ox-pandoc
org-pandoc-import
ox-pandoc | org-pandoc-import | |
---|---|---|
7 | 7 | |
264 | 232 | |
- | - | |
0.0 | 0.0 | |
over 1 year ago | over 1 year ago | |
Emacs Lisp | Emacs Lisp | |
- | GNU General Public License v3.0 only |
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ox-pandoc
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LaTeX and Neovim for technical note-taking
You can use the ox-pandoc library to export from Org Mode in Emacs to 65 different formats (at time of writing) including all the ones you mention.
For some formats that pandoc does not output, there are also specialised ox-format libraries.
There are even several exporters to Github-flavoured markdown. I personally find both ox-pandoc and ox-gfm very useful for that purpose.
https://github.com/kawabata/ox-pandoc
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How to style org mode export to PDF.
Orgmode's page about tools about import & export actually includes both to an entry about export to pandoc (ox-pandoc) as well as import from pandoc (org-pandoc-import).
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I am able to use pandoc from the CLI but I don’t understand how to use pandoc from within emacs. For example to turn a .org to a .docx document.
You need to install some package for that; have a look at https://github.com/kawabata/ox-pandoc for example.
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Assistance with Writing fiction with Emacs
The ox-pandoc package is really useful (you need to have pandoc itself installed) and can export to epub using just the export function of org-mode itself. (That, in turn, is described thoroughly in the org manual.)
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Emacs for a writer looking to quit LibreOffice Writer?
It's always nice to see someone from the humanities interested in Emacs. I suspect that you'll find the best experience by using Org mode + Pandoc. This will let you write in a rather nice plaintext environment, and then export that to a .docx file. I don't think the styling will be great (could well be wrong though), but it should work fairly well :) Importing (from .docx to .org) is likely to be less smooth, but still decent.
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Is it possible to use GNU/Emacs as an alternative of Libreoffice Writer/Ms Word/OnlyOffice?
Can also export directly to word through pandoc as well; there's a package ox-pandoc, which lets you do just that, and you can even include a reference document in case you need to have custom styles added to it.
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Exporting to PDF - Making documents professional rather than academic - any tips?
If you want an easy, bare bones PDF export that is not LaTeX and doesn't require a bunch of fiddling to make it not look an LaTeX article, using ox-pandoc with the "mspdf" export (using pdfroff as the pdf generator) is decent. It doesn't support embedded images, but is otherwise pretty robust.
org-pandoc-import
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Markdown to orgmode without breaking links?
You can try to use https://github.com/tecosaur/org-pandoc-import
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Note taking in markdown?
Ooh, org-pandoc-imoort would be perfect for this! It'll convert your markdown files to org on import, provided you have pandoc installed, and then back when you save!
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How to style org mode export to PDF.
Orgmode's page about tools about import & export actually includes both to an entry about export to pandoc (ox-pandoc) as well as import from pandoc (org-pandoc-import).
- Org Pandoc Import
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Emacs for a writer looking to quit LibreOffice Writer?
It's always nice to see someone from the humanities interested in Emacs. I suspect that you'll find the best experience by using Org mode + Pandoc. This will let you write in a rather nice plaintext environment, and then export that to a .docx file. I don't think the styling will be great (could well be wrong though), but it should work fairly well :) Importing (from .docx to .org) is likely to be less smooth, but still decent.
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Org export to HTML: can I export *only* the body?
The use case is: I maintain a little blog of my own and I use org mode for writing. I previously used Hakyll and Pandoc, but switched to Gatsby a while ago. Because Gatsby doesn't (didn't?) support using Pandoc in the pipeline, I switched to Orga, which provides a transformer for Gatsby. However, I've had a number of issues with Orga, so I'm looking for a replacement. I considered using org-pandoc-import and storing the documents as markdown instead, but I couldn't make it work properly. I'd also like to be able to utilize features such as (sequential) code block line numbering and links to code lines, which I haven't been able to find any support for outside of pure HTML export.
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How to convert a region from Markdown to Org mode syntax?
https://github.com/tecosaur/org-pandoc-import might help?
What are some alternatives?
org-roam - Rudimentary Roam replica with Org-mode
smart-mode-line - A powerful and beautiful mode-line for Emacs.
pandoc - Universal markup converter
orgajs - parse org-mode content into AST
org-ref - org-mode modules for citations, cross-references, bibliographies in org-mode and useful bibtex tools to go with it.
evil-snipe - 2-char searching ala vim-sneak & vim-seek, for evil-mode
github-orgmode-tests - This is a test project where you can explore how github interprets Org-mode files
rte - Rich text editor Elm package
ox-epub - Org mode epub export
orgmode-latex-templates - My org-mode starter codes for exporting to latex/pdf
emacs-multi-compile - emacs package multi-compile
markdown-mode - Emacs Markdown Mode