Carsten Dominik <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes: > You can add a category property to the entry, and that will overrule the > category that might be inherited from above. With the latest org-mode > 5.12, > press `C-c C-x p'. This will prompt you for a property name, enter > CATEGORY > (using completion). The it will ask you for the category itself and > you
Completion doesnt work for me. Possibly this is a result of using icicles? You just TAB to completion? > can enter it, again using completion against existing categories > (given as > properties *anywhere* in the file. So this will not see the > #+CATEGORY lines, > only the > > :PROPERTIES: > :CATEGORY: work > :END: > > definitions. > > You can also insert a line > > #+PROPERTY: CATEGORY_ALL work home phone whendrunk > > to define a complete list of categories. > > Note that setting the property wil change the category of the item, > but it will *not* move it to a different place in the file. If I > understand correctly, this is what you want. Yes. The concept of not having to worry about where things are in the org file doesn't really work for me. I like things having a certain category in that category section - otherwise there seems little point in having lines like ,---- | * Emacs | | :PROPERTIES: | :CATEGORY: Emacs | :END: `---- This might seem like an incredibly naive question, but with the concept of "general properties", where do TAGs fit in now? Is a tag a special kind of property? I am having difficulty seeing the best way to utilise the tools and would appreciate some wise words of guidance here. > > - Carsten _______________________________________________ Emacs-orgmode mailing list Remember: use `Reply All' to send replies to the list. Emacs-orgmode@gnu.org http://lists.gnu.org/mailman/listinfo/emacs-orgmode