

Unless you use their substituters, you'll build multiple GHC versions from Haskell support in Nix is borked, and has been for a long time). Warning: this uses haskell.nix infrastructure for builds (because Nix develop github:lierdakil/pandoc-crossref By far the easiest way to get those is via ghcup.ĭescribing using ghcup is out of scope for this small guide, but TL DR is this: You'll need to get GHC and cabal-install installed first.
CABAL CODE ZERO DOWNLOAD WINDOWS
NOTE: Linux and Windows binaries are packed with upx (not macOS though, since upx apparently has questionable interactions with Apple's x86 emulation on A1 processors). Version of pandoc available, for which there are no pandoc-crossref builds.
CABAL CODE ZERO DOWNLOAD FREE
Feel free to open issues if there's a new Version matches the version pandoc-crossref was built against, otherwise WARNING: When using pre-built executables, make sure that your pandoc Feel free to open issues if thoseĭon't work though, I'll try to do what I can. Such, provided as-is, with zero guarantees.

The easiest option to get pandoc-crossref on Windows, macOS, or Linux, is toĭownload pre-built executables available at the releasesīear in mind that those are a product of automated build scripts, and as Should mimic metadata configuration by setting header-includes

It also tries to supplement rudimentary LaTeX configuration that Pandoc-eqnos by package tries to use LaTeX labels and references if output type is You need to specify -M chapters for non-LaTeX/PDF You can also enable per-chapter numbering (as with -chapters for Optionally, you can use cleveref for LaTeX/PDF output, e.g. Pandoc-crossref is a pandoc filter for numbering figures, equations,
