Having an alias function that only wraps another one is silly, and
keeping the more obvious name should flush out more uses of deprecated
strings.
No behavior change.
With this patch, the blocks in a markdown document render a vector of
lines. These lines get concatenated in Document::render_to_terminal, so
this does not change any external APIs of LibMarkdown.
This change makes it possible to indent individual lines in the rendered
markdown. So, rendering blockquotes in a similar way to code blocks :^)
When parsing a code block not in a section (in a file without a
heading), the parser would initialize the code block with an
uninitialized (invalid) value for current_section. Accessing this value
would later cause a segmentation fault in render_to_terminal.
We have a new, improved string type coming up in AK (OOM aware, no null
state), and while it's going to use UTF-8, the name UTF8String is a
mouthful - so let's free up the String name by renaming the existing
class.
Making the old one have an annoying name will hopefully also help with
quick adoption :^)
Each of these strings would previously rely on StringView's char const*
constructor overload, which would call __builtin_strlen on the string.
Since we now have operator ""sv, we can replace these with much simpler
versions. This opens the door to being able to remove
StringView(char const*).
No functional changes.
This also improves Commonmark coverage, e.g. it fixes tests
HTML_blocks_ex179_2894..2906 and Lists_ex308_5439..5457.
In other words, we go from 271 out of 652 to 273 out of 652.
From the commonmark spec:
A list is loose if any of its constituent list items are separated by
blank lines, or if any of its constituent list items directly contain
two block-level elements with a blank line between them. Otherwise a
list is tight. (The difference in HTML output is that paragraphs in a
loose list are wrapped in <p> tags, while paragraphs in a tight list are
not.)