Tyler Smith writes:
> I set up org-agenda-files to contain ~/org/, such that all files in that
> directory are in my agenda. I then add an individual file from
> elsewhere, via org-agenda-file-to-front. In the process, the entry for
> the ~/org/ directory is removed, and replaced with explicit en
Hi again,
Continuing to play around with getting org files into my agenda, I run
into this:
I set up org-agenda-files to contain ~/org/, such that all files in that
directory are in my agenda. I then add an individual file from
elsewhere, via org-agenda-file-to-front. In the process, the entry fo
Brenda Butler writes:
> I have tried links, but in all my attempts the links break whenever the
> source or the target is committed to version control. My understanding
> that each new commit to a file effectively changes the inode, breaking
> the link
>
> Sounds like you might be using hard
Tyler Smith writes:
[...]
> I have tried links, but in all my attempts the links break whenever the
> source or the target is committed to version control. My understanding
> that each new commit to a file effectively changes the inode, breaking
> the link.
Are you thinking of hard links rather
On Thu, Dec 31, 2015 at 1:38 PM, Tyler Smith wrote:
> I have tried links, but in all my attempts the links break whenever the
> source or the target is committed to version control. My understanding
> that each new commit to a file effectively changes the inode, breaking
> the link
Sounds like
On Thu, Dec 31, 2015 at 1:33 PM, Tyler Smith wrote:
> Ken Mankoff writes:
> >
> > In my version of this, I have each project as its own git repository,
> > where git contains the Org file, other code, the manuscript, etc. I
> > add any Org files to my global agenda with =M-x
> > org-agenda-file-
Kyle Meyer writes:
>
> In addition to what Ken suggested, another option is to use links to
> populate the agenda directory. Have a git repo for your Org notes and
> agenda file (your "org" directory above), and add this directory (or one
> of its subdirectories) to org-agenda-files so that all t
Ken Mankoff writes:
>
> In my version of this, I have each project as its own git repository,
> where git contains the Org file, other code, the manuscript, etc. I
> add any Org files to my global agenda with =M-x
> org-agenda-file-to-front= and remove with = M-x org-remove-file=.
>
>> most tutor
Hi Tyler,
Tyler Smith writes:
> Hello list,
>
> I'm struggling to incorporate project-specific org files into my global
> org system. My file system looks something like this:
>
> ~
> ├── org
> │ ├── todo.org
> │ ├── reading.org
> │ └── personal.org
> └── research
> ├── project1
>
Hi Tyler,
I have a similar setup.
On 2015-12-31 at 12:38, Tyler Smith wrote:
> ├── org
> │ ├── todo.org
> │ ├── reading.org
> │ └── personal.org
On my system this is a git repository and a cron (or actually LaunchAgent since
I'm on OS X) does a =git commit -a = every night. I also have
Hello list,
I'm struggling to incorporate project-specific org files into my global
org system. My file system looks something like this:
~
├── org
│ ├── todo.org
│ ├── reading.org
│ └── personal.org
└── research
├── project1
│ ├── project1.org
│ └── project1_reference.pdf
Hi,
org-index ("A personal index for org") has reached Version 5.0; it can be
downloaded at:
http://orgmode.org/w/?p=org-mode.git;a=blob_plain;f=contrib/lisp/org-index.el;hb=HEAD
A short introduction and demo is available as a screencast:
http://2484.de/org-index.html
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