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I'm using pandoc to convert some markdown documents to .html via a custom css file.

Everything is working except one thing. From what I understand the text in backticks `` should be white space significant, since it is usually code inside. In my case, it is not - in other words, it just looks like ordinary other text.

I'm interested in where is that regulated in pandoc, or in a custom css file - what css attribute regulates whether the white space should be significant?

2 Answers 2

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Pandoc will put text between backticks inside HTML <code> tags. Leading and trailing whitespace are ignored (as in Markdown.pl), but internal spaces are preserved. Newlines are treated as spaces. Check the HTML source to make sure you have the <code> tags. If you don't, then there is probably a problem with your markdown source. Also check to make sure you're not linking to CSS that overrides the default settings for <code> tags.

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  • I'm using a custom css file, and it doesn't seem to be preserving blanks. Don't know why.
    – Rook
    Mar 11, 2012 at 12:43
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The css property you're looking for is white-space.

I was having the same problem, and it was because of this css:

pre {
  white-space: pre-line;
}

To fix it I added white-space: pre-wrap; to the code rule:

code {
  font-family: "Menlo", "Courier New", "Courier", monospace;
  font-size: 0.85rem;
  border: 0.0625rem solid rgba(255,255,255,0.7);
  background-color: rgba(255,255,255,0.5);
  border-radius: 2px; color: #2DAB5F; /* #2DAB5F */
  text-shadow: none;
  white-space: pre-wrap;
}

You can see all of the white-space options here.

The two you're probably interested in are:

pre: Whitespace is preserved by the browser. Text will only wrap on line breaks. Acts like the tag in HTML

pre-wrap: Whitespace is preserved by the browser. Text will wrap when necessary, and on line breaks

The css I'm using has a max width, so it's not uncommon for line wrapping to happen. I preferred pre-wrap, which wraps on words, as opposed pre which will wrap in the middle of a word.

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