actually you migt be betst ignoring the notes as they were written many
years before even the tses in it. but the code wfm.
On Wednesday, April 10, 2024, Samuel Wales wrote:
> to me, the concepts of the log mode feature and the showing inactive tses
> feature are so close that they are worth me
to me, the concepts of the log mode feature and the showing inactive tses
feature are so close that they are worth merging into the same
functionality, parameterized if needed [not needed for me].
in my own case, i basically want all [log mode and inactive tses] off or
all on. years ago, i implem
Russell Adams writes:
> I pull up a file in 'emacs -Q'.
>
> M-x org-agenda 1 a (restricted to current file, create agenda view).
> Now viewing the weekly agenda in buffer *Org Agenda*.
> Press "L" to enable logbook.
> Press "[" to enable inactive timestamps.
>
> I now see the full week with log
On Mon, Apr 08, 2024 at 07:31:10PM +, Ihor Radchenko wrote:
> Russell Adams writes:
>
> > I have noticed that when I pull up an agenda view, if I enable/disable
> > items (ie: enable logbook, enable inactive timestamps), that if I
> > change to a new time period (ie: forward/backward day/week/
Russell Adams writes:
> I have noticed that when I pull up an agenda view, if I enable/disable
> items (ie: enable logbook, enable inactive timestamps), that if I
> change to a new time period (ie: forward/backward day/week/month/view)
> that I lose some settings. Generally it's the inactive time
I have noticed that when I pull up an agenda view, if I enable/disable
items (ie: enable logbook, enable inactive timestamps), that if I
change to a new time period (ie: forward/backward day/week/month/view)
that I lose some settings. Generally it's the inactive timestamps,
though logbook stays.
C