If pygments fails to lex a source string as the specified highlight
language, Sphinx prints a warning. Previously, that warning did not
include the actual source text, although it does include location
information.
However, in some cases the location information may be missing, there
may be multiple highlighted literals on the same line, or the rST is
automatically generated somehow. In such cases, it can be difficult
to determine the source text that led to the error.
With this change, the source text is included in the warning.
Without this change, local images with `#` in their name result in incorrect URLs
There is already a similar call to `urllib.parse.quote` for file downloads, suggesting this is a sensible approach.
Co-authored-by: Adam Turner <9087854+AA-Turner@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: Takeshi KOMIYA <i.tkomiya@gmail.com>
This is a combination of 2 + 28 + 7 + and some more commits...
* Cherry-pick: Add support for booktabs-style tables to LaTeX builder
* Cherry-pick: Add support for zebra-striped tables to LaTeX builder
Co-authored-by: Stefan Wiehler <stefan.wiehler@missinglinkelectronics.com>
Above work originally initiated by @sephalon (thanks!)
Development refactored and continued by @jfbu
* latex_table_style configuration, support booktabs, colorrows, borderless
Some details:
- Simplify a bit a conditional in the longtable template
This also puts the target for a longtable with a label but no caption
above the toprule for better hyperlinking (testing shows hyperlink
target can not end up alone at bottom of previous page).
- Extend allowed syntax for colour assignments via 'sphinxsetup'
- latex_table_style new configuration value and coloured rows
For the user interface I tried to look for inspiration in
https://docutils.sourceforge.io/docs/user/config.html#table-style
which mentions booktabs and borderless. They also mention
captionbelow which we can implement later, now that architecture
is here. They don't mention coloured rows.
- Test on our own document... looks fine!
- Work-around an incompatibility of \cline with row colours
- Reverse priority of classes to allow overruling booktabs by standard
after parsing source but before letting LaTeX writer act
- Closes#8220
Commit
bb859c6696
already improved a bit, this finishes it (as :rst:dir:`rst-class` was
actually not linking to anywhere).
- Let booktabs style defaults to *not* using \cmidrule. They actually
don't make much sense there, as all \hline's are removed.
- Add \sphinxnorowcolor which allows construct such as this one in
a tabularcolumns directive:
>{\columncolor{blue}\sphinxnorowcolor}
else LaTeX always overrides column colour by row colour
- Add TableMergeColorHeader, TableMergeColorOdd, TableMergeColorEven
so single-row merged cells can be styled especially
- Extend row colours to all header rows not only the first one
(all header rows will share same colour settings)
- Auto-adjust to a no '|'-colspec for optimal handling of merged cell
- Add \sphinxcolorblend
- Workaround LaTeX's \cline features and other grid tables matters
- Add \sphinxbuildwarning for important warnings
- Fix some white gaps in merged cells of tables with vlines and
colorrows
- Work around LaTeX's \cline serious deficiencies for complex grid
tables
This commit corrects \cline badly impacting vertical spacing and
making tables look even more cramped as they usually are in LaTeX
(although one sees it clearly only with \arrarrulewidth a bit more
than the LaTeX default of 0.4pt).
Most importantly this commit solves the problem that \cline's got
masked by colour panels from the row below.
- Update CHANGES for PR #10759
- Improve documentation of new latex_table_style regarding colours
Fix#10188
Footnotes in some LaTeX environments (tables, fulllineitems for object
descriptions) are gathered and appear after the environment, causing the
footnote to possibly appear on a page later than some of the footnote
marks referring it.
With this commit, the footnote mark compares page numbers and
incorporates the destination page number if it turns out to be distinct
from the page where it stands.