legal_markdown 0.1.5 → 0.2.0
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- data/.gitignore +2 -2
- data/.ruby-gemset +1 -0
- data/.ruby-version +1 -0
- data/README.md +186 -86
- data/bin/legal2md +7 -0
- data/legal_markdown.gemspec +2 -2
- data/lib/legal_markdown/make_yaml_frontmatter.rb +115 -0
- data/lib/legal_markdown/roman-numerals.rb +77 -0
- data/lib/legal_markdown/version.rb +1 -1
- data/lib/legal_markdown.rb +272 -276
- metadata +16 -26
- data/bin/md2legal +0 -7
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# Introduction
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This gem will parse YAML Front Matter of Markdown Documents. Typically, this gem would be called with a md renderer, such as [Pandoc](http://johnmacfarlane.net/pandoc/), that would turn the md into a document such as a .pdf file or a .docx file. By combining this pre-processing with a markdown renderer, you can ensure that both the structured content and the structured styles necessary for your firm or organization are more strictly enforced. Plus you won't have to deal with Word any longer, and every lawyer should welcome that. Why? Because Word is awful.
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This gem will parse YAML Front Matter of Markdown Documents. Typically, this gem would be called with a md renderer, such as [Pandoc](http://johnmacfarlane.net/pandoc/), that would turn the md into a document such as a .pdf file or a .docx file. By combining this pre-processing with a markdown renderer, you can ensure that both the structured content and the structured styles necessary for your firm or organization are more strictly enforced. Plus you won't have to deal with Word any longer, and every lawyer should welcome that. Why? Because Word is awful.
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Gitlaw is markdown agnostic at this point and needs to be called independently of any markdown renderer. It is easy enough to build it into your work flow by editing the way that your markdown renderer is called. For instance you can call this file just before pandoc builds it.
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Gitlaw is markdown agnostic (indeed, it probably does not depend on markdown, or any of its flavors at all and *should* work with ASCII or other text based documents) at this point and needs to be called independently of any markdown renderer. It is easy enough to build it into your work flow by editing the way that your markdown renderer is called. For instance you can call this file just before pandoc builds it.
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## What Does the Gem Allow For?
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## How to Install This Gem?
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It is very simple. But first you must have ruby installed on your system.
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It is very simple. But first you must have ruby installed on your system. If you are on OS X then it comes standard on your machine and you do not need to do anything. If you are on Windows then the easiest way to install ruby is install 1.9.3 or higher from [rubyinstaller](http://rubyinstaller.org/). If you are on Linux, then you don't need help. Once you have ruby installed then you simply go to your terminal and type: `$> gem install legal_markdown`.
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If you are looking to try out the gem, and you use [Sublime Text](http://www.sublimetext.com/) as your text editor, then you can easily install my `legal_markdown` package by visiting the repo [here](https://github.com/compleatang/Legal-Markdown-Sublime). If you install the package there is no need to install the gem, but you will still have to install ruby.
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## How to Use This Gem?
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After the gem has finished its installation on your system then you can simply type `$>
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After the gem has finished its installation on your system then you can simply type `$> legal2md [filename]` where the filename is the file (in whatever flavor of markdown you use). The gem will parse the file and output the same filename.
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If you prefer to output as a different filename (which will allow you to keep the YAML front-matter), then you simply type `$> legal2md [input-filename] [output-filename]`.
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If you have been working on a template or document and would like the gem to build the YAML Front-Matter (see below) automatically for you, then simply type `$> legal2md --headers [filename]`.
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# YAML Front-Matter
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[YAML](http://www.yaml.org/spec/1.2/spec.html) is
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[YAML](http://www.yaml.org/spec/1.2/spec.html) is easy thing to create. At the top of your file (it MUST be at the top of the file) you simply put in three hyphens like so: `---` on a single line. Then on the next line you simply put in the `field` followed by a `:` (colon) followed by the `value`. For each line you put the `[field]: [value]` until you have filled everything in that you need. After you have put in all your YAML front-matter then you simply put in a single line with three more hyphens `---` to signal to the gem that it is the end of the fields. So this would look like this:
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```
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---
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party1_address: "Muj Axmed Jimcaale Road, Hargeisa, Republic of Somaliland"
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party1_full: "Watershed Legal Services, Ltd."
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party1_reg: the Republic of Somaliland
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party1_rep: "# Casey Kuhlman"
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party1_short: "(\"Watershed\")"
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party1_type: private company limited by shares
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---
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```
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There are a few fields that will be treated uniquely. The three fields in the example above (title: , author: , and date: ) will be replaced with the Pandoc fields as appropriate. Perhaps later we can (as a community) build out this functionality for other renderers but for now I've only built it to use Pandoc. If you don't use Pandoc then you can simply omit these fields and there will be no problem.
