Neil Jerram writes:
Hi,
> Is there a best practice or recommended approach for preparing and
> providing an Org-based application so that others could make use of it?
>
> I've been using Org for a few years to keep track of the membership and
> 'fixing' for my choir - where 'fixing' means findin
Eric S Fraga writes:
> On Friday, 8 Mar 2019 at 13:05, Emil Marklund wrote:
>> Hello!
>>
>> Some[1][2][3] have been asking for a method to create repeatable tasks
>> that repeats on workdays (Monday to Friday). As far as I can tell, there
>> is no "native support" for this in org-mode. It would
Uwe Brauer writes:
>> Uwe Brauer writes:
>
>> When I do M-# # writing this mail I see:
>> ,
>> | [ *unsent followup to Uwe Brauer on gmane.emacs.orgmode* ] Exit
>> | with M-#
>> | (Meta-Key and #)
>> | * --text follows this line--
>> | Uwe Brauer writes: ...[
Uwe Brauer writes:
>> Uwe Brauer writes:
>
>> When I do M-# # writing this mail I see:
>> ,
>> | [ *unsent followup to Uwe Brauer on gmane.emacs.orgmode* ] Exit
>> | with M-#
>> | (Meta-Key and #)
>> | * --text follows this line--
>> | Uwe Brauer writes: ...[
Uwe Brauer writes:
>>>> "Thorsten" == Thorsten Jolitz writes:
>
>> A good start would be to try outshine with emacs-lisp mode.
>> With your outshine config done, write a file like foo.el
>
>> ,
>> | ;;
Uwe Brauer writes:
>> Uwe Brauer writes:
>
>> Wow, emacs 27 ... I'm on Archlinux and always thought packages a
>> pretty
>> up-to-date.
>
> Right Ubuntu officially only ships 24, which is pretty old.
>
> Well it is directly form git master, so it is a pre release.
> The official
Uwe Brauer writes:
>>>> "Thorsten" == Thorsten Jolitz writes:
>
>> Uwe Brauer writes:
>>>>>> "Thorsten" == Thorsten Jolitz writes:
>>>
>>> > Joseph Vidal-Rosset writes:
>>> > Hallo
>>>
&
Thorsten Jolitz writes:
> Uwe Brauer writes:
>
>>>>> "Thorsten" == Thorsten Jolitz writes:
>>
>>> Joseph Vidal-Rosset writes:
>>> Hallo
>>
>>>> I know that the subject of my email exists already.
>>
Uwe Brauer writes:
>>>> "Thorsten" == Thorsten Jolitz writes:
>
>> Joseph Vidal-Rosset writes:
>> Hallo
>
>>> I know that the subject of my email exists already.
>>>
> [[https://lists.gnu.org/archive/html/emacs-orgm
Uwe Brauer writes:
>>>> "Thorsten" == Thorsten Jolitz writes:
>
>> Joseph Vidal-Rosset writes:
>> Hallo
>
>>> I know that the subject of my email exists already.
>>>
> [[https://lists.gnu.org/archive/html/emacs-orgm
> Professor John Kitchin
> Doherty Hall A207F
> Department of Chemical Engineering
> Carnegie Mellon University
> Pittsburgh, PA 15213
> 412-268-7803
> @johnkitchin
> http://kitchingroup.cheme.cmu.edu
>
> On Sat, Mar 3, 2018 at 12:26 PM, Thorsten
Thorsten Jolitz writes:
PS
Ups ... a few little bugs in the code, here is version 2
#+BEGIN_SRC emacs-lisp
(defconst tj/radio-rgxp "^#\\+attr_org:[[:space:]]+:radio")
(defconst tj/radio-temp "temp")
(defconst tj/radio-wind "wind")
(defvar tj/radio-rw '(&qu
Hello List,
due to some interest in org-dp recently on this list, I actually took
the challenge of implementing a feature request by John Kitchin (without
actually sticking close to the specification, this is just a showcase
for org-dp).
Task: implement a radio-list with org checkboxes
Extra fea
Thorsten Jolitz writes:
PS
One more to show that one can not only easily modify a certain
org element, but that its just as easy to convert it to another type of
org element.
