Matt Price writes:
> On Wed, Dec 5, 2012 at 7:44 PM, Alan L Tyree wrote:
>> On 06/12/12 11:22, Rasmus wrote:
>>>
>>> Andrew Hyatt writes:
>>>
This sounds like an interesting project. My advice is to make a few
screenshots that give people an idea what you are working towards.
Of
Hi!
Clocking in changes my TODO state from TODO to INWORK, which is ok.
I have some tasks which I want to stay with the initial TODO state when
clocking time to it.
Can I configure this behavior through a property inhibiting the state
change when clocking?
Thanks!
Rainer
Hi Vikas,
Vikas Rawal wrote:
> The top title space on the orgmode website says: "Org mode is for
> keeping notes, maintaining TODO lists, doing project planning, and
> authoring with a fast and effective plain-text system."
>
> Orgmode today does a lot more than organising/planning.
FYI, AFAIK, t
Vikas Rawal writes:
> The top title space on the orgmode website says: "Org mode is for
> keeping notes, maintaining TODO lists, doing project planning, and
> authoring with a fast and effective plain-text system."
>
> Orgmode today does a lot more than organising/planning. I felt that
> the abov
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On 06/12/12 09:36, Jambunathan K wrote:
>
> I am attaching screen shot of LibreOffice UI.
Nice - I cusomised libreoffice immediately to look like that - nice.
>
> On the left is the navbar. - You can quickly navigate to any heading, a table
> or a
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On 06/12/12 10:11, Rainer M Krug wrote:
> On 06/12/12 09:36, Jambunathan K wrote:
>
>> I am attaching screen shot of LibreOffice UI.
>
> Nice - I cusomised libreoffice immediately to look like that - nice.
>
>
>> On the left is the navbar. - You ca
Dear list,
GNU Emacs 24.1.1 (i386-mingw-nt5.1.2600) of 2012-06-10 on MARVIN
Org-mode version 7.8.11
on windows XP
I create a link to a directory
file:c:/home
When I "mouse click" or press C-c C-o (org-open-at-point)
I would like the link to be opened in dired, but windows explorer appears.
How
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OK - Left side: is present in ecb. I installed ecb from MELPA (the other
version does not work
with emacs 24 and the cedet version) and I have the navigation panel - very
nice. ecb, I am back.
Cheers,
Rainer
On 06/12/12 10:14, Rainer M Krug wrot
The last test will fail if run before 15:00... either the clock table code gets
smarter to recognize that you'd want the end of the day when specifying ":tend
" or the test should specify ":tend ".
Regards,
Achim.
Rainer M. Krug writes:
> On 06/12/12 09:36, Jambunathan K wrote:
>> On the left is the navbar. - You can quickly navigate to any
>> heading, a table or a captioned
>> figure.
>
> Couldn't the navbar from emacs be used for that? I haven't used it in
> a long time, but in ecb
> (Emacs Code Browswer)
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On 06/12/12 11:51, David Engster wrote:
> Rainer M. Krug writes:
>> On 06/12/12 09:36, Jambunathan K wrote:
>>> On the left is the navbar. - You can quickly navigate to any heading, a
>>> table or a
>>> captioned figure.
>>
>> Couldn't the navbar fro
Hi Rainer,
Rainer Stengele writes:
> Clocking in changes my TODO state from TODO to INWORK, which is ok.
>
> I have some tasks which I want to stay with the initial TODO state when
> clocking time to it.
> Can I configure this behavior through a property inhibiting the state
> change when clocki
writes:
> Dear list,
>
> GNU Emacs 24.1.1 (i386-mingw-nt5.1.2600) of 2012-06-10 on MARVIN
>
> Org-mode version 7.8.11
>
> on windows XP
>
> I create a link to a directory
>
> file:c:/home
Try
file+emacs:c:/home
Regards,
Bernt
>
> When I “mouse click” or press C-c C-o (org-open-at-point)
>
> I
On Thu, Dec 6, 2012 at 5:51 AM, David Engster wrote:
> Rainer M. Krug writes:
>> On 06/12/12 09:36, Jambunathan K wrote:
>>> On the left is the navbar. - You can quickly navigate to any
>>> heading, a table or a captioned
>>> figure.
>>
>> Couldn't the navbar from emacs be used for that? I haven't
On Thu, Dec 6, 2012 at 6:25 AM, Rainer M Krug wrote:
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>
> On 06/12/12 11:51, David Engster wrote:
>> Rainer M. Krug writes:
>>> On 06/12/12 09:36, Jambunathan K wrote:
On the left is the navbar. - You can quickly navigate to any heading, a
>>>
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On 06/12/12 12:55, Matt Price wrote:
> On Thu, Dec 6, 2012 at 6:25 AM, Rainer M Krug wrote:
>> -BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE- Hash: SHA1
>>
>> On 06/12/12 11:51, David Engster wrote:
>>> Rainer M. Krug writes:
On 06/12/12 09:36, Jambunathan
On Thu, Dec 6, 2012 at 3:36 AM, Jambunathan K wrote:
>
> I am attaching screen shot of LibreOffice UI.
