strong. I’ve been using it since the beginning, and am
constantly impressed by how vibrant the contributions and community have
remained all throughout that time.
--
John Wiegley GPG fingerprint = 4710 CF98 AF9B 327B B80F
http://newartisans.com 60E1 46C4 BD1A 7AC1 4BA2
Hello,
The following patch adds ‘org-archive-finalize-hook’, which runs earlier than
‘org-archive-hook’ and in the destination buffer, not the original file. This
allows the context to be extended, the archived entry to be cleaned up after
inseration, maybe even encrypted or hashed to prevent chan
example.
Meanwhile, I corrected the behavior with advice. Not ideal, since it affects
all cases of pasting subtrees, but it works well enough:
(advice-add 'org-paste-subtree :before #'(lambda (_) (delete-blank-lines)))
--
John Wiegley GPG fingerprint = 4710 CF98 AF9B
Understood, I just haven’t had the time to dig into this. I’ll let you know
once I find out.
John
On Sat, Mar 16, 2024, at 12:46 AM, Ihor Radchenko wrote:
> Ihor Radchenko writes:
>
>> Ihor Radchenko writes:
>>
>>> So, may you dig a bit further and check why `org-agenda-prepare' is not
>>> ope
n visiting Org entries from the Agenda.
--
John Wiegley GPG fingerprint = 4710 CF98 AF9B 327B B80F
http://newartisans.com 60E1 46C4 BD1A 7AC1 4BA2
>>>>> Ihor Radchenko writes:
> No further votes.
> I am thus leaving the current behavior.
> Closed, poll.
> Canceled, bug.
Understood, thank you very much for the consideration. I’m training my fingers
to the current behavoir.
--
John Wiegley GPG f
havior”, then the muscle memory needed is
‘\ - ‘ rather than ‘\ ‘. Still feels odd for space to mean
anything rather than nothing, though… I mean, space is empty, right? :)
--
John Wiegley GPG fingerprint = 4710 CF98 AF9B 327B B80F
http://newartisans.com 60E1 46C4 BD1A 7AC1 4BA2
usually goes with agenda, consequences of some changes are not
IR> always straightforward.
Since my data should all still be compatible with the old version I was using,
I’ll see if I can bisect this. I know I was used to that binding, but I’m not
100% certain it wasn’t due to extenuating factors
ged entries, which is why I had that expectations.
--
John Wiegley GPG fingerprint = 4710 CF98 AF9B 327B B80F
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AppKit 2299.6)
Package: Org mode version 9.6.4 (release_9.6.4-1-g76cf21 @
/Users/johnw/.emacs.d/lisp/org-mode/lisp/)
--
John Wiegley GPG fingerprint = 4710 CF98 AF9B 327B B80F
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om Emacs_conf to =~/.bashrc=, even if
called
MT> from =~/.bashrc=
For the sake of consistency, perhaps import and export, rather than pull and
export? And, great idea!
--
John Wiegley GPG fingerprint = 4710 CF98 AF9B 327B B80F
http://newartisans.com 60E1 46C4 BD1A 7AC1 4BA2
small change
like this can lead to big headaches if not enough other people are actively
using it.
John
On Wed, Apr 26, 2023, at 1:25 AM, John Wiegley wrote:
>>>>>> "IR" == Ihor Radchenko writes:
>
> IR> Sorry, but I am against this feature.
> IR> Th
//list.orgmode.org/orgmode/87oatek909@nicolasgoaziou.fr/
I should be able to choose to trade performance for layout. It's my data.
Since this does not impair the performance of those who do not opt in for
this feature, it seems an unnecessary restriction to prevent it.
--
John Wiegley GPG f
d (not org-allow-properties-at-end)
+ (looking-at org-property-drawer-re))
(goto-char (match-end 0))
(forward-line))
;; When FULL is not nil, skip more.
--
John Wiegley GPG fingerprint = 4710 CF98 AF9B 327B B80F
http://newartisans.com 60E1 46C4 BD1A 7AC1 4BA2
ou surmised. This
is really quite strange, I'm not even sure how my configuration had led to an
inversion of the tag filtering behavior.
Anyway, I reverted that change and now all things are working fine. Sorry
again for the noise.
