I'm aware of two ways to create a sibling heading (a heading directly after the current heading):
1. M-return (org-meta-return) 2. C-return (org-insert-heading-after-current) They both operate slightly differently, but neither seem to do what I want. org-meta-return creates a heading directly after the current heading, but before the properties and content of the original heading. org-insert-heading-after-current collapses the current heading before creating the next heading, keeping properties and content in their correct location. I tend to use org-insert-heading-after-current to get around this side effect of org-meta-return, but org-insert-heading-after-current doesn't support the same features that org-meta-return does: - Using the shift key to make the new heading a TODO item - Creating a heading *above* the current heading when used at the BOL Plus, org-insert-heading-after-current also collapses the open headings around it, which is often not what I want since it removes context information. I guess I have two questions: 1. Is there a bug in org-meta-return that assigns the properties and content of the current heading to the newly created heading? 2. What is the intended difference between M-return and C-return? Thanks. -- Peter Jones, http://pmade.com pmade inc. Louisville, CO US _______________________________________________ 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