On Aug 12, 2009, at 6:09 PM, Dan Davison wrote:
Carsten Dominik writes:
On Aug 11, 2009, at 10:29 PM, Dan Davison wrote:
<...>
Try putting the following fragment into python-mode, and getting rid
of
the asterisks. Then org-cycle issued with point at any of the
asterisked
locations eats th
Carsten Dominik writes:
> On Aug 11, 2009, at 10:29 PM, Dan Davison wrote:
>
<...>
>> Try putting the following fragment into python-mode, and getting rid
>> of
>> the asterisks. Then org-cycle issued with point at any of the
>> asterisked
>> locations eats the string 'file' and prompts for a lin
On Aug 12, 2009, at 9:52 AM, Manish wrote:
On Wed, Aug 12, 2009 at 1:59 AM, Dan Davison wrote:
Recently I've been randomly losing the string 'file' from all sorts
of
documents. Up until now I had no explanation. It's not the sort of
question one wants to ask on public mailing lists.
OK, so
On Aug 11, 2009, at 10:29 PM, Dan Davison wrote:
Recently I've been randomly losing the string 'file' from all sorts of
documents. Up until now I had no explanation. It's not the sort of
question one wants to ask on public mailing lists.
OK, so if you call org-cycle "in the vicinity" of a word
On Wed, Aug 12, 2009 at 1:59 AM, Dan Davison wrote:
> Recently I've been randomly losing the string 'file' from all sorts of
> documents. Up until now I had no explanation. It's not the sort of
> question one wants to ask on public mailing lists.
>
> OK, so if you call org-cycle "in the vicinity" o
Dan Davison wrote:
> Recently I've been randomly losing the string 'file' from all sorts of
> documents. Up until now I had no explanation. It's not the sort of
> question one wants to ask on public mailing lists.
>
> OK, so if you call org-cycle "in the vicinity" of a word that starts
> with th
Recently I've been randomly losing the string 'file' from all sorts of
documents. Up until now I had no explanation. It's not the sort of
question one wants to ask on public mailing lists.
OK, so if you call org-cycle "in the vicinity" of a word that starts
with the string 'file', then it eats up