SSIA. I'm sure this is answered in an obvious place, but I couldn't
find it. Quoting so I'd get correct export rendering would be
sufficient.
--
Cheers =8-} Mike
Friede, Völkerverständigung und überhaupt blabla
Hello
I was looking at the table tutorial
[[http://orgmode.org/worg/org-tutorials/tables.html][here]], and some
information conflicted with my Org setup. It says
"When columns are narrowed, it might be useful to temporary see the
content of a cell with C-c ..."
I couldn't get it to work with this c
On 17.4.2011, at 09:18, Michael Sperber wrote:
>
> SSIA. I'm sure this is answered in an obvious place, but I couldn't
> find it. Quoting so I'd get correct export rendering would be
> sufficient.
| \vert | c |
| x | abc\vert{}def |
HTH
- Carsten
Hi list,
I use Pomodoro to help keeping me focused, and right now I use Focus
Booster on OSX.
However, I just found http://kanis.fr/hg/lisp/ivan/pomodoro.el, which
might be a good addition to the emacs PIM arsenal, haven't tried it
yet, but wanted to spread the word :)
Cheers,
Marcelo.
Just to follow up on my own post.
On 2011-01-25, Samuel Wales wrote:
> Do you just do this every time you want a within-headline section?
>
> #+begin_center
> ---
> #+end_center
I know about "-", but that extends across the page. Is there a
shortcut for a short separator?
Thanks.
Samuel
Just to say, I also am interested in how you would do this. There are
probably more attributes that I would like to add to the image (like size
and alignment for instance) than there are attributes I would like to add
to the link.
Mark
--- On Wed, 4/6/11, Francesco Pizzolante wrote:
> It is cool but doesn't play well with margins, as you have seen. I've
> given up on cool and use the following instead:
I agree on the cool not being cool. However, I do wonder why you would
want to use /ordinary/ footnotes rather than something easily removable
such as fixmenotes, e.g. \fxnot
1 dash: - 2 -- 3 ---
1 dash: - 2 – 3 —
When I write in ASCII, I notate emdash like "--". I think this is standard.
But in HTML export, that is an endash.
I never use "---" in ASCII. Is there a way to make "--"
export as emdash in order to be consistent with ASCII?
I wonder if we could control
For what its worth, "--" is an endash in LaTeX as well.
On Apr 17, 2011 11:04 PM, "Samuel Wales" wrote:
> 1 dash: - 2 -- 3 ---
> 1 dash: - 2 – 3 —
>
> When I write in ASCII, I notate emdash like "--". I think this is
standard.
> But in HTML export, that is an endash.
>
> I never use "---" in ASCII
Interesting.
However, unlike Org, Latex is not commonly exported to ASCII, commonly
copied without exporting to ASCII, commonly used as an organizing
system with ASCII pasted in, or multitargeted to ASCII (by copying and
export) and other formats, is it? Or is it? (Asking, not
rhetorical.)
Samuel Wales writes:
> 1 dash: - 2 -- 3 ---
> 1 dash: - 2 – 3 —
>
> When I write in ASCII, I notate emdash like "--". I think this is
> standard.
I think not. I see many (non-Org) ASCII documents that distinguish a
notional em dash from en dash by different number of hyphens, as in your
first l
On 2011-04-17, Ben Finney wrote:
> I think not. I see many (non-Org) ASCII documents that distinguish a
> notional em dash from en dash by different number of hyphens, as in your
> first list.
Like this---really? Or --- this? It does look, however, as if people
use different standards. I am no
On Mon, Apr 18 2011, Samuel Wales wrote:
> On 2011-04-17, Ben Finney wrote:
>> I think not. I see many (non-Org) ASCII documents that distinguish a
>> notional em dash from en dash by different number of hyphens, as in your
>> first list.
>
> Like this---really? Or --- this? It does look, howev
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