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MultiMarkdown is a lightweight markup language created by Fletcher T. Penney as an extension of the Markdown format. It supports additional features not available in plain Markdown syntax. [5] There is also a text editor with the same name that supports multiple export formats. [6]
Prince (formerly Prince XML) is a computer program that converts XML and HTML documents into PDF files by applying Cascading Style Sheets (CSS). Prince is a commercial product, which is free to download and use for non-commercial purposes. [5] Prince supports all common web standards, including HTML, CSS and JavaScript, through its own code.
deskUNPDF: PDF converter to convert PDFs to Word (.doc, docx), Excel (.xls), (.csv), (.txt), more; GSview: File:Convert menu item converts any sequence of PDF pages to a sequence of images in many formats from bit to tiffpack with resolutions from 72 to 204 × 98 (open source software) Google Chrome: convert HTML to PDF using Print > Save as PDF.
Proprietary; export to PDF, HTML, Markdown, CSV Obsidian: Wiki, Tree and Categories: Yes Yes Yes ? No No Plug-In [6] No Yes Yes Yes Yes Markdown, PDF Okular? ? ? No ? Yes [Notes 10] No No No ? ? ? Yes PDF, PS, TIFF, CHM, DjVu, DVI, XPS, ODF, others; export PDF+notes for sending to other Okular users Open-Sankoré: tree, notebooks No No No ? Yes ...
Pandoc is a free-software document converter, widely used as a writing tool (especially by scholars) [2] and as a basis for publishing workflows. [3] It was created by John MacFarlane , a philosophy professor at the University of California, Berkeley .
In 2002 Aaron Swartz created atx and referred to it as "the true structured text format". Gruber created the Markdown language in 2004 with Swartz as his "sounding board". [13] The goal of the language was to enable people "to write using an easy-to-read and easy-to-write plain text format, optionally convert it to structurally valid XHTML (or ...
In Zim, text is written and saved in a lightweight mark-up that is a hybrid of DokuWiki and Markdown. The wiki editor accepts input in either WYSIWYG format or markdown source code. Zim has support for multimedia content. Images can be inserted and displayed directly in pages, and other types of files can be stored as attachments.
DVI or Portable Document Format (PDF) converter Texinfo: 1986 Richard Stallman: Text editor: output to DVI, Portable Document Format (PDF), HTML, DocBook, others. TeXmacs format: 1998 Joris van der Hoeven: Text editor/TeXmacs editor: PDF or PostScript files. Converters exist for TeX/LaTeX and XHTML+Mathml: Textile: 2002 [3] Dean Allen Text editor