Viktor Rosenfeld <listuse...@gmail.com> writes: >> Ah, you mean the textsc? Perhaps it is a bit eccentric. But you're >> bringing up a good point. It should recognize [p]+s and perhaps even >> order them. . . > > If there is no PS prefix set, users could simply write these out > themselves. I don't think it is much of a burden. Recognizing multiple > :P[+]S: tags in code seems like overkill to me. The all go into the same > \ps, don't they?
No, you'd want have \ps{ps:one} \ps{pps:two} \ps{pps:three}. Either they could be different subtrees * ps :ps: ** ps-one ps:one ** ps-two ps:two [...] or they could just be ordered the way they were in the buffer. Probably that's easier. > The latter example does not really work for me because I often write > letters below a TODO headline (as opposed to a dedicated file). So I > restrict export to a subtree which would not work if I'm below the > letter headline. In my case I would use something like this: > > #+BEGIN_EXAMPLE > * TODO write letter > :PROPERTIES: > :EXPORT_OPENING: ... > ... > :END: > > The letter goes here. > > ** TO :TO: > ... > #+END_EXAMPLE > I have a capture template setup for letters, so I don't normally have to > add the address information manually. I would probably stick to the old > format and use headlines if I have a PS and so on. Cool, you should write an article about! -- Don't panic!!!