>
> On the left is the navbar.
> - You can quickly navigate to any heading, a table or a captioned
> figure.
>
> On the right is the style - one can choose char, paragraph, frame, list
> styles
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On 06/12/12 12:50, Matt Price wrote:
> On Thu, Dec 6, 2012 at 5:51 AM, David Engster wrote:
>> Rainer M. Krug writes:
>>> On 06/12/12 09:36, Jambunathan K wrote:
On the left is the navbar. - You can quickly navigate to any heading, a
table
that looks really great, I'm going to play with it as soon as I can -
-thanks! Hve you set up your own window layouts using htis package?
matt
On Wed, Dec 5, 2012 at 11:21 PM, Yagnesh Raghava Yakkala
wrote:
>
> Hello Matt,
>
> IIUC Scrivener, the one difficult part is implementing a window mange
Matt Price writes:
> (1) do you know if it's possible to get the speedbar buffer in a
> window instead of a frame?
I initially thought that would be easy. Turns out it isn't. ECB uses all
kinds of 'defadvice' to achieve that.
There's a package sr-speedbar at
http://www.emacswiki.org/SrSpeedbar
On Thu, Dec 6, 2012 at 3:08 AM, Eric Abrahamsen wrote:
> Matt Price writes:
>
>> On Wed, Dec 5, 2012 at 7:44 PM, Alan L Tyree wrote:
>>> On 06/12/12 11:22, Rasmus wrote:
Andrew Hyatt writes:
> This sounds like an interesting project. My advice is to make a few
> screensh
>
> Why not just type out what the page should say? That is in the spirit
> of collaborative way of using things.
>
> Your mail sounds more like a complaint, but with a polite tone.
Oops. I was not complaining. I am sorry if my mail gave that
impression. I raised an issue. Or, what I thought wa
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On 06/12/12 13:07, David Engster wrote:
> Matt Price writes:
>> (1) do you know if it's possible to get the speedbar buffer in a window
>> instead of a frame?
>
> I initially thought that would be easy. Turns out it isn't. ECB uses all
> kinds of 'd
writes:
> When I “mouse click” or press C-c C-o (org-open-at-point)
>
> I would like the link to be opened in dired, but windows explorer
> appears.
dired=> C-u C-c C-o
explorer => C-u C-u C-c C-o
--
Hi there,
I had to describe orgmode to a young colleague of mine... and I came
up with something like:
Orgmode is a Free/libre plain-text versatile personal workflow and
information tool for GNU Emacs allowing you to keep and organize
notes, projects, calendars, do literate programming and reprod
On 12/06/12 20:09 PM, Matt Price wrote:
> On Thu, Dec 6, 2012 at 3:08 AM, Eric Abrahamsen
> wrote:
>> Matt Price writes:
>>
>>> On Wed, Dec 5, 2012 at 7:44 PM, Alan L Tyree wrote:
On 06/12/12 11:22, Rasmus wrote:
>
> Andrew Hyatt writes:
>
>> This sounds like an interesti
Vikas Rawal writes:
>> One remedy, to this, and a thing I think would be nice in any case,
>> would be if keywords in the presenting sentence would link to (worg?)
>> feature pages.
>
> Another possibility would be to make the title just say "Org mode".
>
> And the first headline, before "Downlo
Eric Abrahamsen writes:
> Vikas Rawal writes:
>
>>> One remedy, to this, and a thing I think would be nice in any case,
>>> would be if keywords in the presenting sentence would link to (worg?)
>>> feature pages.
>>
>> Another possibility would be to make the title just say "Org mode".
>>
>> An
Hi Nicolas
On Wed, Dec 5, 2012 at 10:05 PM, Nicolas Goaziou wrote:
> The second one is a more difficult problem. Org Elements usually
> translates links on the fly when parsing them: `org-element-link-parser'
> calls `org-translate-link'. This function requires
> `org-link-abbrev-alist' and `org-
Great. Thanks Bernt.
It works wonderfully. Are there other magic combinations?
> -Original Message-
> From: Bernt Hansen [mailto:be...@norang.ca]
> Sent: 06 December 2012 11:46
> To: Mercado, Ronaldo (DLSLtd,RAL,DIA)
> Cc: emacs-orgmode@gnu.org
> Subject: Re: "file" link from org-mode file
Dear Org-Mode Gurus,
I noticed some strange behaviour in Org Mode. I'm not sure
if this happens for a good reason, or is simply a bug.
Either way, it's pretty annoying.