Use this (call M-x tj/obch)
#+BEGIN_SRC emacs-lisp
(defun tj/obch ()
"docstring"
(interactive)
(org
John Kitchin writes:
Hallo,
> This is a neat idea.
This is quite a nice use/show case for org-dp too.
I did not really try to solve the users feature request, just wanted to
demonstrate how different a possible solution looks using declarative
programming, leaving all the low-level parsing an
Nicolas Goaziou writes:
> Thorsten Jolitz writes:
>
>> You used the word 'discrepancy',
>
> True. I inferred it from
>
> (funny enough, some org elements have 'value' as their content, others
> 'content').
>
> which, IMO, sounds
Lawrence Bottorff writes:
Hi Lawrence,
> I'm looking at picolisp -- and wondering how it works, or better, why it
> doesn't really work work with babel. First problem, I couldn't get any
> form of picolisp to work in Emacs -- until I stopped starting Emacs with
> [...]
> I don't mean to complai
Nicolas Goaziou writes:
> Thorsten Jolitz writes:
>
>> I have defined these two constants in org-dp.el to work around this
>> discrepancy (and to know which elements do not have interpreted content
>> at all):
>>
>> ,
>> | (defconst org-dp-no-con
Nicolas Goaziou writes:
Hello,
> Thorsten Jolitz writes:
>
>> (funny enough, some org elements have 'value' as their content, others
>> 'content').
>
> Could you point out where there is such discrepancy in "org-element.el"?
I have define
Joseph Vidal-Rosset writes:
Hallo
> I know that the subject of my email exists already.
> [[https://lists.gnu.org/archive/html/emacs-orgmode/2009-08/msg00855.html]]
This works perfectly for your subject:
,[ C-h f outorg-edit-as-org RET ]
| outorg-edit-as-org is an interactive Lisp function
John Kitchin writes:
Hello John,
> I am trying to find some ways to programatically modify org-elements
> that use fewer regexps and motion commands. It seems like org-dp
> (https://github.com/tj64/org-dp) was intended to do that
thats right, that's it's exact use case
> but it is not clear en
Hello,
this is a long thread so I did not read everything, just want to mention
that in org-dp.el I did something similar using
- tempo templates (for a programmer who wants to insert an
org-dp-create call in his emacs-lisp program) and
- a universal (org) prompt function for a user who wants t
Michael Brand writes:
Hello Micheal,
> My requirements for orgstruct-mode or its replacement are very limited
> compared to what orgstruct-mode or outshine.el do or intend to do:
> 4) Key bindings exactly like Org
> All items 3)..7) are supported in orgstruct-mode, in outshine.el I was
> not a
Alan Schmitt writes:
Hi Alan,
> On 2016-09-30 22:52, Thorsten Jolitz writes:
>
>>> Are there functions for manipulating org-tables using emacs-lisp? More
>>> precisely, I would like to refer to a table by its name, read some cells
>>> (either by position or
Alan Schmitt writes:
Hi Alan,
> Are there functions for manipulating org-tables using emacs-lisp? More
> precisely, I would like to refer to a table by its name, read some cells
> (either by position or by matching some given text with some text in the
> first row/column), and write in some cell
Giacomo M writes:
Hi,
> right now I manually =er/expand-region= (from expand-region.el) until
> I select a subtree, and then =count-words-region= to get number of
> words for the subtree. I was wondering whether anybody already coded
> some lisp to programmatically have this count, ideally one c
Adam Porter writes:
Hi Adam,
> Thorsten Jolitz writes:
>
>> [WARNING: this is an extremely long post with lots of boxquotes that
>> might turn out unreadable, you might want to consider this as spam
>> and just ignore it]
>
> Hi Thorsten,
>
> I guess I h
Philip Hudson writes:
[WARNING: this is an extremely long post with lots of boxquotes that
might turn out unreadable, you might want to consider this as spam
and just ignore it]
Hi Philip,
> On 12 September 2016 at 23:10, Nick Dokos wrote:
>> Thorsten Jolitz writes:
>>
>
Joost Kremers writes:
Hi,
> I was wondering if there is some sort of (semi)official API for handling
> org files programmatically. That's to say, is there a documented way for
> non-org Emacs packages to manipulate (the contents of) org files?
