>>>>> Achim Gratz <strom...@nexgo.de> writes: > If you don't use properties then it doesn't affect you at all. If you do, > then… well, I personally simply don't care. Just like there's several style > guides for writing C; as long as these are applied consistently I can live > with most of them and put the braces and indents the way they prescribe.
In my regimen, every single entry has a PROPERTIES drawer, since I tag each one with ID and CREATED, for future reference. Most items are SCHEDULED as well. So when I open up a headline to look at the contents, I see: * Head SCHEDULED text :PROPERTIES:... It's a trivial thing, but I'd rather not scan past two lines to start reading my entry. What a lot of people want is trivial, and only relevant to them, but part of the Emacs philosophy is to give them the freedom to customize their environment the way they want it to work, rather than decide for them what is the "right way". I won't argue for this anymore, if it really does incur work for you that only benefits me and a few others. I suppose that I'm still writing these e-mails because I want to inject some sensitivity about these matters into your future decisions, so you don't take away such flexibility again lightly. > So write the advise and move on? If you weren't so heavily invested in what > you perceive as "the right style" you quite likely wouldn't care, or would > you? I'm invested in the spirit of the project, since I've been using it for a very long time, and continue to recommend it to many people as an amazing tool for self-organization. The more it becomes something I have to hack to like, the less I feel like putting my heart into it. I *care*, which is maybe both a blessing and a curse. It is the origin of my creative contributions, but also the cause of these annoying threads. I'd rather work with you guys than against you; but there are some sacred cows that moan plaintively, when a sharp parenthesis is drawn across their throats. Yours, John