On 2012-01-28, Nicolas Goaziou <n.goaz...@gmail.com> wrote: > If you don't know which one it is, you can successively mark each table > in that buffer and use org-export-dispatch with the region active (it > will only export the region) until the culprit is found.
I get "Before first headline at position ..." error. Can't send stack trace now. > (org-e-ascii-verbatim-format). That will affect ~code~, =verbatim= and > inline src blocks. Can these be affected individually? Or can emphasis be told to be always left in verbatim? >> It splits the window even though I have pop-up-windows set to nil. Rationale: It is true that this only applies to display-buffer. And this is not only a problem with your exporter. But most of Emacs can be made to work properly with this variable. There are parts that do not. Those require an ever-expanding list of defadvices, same-window-*, and other kludges to use the same window. pop-up-windows is a good candidate for the user to signal the intention to do this for all output buffers. In any case, I added a defadvice. There does not exist any way to say "Do not split output windows". So it is a constant struggle. >> Lists are not indented although I always indent them by 2. > > e-ascii back-end has its own (configurable) layout. In particular, it > doesn't bother with the indentation you use in the original Org buffer. > > I'm not convinced that lists should be made special and have their own > margin variable. There are not many visual markers in the ASCII output, > indentation being one of them. I prefer to use them parsimoniously. I might need to stick with the old exporter then. Here are 2 reasons I like indented lists: 1) Notice how it is set off so you know when the end of the list is? 2) Other reasons >> Feature requesti --export tables using tab characters. If it doesn't >> exist already. Maybe it does? > > Do you mean inserting tabs instead of white spaces in cells? If that's > the case, I'd rather not implement it. No, I mean that this is a useful way to send things to people who use proportional fonts. > Thanks for your feedback. Thanks for your work on the exporter. Samuel -- The Kafka Pandemic: http://thekafkapandemic.blogspot.com