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**Note**: YAML can be quite testy, so if you use any symbols or parentheses or square brackets, etc. just put the entire field inside of double quotes ("). Also, if you need double quotes within the value then you "escape" them by putting a backslash before the double quotes.
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# Mixins
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Mixins are straight-forward they are simple markers that can be used throughout the text to identify certain things (Court) or (Company) or (Client) to identify a few. This allows for the creation and utilization of templates that can be reused by simply updating the YAML front-matter.
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Mixins are straight-forward they are simple markers that can be used throughout the text to identify certain things (Court) or (Company) or (Client) to identify a few. The example above is the YAML Front Matter for mixins. This allows for the creation and utilization of templates that can be reused by simply updating the YAML front-matter.
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Mixins are structured in the form of **double curly** brackets. So, for a `{{court}}` mixin within the body of your document, the YAML front-matter would look like this:
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```
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court: Regional Court of Hargeisa
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```
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If you do not want a mixin turned on for a particular document just add the mixin in the YAML Frontmatter and then leave it blank. Legal_markdown will replace the mixin with an empty string so in the parsed document it will be out of your way.
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## Optional Clauses Function
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When building templates for contracts, you often build in optional clauses or you build clauses that are mutually exclusive to one another. This functionality is supported by legal_markdown. Here is how to build an optional clause.
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In the body of your document you put the entire clause in square-brackets (as you likely normally would) and at the beginning of the square bracket you put a mixin titled however. In the YAML Front-Matter you simply add "true" or "false" to turn that entire clause on or off. **Note**, if you do not add the mixin to your header, legal_markdown is just going to leave it as is.
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You are able to nest one optional clause inside of another. However, if you do so, make sure that you include all of the sub-provisions of the master provision in the YAML matter, else legal_markdown will not be able to understand when it should close the optional provision. If you use the automatic YAML population feature either from the command line (see above) or using the Sublime package, it will simplify this process for you greatly. Another thing to note, if you include nested provisions, you can turn off an inside provision and leave an outside provision on, but if you turn off an outside provision you cannot turn on an inside provision.
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So, this is how the body of the text would look.
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```
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[{{my_optional_clause}}Both parties agree that upon material breach of this agreement by either party they will both commit suicide in homage to Kurt Cobain.]
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```
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Then the YAML Front Matter would look like this
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```
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my_optional_clause: true
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```
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or
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```
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my_optional_clause: false
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```
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I don't know why you would ever write such a clause, but that is why the functionality exists!
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# Structured Headers
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When creating many legal documents, but especially laws and contracts, we find ourselves constantly repeating structured headers. This gets utterly maddening when working collaboratively with various word processors because each word processor has its own
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When creating many legal documents, but especially laws and contracts, we find ourselves constantly repeating structured headers. This gets utterly maddening when working collaboratively with various word processors because each word processor has its own styles and limitations for working with ordered lists and each user of even the same word processor has different defaults. This presents a mess for those that have to clean up these lists. We waste an inordinate amount of time with "Format Painter" and other hacks that do not really allow us to focus on the text.
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In order to address this problem, I have built functionality into legal_markdown that gets around this. Here is how structured headers work in the gem.
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In order to address this problem, I have built functionality into legal_markdown that gets around this. Here is how structured headers work in the gem.
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Wherever you wish to start the block of structured headers just put in ````` Three backticks (~ without the shift) at the beginning of the line. Then start the block of structured headers on the next line. When you are done with the block just put the same three backticks at the beginning of the line and continue your document.
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At the beginning of the line you simply type the level in which the provision resides by the number of lowercase "l" followed by a period and then a space. So a top level provision (perhaps a Chapter, or Article depending on your document) will begin with `l. The provision ...` A second level provision (a Section or whatnot) will begin with `ll. Both parties agree ...` A third level provision will begin with `lll. Yaddy Yadda ...` And so on. These will reside in the body of the text.
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When the gem parses the document it will automatically add and reset each level in the tree that you set up based on the criteria you establish.
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Then you can describe the functionality that you require in the YAML front-matter. In the YAML front-matter you will simply add the following fields: `level-1` and then the `: ` followed by what the format you would like it to be in. Currently there are a few possible options at this time:
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1. `level-1: 1.` will format that level of the list as 1. 2. 3. etc.; This is the default functionality;
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2. `level-1: (1)` will provide for the same numbering only within parenteticals rather than followed by a period;
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3. `level-1: A.` will format with capital letters followed by a period (e.g, A., B., C., etc.);
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4. `level-1: (A)` will format the same as the above only with the capital letters in a parentetical;
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5. `level-1: a.` will format with lowercase letters followed by a period;
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9. `level-1: i.` will format with lowercase Roman numerals followed by a period;
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10. `level-1: (i)` will format with lowercase Roman numerals within a parententical..
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Obviously you will replace `level-1` with `level-2`, etc.
