromJSON Station where
parseJSON (Object v) = Station <$>
v .: "street_address" <*>
v .: "station_name" <*>
(words <$> (v .:? "cards_accepted" .!= ""))
parseJSON _ = mzero
createLetter :: [Station] -> Pandoc
createLetter stations = doc $
para "Dear Boss:" <>
para "Here are the CNG stations that accept Voyager cards:" <>
simpleTable [plain "Station", plain "Address", plain "Cards accepted"]
(map stationToRow stations) <>
para "Your loyal servant," <>
plain (image "JohnHancock.png" "" mempty)
where
stationToRow station =
[ plain (text $ name station)
, plain (text $ address station)
, plain (mconcat $ intersperse linebreak
$ map text $ cardsAccepted station)
]
main :: IO ()
main = do
json <- BL.readFile "fuel.json"
let letter = case decode json of
Just stations -> createLetter [s | s <- stations,
"Voyager" `elem` cardsAccepted s]
Nothing -> error "Could not decode JSON"
docx <- runIO (writeDocx def letter) >>= handleError
BL.writeFile "letter.docx" docx
putStrLn "Created letter.docx"
Voila! You've written the letter without using Word and without looking at the data.
Pandoc has a number of data files, which can be found in the
data/
subdirectory of the repository. These are installed
with pandoc (or, if pandoc was compiled with the
embed_data_files
flag, they are embedded in the binary).
You can retrieve data files using readDataFile
from
Text.Pandoc.Class. readDataFile
will first look for the
file in the "user data directory" (setUserDataDir
,
getUserDataDir
), and if it is not found there, it will
return the default installed with the system.
To force the use of the default, setUserDataDir Nothing
.
Pandoc has its own template system, described in the User's
Guide. To retrieve the default template for a system,
use getDefaultTemplate
from Text.Pandoc.Templates.
Note that this looks first in the
templates
subdirectory of the user data directory, allowing
users to override the system defaults. If you want to disable
this behavior, use setUserDataDir Nothing
.
To render a template, use renderTemplate'
, which takes two
arguments, a template (String) and a context (any instance
of ToJSON). If you want to create a context from the metadata
part of a Pandoc document, use metaToJSON'
from
Text.Pandoc.Writers.Shared. If you also want to incorporate
values from variables, use metaToJSON
instead, and make sure
writerVariables
is set in WriterOptions
.
runIO
and runPure
return an Either PandocError a
. All errors
raised in running a PandocMonad
computation will be trapped
and returned as a Left
value, so they can be handled by
the calling program. To see the constructors for PandocError
,
see the documentation for Text.Pandoc.Error.
To raise a PandocError
from inside a PandocMonad
computation,
use throwError
.
In addition to errors, which stop execution of the conversion
pipeline, one can generate informational messages.
Use report
from Text.Pandoc.Class to issue a LogMessage
.
For a list of constructors for LogMessage
, see
Text.Pandoc.Logging. Note that each type of log message
is associated with a verbosity level. The verbosity level
(setVerbosity
/getVerbosity
) determines whether the report
will be printed to stderr (when running in PandocIO
), but
regardless of verbosity level, all reported messages are stored
internally and may be retrieved using getLog
.
It is often useful to walk the Pandoc AST either to extract
information (e.g., what are all the URLs linked to in this
document?, do all the code samples compile?) or to transform a
document (e.g., increase the level of every section header,
remove emphasis, or replace specially marked code blocks with
images). To make this easier and more efficient, pandoc-types
includes a module Text.Pandoc.Walk.
Here's the essential documentation:
class Walkable a b where
-- | @walk f x@ walks the structure @x@ (bottom up) and replaces every
-- occurrence of an @a@ with the result of applying @f@ to it.
walk :: (a -> a) -> b -> b
walk f = runIdentity . walkM (return . f)
-- | A monadic version of 'walk'.
walkM :: (Monad m, Functor m) => (a -> m a) -> b -> m b
-- | @query f x@ walks the structure @x@ (bottom up) and applies @f@
-- to every @a@, appending the results.
query :: Monoid c => (a -> c) -> b -> c
Walkable
instances are defined for most combinations of
Pandoc types. For example, the Walkable Inline Block
instance allows you to take a function Inline -> Inline
and apply it over every inline in a Block
. And
Walkable [Inline] Pandoc
allows you to take a function
[Inline] -> [Inline]
and apply it over every maximal
list of Inline
s in a Pandoc
.
Here's a simple example of a function that promotes the levels of headers:
promoteHeaderLevels :: Pandoc -> Pandoc
promoteHeaderLevels = walk promote
where promote :: Block -> Block
promote (Header lev attr ils) = Header (lev + 1) attr ils
promote x = x
walkM
is a monadic version of walk
; it can be used, for
example, when you need your transformations to perform IO
operations, use PandocMonad operations, or update internal
state. Here's an example using the State monad to add unique
identifiers to each code block:
addCodeIdentifiers :: Pandoc -> Pandoc
addCodeIdentifiers doc = evalState (walkM addCodeId doc) 1
where addCodeId :: Block -> State Int Block
addCodeId (CodeBlock (_,classes,kvs) code) = do
curId <- get
put (curId + 1)
return $ CodeBlock (show curId,classes,kvs) code
addCodeId x = return x
query
is used to collect information from the AST.
Its argument is a query function that produces a result
in some monoidal type (e.g. a list). The results are
concatenated together. Here's an example that returns a
list of the URLs linked to in a document:
listURLs :: Pandoc -> [String]
listURLs = query urls
where urls (Link _ _ (src, _)) = [src]
urls _ = []
All of the functionality of the command-line program pandoc
has been abstracted out in convertWithOpts
in
the module Text.Pandoc.App. Creating a GUI front-end for
pandoc is thus just a matter of populating the Opts
structure and calling this function.
-
Pandoc's parsers can exhibit pathological behavior on some inputs. So it is always a good idea to wrap uses of pandoc in a timeout function (e.g.
System.Timeout.timeout
frombase
) to prevent DoS attacks. -
If pandoc generates HTML from untrusted user input, it is always a good idea to filter the generated HTML through a sanitizer (such as
xss-sanitize
) to avoid security problems. -
Using
runPure
rather thanrunIO
will ensure that pandoc's functions perform no IO operations (e.g. writing files). If some resources need to be made available, a "fake environment" is provided inside the state available torunPure
(seePureState
and its associated functions in Text.Pandoc.Class). It is also possible to write a custom instance ofPandocMonad
that, for example, makes wiki resources available as files in the fake environment, while isolating pandoc from the rest of the system.