Hi Eric, Eric Schulte wrote: > "Sebastien Vauban" <sva-n...@mygooglest.com> writes: >> Eric Schulte wrote: >>> aditya siram <aditya.si...@gmail.com> writes: >>>> What's the rationale for having padlines by default in tangled source? It >>>> generates wrong programs for languages where whitespace is significant >>>> (Haskell) and, for me, doesn't noticeably improve the look of the tangled >>>> file in cases where it isn't. >>> >>> It is possible to change the value of default header arguments on a >>> per-language basis because e.g., while (:padlines "yes") may make sense for >>> sh, it probably doesn't for Haskell. >> >> Could it be possible that ":padline yes" does not insert a blank line in >> front of the very first block, only *between* all blocks? > > I just pushed up a commit which implements this behavior. See the > attached file for an example. > > #+Title: Examples with the new padline behavior
The blank line which was inserted between blocks isn't anymore for me. ECM: --8<---------------cut here---------------start------------->8--- * Tangle these blocks :PROPERTIES: :tangle: yes :padline: yes :END: #+begin_src emacs-lisp :file test.csv "data" #+end_src #+begin_src emacs-lisp :file test.csv "datb" #+end_src --8<---------------cut here---------------end--------------->8--- results in: --8<---------------cut here---------------start------------->8--- "data" "datb" --8<---------------cut here---------------end--------------->8--- Note that I tried adding ":padline" to yes, but I normally should not, as it is the default. Best regards, Seb -- Sebastien Vauban