--
John Wiegley GPG fingerprint = 4710 CF98
>>>>> Ihor Radchenko writes:
> "John Wiegley" writes:
>> In previous version of Org-mode, I was used to "/ t" showing me only
>> entries that matched the tag keyed by 't'. Now it hides them instead.
> May you please provide a repro
mulate current nil)))
(org-agenda-filter-apply org-agenda-tag-filter 'tag expand))
(t (error "Invalid tag selection character %c" char)
The documentation for '/' says that "Keep only those lines in the agenda
buffer that have a specific tag.", so I&#
one area where Hydras come into their own is that once you have the
Hydra active, it stays active, allowing you to chain together many single-
letter commands.
For example, you could have a hydra for "large-scale syntactic structures",
where repeated uses of n/p are mapped to what C-c C-n and
ulls ELPA.git (as it should, since it's within our
purview as well), then global search&replace should still affect all the
files.
I hear your other points, so I'm curious now as to what more people think
about this who work on Emacs core: Do you want more modularity with regard
ELPA, o
re seems little enthusiasm for this as the way forward.
Correct, I don't want to move forward with the package.el option yet. Just
copying files into the core build structure should be very lightweight, and it
lets us focus on the ELPA separation first. I believe the package.el coupling
is
t something major-modes would want to include
default support for?
The last time I tried it, for C++ code, it was far too slow. Are you saying
it's effective for other languages, like Python or Javascript or Go?
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John Wiegley GPG fingerprint = 4710 CF98 AF9B 327B B80F
http
ctually done this. I remember when ActivePython bundled
quite a few things, making it an attractive alternate to installing core
Python (back when package management was still very poor in Python world).
--
John Wiegley GPG fingerprint = 4710 CF98 AF9B 327B B80F
http://newartisans.com 60E1 46C4 BD1A 7AC1 4BA2
cases where the answer was
"let's move some of those packages into core development to ease ___". This is
why I find it a bit surprising that some feel so strongly about keeping these
large, external packages in core.
--
John Wiegley GPG fingerprint = 4710 CF98 AF9B 3
encourage more major modes and other features to use CEDET).
Hi Stefan,
Can you clarify what the plans are here? Which CEDET features would we want
to use from core?
--
John Wiegley GPG fingerprint = 4710 CF98 AF9B 327B B80F
http://newartisans.com 60E1 46C4 BD1A 7AC1 4BA2
e right answer? Technically it doesn't
seem as though Django belongs there, even if culturally it sounds hard to
separate. Should it stay indefinitely, or should the development model change?
--
John Wiegley GPG fingerprint = 4710 CF98 AF9B 327B B80F
http://newartisans.com 60E1 46C4 BD1A 7AC1 4BA2
nolithic development model for no better reason than "we're
used to it".
In fact, what we're doing feels like if Python included Django in its main
repository, just to solve Django's problems of compatibility, testing, and
making its bugs known to the main Python developers
ur control; we can adjust our process to suit the needs of Emacs development.
LI> Emacs doesn't seem to have a massive surfeit of developers, so I wonder
LI> where this plan comes from.
It comes from the desire to decouple the development of large, mostly external
projects,
ve they
can be fixed.
We're moving toward a future where Emacs.git will represent "core Emacs", and
only contain what core needs (plus a few historical bits, I'm sure). There
should be no argument for keeping a project in core just to gain auxiliary
benefits.
--
John Wiegley
uld only be a mistake if other parts of core need to use it. If only
users make use of it, then having it ELPA will be invisible to them.
--
John Wiegley GPG fingerprint = 4710 CF98 AF9B 327B B80F
http://newartisans.com 60E1 46C4 BD1A 7AC1 4BA2
for the second, if anyone has ideas. Phillip, how is your work on these coming
along?
--
John Wiegley GPG fingerprint = 4710 CF98 AF9B 327B B80F
http://newartisans.com 60E1 46C4 BD1A 7AC1 4BA2
>>>>> "EZ" == Eli Zaretskii writes:
EZ> AFAIR, we have never released a major version so quickly, and I don't see
EZ> why this one would be different. A year at least, I'd say, probably more.
This was my feeling as well.
--
John Wiegley
efer to your judgment on
this issue, Eli.