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Obviously you will replace `level-1` with `level-2`, etc.
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Sometimes in legal documents (particularly in laws) you want to build multiple structured header levels, but you do not want to reset all of the headers when going up the tree. For example, in some laws you will have Chapters, Parts, Sections, ... and you will want to track Chapters, Parts and Sections but when you go up to Parts you will not want to reset the Sections to one.
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This functionality is built in with a `no-reset` function. You simply add a `no-reset` field to your YAML header and note the headers that you do not want to reset by their l., ll. notation. Separate those levels you do not want reset with commas. Example YAML line:
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In addition to the reference portion of the structured header, you can add in whatever text you wish. For example, if you want the top level to be articles with a number and then a period, the next level down to be sections with a number in parentheses, and the next level down to be a letter in parentheses then this is what the YAML front matter would look like.
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```
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---
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level-1: Article 1.
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level-2: Section (1)
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level-3: (a)
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---
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```
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## No Indent Function
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As of version 0.2.0, you can start on any number or letter you wish. So if you want the first Article to be Article 100. instead of Article 1. there is no problem with that. One thing to be careful of if you do not start with the default numbering/lettering is that you should likely turn off the reset function for that level (see below) or else when the gem is parsing the document it will reset the level based on the default numbering/lettering rather than the initial numbering/lettering you established. Also, be careful if you want to start with letters that also match with Roman Numerals (I, V, X, L, C, D, M) whether upper or lower case as the gem parses Roman's first and if you want a sequence similar to (a), (b) but you put in (c) the gem will default to the lowercase version of the Roman Numeral C (100).
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## Optional Clauses Function
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When building templates for contracts, you often build in optional clauses or you build clauses that are mutually exclusive to one another. This functionality is supported by legal_markdown. This is how you build an optional clause. In the body of your text you put the entire clause in square-brackets (as you likely normally would) and at the beginning of the square bracket you put a mixin titled however. In the YAML Front-Matter you simply add true or false to turn that entire clause on or off. **Note**, if you do not add the mixin to your header, legal_markdown is just going to leave it as is.
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## No Reset Function
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Sometimes in legal documents (particularly in laws) you want to build multiple structured header levels, but you do not want to reset all of the headers when going up the tree. For example, in some laws you will have Chapters, Parts, Sections, ... and you will want to track Chapters, Parts and Sections but when you go up to Parts you will not want to reset the Sections to one.
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This functionality is built in with a `no-reset` function. You simply add a `no-reset` field to your YAML header and note the headers that you do not want to reset by their l., ll. notation. Separate those levels you do not want reset with commas. Example YAML line:
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```
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no-reset: l., ll., lll.
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```
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```
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This will not reset level-1, level-2, or level-3 when it is parsing the document and those levels will be numbered sequentially through the entire block rather than reseting when going to a higher block, levels not in this reset, e.g., llll. and lllll. will be reset when going up a level in the tree. Obviously the level 1 headers will never reset.
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## No Indent Function
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```
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If you are outputting to .pdf, .odt, .doc(x) you may want to keep some of the header levels tight to the margins. This functionality is built into legal_markdown with a `no-indent` function. You simply add a `no-indent` field to your YAML header and not the headers you do not want to indent by their l., ll. notation. Separate those levels you do not want to reset with commas as with the `no-reset` function. Any levels *below* the last level in the `no-indent` function will be indented four spaces for each level.
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## Examples
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The syntax should be straight-forward. If you learn by seeing rather than by reading, take a look at the Watershed lmd [repos](https://github.com/watershedlegal/commercial-documents) where we keep our contract templates for more examples. That link is for some commercial documents, but we have more on the Watershed Github page.
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If you use a system like Pandoc you can establish a system wherein the styles that you establish in the reference.docx or reference.odt or the latex style references can make up for the lack of granular fuctionality. When you build your reference.odt for example and you want to have a contract look like this:
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```
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Article 1. Provision for Article 1.
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Section 1.1. Provision for Section 1.1.
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Section 1.1. Provision for Section 1.1.
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1.1.1 Provision for 1.1.1.
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```
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---
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title: Wonderful Contract
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author: Your Name
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date: today
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level-1: 1.
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level-2: A.
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level-3: a.
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### Step 3: Modify your reference.odt or reference.docx
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In Libreoffice you would modify your template reference.odt as you need it. You would go to Format -> Bullets and Numbering -> Options.
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In Libreoffice you would modify your template reference.odt as you need it. You would go to Format -> Bullets and Numbering -> Options.
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1. First you would select Level 1 (on the left). In the Before field you would add "Article " (without the quotes, but not the space). In the After field you would add a period. In the Numbering field you would select 1, 2, 3, .... And in the Show sublevels field you would choose 1
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2. Second you would select Level 2 (on the left). In the Before field you would add "Section " (without the quotes, but with the space). In the After field you would add a period. In the Numbering field you would select 1, 2, 3, .... And in the Show sublevels field you would choose 2.
