Versions:

  • 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, maintained by John MacFarlane, is a command-line document converter whose 3.9.0.1 release continues a lineage that now spans 62 public versions. Designed as a universal translator for markup languages, the utility reads source files in any of several dozen formats—including Markdown, reStructuredText, HTML, LaTeX, Microsoft Word, OpenDocument, EPUB, and Jupyter notebooks—and writes them out again in whatever destination format the user specifies, making it indispensable for academic publishing, web content migration, static-site generation, automated reporting, and ebook production. Scholars frequently invoke Pandoc to turn Markdown drafts into PDFs via LaTeX or to convert bibliographies between CSL-aware word-processor formats; web teams embed it in continuous-integration pipelines to compile documentation sites; data scientists export notebook analyses to Word or HTML without manual reformatting; and publishers batch-transform legacy XML archives into modern HTML or EPUB packages. Because the program exposes every conversion through a rich set of command-line options—controlling citation rendering, cross-reference resolution, template application, and filter invocation—users can automate even complex transformations with a single script. The software belongs to the Document Conversion category and is available for free on get.nero.com, where downloads are provided through trusted Windows package sources such as winget, always delivering the latest version and supporting batch installation of multiple applications.

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