On 02.02.2010 23:25, Ryan Thompson wrote:
If the previous command was anything else,
then Org Mode has no idea whether the buffer or its visibility has
changed since the last-executed S-Tab, since it cannot know which
other commands will affect buffer visibility and which will not.
I think, only Org changes visibility, so it can track current state.
On Tue, Feb 2, 2010 at 12:38 PM, Ivan Vanyushkin<va...@vanav.com.ua> wrote:
There is org-startup-folded that controls startup state, so org-mode should
know it.
Also S-Tab forgets state even in the middle of document. Key presses to
reproduce:
1) S-Tab - OVERVIEW
2) S-Tab - CONTENTS
3) C-G (or any other)
4) S-Tab - OVERVIEW (expected: SHOW ALL)
or
1) S-Tab - OVERVIEW
3) C-G (or any other)
4) S-Tab - OVERVIEW (nothing changed! expected: CONTENTS)
Is it by design? Why?
On 02.02.2010 21:40, Ryan Thompson wrote:
I don't think it is possible in general to know the startup state of a
file. Files with a #+STARTUP line may be an execption.
On Tue, Feb 2, 2010 at 11:28 AM, Ivan Vanyushkin<va...@vanav.com.ua>
wrote:
Hello.
On initial file opening, S-<TAB> cycles through
1) OVERVIEW -> 2) CONTENTS -> 3) SHOW ALL
not depending on current state of document.
So, if (as default) document is in OVERVIEW state, first press
_does nothing_ (switch to OVERVIEW again). Expected: CONTENTS.
If document initially "#+STARTUP: content", then first press switches it
back to OVERVIEW. Expected: SHOW ALL.
So, S-Tab (and maybe Tab) doesn't use context state when start cycling.
Is it correct and why?
org-version 6.21 and 6.34c
Emacs 23.1.1
Thank you for your answer!
--
Ivan Vanyushkin - Vanav.
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