--
John Wiegley GPG fingerprint = 4710 CF98 AF9B 327B B80F
http://newartisans.com 60E1 46C4 BD1A 7AC1 4BA2
signature.asc
Description: PGP signature
ite
> /home/bvr/.emacs.d/elpa/org-20151214/org-compat hides
> /usr/share/emacs/24.5/lisp/org/org-compat
> /home/bvr/.emacs.d/elpa/org-20151214/org-mobile hides
> /usr/share/emacs/24.5/lisp/org/org-mobile
> Features:
> (shadow sort mail-extr emacsbug message rfc822 mml mml-sec mm-decode
> mm-bodies mm-encode mail-parse rfc2231 mailabbrev gmm-utils mailheader
> sendmail rfc2047 rfc2045 ietf-drums mail-utils debug ox-texinfo
> ox-icalendar ox-html ox-beamer ox-latex ox-ascii ox-publish ox
> vc-dispatcher vc-svn flyspell ispell org-indent org-rmail org-mhe
> org-irc org-info org-gnus org-docview doc-view jka-compr image-mode
> org-bibtex bibtex org-bbdb org-element avl-tree org-w3m org org-macro
> org-footnote org-pcomplete pcomplete org-list org-faces org-entities
> org-version ob-emacs-lisp ob ob-tangle ob-ref ob-lob ob-table ob-exp
> org-src ob-keys ob-comint comint ansi-color ob-core ob-eval org-compat
> org-macs org-loaddefs find-func cal-menu calendar cal-loaddefs
> image-file face-remap server auctex-latexmk tex-jp latex tex-style
> tex-buf tex dbus xml crm multi-term cl-macs cl gv term disp-table ehelp
> ring edmacro cc-mode cc-fonts cc-guess cc-menus cc-cmds cc-styles
> cc-align cc-engine cc-vars cc-defs wheatgrass-theme mb-depth two-column
> bookmark pp icicles icicles-mode icicles-cmd2 icicles-cmd1 advice
> icicles-mcmd help-mode image-dired format-spec dired icicles-fn
> icicles-var icicles-opt kmacro ffap url-parse auth-source eieio byte-opt
> bytecomp byte-compile cl-extra cconv eieio-core gnus-util mm-util
> help-fns mail-prsvr password-cache url-vars cus-theme cus-edit cus-start
> cus-load wid-edit cl-loaddefs cl-lib thingatpt icicles-face paren
> elec-pair time-date battery time noutline outline easy-mmode reveal
> linum tex-site info easymenu package epg-config debian-el
> debian-el-loaddefs tooltip electric uniquify ediff-hook vc-hooks
> lisp-float-type mwheel x-win x-dnd tool-bar dnd fontset image regexp-opt
> fringe tabulated-list newcomment lisp-mode prog-mode register page
> menu-bar rfn-eshadow timer select scroll-bar mouse jit-lock font-lock
> syntax facemenu font-core frame cham georgian utf-8-lang misc-lang
> vietnamese tibetan thai tai-viet lao korean japanese hebrew greek
> romanian slovak czech european ethiopic indian cyrillic chinese
> case-table epa-hook jka-cmpr-hook help simple abbrev minibuffer nadvice
> loaddefs button faces cus-face macroexp files text-properties overlay
> sha1 md5 base64 format env code-pages mule custom widget
> hashtable-print-readable backquote make-network-process dbusbind
> gfilenotify dynamic-setting system-font-setting font-render-setting
> move-toolbar gtk x-toolkit x multi-tty emacs)
> Memory information:
> ((conses 16 392136 6731)
> (symbols 48 47030 0)
> (miscs 40 469 233)
> (strings 32 110900 14123)
> (string-bytes 1 3505337)
> (vectors 16 42209)
> (vector-slots 8 743867 4164)
> (floats 8 175 131)
> (intervals 56 1590 554)
> (buffers 960 16)
> (heap 1024 55644 2125))
--
John Wiegley GPG fingerprint = 4710 CF98 AF9B 327B B80F
http://newartisans.com 60E1 46C4 BD1A 7AC1 4BA2
Closed
> sgeorgii writes:
> I launch emacs (-q switch makes no difference), open my .org file and
> proceed as follows:
> M-x org-agenda
I've forwarded this to the Org-mode mailing list.
