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According to the CSL manual, the default entry spacing is 1.
We were treating it as 0.
T.P.Citeproc: always include an entry-spacing attribute
in the Div if the bibliography element contains an entry-spacing
attribute (previously we omitted it when it was 0).
LaTeX writer: use entry spacing 1 if no entry-spacing
attribute is present.
Update tests.
See #9058.
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Update tests.
Reason: it turns out that the native output generated by
pretty-simple isn't always readable by the native reader.
According to https://github.com/cdepillabout/pretty-simple/issues/99
it is not a design goal of the library that the rendered values
be readable using 'read'. This makes it unsuitable for our
purposes.
pretty-show is a bit slower and it uses 4-space indents
(non-configurable), but it doesn't have this serious drawback.
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Previously we used our own homespun formatting. But this
produces over-long lines that aren't ideal for diffs in tests.
Easier to use something off-the-shelf and standard.
Closes #7580.
Performance is slower by about a factor of 10, but this isn't
really a problem because native isn't suitable as a serialization
format. (For serialization you should use json, because the reader
is so much faster than native.)
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Previously, using `--citeproc` could cause punctuation to move in
quotes even when there aer no citations. This has been changed;
now, punctuation moving is limited to citations.
In addition, we only move footnotes around punctuation if the
style is a note style, even if `notes-after-punctuation` is `true`.
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This affected author-in-text citations in footnotes.
It didn't cause problems for the printed output, but for
filters that expected the citation id and other information.
Closes #6890.
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