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3. Third you would select Level 3 (on the left). In the Before field you would add nothing (to accomplish the above desired output). In the After field you would add a period. in the Show sublevels field you would choose 3.
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4. Lastly you would make sure that Consecutive Numbering (field at the bottom) was turned off.
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5. You can make sure that all the indenting is as desired in the Position Tab.
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4. Lastly you would make sure that Consecutive Numbering (field at the bottom) was turned off.
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5. You can make sure that all the indenting is as desired in the Position Tab.
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Then you would save the reference.odt as a new name perhaps contract-reference.odt in your Pandoc reference folder.
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Then you would save the reference.odt as a new name perhaps contract-reference.odt in your Pandoc reference folder.
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### Step 3(a): Add Precursors to Headers
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Now that you've been warned, here's how you use precursors. Within the text of the document nothing changes. In the YAML front matter you will leave it as it was before. All you need to do is add any word or other marker before the trigger. What `legal_markdown` will do is to look at the last two characters if the marker ends in a period or three if it ends in a paren, and then everything else it will place into a precursor. If you want to reference the preceding level (like 1.1.1 in the example above) then simply put in {pre}. I'll try to make this less fragile down the road, but for now it is what it is. So, your YAML front matter will look like this:
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Within the text of the document nothing changes. In the YAML front matter you will leave it as it was before. All you need to do is add any word or other marker before the trigger. If you want to reference the preceding level (like 1.1.1 in the example above) then simply put in `pre`.So, your YAML front matter will look like this:
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```
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---
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title: Wonderful Contract
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author: Your Name
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date: today
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level-1: Article 1.
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level-2: pre 1.
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level-3: pre
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level-2: Section pre 1.
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level-3: pre 1.
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---
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```
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|
+
This is how I build most of my contracts.
|
210
|
+
|
211
|
+
### Step 3(b) Add Another Type of Precursors to Headers
|
212
|
+
|
213
|
+
Sometimes, particularly in laws, the structure is something akin to Chapter 1 and then Section 101, Section 102, ... Chapter 9, Section 901, Section 902, etc. As of version 0.2.0 you can easily adopt this structure to your document by using the `preval` feature within the YAML front matter. If you combined this structure by also using markdown headers the YAML front matter would look something like this:
|
214
|
+
|
215
|
+
```
|
185
216
|
---
|
217
|
+
level-1: "# Chapter 1."
|
218
|
+
level-2: "## Section preval 1."
|
219
|
+
level-3: pre(a)
|
220
|
+
no-indent: l., ll.
|
221
|
+
---
|
222
|
+
```
|
223
|
+
|
224
|
+
This would output (using the same text from the body of the document typed in step 1) as:
|
225
|
+
|
186
226
|
```
|
227
|
+
# Chapter 1. Provision for Article 1.
|
228
|
+
|
229
|
+
## Section 101. Provision for Section 1.1.
|
230
|
+
|
231
|
+
101(a) Provision for 1.1.1.
|
232
|
+
|
233
|
+
101(b) Provision for 1.1.2.
|
187
234
|
|
188
|
-
|
235
|
+
## Section 102. Provision for Section 1.2.
|
189
236
|
|
190
|
-
|
237
|
+
102(a) Provision for 1.2.1.
|
191
238
|
|
192
|
-
|
239
|
+
103(b) Provision for 1.2.2.
|
240
|
+
|
241
|
+
...
|
242
|
+
```
|
243
|
+
|
244
|
+
### Step 4: Run Legal-Markdown and Pandoc (or other markdown processor)
|
245
|
+
|
246
|
+
Make sure when you run Pandoc you use the new reference document that you created as the basis.
|
193
247
|
|
194
248
|
I do not use latex to create pdfs nor do I use Word, but the functionality will be similar with Word, and if you're using latex then you can figure out how to mirror this workflow.
|
195
249
|
|
250
|
+
## A Few Other Features
|
251
|
+
|
252
|
+
I find, particularly when I'm working with contracts and templates that I needed a few more features.
|
253
|
+
|
254
|
+
### Working with Cross Reference Provisions.
|
255
|
+
|
256
|
+
One thing I needed was the ability to cross reference between provisions where the text of Section 16 refers back to Section 12. When you're working with templates you may turn on or off provisions after reviewing a draft with a client. Also when you're working in a `lmd` file you do not see what the Section reference is within the document (that's the whole point). So, as of 0.2.0, there is a cross referencing feature to `legal_markdown`.
