Please report back when you identify the issue. I regularly get latest org and have never gotten org-toggle-checkbox to do anything.
On Jun 13, 2011, at 6:05, "Wikström, Gustav" <gustav.wikst...@sogeti.se> wrote: > Good comments! > > I did some tests beforehand but did not try the minimal .emacs. > > The key is still bound to the function according to C-h c and M-x > org-toggle-checkbox did not do any difference. There is something blocking > the function in my initialization though, because when using a minimal > init.el it did work! Since it's probably a local error springing from > something altered by me I'll continue with the debugging on my own. > > Thanks for the input. > > /Gustav > > -----Original Message----- > From: n...@dokosmarshall.org [mailto:n...@dokosmarshall.org] On Behalf Of > Nick Dokos > Sent: den 11 juni 2011 19:51 > To: Wikström, Gustav > Cc: emacs-orgmode@gnu.org; nicholas.do...@hp.com > Subject: Re: [O] Org-toggle-checkbox broken in 7.5? > > Wikström, Gustav <gustav.wikst...@sogeti.se> wrote: > >> Hello! >> >> The command C-c C-x C-b has stopped working for me and I quietly blame 7.5 >> for it. Anyone who can >> attest or reject this statement? >> > > Works here: Org-mode version 7.5 (baseline.273.g889a48) > > Before blaming org, please do your due diligence: > > Execute the function by hand, with M-x org-toggle-checkbox RET, and > *report the results*: "it does not work" is just not specific enough, > because it depends on your expectations which may or may not match > reality. If it does nothing, then say so explicitly. > > Is the key still bound to the correct function? C-h c C-c C-x C-b will > tell you whether the key is still bound to what it is supposed to be > bound to (org-toggle-checkbox in this case). If not, then you are > probably using some minor mode that hijacks the key. Check the mode > line for what minor modes you are running, eliminate them one by one and > see if you can get the functionality back. > > If this doesn't resolve it, next start up emacs without your > customizations, just a minimal .emacs file that initializes org-mode, > visit the file and do the things above again. I keep a very short > minimal.emacs file for exactly this purpose, start up emacs with > > emacs -q -l ~/minimal.emacs > > and try to reproduce the problem. > > In 99% of problems, these are enough to identify the culprit. > > If you feel a bit adventurous and have the time, you can learn a bit > about debugging (see section 18.2, "Edebug", of the Elisp manual) and > trace the execution of the function. If you don't know elisp, you may > feel somewhat apprehensive about this, but it's a good way to dig deeper > into emacs. > > Nick