Hello Emmanuel,
The filter tricks Paul told you will work when not using --no-headers,
so you've got the default txt2tags generated headers. Then smart
filters (postproc) can change the code to your needs.
But as you're using your customized headers, txt2tags leaves to you
the task to fill them.
Hello Barrie,
The solution here is simple: just close the nested list with the empty item:
p0
- p1
p2
- a1
- b1
-
p3
- a2
- b2
-
p4
This "empty item closes current list" mark was created just to be used
in this specific situation, where nested list couldn't be closed
with
Hello Aurelio,
Aurélio Jargas a écrit :
> Hello Emmanuel,
>
> The filter tricks Paul told you will work when not using --no-headers,
> so you've got the default txt2tags generated headers. Then smart
> filters (postproc) can change the code to your needs.
>
> But as you're using your customized
Hello Emmanuel,
On Fri, Feb 6, 2009 at 12:54, Emmanuel Godard
wrote:
> I appreciate your suggestion, but I am really looking for something
> *simple*. Actually, I already have my own homemade (sed m4 perl) scripts
> and I want to migrate everything to txt2tags (because it is multi
> targets and
paul+...@blakecomp.co.uk a écrit :
> I use postproc lines to change the headers where necessary:
>
> add text to the title:
> %!postproc(xhtml): '' ' - friendly matches, Sunday cricket,
> Surrey & Hants'
>
That means that you are using something like
%!include(html):header.html, no? As I said, I
On Fri, Feb 06, 2009 at 11:43:05AM -0200, Aur?lio Jargas wrote:
> The solution here is simple: just close the nested list with the empty item:
>
> p0
> - p1
>
> p2
> - a1
> - b1
> -
> p3
> - a2
> - b2
> -
> p4
>
> This "empty item closes current list" mark was created just