John
Copying bug report.
John
--- Begin Message ---
I launch emacs (-q switch makes no difference), open my .org file and
proceed as follows:
M-x org-agenda
a (agenda for current week or day)
menu "File" -> "PostScript Print Buffer"
instead of printout of agenda on my printer I get the following
> Achim Gratz writes:
> So isn't your request rather to hide the properties drawer better by
> default? You were _only_ talking about the UX in this whole thread and that
> might be a lot easier to adapt while not changing the way Org syntax is
> defined.
Good call, Achim! I became too focus
> Achim Gratz writes:
> If you don't use properties then it doesn't affect you at all. If you do,
> then… well, I personally simply don't care. Just like there's several style
> guides for writing C; as long as these are applied consistently I can live
> with most of them and put the braces a
> Nicolas Goaziou writes:
> I really don't like the idea of making Org /syntax/ customizable, would it
> be with the help of a hook or a variable.
>From what I've seen so far, several users want regularity of syntax to decide
formatting, and several users want user preference to decide forma
> Aaron Ecay writes:
> Adding knobs to this parser increases the burden of those who have to build
> and maintain it.
Thank you for your reply, Aaron, I found it most illuminating.
If the answer from the maintainers is "It's more work than we want to do",
that's completely acceptable. I've
> Stelian Iancu writes:
> John, if you end up writing an advice for this function, please share it
> with the list, as I would like the 8.2 behavior as well (I unfortunately
> don't know enough elisp and org internals to do such a thing).
To Achim I would say that these are the reasons to ha
> Rasmus writes:
> If the placement of properties is "free", the secondary interpreter /must/
> support this customization option to be able to interpret the org format.
> Note, this matters for both interactive usage (being able to click/open a
> reference) and for "export" (e.g. org-ruby).
> Achim Gratz writes:
> The whole point of defining a formal syntax for Org is that it becomes
> possible to parse Org documents with something other than Emacs and still
> make sense of them. To reap that benefit, you need to drop some of the
> ad-hoc parsing that Org did in the past.
Yes,
> Rasmus writes:
>> To those who repeat the performance argument: This is an opt-in only
>> request. It is not about changing the performance of default Org, or making
>> files more difficult to parse outside of Emacs for everyone.
> I disagree with your last claim.
I'm not sure I understa
>>>>> John Wiegley writes:
> I spoke to Nicolas directly and he mentioned that a goal for syntax
> regularity is to make it possible to reliably read and manipulate Org files
> outside of Emacs.
>
> For this I *am* willing to give up order independence of PROPER
In case this wasn't seen by the Org maintainers...
--- Begin Message ---
Start emacs with `emacs -Q'
Create a Org file `test.org'
Copy the following table into that file and save.
|---+-|
| Plugins | How to install |
|---
> Bastien Guerry writes:
> I think Achim's points above are very valid, and the flexibility offered by
> the option above should be very carefully examined.
I spoke to Nicolas directly and he mentioned that a goal for syntax regularity
is to make it possible to reliably read and manipulate O
> Will Monroe writes:
> As someone who uses Zotero and org-mode quite a bit, I'd be glad to help
> with testing, if that would be useful. I'm learning Elisp but I'm still a
> beginner. Nevertheless, I have a keen interest in bringing together these
> tools.
Me too, I'm a fan and active user
> Nicolas Goaziou writes:
> As a matter of fact, going to the end of an entry is not negligible, because
> of inlinetasks. Also, it is not really O(1) since it depends on the size of
> the entry. To get an idea, on my computer, moving past a 500 lines entry
> takes around 0.001s. I can imagin
> Achim Gratz writes:
> I don't think so. Search for end of entry can be complex in itself and you
> would never know if the properties you find by looking back aren't belonging
> to an entry one level down unless you scanned the whole span again. Also,
> properties can be any size and you ha
> Jonathan Leech-Pepin writes:
> Wouldn't last item in entry scale without issues? Find end of headline
> (start of next or end of buffer) and search backwards. If first element from
> end is a property drawer you have it, otherwise you still know there is
> none.