>
> Specifically, I'm wondering about creating and d
Uwe Brauer writes:
>>>> "Thorsten" == Thorsten Jolitz writes:
>> Peter Davis writes:
>>> I realize this would require somehow converting the original message
>>> to org-mode markup, and that seems very tricky. I just wondered
Peter Davis writes:
> I realize this would require somehow converting the original message
> to org-mode markup, and that seems very tricky. I just wondered
> if anyone had taken a stab at building something like this.
outorg.el works with message-mode too, so I currently write this message
in O
"Paul M." writes:
Hi,
> I'm interested in treating an entire node or subtree as a source block
> for the purposes of tangling.
>
> Is there some way to specify that, say with properties, without having
> to explicitly surround text to be tangled with
> "#+BEGIN_SRC...#+END_SRC" ?
It depends wha
John Kitchin writes:
> On Wed, Feb 10, 2016 at 3:13 PM, Thorsten Jolitz
> wrote:
>
> #+BEGIN_SRC emacs-lisp
> (defun my-foo (_)
> "Hello World.
> Argument _ unknown argument."
> (+ 1 1))
> #+END_SRC
>
> strange. in Emacs
Eric S Fraga writes:
Hello,
>
> for a very long time now, my default org setting has been to use
> org-indent-mode with visual-line-mode activated. This has been working
> very well until sometime since the start of the new year. I have two
> symptoms now:
>
> 1. org files, especially large one
art for "_" to the docstring.
I don't remember that I've seen this before, so maybe this is a rather new
feature/convention?
> Thorsten Jolitz writes:
>
>> Hi List,
>> just out of curiosity, a few functions in org-element.el contain _ in
>> t
Hi List,
just out of curiosity, a few functions in org-element.el contain _ in
their parameter list, but its not used in the body.
What does it stand for?
--
cheers,
Thorsten
童俊翔 writes:
> I want to use capture, the following is my configuration in .emacs
>
>
> ;;(add-to-list 'auto-mode-alist '("\\.org\\'" . org-mode))
> (global-set-key "\C-cl" 'org-store-link)
> (global-set-key "\C-cc" 'org-capture)
> (global-set-key "\C-ca" 'org-agenda)
> (global-set-key "\C-cb" 'or
Rasmus writes:
> Thorsten Jolitz writes:
>
>> Its not wrong or unfair, but not what I would say
>> either. org-element does the same thing - parse the given text, work
>> on the internal representation, write the new text by interpreting
>> the modified interna
Rasmus writes:
> Thorsten Jolitz writes:
>
>> Xebar Saram writes:
>>
>> Hi Xebar,
>>
>>> Thx Thorsten
>>>
>>> i still use it daily :D
>>
>> I did not know that I have a user actually, because when I announced
>> i
Xebar Saram writes:
Hi Xebar,
> Thx Thorsten
>
> i still use it daily :D
I did not know that I have a user actually, because when I announced it
a year ago or so it never drew much attention (a bit to my surprise, I
must admit). So I'm happy about the news ;-)
You just used a few convenience f
Rasmus writes:
Hi Rasmus,
> I’m happy to see you in this neck of the woods.
thanks, I really hope that becomes a habit again ...
> Thorsten Jolitz writes:
>
>> Not sure if I understand what "base your work off master" refers to,
>> but I'll try cl-lib,
Hi List,
after not touching it for a year or so I recently rediscovered my org-dp
("Declarative Programming with Org Elements") library and still liked
it, so I decided to clean it up a bit and publish it as version 1.0 on
MELPA. Now you can install it via package manager or clone it from my
githu
Nicolas Goaziou writes:
Hello,
> Thorsten Jolitz writes:
>
>> Hi List,
>> again an Org function I used in one of my libraries has disappeared.
>>
>> ,
>> | org-dp-lib.el:483:1:Warning: the function
>> | `org-end-of-meta-data-and-dr
Hi List,
again an Org function I used in one of my libraries has disappeared.
,
| org-dp-lib.el:483:1:Warning: the function `org-end-of-meta-data-and-drawers'
| is not known to be defined.
`
Two related questions:
- is there a replacement?
