Rainer Stengele schrieb:
Carsten Dominik schrieb:
...
While I maybe can see the use of having an #include mechanism,
I don't see why you'd want to *see* the included stuff.
It is just as easy to look at the include file itself, and if it is
the same for every file you use, you'd have it memorized soon enough.
- Carsten
Well - thinking hard about it I have to agree it's not really necessary
to see the contents of the file.
Seeing it at the beginning of any org file was just quite convenient
when I started using org-mode and was still modifying my used TAG set etc.
Agreed, a simple "standard" include mechanism would do it very well!
Rainer
Taking the idea a little "around the corner" I wonder if it would be
possible to hide everything that begins with a "#" before the first heading.
Application: I have my org files under subversion control and carry
around this line at the beginning of my files:
# SVN $Revision: 385 $ $Date: 2007-08-21 23:50:43 +0200 (Di, 21 Aug 2007) $
I would like to hide that and similar lines unless showing all with "C-c
C-a". Also a possible "#include" line could be hidden. If somebody wants
to see the lines - of course - a config option would do it.
Rainer
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