|
257
|
+
|
258
|
+
In order to try to make the gem interoperable with as many finishing renders as possible I've tried to keep the switches and symbols unique to the gem to a very few (so far within the body of the document we've only relied on square brackets and double curly braces to do all of the work). But there is only so much one can do with those symbols. So I have had to add one more symbol to get the cross-referencing right and unambiguous to the parser. Within your structured headers block simply place a reference (which you can make up and remember, it can contain letters, numbers, or symbols) within pipes "|" (the key above the enter key on US keyboards). First stake the piped reference to the provision which you want to reference to. Then other provisions can refer to it (either before or after the reference point within the document).
|
259
|
+
|
260
|
+
For example, if the YAML front matter looked like this:
|
261
|
+
|
262
|
+
```
|
263
|
+
---
|
264
|
+
level-1: "# Article 1."
|
265
|
+
level-2: "Section 1."
|
266
|
+
level-3: (a)
|
267
|
+
no-indent: l., ll.
|
268
|
+
---
|
269
|
+
```
|
270
|
+
|
271
|
+
and the body of the text looked like this:
|
272
|
+
|
273
|
+
```
|
274
|
+
...
|
275
|
+
ll. |123| This provision will need to be referenced later.
|
276
|
+
ll. Provision
|
277
|
+
lll. As stated in |123|, whatever you need to say.
|
278
|
+
...
|
279
|
+
```
|
280
|
+
|
281
|
+
would output to this:
|
282
|
+
|
283
|
+
```
|
284
|
+
Section 7. This provision will need to be referenced later.
|
285
|
+
|
286
|
+
Section 8. Provision
|
287
|
+
|
288
|
+
(a) As stated in Section 7, whatever you need to say.
|
289
|
+
```
|
290
|
+
|
291
|
+
#### Working with Partials
|
292
|
+
|
293
|
+
In particular when I work with templates, I was realizing that it would be nice to be a bit more DRY (don't repeat yourself) in my contract building. In order to help with this, I wanted to build a partials feature. Probably not a lot of people will use this, but here is how you do it. Let's say you put your standard interpretation, notice, severance, boilerplate typically at the end of the contract just before the signature block. Let's also assume that you have multiple contract templates and they all mostly use the same boilerplate final provisions.
|
294
|
+
|
295
|
+
If you were lawyering like coders think then you would abstract these provisions into their own file within your contracts templates folder. Then you would change all of your templates to reference back to that partial. Later, if there is some change in the law you just go into the partial, make the necessary change to adopt to the change in law or interpretation, and then all of your templates which refer to that partial are automatically updated. A bit more simple then updating each and every one of your templates, eh?
|
296
|
+
|
297
|
+
Partials are simple. They use the `@import [filename]` syntax. So if your final provisions are kept in a file in the same folder called final_provisions.lmd you would put `@import final_provisions.lmd` on its own line (either within a structured headers block or outside of it) and the gem will import the contents of the partial before chewing on the whole contract. If your partial was located in another directory you just type that in just like you would on the command line `@import ~/gitlaw/contracts/commercial/partials/final_provisions.lmd` or wherever your partial is.
|
298
|
+
|
196
299
|
## A Few Gotchas
|
197
300
|
|
198
|
-
* When you are using structured headers of legal_markdown you should make the lists tight. Do not add blank lines in between the list levels or the gem will think you are creating a new list. If you are trying to create a new list then by all means go ahead as the blank lines will break the parsing. On the roadmap is functionality for multiple blocks, but at this point in the Gem's development it will only run one block through the modification methods.
|
199
|
-
* If you use the reference.odt or reference.docx to override the default formating of the list then it is not optimal add level-1 or level-2 leading text or utilize the different marker functionality (e.g., (i) or (a) and the like) to the YAML front-matter. The optimal way is to use the defaults that pandoc has or whatever renderer you use along with legal_markdown to set the spacing and then use the reference styles to build the functionality that you would like from the word processor side. The leading text and different marker systems are predominately built for html output.
|
200
301
|
* Legal_markdown is optimized primarily for contracts, legislation, and regulations. It is not optimized for cases. For memoranda and filings I use the mixin portion but not the header portion which is enough to meet my needs - in particular, when matched with Sublime Text snippets. If you area looking for a more complete solution for cases and filings I would recommend the [Precedent Gem](https://github.com/BlackacreLabs/precedent) built by [Kyle Mitchell](https://github.com/kemitchell) for [Blackacre Labs](https://github.com/BlackacreLabs)
|
302
|
+
* At this point, you cannot have more than 9 levels for headers, but if you have more than 9 levels of headers you have some insane case study which will require more than this tool to cope with.
|
303
|
+
|
304
|
+
## Roadmap / TODO
|
305
|
+
|
306
|
+
- [X] Allow for lll. or l3. leaders based on leader-style: l. or leader-style: l1. switch in YAML.
|
307
|
+
- [X] Implement partials as `@include filename`.