- using Magit, how can I investigate the
Nicolas Goaziou writes:
> As a first approximation, I think
>
> (with-current-buffer (marker-buffer org-log-note-marker)
> (goto-char org-log-note-marker)
> (copy-marker (org-log-beginning)))
>
> is close to what `org-log-note-marker' used to be.
Thanks for the code example - I used i
Kaushal Modi writes:
Hi Kaushal,
> Recently the global variable org-log-note-marker was removed from
> org.el.
>
> But it is used in outshine.el as follows:
>
> (defadvice org-store-log-note (around org-store-log-note-around
> activate)
> "Outcomment inserted log-note in Outshine buffers."
> (le
Kaushal Modi writes:
> Has it been replaced - with what?
>
>
>
> Looks like setq-local can be used directly instead of org-set-local.
>
> -
> http://orgmode.org/cgit.cgi/org-mode.git/commit/?id=bc0588fee4994eda9474e62313eb9925ad65dab1
> -
> http://orgmode.org/cgit.cgi/org-mode.git/c
Hi List,
After updating Org from Git I get this error:
,
| and: Symbol's function definition is void: org-set-local
`
Has it been replaced - with what?
TIA
--
cheers,
Thorsten
Xavier Maillard writes:
Hello,
> there is an area where I am pretty dumb: orgmode articulation with Gnus
> buffers.
>
> What do I need exactly to do to activate orgmode into Gnus both when
> reading
> posts and when writing new ones ?
I guess you mean message-mode?
For writing:
- use orgstruc
Jonas Bernoulli writes:
Hi List,
> Aaron Ecay writes:
>
>> Thorsten Jolitz wrote the outshine library
>
> I know. I used it for a while and contributed a few commits. But I
> pretty much only used the cycling functionality at the time and when
> I discovered that `or
Rainer M Krug writes:
Hi Rainer,
>> This might be the issue discussed earlier [1]. If so, it is solved
>> (see the linked thread).
I just applied the (hopefully relevant) patch for this on github, so
this should propagate to MELA anytime soon.
I tried to close some of the other issues around
Kaushal writes:
Hi all, Hi Bastien,
> I don't know the outshine and outorg code in and out. But I wouldn't
> mind keeping it maintained with the pull requests I get.
>
> That said, adding Thorsten Jolitz to this discussion.
> @Thorsten Would you mind making me (
John Kitchin writes:
Hi John,
> Is there a convenient way to get the properties of a headline from
> org-element? I see they are in the parsed output, e.g. as :CATEGORIES
> emacs,org :DATE today, but I didn't see a way to get them if I don't
> already know what they are.
>
> I know how to get th
Alan Schmitt writes:
Hi Alan,
> On 2014-11-03 09:06, Thorsten Jolitz writes:
>
>> Grant Rettke writes:
>>
>>> On Sat, Nov 1, 2014 at 5:58 AM, Thorsten Jolitz
>>> wrote:
>>>> And there is a new library
>>>>
>>>> [[http:/
Grant Rettke writes:
> On Sat, Nov 1, 2014 at 5:58 AM, Thorsten Jolitz wrote:
>> And there is a new library
>>
>> [[http://goo.gl/pYYzS6][outorg-export]]
>
> I just used http://goo.gl/pYYzS6 and it worked fine; that looks like
> an org mode link.
It is an Org-m
"Charles C. Berry" writes:
> As to Thorsten's query:
>
> ,
> | what would acutally be the benefit of using RMarkdown over Org-mode,
> | or put it another way - when you already use RMarkdown, why do you
> | need Org-mode too? And if you use Org-mode, what does RMarkdown add to
> | the table?
Brady Trainor writes:
> 1. Cut some pieces from my .el or .org files,
> 2. Paste into the scratch buffer,
> 3. Convert scratch buffer to Major mode org,
> 4. Add src blocks using org-mode shortcuts (" 5. Edit as needed for email, for instance taking advantage of
> indenting etc. in "C-c '" mode
Scott Randby writes:
>> What if you try navi-mode with your orgstruct init.el? It works with
>> outshine and with org-mode, so maybe with orgstruct too?
>
> I found this on http://orgmode.org/worg/org-tutorials/org-outside-org.html.
