Hi Nicolas,
Nicolas Goaziou writes:
> Sebastian Miele writes:
>
>> The Org default of org-edit-src-content-indentation is 2. I like that
>> value and leave it that way. Worg's root .dir-locals sets it to 0
>> buffer-locally in at least many Worg's Org files. Hence, when I edit an
>> src block i
Neil Jerram writes:
> If org-web and organice are browser-based, why do they need syncing? Could
> the server be your regular non-mobile Org machine?
Presumably yes, if you're willing to keep it online and run a WebDAV
server on it.
> On Tue, 19 Nov 2019 at 08:57, Diego Zamboni wrote:
>> Loo
Anssi Saari writes:
Hi Anssi,
> Just curious but what do you sync to with Foldersync?
To a directory on my computer via sftp
>> However, I have been following Orgzly's development, Webdav and git
>> sync have just been implemented.
>
> I hadn't noticed git sync?
You won't see it yet:
https:/
Hello,
Sebastian Miele writes:
> The Org default of org-edit-src-content-indentation is 2. I like that
> value and leave it that way. Worg's root .dir-locals sets it to 0
> buffer-locally in at least many Worg's Org files. Hence, when I edit an
> src block in a Worg file, the value of org-edit-s
If org-web and organice are browser-based, why do they need syncing? Could
the server be your regular non-mobile Org machine?
On Tue, 19 Nov 2019 at 08:57, Diego Zamboni wrote:
> Hm... organice is suspiciously similar to https://org-web.org/, which I
> had seen before. Even the Sample files are
Hm... organice is suspiciously similar to https://org-web.org/, which I had
seen before. Even the Sample files are almost identical.
Looking at the github history, organice seems to be a fork of org-web, but
with more recent development.
--Diego
On Mon, Nov 18, 2019 at 10:10 PM Richard Lawrence