That sounds even better tha
> Achim Gratz writes:
> Well, that's precisely the thing that doesn't scale and that Nicolas wanted
> to avoid. Putting the properties at the beginning of an entry makes the
> search pretty much constant time and if you find something else at the start
> of the entry then you know there aren'
> Nicolas Goaziou writes:
> I'd rather not have syntax too much customizable, for portability, ease of
> maintenance, too. There are already too many mistakes in that area.
Thanks for discussing this with me, Nicolas. I appreciate there may be
technical complexities involved. Could we specia
> Nicolas Goaziou writes:
> It is for efficiency reasons. Properties are an important feature in Org,
> letting them anywhere in a potentially long entry doesn't scale well.
Since it scales for my use case, can I please have a customization variable to
relax this restriction? I prefer PROPER
> Nicolas Goaziou writes:
> This is not a bug. The order is HEADLINE (SCHEDULED PROPERTIES).
Ah, I had misspoken. It's not SCHEDULE-before-PROPERTIES that has broken for
me, it is the inability to have PROPERTIES at the very end of the entry.
Why must the properties drawer appear before the
> Puneeth Chaganti writes:
>> Actually there has been introduced a constraint on the ordering planning
>> lines and property drawers in 8.3. See http://orgmode.org/Changes.html.>
>> This at least invalidates to use PROPERTIES before SCHEDULED afaics.
> Yes, that is correct and you can use th
> Josiah Schwab writes:
> Upon upgrading, my org-habits did not display correctly, because the
> PROPERTY drawer where the habit style was indicated came after the LOGBOOK
> in my org files.
Is there a reason why this was done? I rather liked having my PROPERTY
drawers at the bottom of each
Hello,
I've upgrade today to Org 8.3.1, and I've noticed that any customization which
used overlays (mainly, org-habit) now displays no overlays in the Agenda
buffer.
Is this something others have already seen and found a fix for?
Thanks,
John
> Erik Hetzner writes:
> I don’t know if the behavior of vc-git-root has changed, but I don’t see
> anything in the emacs git log for vc/vc-git.el and it seems to have the same
> behavior in 24 & 25.
I hadn't noticed it breaking, but is it possible to make your change a bit
more defensive?
No reason I can think of.
John
On Mar 12, 2014, at 1:39 PM, Bastien wrote:
> Hi Oleh,
>
> Oleh writes:
>
>> I wanted to store this file as an attachment in an org document, so I
>> don't forget about it, but this attachment can't be opened due
>> to `org-attach-file-list` ignoring all files
> Carsten Dominik writes:
> Bastien's activity has been unmatched. He has answered a huge amount of
> questions in the mailing list, fixed an uncounted number of bugs and he has
> been designing and applying changes over the entire breadth of the Org code
> base. This is no easy feat and I
> Michael Heinrich writes:
> I came from planner-mode and use kind of GTD also in org-mode. One
> thing I still miss in org-mode is the flexibility of moving tasks up and
> down on the today page.
Hi Michael, planner author here and now org-mode user too. :)
You'll have to change the posit
> Michael Heinrich writes:
> whenever I change the todo state of a task in the agenda this task becomes
> line 1 in my agenda buffer. This is really annoying for me. How can I
> change to the old behaviour where the agenda buffer is not scrolled down?
I'll second this, I just noticed this
If I use C-u > to hide a category of tasks from the agenda, and then refresh
the agenda with 'g', it will show me only the category I had hidden! In other
words, it inverts the meaning of the hiding.
John
In Org I've liked that fact that hitting M-RET in a list of headlines which
have no intervening whitespace, will add a new headline without whitespace.
Example:
* One
* Two
* Three
If hit M-RET at the , I'll would get:
* One
* Two
*
* Three
With the latest Org, I ge
I just upgraded to Org-mode's master branch today, and found that the
org-priority face gets applied not just to the '[#C]' cookie, but the entire
text of the headline in the Agenda buffer. Is this intended?
Thanks,
John
> Jambunathan K writes:
> I offer to take over maintainership of Org.
> Offer closes in 7 days. Only pre-condition will be that Org-8.0 and
> subsequent releases happen under my supervision.
