Eric Abrahamsen <e...@ericabrahamsen.net> writes: > Eric S Fraga <e.fr...@ucl.ac.uk> writes: > >> On Wednesday, 4 Mar 2015 at 17:28, Eric Abrahamsen wrote: >> >> [...] >> >>> I'm still seeing an issue where, if I start right off typing a big >>> paragraph of text at the top of the message (no salutation or anything), >>> all the lines *after* the first line are indented by one tab. Subsequent >>> paragraphs are unaffected. >> >> Hi Eric, >> >> I had this problem for a long time. It disappeared a some time ago now >> and I have no idea why. However, while I had the problem, I trained >> myself to always start an email (that was not a response like this one) >> with some form of salutation! More polite as well as avoiding the bug >> :) > > Well, sure :) I guess I'll try being politer! > > I just poked around a little bit, edebugging > `org-adaptive-fill-function'. I looked at the call to > `fill-context-prefix' two-thirds of the way down. I tested this with the > last email I sent, and I see that calling `org-adaptive-fill-function' > on the first paragraph results in `fill-context-prefix' being called > with the arguments 1 (the post-affiliated arg), and 447 (the end > position of the first paragraph). The result of that call is a tab. > > If I move to the second paragraph and do the same thing, the > post-affiliated arg was 447, and the end position is 475. The result of > that call was nil, which is probably what I wanted. > > My value of adaptive-fill-regexp, in this case is: > > "\\(\\([ ]*[_.[:word:]]+>+\\|[ ]*[]>|]\\)+\\)[ ]*\\|[ > ]*\\([-–!|#%;>*·•‣⁃◦]+[ ]*\\)*" > > I will poke further as time allows. I don't know much about filling (and > have never understood what "post-affiliated" actually means), but assume > I can eventually get to the bottom of it... > > E
It looks like the problem was that all the message headers are parsed as though they were part of the first paragraph of message body text. Why that should result in a secondary TAB indent I don't know, but regardless, Org probably should only be looking at the message body, and nothing else. The attached patch is a hack that adds the `mail-header-separator' regexp to the `org-element-paragraph-separate' regexp. That means it will only work for paragraphs, so there might still be weirdness if a message body starts with a list or what have you. Perhaps a better solution would be to narrow to the body of the message before doing the fill prefix calculation. Eric
>From cb65e1b8adad54e6fc72c1eddb79efa644abbfc0 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Eric Abrahamsen <e...@ericabrahamsen.net> Date: Tue, 10 Mar 2015 10:08:24 +0800 Subject: [PATCH] Change paragraph boundaries in message mode * lisp/org.el (org-adaptive-fill-function): The value of `mail-header-separator' should count as a paragraph separator. --- lisp/org.el | 5 +++++ 1 file changed, 5 insertions(+) diff --git a/lisp/org.el b/lisp/org.el index c566152..4f32e35 100755 --- a/lisp/org.el +++ b/lisp/org.el @@ -23017,6 +23017,11 @@ matches in paragraphs or comments, use it." (org-with-wide-buffer (unless (org-at-heading-p) (let* ((p (line-beginning-position)) + (org-element-paragraph-separate + (if (derived-mode-p 'message-mode) + (concat org-element-paragraph-separate + "\\|" mail-header-separator) + org-element-paragraph-separate)) (element (save-excursion (beginning-of-line) (org-element-at-point))) -- 2.3.2