>
> "orgstruct currently does NOT work with outorg and navi-mo
Grant Rettke writes:
Hi Grant,
> Last week I started learning about [RMarkdown]. It is a [literate
> programming] tool implemented in, and for, the [ℝ programming
> language]. Although I haven't dug in deep yet, I do know that (1) it is
> /basically/ [Markdown] and that (2) `org' exports both to
Karl Voit writes:
> Hi!
>
> * Thorsten Jolitz wrote:
>> Marcin Borkowski writes:
>>
>>> And now there's another problem: I'd like to have my init file
>>> collapsed to only headlines on opening. Since I visit my init file
>>> through a
Jay Iyer writes:
> Hi Thorsten,
> The file entries are as follows and the task/note/project sub-heads generally
> don't have active/inactive timestamps except when a scheduling/deadline is
> specified. Thanks.
> ** 2014-10 October
> *** 2014-10-01 Wednesday
> TODO first task
> Genera
Jay Iyer writes:
Hi Jay,
> The file entries are as follows and the task/note/project sub-heads generally
> don't have active/inactive timestamps except when a scheduling/deadline is
> specified. Thanks.
> ** 2014-10 October
> *** 2014-10-01 Wednesday
> TODO first task
> General note
Jay Iyer writes:
Hi,
> I have my Org files set up as date-trees containing a mix of notes,
> tasks and projects. I now have a need to generate a list of projects
> and tasks filed under specific date-tree or in a range of dates. Is it
> possible to get this listing from the date-trees if the entr
abonnements writes:
> Hi, thank you for your answer.
>
> Your solution is OK but only for the example I gave (2 or 3
> results). In practice I have about 10 results and the number of them
> may be variable... Furthermore :vars does not work on my version (I
> must use :var x=A :var y=B)...
:var
abonnements writes:
Hello,
> I have somethink like that
>
> #+call: gen(A)
> #+results: A
> : 10
>
> #+call: gen(B)
> #+results: B
> : 20
>
> Is there a simple mean to aggregate the results in a table, i.e to get
> | A | 10 |
> | B | 20 |
>
> I think some lisp can do that but as a beginner... bu
Marcin Borkowski writes:
> Imagine someone wrote a dedicated Org-mode LaTeX class, and the LaTeX
> exporter got an option to export to this class. The class modifies
> LaTeX so that it supports all Org's elements and objects, and things
> like tags, timestamps, checkboxes etc. Moreover, the loo
John Kitchin writes:
> Marcin Borkowski writes:
>
>
> Check the last element of org-heading-components.
>
> * Headline:tag1:
>
> #+BEGIN_SRC emacs-lisp
> (org-heading-components)
> #+END_SRC
>
> #+RESULTS:
> | 1 | 1 | nil | nil | Headline | :tag1: |
>
>
>
>
>> Hi
Eric Abrahamsen writes:
> Fabrice Niessen
> writes:
Hello,
>> On Windows 8, with Emacs 24.4.1 (from Dani) and Org mode version
>> 8.3beta, I can very often freeze Emacs when clocking into a task, or
>> when editing the timestamps found in the LOGBOOK drawer.
>
> I've gotten something looking l
Nick Dokos writes:
> Thorsten Jolitz writes:
>
>> Your interpretation of 'obvious' seems (obviously?) be a bit overly
>> optimistic sometimes.
>
> Probably apocryphal but ...
>
> http://mystatpage.wordpress.com/tag/g-h-hardy/
Nice.
Whats really obvious
Hi List,
I cannot find a good example file for org-invoice, does it exist
somewhere?
And does anybody have a workflow (and maybe src-code) that uses
org-invoice report data and a (customized) latex-class to
semi-automatically create good looking invoices from Org files? I would
be interested.
Nicolas Goaziou writes:
> Hello,
>
> Thorsten Jolitz writes:
>
>> ,[ C-h f yes-or-no-p RET ]
>> | yes-or-no-p is an alias for `y-or-n-p'.
>> |
>> | (yes-or-no-p PROMPT)
>> |
>> | Ask user a "y or n" question.
