Bastien <bastiengue...@googlemail.com> writes: > Hi Cian, >> Its just that when drafting papers I tend to have lots and lots of >> indentation in early drafts, and while narrowing trees is a godsend, the >> unnecessary (for my purposes) indentation is slightly annoying. > > If the purpose of such a temporary display is to make the export render > the structure of the narrowed buffer as if it was a top-level subtree, > then I agree this is useful. You can already achieve this by selecting > the whole narrowed subtree (with transient-mark-mode on) and exporting > the region.
Not really. Its simply a convenience method that I can probably hack for myself, but didn't want to if it already existed. Its simply when I'm drafting I tend to work in subtrees, and it becomes (for my purposes) quite unwieldy when working with large trees (as I tend to). The indent when I'm working with the narrowed buffer is a waste of space, and it also makes it difficult for me to work out what level I'm working at with a simple eyeball at the structure. However I can quite cheerfully see that this is not something most people would want/need. > But maybe a narrowed tree should be considered as a selected region by > default... Yes it probably should. _______________________________________________ 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