On Wed, Jun 13, 2018 at 12:12 AM Berry, Charles wrote:
> > On Jun 12, 2018, at 2:30 PM, Ken Mankoff wrote:
> >
> > Based on the profiling, I think the reason it takes 1 minute is because
> the code blocks use <> blocks?
>
> I do not see this.
>
> It takes a bit longer to run the noweb example yo
Hello,
Thibault Polge writes:
> Steps to reproduce, from emacs -q:
>
> 1. (setq org-imenu-depth 10)
>
> 2. Create the following document:
>
> #+begin_src org
> #+TITLE: Test
>
> * Level 1
> ** Level 2
> *** Level 3
> Level 4
> Level 8
> #+end_src
>
> Notice the break on the struc
> On Jun 12, 2018, at 2:30 PM, Ken Mankoff wrote:
>
> Based on the profiling, I think the reason it takes 1 minute is because the
> code blocks use <> blocks?
I do not see this.
It takes a bit longer to run the noweb example you gave with 200 `baz' src
blocks, but nothing crazy - like 10
As an MWE, I can test with "emacs -Q" and the following org file:
#+PROPERTY: header-args :eval never-export
# (setq org-export-use-babel t)
#+BEGIN_SRC emacs-lisp :results none
(org-babel-do-load-languages
'org-babel-load-languages
'((shell . t)))
#+END_SRC
#+BEGIN_SRC sh :results org
Hello,
Uwe Brauer writes:
> First of all thanks for orgalist, I use it frequently and enjoy quite a
> bit. There are two features I am missing (or don't know who to use
> them).
>
> 1. How can I increase the vspace per default (say one blank line) between
> 2
>points in a list? That
On Tue, Jun 12, 2018 at 11:07 PM Berry, Charles wrote:
>
> > On Jun 12, 2018, at 12:41 PM, Ken Mankoff wrote:
> >
> > Hi Chuck,
> >
> > It looks fine to me. I see:
> >
> > Name: fig:foo
> > Lang: python
> > Properties:
> > :header-args:eval never-export
> > :header-args:python
> On Jun 12, 2018, at 12:41 PM, Ken Mankoff wrote:
>
> Hi Chuck,
>
> It looks fine to me. I see:
>
> Name: fig:foo
> Lang: python
> Properties:
> :header-args:eval never-export
> :header-args:python nil
> Header Arguments:
> :cache no
> :eval
Bumping this question to see if anyone has a workaround -
I recently have been wishing to search for keywords and order
the results in reverse timestamp order.
This sounds like a fairly useful and common feature, so I think
there must be something I'm configuring incorrectly. I am able
to reprodu
Hi friends,
Here's a new function that counts lines, words, and characters in the
region or the subtree at point. It prints a message like `count-words`
does, like:
Subtree "Heading" has 7 line, 5 words, and 28 characters.
Note that it does *not* count words in heading lines, planning lines
Hi Chris,
Thanks for the hint. I didn't think to profile. This may be useful, but I'm
not sure how to interpret the results, which are:
- command-execute 15852 79%
- call-interactively 15852 79%
- funcall
Hi Chuck,
It looks fine to me. I see:
Name: fig:foo
Lang: python
Properties:
:header-args :eval never-export
:header-args:python nil
Header Arguments:
:cache no
:eval never-export
:exports results
:hlines no
:noweb yes
:results file replace
:session discharge_ts
:tangle no
-k.
On Tue, Jun 1
> On Jun 12, 2018, at 7:01 AM, Ken Mankoff wrote:
>
> I'm trying to export a file to LaTeX. It takes about one minute. The
> file is 12000 lines long and has 200 code blocks. I have set:
>
> #+PROPERTY: header-args :eval never-export
>
That is the right idiom. Of course, you have to refres
Hello, Ken!
Ken Mankoff (mank...@gmail.com) 2018-06-12:
> Is there a way to speed up exporting?
I may be jumping to conclusions here, and if so, please excuse me. Have
you tried profiling the export? (As in M-x profiler-start, run the
export, then M-x profiler-report?) This can shed a surprising
Marian Schubert writes:
> Hello,
>
> I'm having trouble with babel block like this:
>
> #+BEGIN_SRC shell :results output :session xyz
> echo "foo#bar"
> #+END_SRC
>
> #+RESULTS:
> :
> : bar
>
> I expect results to be foo#bar, but it's just bar.
> If I remove :session xyz it displays correct val
I'm trying to export a file to LaTeX. It takes about one minute. The
file is 12000 lines long and has 200 code blocks. I have set:
#+PROPERTY: header-args :eval never-export
which means, I think, no babel blocks should evaluate.
(setq org-export-use-babel t) seems to be the culprit. If I set it
On Tuesday, 12 Jun 2018 at 12:23, Gerald Wildgruber wrote:
> Hi Eric,
>
> thanks for the input: indeed, I always use at least five windows (on a
> 40" display), as this setup displays simultanously almost 60Kb of text,
> an entire papaer, which is excellent!
That's a lot of text so maybe it's real
Hi Eric,
thanks for the input: indeed, I always use at least five windows (on a
40" display), as this setup displays simultanously almost 60Kb of text,
an entire papaer, which is excellent!
I will try the results with fewer windows tomorrow, when back in office.
Elsewise: do you see any reason
>"KM" == Kaushal Modi writes:
KM> htmlize.el is required for ox-html exports, especially if you export src
KM> blocks. You need to have htmlize installed in the default load-path (you
KM> will need to do that much customization in emacs -Q sessions too).
Thank you. In fact I am upgrading
On Monday, 11 Jun 2018 at 14:56, Gerald Wildgruber wrote:
> My typical setup is to use a maximized or full screen emacs frame split
[...]
> portions towards the end of the file. If I deactivate follow-mode, the
> problem disappears.
I have a 38" monitor and I frequently do what you say. However
Hi
First of all thanks for orgalist, I use it frequently and enjoy quite a
bit. There are two features I am missing (or don't know who to use
them).
1. How can I increase the vspace per default (say one blank line) between 2
points in a list? That is a variable which controls that b
Hello,
stardiviner writes:
> The original text:
>
> ,
> | We define refs the same way we define atoms, but the two are used rather
> differently.
> | Let's take a quick look at how they work below.
> |
> | (def names (ref []))
> |
> | (dosync
> | (ref-set names ["John"])
> | (alter na
For this very interesting setup, many thanks Tim. I am going to test
it and I will inform you about the results and/or my difficulties.
Many thanks again to Nick and to John, I always appreciate your very
kind help. (This list is terrific.)
(The problem with this latex class is tha
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