>> `
&g
Nicolas Goaziou writes:
> Thorsten Jolitz writes:
>
>> The conclusion of your answer above is that the item-interpreter cannot
>> produce the complete org-mode syntax for plain-lists that is recognized
>> by the parser and described in the manual?
> This question is
Nicolas Goaziou writes:
Hello,
> Thorsten Jolitz writes:
>
>> One more question: bullet strings are parsed 'as-is', but the
>> interpreter seems to have its own logic that is a bit difficult to grok
>> (or are there syntax errors too?):
>
> This is sim
Thorsten Jolitz writes:
> Nicolas Goaziou writes:
[...]
>> You should not provide 'on, 'off or 'trans, and even less strings, but
>> on, off or trans since your expression is already quoted.
One more question: bullet strings are parsed 'as-is', but the
Justin Gordon writes:
> I just updated emacs org-mode and when visiting org files, this
> binding takes effect:
>
> C-TAB (org-force-cycle-archived)
> Cycle a tree even if it is tagged with ARCHIVE.
>
> What's the best way to disable this binding?
>
> I use C-Tab for moving between windows.
Tr
Nicolas Goaziou writes:
> Hello,
>
> Thorsten Jolitz writes:
>
>> Hi List,
>>
>> evaluating this
>>
>> #+BEGIN_SRC emacs-lisp
>> (org-element-interpret-data
>> '(item (:bullet "1" :tag "hello" :checkbox "tran
Hi List,
evaluating this
#+BEGIN_SRC emacs-lisp
(org-element-interpret-data
'(item (:bullet "1" :tag "hello" :checkbox "trans" :counter 2)
(section nil "world")))
#+END_SRC
#+results:
: 1. [@2] hello ::
:world
the content is always placed on a newline, which looks strange in my
eyes.
Nick Dokos writes:
> Marcin Borkowski writes:
>
>> On 2014-10-17, at 00:19, Thorsten Jolitz wrote:
>>
>>>> OK, so what is the canonical way of doing this? I don't want to use
>>>> org-dp, since it is another dependency.
>>>
>>&g
Marcin Borkowski writes:
> On 2014-10-17, at 00:19, Thorsten Jolitz wrote:
>
>> However, here is a org-dp solution, use 't' instead of 'prepend to
>> replace the links, and whatever you want instead of "file+emacs" as
>> replacement. Of cour
Marcin Borkowski writes:
> On 2014-10-15, at 23:52, Nicolas Goaziou wrote:
>
>> Marcin Borkowski writes:
>>
>>> I have one more question. What I'm about to do is (basically) put
>>> "file:some-file-name::" in front of the link, without changing the
>>> description. I could use `org-element-put
Thorsten Jolitz writes:
> Marcin Borkowski writes:
>
>> On 2014-10-16, at 00:28, Thorsten Jolitz wrote:
>>
>>> Marcin Borkowski writes:
>>>
>>>> I see. What is the most interesting for me is the idea of
>>>> getting/setting propertie
Marcin Borkowski writes:
> On 2014-10-16, at 00:28, Thorsten Jolitz wrote:
>
>> Marcin Borkowski writes:
>>
>>> I see. What is the most interesting for me is the idea of
>>> getting/setting properties, that's what I was looking for.
>>
>> T
Marcin Borkowski writes:
> I see. What is the most interesting for me is the idea of
> getting/setting properties, that's what I was looking for.
Thats exactly what org-dp (https://github.com/tj64/org-dp) is about:
getting and setting element properties instead of working on the textual
repres
Marcin Borkowski writes:
> On 2014-10-15, at 09:16, Thorsten Jolitz wrote:
>
>> Marcin Borkowski writes:
>>
>>> Hi list,
>>>
>>> assume that I have a link object (e.g., I'm in the ellipsis part of
>>> this:
>>>
>>>
Marcin Borkowski writes:
> Hi list,
>
> assume that I have a link object (e.g., I'm in the ellipsis part of
> this:
>
> (org-element-map (org-element-parse-buffer 'object) 'link
> (lambda (elt) ... ))
>
> What I want to do is this:
> 1. check whether it is an internal link, and
> 2. if it is, c
Hi List,
in a derived backend it would be OK to let the parent backend (html)
export the TOC, but I need to post-process the exported html (wrap it in
extra code).
