>> >> Most languages should and (at least those I use regularly) do run in the >> directory of the containing Org-mode file. Which languages do not? > > I'm working on ob-octave.el which does not. So I'll fix it in this > case.
Great, thanks. > > Which leads me to another question I was about to ask. How to comint > commands in org-babel-XXX-initiate-session as session is not assigned > yet? I don't understand. > Right now I have something like the following in that function > > (comint-send-string > (get-buffer-process (current-buffer)) > "set(0, 'defaultfigurevisible', 'off');\n") > > I do it there as it does not make sense to call for each block. I was about > to write that ob-R does show stuff but I believe it was in earlier versions > of ob-R.el or something as I've checked and indeed nothing appears on screen > as code being wrapped in a device output block. > I'm not aware of a way to run code on the start of a session. I do see how this could be a useful addition. > > Also IIRC ob-sh does not change directory though I tried it on Windows with > cmd.exe. Granted I only run on linux, but (on linux) ob-sh *does* run in the directory of the containing Org-mode file. > Worth mentioning that it tangles into dot sh instead of dot bat or dot > cmd on that platform. It misses platform specific > > (defvar org-babel-tangle-lang-exts) > (if (string-equal system-type "windows-nt") > (add-to-list 'org-babel-tangle-lang-exts '("sh" . "bat")) > ) > OK, could you convert the above into a patch which we could apply to ob-sh? > > P.S. I feel like I'm hijacking the thread.... > > M. > I am certainly not the OP, but I don't mind, these varied topics all seem important. Cheers, -- Eric Schulte http://cs.unm.edu/~eschulte