>
> Principals and riff-raffs can PM me with your thoughts. I defend your right
> to choose the mai
>>>>> John Wiegley writes:
> The value of git-annex is that it lets you associate truly huge files with a
> Git repository that are check-summed and easily archived, which you can then
> drop from your local attachments directory when you no longer need the file
>
I pushed a change to master that allows you to use the wonderful git-annex
utility[1] seamlessly with org-attach. The way it works is as follows:
1. If your `org-attach-directory' is a git working tree,
2. and if you have run "git annex init" there,
3. and if `org-attach-git-annex-cutoff' is
I can get an agenda report for the next 4 days using:
M-: (org-agenda-change-time-span 4) RET
But there seems to be no command for doing so. It would be nice if `v N',
where N is a number 1-9, could give me a report for the next N days.
This is useful to me right now because I have a house-mo
> Alan Schmitt writes:
> Thanks a lot, that was most helpful. Here is what I ended up with, if it may
> help other people:
> (org-add-link-type "x-devonthink-item" 'org-devonthink-open)
> (defun org-devonthink-open (link)
> "Open the devonthink link."
> (start-process (c
I have a shell block in my todo.txt which I've been using for generating some
reports for about a year. I just tried C-c C-c in that shell block today, and
got the following:
--8<---cut here---start->8---
Debugger entered--Lisp error: (void-variable org-current
> Frank writes:
> I've used org-mode about a year and a half, and I don't think it's the best
> application for what you describe. There are several packages available to
> do this; the one I've used most often and successfully is Zotero
> (zotero.org). This is a browswer plug-in which imp
> Karl Voit writes:
> I am using Org-mode to organize my contacts following org-contacts.el[1] and
> a *lot* of additional properties. Those things are so far »by convention«
> and I always wanted to sum it up on WORG but did not find time for that.
You know, it really shouldn't be hard to w
> Mehul Sanghvi writes:
> I was clocked-in and I absentmindedly quit out of emacs without doing a
> clock-out. How do I get the clock working and picking up from where it left
> off ? Or have I lost what I had for today ?
Type M-x org-resolve-clocks.
John
> Max Mikhanosha writes:
> In fact I kind of like it, so wondering maybe it should be made `t' by
> default?
Please no. I do not want to be overwhelmed by seeing all of my habits every
day, since that defeats the whole purpose of Org-mode for me: reducing
overwhelm.
Thanks, John
> Bastien writes:
> You might also look at org-element.el.
> FYI: Nicolas and I have been discussing about the issue you raised, and the
> integration of org-element.el will force us to be clearer about such cases,
> which is good.
I think Org-X and org-element can be merged.
Org-X is a b
I discovered the < key in the agenda yesterday (by accident!), which filters
the Agenda down to entries having the same category.
However, I use both *categories* and *projects*. For example:
* Work
:CATEGORY: Work
:OVERLAY: (face (:background "#fdfdeb"))
** PROJECT Foo
:CATEGOR
> Marcelo de Moraes Serpa writes:
> Hi folks, What is the best way to setup notifications to work with Growl for
> orgmode? I know org can work with emacs Appt system, but is anyone currently
> using it with Growl for notifications?
> If you could point me to the right direction, I'd be grat
> Michael Brand writes:
> When one does "Shift-" on an inactive timestamp it remains
> inactive. When one does "C-c . S- RET" the inactive timestamp changes
> to active but I would like it also to remain inactive. What are the opinions
> on this?
C-c . is the keystroke for inserting an activ
> Dave Abrahams writes:
> Yeah, it's just a question of having to think absolutely when you want to
> think incrementally. That's a lot of keystrokes when what I want is to hit
> `f' (or something) 3 times to move the items to three days from now.
+1.
John
> Rainer Stengele writes:
> I think I have read somewhere that you wrote a function which does the
> following:
> If a todos schedule date is more than one day in the past it will be
> scheduled automatically to today when using the function to move the
> schedule forward for one day.
> Is
> Bernt Hansen writes:
> I log stuff in :LOGBOOK: with the items reversed so the newest is always on
> top.
> SPC on a task in the agenda opens the task including the drawer so I can see
> the details for any given task.
Or in that case you should be able to type E in the agenda and see it
> Andy Moreton writes:
>> I bind M-n/p to next/perv-week/day/etc.
> I fervently hope this an unfortunate typo. A whole week ? :-)
LOL. Somehow, flyspell thinks prev is less correct than perv.
