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| 1 | +% gitit-Jg.tex |
1 | 2 | \begin{hcarentry}[updated]{gitit}
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2 | 3 | \label{gitit}
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3 |
| -\report{John MacFarlane}%11/09 |
4 |
| -\participants{John MacFarlane, Gwern Branwen, Simon Michael, Henry Laxen, Anton |
| 4 | +\report{John MacFarlane}%11/10 |
| 5 | +\participants{Gwern Branwen, Simon Michael, Henry Laxen, Anton |
5 | 6 | van Straaten, Robin Green, Thomas Hartman, Justin Bogner, Kohei Ozaki,
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6 | 7 | Dmitry Golubovsky, Anton Tayanovskyy, Dan Cook, Jinjing Wang}
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7 | 8 | \status{active development}
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8 | 9 | \makeheader
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9 | 10 |
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10 |
| -Gitit is a wiki built on Happstack and backed by a git, darcs, or mercurial |
| 11 | +Gitit is a wiki built on Happstack~\cref{happstack} and backed by a git, darcs, or mercurial |
11 | 12 | filestore. Pages and uploaded files can be modified either directly
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12 | 13 | via the VCS's command-line tools or through the wiki's web interface.
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13 | 14 | Pandoc~\cref{pandoc} is used for markup processing, so pages may be written in
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14 | 15 | (extended) markdown, reStructuredText, LaTeX, HTML, or literate Haskell,
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15 |
| -and exported in eleven different formats, including LaTeX, ConTeXt, |
16 |
| -DocBook, RTF, OpenOffice ODT, MediaWiki markup, and PDF. |
| 16 | +and exported in thirteen different formats, including LaTeX, ConTeXt, |
| 17 | +DocBook, RTF, OpenOffice ODT, MediaWiki markup, EPUB, and PDF. |
17 | 18 |
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18 | 19 | Notable features of gitit include:
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19 |
| -\begin{itemize} |
| 20 | +\begin{compactitem} |
20 | 21 | \item
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21 | 22 | Plugins: users can write their own dynamically loaded page transformations,
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22 | 23 | which operate directly on the abstract syntax tree.
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33 | 34 | easy to include a gitit wiki (or wikis) in any Happstack application.
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34 | 35 | \item
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35 | 36 | Literate Haskell: Pages can be written directly in literate Haskell.
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36 |
| -\end{itemize} |
| 37 | +\end{compactitem} |
37 | 38 |
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38 | 39 | \FurtherReading
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39 | 40 | \url{http://gitit.net} (itself
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