Hi Peter,
thank you for your thoughtful post. I tend to agree that there is
some consistency missing in this area. Following your post, I am
changing the interface like this:
M-RET and M-S-RET will remain the same, i.e. they will insert the
heading directly after the current line, therefore making any content
of the entry part of the new entry. I believe this still makes sense,
because it feels more like direct editing of the text file. In this
case, the idea is that if you want to insert the new heading after all
the content, you would first move the cursor to after the content.
I am redefining C-RET and C-S-RET in the way you propose. The will
now also insert a new heading *before* the current if the cursor is at
the beginning of the line. And they will achieve the insertion
without folding siblings.
Finally, I am introducing a new option `org-insert-heading-respect-
content', default nil. If you set this to t, M-RET and M-S-RET will
behave just like C-RET and C-S-RET, respectively, so in this way you
can make this behavior the default.
I hope this will work for everyone, let me know if not.
- Carsten
On Sep 11, 2008, at 11:08 PM, Peter Jones wrote:
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
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