Since I did not find suitable functionality for this, I use a kind of
workaround:
1. disable default with option toc:nil
2. p
Hi List,
in an exporter I would like to have a filter function (for headlines)
that acts conditional on the back-end and on the headline's properties
(say its :todo-keyword). But is it possible to find the internal
representation of the filtered headline in the communication channel?
#+BEGIN_SRC
Aaron Ecay writes:
Hi Rainer,
> 2014ko urriak 10an, Rainer M Krug-ek idatzi zuen:
>> It looks like this - but I am always shocked by the number of brackets
>> in lisp.
>
> It’s a bit of an adjustment. If you get into any serious lisp coding,
> check out paredit – it forces you to always have ba
Brady Trainor writes:
Hi,
> Newb bug report:
> I think if I have a brand new Emacs setup, installing org with an "emacs
> -q", then installing outshine.el (all with built-in package manager),
> that there is some problems created, possibly because of outorg to
> install (IIRC, a "silent-notifi
Marcin Borkowski writes:
Hi,
> I have an Org file which should all go to the archive. What do I do?
> Should I manually archive all level-one headlines? Should I just append
> "_archive" to its filename? What is the best practice?
there are probably build-in solution, but something on the li
Florian Lindner writes:
Hello,
,
| * A
| ** AA
| *** AAA
| ** AB
| *** ABA
|
| Archiving AA will remove the subtree from the original file and create
| it like that in archive target:
|
| * AA
| ** AAA
|
| What I want (wish for) is to create it like that in the archive target:
|
| * A
|
gregory mitchell writes:
>> My intended use-case is editing Org syntax in HTML text-areas, and it
>> would be a marvellous solution to give the users a pre-configured
>> specialized Emacs(server) and help them to configure their web-brower(s)
>> to call emacs(client) as an external editor when ed
jorge.alfaro-muri...@yale.edu (Jorge A. Alfaro-Murillo) writes:
> hymie! writes:
>
>> I would suggest, rather than adapting more editors to support
>> Org, creating a stand-alone program that "compiles" and manages
>> Org functions separate from the act of editing them.
>
> Perhaps the easiest
hy...@lactose.homelinux.net (hymie!) writes:
> In our last episode, the evil Dr. Lacto had captured our hero,
> Manuel Schneckenreither
> , who said:
>>Hi fellows,
>>
>>I couldn't find anything on the web about it. Therefore, I like to ask
>>you if anyone knows a program (another editor) which s
Manuel Schneckenreither
writes:
Hi,
> I couldn't find anything on the web about it. Therefore, I like to ask
> you if anyone knows a program (another editor) which supports Org mode.
I recently asked about browser editors that give some support for Org
syntax, but with no results. I think it wo
Eric Abrahamsen writes:
> Marcin Borkowski writes:
>
>> Hi list,
>>
>> does there exist any place I could find the specs of the org-element
>> data structure? From what I can see, it is a list whose car is the type
>> of the element, then a (somewhat mysterious or me) plist follows, and
>> then
hy...@lactose.homelinux.net (hymie!) writes:
> *** This is a very long line which is way too long to fit on a single line
> so I have it broken up into smaller lines so that I can read it
> but still have the indentation lined up, so it's obvious (to me) that
> this is all designed to
Jarmo Hurri writes:
> Greetings.
>
> I have a very basic Babel question, but I can not extract the solution
> from the manual.
>
> I have a language-specific function - in this case Asymptote, but it
> could be e.g. C as well - that I want to use in a number of different
> source blocks of the sa
Andreas Leha writes:
Hi Andreas,
> Thorsten Jolitz writes:
>> Hi List,
>>
>> I set 'org-todo-keywords' as file-local variables in a file, and 'C-h v
>> org-todo-keywords' in that file's buffer suggests I was successfull:
[...]
>> but
Hi List,
I set 'org-todo-keywords' as file-local variables in a file, and 'C-h v
org-todo-keywords' in that file's buffer suggests I was successfull:
,
| org-todo-keywords is a variable defined in `org.el'.
| Its value is shown below.
|
| This variable's value is file-local.
|
| Document
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