Versions:

  • 3.9.0.2
  • 3.9.0.1
  • 3.9
  • 3.8.3
  • 3.8.2.1
  • 3.8.2.0
  • 3.8.1.0
  • 3.8.0.0
  • 3.7.0.2
  • 3.7
  • 3.6.4
  • 3.6.3
  • 3.6.2
  • 3.6.1
  • 3.6
  • 3.5
  • 3.4
  • 3.3
  • 3.2.1
  • 3.2
  • 3.1.13
  • 3.1.12.3
  • 3.1.12.2
  • 3.1.12.1
  • 3.1.12
  • 3.1.11
  • 3.1.10
  • 3.1.9
  • 3.1.8
  • 3.1.7
  • 3.1.6.2
  • 3.1.6.1
  • 3.1.6
  • 3.1.5
  • 3.1.2
  • 3.1.1
  • 3.1
  • 3.0.1
  • 3.0
  • 2.19.2
  • 2.19.1
  • 2.19
  • 2.18
  • 2.17.1.1
  • 2.17.1
  • 2.17.0.1
  • 2.17
  • 2.16.2
  • 2.16.1
  • 2.16
  • 2.15
  • 2.14.2
  • 2.14.1
  • 2.14.0.3
  • 2.14.0.2
  • 2.14.0.1
  • 2.13
  • 2.11.4
  • 2.11.3.2
  • 2.11.1
  • 2.11.0.2
  • 2.10.1
  • 2.9.2.1

Pandoc, developed by John MacFarlane, is a command-line document converter whose purpose is to translate almost any markup format into almost any other, earning it a reputation as the “swiss-army knife” of file conversion. Released in 63 incremental versions since its inception, the utility now stands at 3.9.0.2 and supports an unusually wide spectrum of inputs—Markdown, reStructuredText, HTML, LaTeX, DOCX, ODT, EPUB, Jupyter notebooks, and many more—outputting to equally diverse targets such as PDF, slide decks, static websites, or even lightweight wiki syntax. Scholars use it to turn LaTeX papers into Word files for committee review, web authors pipe Markdown posts through it to generate responsive HTML or EPUB books, data journalists automate report pipelines that start with Jupyter and finish with typeset PDF, and documentation teams integrate it into CI workflows that sync README files with corporate portals. Because transformations are driven by plain text, Pandoc lends itself to scripting, batch processing, and version control, making it a quiet but essential component in publishing, research, and software-documentation toolchains. The program is available for free on get.nero.com, with downloads provided via trusted Windows package sources such as winget, always delivering the latest version and supporting batch installation of multiple applications.

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