|
308
|
+
- [X] Implement internal cross references as `ll. |123| Provision`
|
309
|
+
- [X] Different starting values.
|
310
|
+
- [X] Pre-VALUE functionality where Article 1 subs to 101.
|
311
|
+
- [X] Handle exceptions better as it is very brittle right now.
|
312
|
+
- [X] YAML Maker.
|
313
|
+
- [ ] md2lmd functionality. At this point legal_markdown cannot take a markdown document and parse it to build a structured legal document. Legal_markdown only works with a renderer to *create* documents but not to *parse* legal documents to create markdown.
|
201
314
|
|
202
|
-
|
203
|
-
|
204
|
-
- [X] Make a no-reset option for certain levels that should not reset when moving up the tree.
|
205
|
-
- [X] Make no indent option.
|
206
|
-
- [X] Optional clauses in brackets with a mixin inside. Turn the mixin to false and the whole clause will not be rendered. For a mixin that simply turns on or off, must make a function whereby the mixin is true that it is turned on.
|
207
|
-
- [ ] Handle Exceptions better as it is very brittle right now.
|
208
|
-
- [ ] Different input and output files.
|
209
|
-
- [ ] Implement partials.
|
210
|
-
- [ ] Leave the YAML Front Matter
|
211
|
-
- [ ] Definitions. For now these can be used as mixins but that functionality needs to improve.
|
212
|
-
- [ ] Date = today function.
|
213
|
-
- [ ] Handle against multiple blocks in a document as this currently will not work.
|
214
|
-
- [ ] ??? Should this switch to TOML rather than YAML frontmatter...?
|
215
|
-
- [ ] legal2md functionality. At this point legal_markdown cannot take a markdown document and parse it to build a structured legal document. Legal_markdown only works with a renderer to *create* documents but not to *parse* legal documents to create markdown.
|
315
|
+
If you have needs that you think other people may have, feel free to put them up in the Github issues.
|
216
316
|
|
217
317
|
# Contributing
|
218
318
|
|
@@ -227,6 +327,6 @@ I do not use latex to create pdfs nor do I use Word, but the functionality will
|
|
227
327
|
|
228
328
|
MIT License - (c) 2013 - Watershed Legal Services, PLLC. All copyrights are owned by [Watershed Legal Services, PLLC](http://watershedlegal.com). See License file.
|
229
329
|
|
230
|
-
This software is provided as is and specifically disclaims any implied warranties of fitness for any purpose whatsoever. By using this software you agree to hold harmless Watershed Legal Services and its Members for any perceived harm that using this software may have caused you.
|
330
|
+
This software is provided as is and specifically disclaims any implied warranties of fitness for any purpose whatsoever. By using this software you agree to hold harmless Watershed Legal Services and its Members for any perceived harm that using this software may have caused you.
|
231
331
|
|
232
|
-
In other words, don't be a jerk.
|
332
|
+
In other words, don't be a jerk.
|
data/bin/legal2md
ADDED
data/legal_markdown.gemspec
CHANGED
@@ -18,9 +18,9 @@ Gem::Specification.new do |s|
|
|
18
18
|
s.test_files = s.files.grep(%r{^(test|spec|features)/})
|
19
19
|
s.require_paths = ["lib"]
|
20
20
|
|
21
|
-
s.add_dependency
|
21
|
+
# s.add_dependency
|
22
22
|
|
23
23
|
s.description = <<desc
|
24
|
-
This gem will parse YAML Front Matter of Markdown Documents. Typically, this gem would be called with a md renderer, such as Pandoc, that would turn the md into a document such as a .pdf file or a .docx file. By combining this pre-processing with a markdown renderer, you can ensure that both the structured content and the structured styles necessary for your firm or organization are more strictly enforced. Plus you won't have to deal with Word any longer, and every lawyer should welcome that. Why? Because Word is awful.
|
24
|
+
This gem will parse YAML Front Matter of Markdown Documents. Typically, this gem would be called with a md renderer, such as Pandoc, that would turn the md into a document such as a .pdf file or a .docx file. By combining this pre-processing with a markdown renderer, you can ensure that both the structured content and the structured styles necessary for your firm or organization are more strictly enforced. Plus you won't have to deal with Word any longer, and every lawyer should welcome that. Why? Because Word is awful.
