On Fri, May 10, 2013 at 1:49 AM, Carsten Dominik <carsten.domi...@gmail.com> wrote: > > On 7.5.2013, at 23:34, John Hendy <jw.he...@gmail.com> wrote: > >> On Tue, May 7, 2013 at 4:54 AM, Bastien <b...@gnu.org> wrote: >>> Hi John, >>> >>> John Hendy <jw.he...@gmail.com> writes: >>> >>>> On Fri, Apr 26, 2013 at 1:54 AM, Bastien <b...@gnu.org> wrote: >>>>> Hi Jisang, >>>>> >>>>> Jisang Yoo <jisang.yoo.ac+...@gmail.com> writes: >>>>> >>>>>> 2. Place cursor at the beginning of "** bacon" and press M-RET and org >>>>>> creates >>>>>> a first-level heading. >>>>> >>>>> This should now be fixed. Thanks for reporting this, >>>> >>>> There were some same/similar/related issues as well, and I'm still not >>>> getting perfect results. >>>> >>>> Using a minimal config (below), if I create this in a new file >>>> >>>> * test >>>> ** test1 >>>> ** test2 >>>> >>>> and then fold on * test, I get this: >>>> >>>> * test...2 >>> >>> I do have (setq require-final-newline t) in my config, which prevents >>> this. What happens is this: if you don't have the config above, the >>> folding will get wrong and display the "2" from the end of the buffer. >>> >>>> Also, after navigating to the end of * test...2 (with it folded) and >>>> issuing M-RET, I get a new second level heading after ** test2. I >>>> would have expected a new first level headline since I did M-RET on a >>>> first level headline. Or is that the default behavior? >>> >>> If you are before the "..." ellipsis, you are on a first level >>> headline and M-RET will insert a first level headline. Otherwise you >>> are on a second level headline ("test2") and it will insert a second >>> level headline. >> >> Ah, that now makes sense. But... just to be clear, take this case: >> >> * Headline1 >> - list1 >> - list2 >> >> Now fold it: >> >> * Headline1<cursor>... >> >> If I do M-RET at <cursor>, I get: >> >> * Headline1 >> * <cursor> >> - list1 >> - list2 >> >> Is that how it's supposed to work? My use case is generally to have a >> new headline after * Headline1 *and* it's contents, not putting >> contents inside the new headline. >> >> C-RET seems to behave more like I'd expect. In reading the manual, I >> think I was just confused on usage based on the definition of C-RET, >> however this in the description of M-RET is confusing: >> >> #+begin_quote >> If the command is used at the end of a folded subtree (i.e., behind >> the ellipses at the end of a headline), then a headline like the >> current one will be inserted after the end of the subtree. Calling >> this command with C-u C-u will unconditionally respect the headline's >> content and create a new item at the end of the parent subtree. >> #+end_quote >> >> It makes it seem like my original case in which the cursor is behind >> (after?) the ... should insert a same-level headline after the end of >> the current subtree (which I would assume means that headline and all >> contents). Am I reading that incorrectly? It doesn't really talk about >> the behavior if you're before the ellipsis. > > Yes, this is also a bit confusing. I think it would be desirable if it > worked as described in the manual, but this is not what is happening. > For now, I fixed the manual. >
Much appreciated, and I'll be following the other M-RET and C-RET thread as it seems some of this behavior will change in the near future. Thanks! John > - Carsten > > >> >> >> Thanks for clarifying, >> John >> >>> >>>> If so, I guess my only concern is the folding of the end of a headline >>>> if there's no hard return after it into the ellipsis of it's parent. >>> >>> Yes. Maybe M-RET could/should handle this corner-case but since >>> `org-insert-heading' is deserving a full rewrite, I'm not going to >>> try to handle this corner-case myself... let's just keep it in mind >>> when doing the rewrite. Thanks for spotting it, >>> >>> -- >>> Bastien >> >