AsciiDoc
AsciiDoc is a human-readable document format, semantically equivalent to DocBook XML, but using plain-text mark-up conventions. AsciiDoc documents can be created using any text editor and read “as-is”, or rendered to HTML or any other format supported by a DocBook tool-chain, i.e. PDF, TeX, Unix manpages, e-books, slide presentations, etc.[2] Common file extensions for AsciiDoc files are The AsciiDoc format is undergoing standardization by the Eclipse Foundation.[5][6] HistoryEarly history
AsciiDoc was created in 2002 by Stuart Rackham, who published tools (‘asciidoc’ and ‘a2x’), written in the Python programming language to convert plain-text, ‘human readable’ files to commonly used published document formats.[2] A Ruby implementation called ‘Asciidoctor’, released in 2013. An implementation is also available in the Java ecosystem using JRuby and in the JavaScript ecosystem using Opal.js. Further implementations exist in Haskell and Go. Standardization and primacy of Asciidoctor (2019 – present)Since the beginning of the standardization process in 2019, the Asciidoctor project has aimed to produce an The beginning of the standardization process in 2019 coincided with the release of Asciidoctor 2.0 and several parts of syntax being deprecated, such as single quotation marks ( The original Python implementation by Stuart Rackham continues to be developed under the moniker of AsciiDoc.py. Since 2021, it is described as Notable applications
Most of the Git project documentation is written in AsciiDoc.[12] Some of O'Reilly Media's books and e-books are authored using AsciiDoc mark-up.[13] Red Hat's product documentation is written in AsciiDoc. Asciidoctor is usable within GitHub[14] and GitLab.[15] ExampleThe following shows text using AsciiDoc mark-up, and a rendering similar to that produced by an AsciiDoc processor:
Tools
See alsoReferences
External links
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