|
25
25
|
desc
|
26
26
|
end
|
@@ -0,0 +1,115 @@
|
|
1
|
+
#! ruby
|
2
|
+
require 'yaml'
|
3
|
+
|
4
|
+
class MakeYamlFrontMatter
|
5
|
+
|
6
|
+
def initialize(*args)
|
7
|
+
data = load(*args)
|
8
|
+
parsed_file = find_yaml_if_yaml(data)
|
9
|
+
new_yaml_as_array = scan_and_filter_yaml(parsed_file[0], parsed_file[1])
|
10
|
+
new_yaml = build_new_yaml_frontmatter(new_yaml_as_array)
|
11
|
+
write_it( new_yaml + parsed_file[1] )
|
12
|
+
end
|
13
|
+
|
14
|
+
def load(*args)
|
15
|
+
begin
|
16
|
+
@file = ARGV[-1]
|
17
|
+
if @file != "-"
|
18
|
+
source_file = File::read(@file) if File::exists?(@file) && File::readable?(@file)
|
19
|
+
else
|
20
|
+
source_file = STDIN.read
|
21
|
+
end
|
22
|
+
source_file.scan(/(@include (.+)$)/).each do |set|
|
23
|
+
partial_file = set[1]
|
24
|
+
to_replace = set[0]
|
25
|
+
partial_contents = File::read(partial_file) if File::exists?(partial_file) && File::readable?(partial_file)
|
26
|
+
source_file.gsub!(to_replace, "[PARTIALSTART]\n" + partial_contents + "\n[PARTIALENDS][#{to_replace}]")
|
27
|
+
end
|
28
|
+
return source_file
|
29
|
+
rescue => e
|
30
|
+
puts "Sorry, I could not read the input file #{@file}: #{e.message}."
|
31
|
+
exit 0
|
32
|
+
end
|
33
|
+
end
|
34
|
+
|
35
|
+
def find_yaml_if_yaml( source )
|
36
|
+
begin
|
37
|
+
yaml_pattern = /\A(---\s*\n.*?\n?)^(---\s*$\n?)/m
|
38
|
+
parts = source.partition( yaml_pattern )
|
39
|
+
if parts[1] != ""
|
40
|
+
headers = YAML.load(parts[1])
|
41
|
+
content = parts[2]
|
42
|
+
else
|
43
|
+
headers = {}
|
44
|
+
content = source
|
45
|
+
end
|
46
|
+
rescue => e
|
47
|
+
puts "Sorry, something went wrong when I was loading the YAML front matter: #{e.message}."
|
48
|
+
end
|
49
|
+
return [headers, content]
|
50
|
+
end
|
51
|
+
|
52
|
+
def scan_doc(content, pattern)
|
53
|
+
headers = content.scan(pattern).uniq.sort.flatten
|
54
|
+
if pattern == @structured_headers_pattern
|
55
|
+
headers = convert_ll_to_level_two(headers)
|
56
|
+
end
|
57
|
+
return headers
|
58
|
+
end
|
59
|
+
|
60
|
+
def convert_ll_to_level_two(levels)
|
61
|
+
# receives an array in form ["l.", "ll.", "lll."] returns array in form ["level-1", "level-2"]
|
62
|
+
levels.inject([]){|arr, level| level[/(l+)./]; arr << "level-" + $1.length.to_s}
|
63
|
+
end
|
64
|
+
|
65
|
+
def filter_yaml(yaml_data, stuff)
|
66
|
+
# yaml_data will be a hash, stuff is an array, returns a filtered hash
|
67
|
+
stuff_in_yaml = stuff.inject({}) do |hash, elem|
|
68
|
+
yaml_data.has_key?(elem) ? hash.merge({elem => yaml_data[elem]}) : hash.merge({elem => ""})
|
69
|
+
end
|
70
|
+
end
|
71
|
+
|
72
|
+
def scan_and_filter_yaml(yaml_data, content)
|
73
|
+
mixin_pattern = /[^\[]{{(\S+)}}/
|
74
|
+
opt_clauses_pattern = /\[{{(\S+)}}/
|
75
|
+
@structured_headers_pattern = /(^l+.)/
|
76
|
+
mixins = filter_yaml(yaml_data, scan_doc(content, mixin_pattern))
|
77
|
+
opt_clauses = filter_yaml(yaml_data, scan_doc(content, opt_clauses_pattern))
|
78
|
+
levels = filter_yaml(yaml_data, scan_doc(content, @structured_headers_pattern))
|
79
|
+
extras = filter_yaml(yaml_data, %w{no-indent no-reset leader-style})
|
80
|
+
return [mixins, opt_clauses, levels, extras]
|
81
|
+
end
|
82
|
+
|
83
|
+
def build_new_yaml_frontmatter(yaml_data_as_array)
|
84
|
+
front = "---\n\n"
|
85
|
+
if yaml_data_as_array[0]
|
86
|
+
front << "\# Mixins\n"
|
87
|
+
yaml_data_as_array[0].each{ |head, val| front << head + ": " + val.to_s + "\n" }
|
88
|
+
end
|
89
|
+
if yaml_data_as_array[1]
|
90
|
+
front << "\n\# Optional Clauses\n"
|
91
|
+
yaml_data_as_array[1].each{ |head, val| front << head + ": " + val.to_s + "\n" }
|
92
|
+
end
|
93
|
+