John
> Andrea Crotti writes:
> On 10/12/2011 03:54 PM, Dave Abrahams wrote:
>> Binding `org-agenda-date-later' to a key like `f' ought to work out for
>> you.
> 'f' is already bound to next-week, and it's also quite useful.
I bind M-n/p to next/perv-week/day/etc.
John
> Dave Abrahams writes:
> It always strikes me as odd that `f' in agenda view moves the item forward
> by a day even if that leaves it still in the past. Typically if I have an
> overdue item, I just want to schedule it for today or a certain number of
> days in the future, and as it stands
> Rainer M Krug writes:
> I am already using desktop-save, but I have the feeling that it sometimes
> does not work.
Just to note (and yes, this is very OT, so I won't say more):
WorkgroupsForWindows solves a different problem than desktop-save. In fact,
there are three aspects to the prob
> Dave Abrahams writes:
>> From the doc string for org-log-done: You can have local logging settings
>> for a subtree by setting the LOGGING property to one or more of these
>> keywords.
> NICE! Thank you!
Just be aware that for Habits, you need to set it to "logdone", because
although a n
> Michael Steeves writes:
> If I have something that I want to track in terms of consistency, and want
> to do it during the weekdays, is there a way I could express that other then
> having a series of 5 habits, one for each day of the week, each one of which
> would repeat every week?
The
> Dave Abrahams writes:
> I have habits that I need to perform, e.g., every weekday, or four times a
> week. I don't see a way to express that. If I could schedule a task for
> +1.4d or +1.75d (respectively), I'd be happy.
Habits aren't really for scheduling, they're for monitoring a simpl
> timetrap writes:
> http://jblevins.org/projects/deft/
> This is different than org-velocity, as it uses multiple text files rather
> than an org-file or a bucket file, you can also add or delete files from
> within deft-mode.
This is a *lot* like howm-mode, which adds Wiki-linking on top
> Bastien writes:
> I will fix this today. Sorry this caused so much problems.
Thanks so much, Bastien, you're awesome.
John
>>>>> John Wiegley writes:
> In the current Org (updated today), this problem now affects *all*
> non-drawer text in entries, including code blocks, lists, and log entries!
> This is makes entry shifting completely useless to me. What do I need to
> revert to make i
> Nick Dokos writes:
> Perhaps Seb Vauban identified the bug correctly (earlier in this thread): he
> pointed to the thread entitled "Extra space inserted in repeated task's date
> line" - see
> http://thread.gmane.org/gmane.emacs.orgmode/45623
In the current Org (updated today), this
> Nick Dokos writes:
> And while I'm at it, what is "r" bound to? In my case, it is
> 'org-self-insert-command: even after turning on org-indent-mode, "r"
> self-inserts. What am I missing?
It is a "speed key", which is bound only when point is on the '*' of a
headline.
John
> Nicolas Goaziou writes:
> So for now, a solution would be to move the block after the drawer.
I prefer my PROPERTIES block to be last, so I need another solution.
> I haven't checked but I don't think it is new.
I've been shifting code-containing entries for many months now. This only
j
I don't have any org-babel variables customized. I have a code block like
this:
*** NOTE Assets:Receivable:CEG
#+begin_src sh :results value :exports results
ledger reg --inject=Expected '^income:ceg'
ledger reg --sort date -b 2007 receivable:CEG
#+end_src
:PROPERTIES:
:ID
>>>>> John Wiegley writes:
>>>>> Le Wang writes:
>> I wasn't able to google a clear examples of how to do this. For example,
>> I'd like to highlight all text between double-quotes.
> Typically it looks something like this:
> (fo
> Le Wang writes:
> I wasn't able to google a clear examples of how to do this. For example,
> I'd like to highlight all text between double-quotes.
Typically it looks something like this:
(font-lock-add-keywords org-mode
(list (list (concat "\\(\"[^\"]+\"\\)")
Hi all, I'm considering switching my lengthy .emacs over to a literate Org
file, using ob-tangle, and as I was wondering if others had any experience
with this, and if so, does it slow down startup much? Is there a way to get
ob-tangle to compile the resulting Elisp file? I'm guessing it does not
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