if yaml_data_as_array[2]
|
94
|
+
front << "\n\# Structured Headers\n"
|
95
|
+
yaml_data_as_array[2].each{ |head, val| front << head + ": \"" + val.to_s + "\"\n" }
|
96
|
+
end
|
97
|
+
if yaml_data_as_array[3]
|
98
|
+
yaml_data_as_array[3].each{ |head, val| front << head + ": " + val.to_s + "\n" }
|
99
|
+
end
|
100
|
+
front << "\n---\n\n"
|
101
|
+
end
|
102
|
+
|
103
|
+
def write_it( final_content )
|
104
|
+
final_content.scan(/(\[PARTIALSTART\].*?\[PARTIALENDS\]\[(.*?)\])/m).each do |set|
|
105
|
+
replacer = set[1]
|
106
|
+
to_replace = set[0]
|
107
|
+
final_content.gsub!(to_replace, replacer)
|
108
|
+
end
|
109
|
+
if @file != "-"
|
110
|
+
File.open(@file, "w") {|f| f.write( final_content ) }
|
111
|
+
else
|
112
|
+
STDOUT.write final_content
|
113
|
+
end
|
114
|
+
end
|
115
|
+
end
|
@@ -0,0 +1,77 @@
|
|
1
|
+
# Extracted from Roman Numerals gem
|
2
|
+
|
3
|
+
# Copyright (c) 2011 Andrew Vos
|
4
|
+
|
5
|
+
# Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person obtaining
|
6
|
+
# a copy of this software and associated documentation files (the
|
7
|
+
# "Software"), to deal in the Software without restriction, including
|
8
|
+
# without limitation the rights to use, copy, modify, merge, publish,
|
9
|
+
# distribute, sublicense, and/or sell copies of the Software, and to
|
10
|
+
# permit persons to whom the Software is furnished to do so, subject to
|
11
|
+
# the following conditions:
|
12
|
+
|
13
|
+
# The above copyright notice and this permission notice shall be
|
14
|
+
# included in all copies or substantial portions of the Software.
|
15
|
+
|
16
|
+
# THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED "AS IS", WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND,
|
17
|
+
# EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO THE WARRANTIES OF
|
18
|
+
# MERCHANTABILITY, FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE AND
|
19
|
+
# NONINFRINGEMENT. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHORS OR COPYRIGHT HOLDERS BE
|
20
|
+
# LIABLE FOR ANY CLAIM, DAMAGES OR OTHER LIABILITY, WHETHER IN AN ACTION
|
21
|
+
# OF CONTRACT, TORT OR OTHERWISE, ARISING FROM, OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION
|
22
|
+
# WITH THE SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR OTHER DEALINGS IN THE SOFTWARE.
|
23
|
+
|
24
|
+
|
25
|
+
module RomanNumerals
|
26
|
+
@base_digits = {
|
27
|
+
1 => 'I',
|
28
|
+
4 => 'IV',
|
29
|
+
5 => 'V',
|
30
|
+
9 => 'IX',
|
31
|
+
10 => 'X',
|
32
|
+
40 => 'XL',
|
33
|
+
50 => 'L',
|
34
|
+
90 => 'XC',
|
35
|
+
100 => 'C',
|
36
|
+
400 => 'CD',
|
37
|
+
500 => 'D',
|
38
|
+
900 => 'CM',
|
39
|
+
1000 => 'M'
|
40
|
+
}
|
41
|
+
|
42
|
+
def self.to_roman_upper(value)
|
43
|
+
value = value.to_i
|
44
|
+
result = ''
|
45
|
+
@base_digits.keys.reverse.each do |decimal|
|
46
|
+
while value >= decimal
|
47
|
+
value -= decimal
|
48
|
+
result += @base_digits[decimal]
|
49
|
+
end
|
50
|
+
end
|
51
|
+
result
|
52
|
+
end
|
53
|
+
|
54
|
+
def self.to_roman_lower(value)
|
55
|
+
value = value.to_i
|
56
|
+
result = ''
|
57
|
+
@base_digits.keys.reverse.each do |decimal|
|
58
|
+
while value >= decimal
|
59
|
+
value -= decimal
|
60
|
+
result += @base_digits[decimal]
|
61
|
+
end
|
62
|
+
end
|
63
|
+
result.downcase
|
64
|
+
end
|
65
|
+
|
66
|
+
def self.to_decimal_string(value)
|
67
|
+
value.upcase!
|
68
|
+
result = 0
|
69
|
+
@base_digits.values.reverse.each do |roman|
|
70
|
+
while value.start_with? roman
|
71
|
+
value = value.slice(roman.length, value.length)
|
72
|
+
result += @base_digits.key roman
|
73
|
+
end
|
74
|
+
end
|
75
|
+
result.to_s
|
76
|
+
end
|
77
|
+
end
|