Normally, C-RET inserts a new empty headline directly after
the previous one, i.e.
Stuff
* Hea
On 6 December 2012 10:03, Jambunathan K wrote:
> When description becomes boring what is needed is a catchy phrase that
> stirs up imagination.
>
> "Free/Libre Digital diary for DIY nuts/ Gen Z geeks/ nerds"
>
Tongue only half-in cheek:
Org-mode: the text editor's best chance at achieving
OH MY GOODNESS, this is VERY exciting to me!
Do you have any screenshots of this in action? I've been thinking of
similar things for some time!
Lluís Vilanova writes:
> It's just barely working and quite slow, but here's an initial tentative on a
> package to get the agenda in Org mode to show
Hello,
(org-babel-edit-distance "foo" "ffoo") returns 0, whereas 1 seems
appropriate. I don't know much about computing the levenshtein distance,
but it seems that part of the algorithm (which i found explained on
fr.wikipedia) is missing from the code. Please find a patch below trying
to address
On Thu, Dec 6, 2012 at 9:15 AM, Eric Abrahamsen wrote:
>
> On 12/06/12 20:09 PM, Matt Price wrote:
>> On Thu, Dec 6, 2012 at 3:08 AM, Eric Abrahamsen
>> wrote:
>>> Matt Price writes:
>>>
On Wed, Dec 5, 2012 at 7:44 PM, Alan L Tyree wrote:
> On 06/12/12 11:22, Rasmus wrote:
>>
At Thu, 06 Dec 2012 09:51:07 -0600,
Christopher Allan Webber wrote:
>
> OH MY GOODNESS, this is VERY exciting to me!
>
> Do you have any screenshots of this in action? I've been thinking of
> similar things for some time!
This can also be accomplished using org-caldav + setting up evolution
to
writes:
> It works wonderfully. Are there other magic combinations?
Of course :-) See http://orgmode.org/org.html#External-links for a
comprehensive list.
Also keep in mind the keyboard and mouse shortcuts for opening links,
described immediately below the list.
Regards,
--
Haider
Hello Matt,
On Dec 06 2012, Matt Price wrote:
> that looks really great, I'm going to play with it as soon as I can -
> -thanks! Hve you set up your own window layouts using htis package?
No, But I used a package written by tkf called ne2wm[1] for some time which
has very good prospectives (ja
Has anybody encountered ellipses instead of the first line of the window?
On 8/21/12, Samuel Wales wrote:
> === beginning of window
> ...
> *** Above all
> Above all, it is a collapse of the uneasy and corrupt
> identification of science -- that principled, unbiased, at
> times necessarily su
On Tue, Dec 04 2012 15:39 (+0100), Bastien wrote:
> Hi Ingo,
>
> sorry nobody had the time to test the patch and report.
>
> It looks good to me and does the right thing.
>
> Do you mind resending it using git? Don't forget to add a changelog
> entry (with `C-x 4 a' in the modified places) and
Hello all,
The new exporter does not properly parse \n characters in macro definitions.
In the old exporter the following:
#+MACRO: test hello\ngoodbye
{{{test}}}
exports to ASCII as:
hello
goodbye
In the new exporter (e-ascii) it exports as:
hello\ngoodbye
I've also reproduced this using
Hi David,
org-caldav comes a godsend for me! Fantastic!
I'm on owncloud and the first syncs worked like a charme!
What I'm trying to figure out at the moment, is how to setup a batch so, that
say work.org goes into calendar "work", family.org into calendar "family" etc.,
without asking for use
Hello,
Jonathan Leech-Pepin writes:
> When trying to insert a macro as one of the variables in another macro
> (inline and not in the definition), the export fails in both exporters
> in different ways.
>
> Using the following example:
>
> #+begin_src org
> #+MACRO: test2 /$1/
> #+MACRO: test3 *
I've been able to run org-edit-src-code just fine under NTEmacs
24.2.50.1 on Windows 7, but under GNU Emacs 23.2.1 on Debian, I got an
error:
Wrong type argument: integer-or-marker-p, nil
With the attached patch, I've been able to run it on both systems. The
change passes (make-marker) to (co
What about starting with a quote by Dr. Stefan Vollmar:
It's difficult to say what exactly Emacs' Org-mode will do for you; it's
easier to list all things it doesn't do
You know, from MPI talk.
Best
Axel
Hey Org mailing list!
So, I have been using org for years (2006?) now, absolutely adore it.
The generic org-export in contrib really excites me as well, I want to
try and write an org-e-mediawiki.el after I learn some more about
org's implementation.
However.. my current issue: I'd like to sort m
> like the following:
>
> * Org mode is useful for
> ** Organising projects
> ** Maintaining TODO lists and calendars
> ** Keeping notes
> ** Creating high quality formatted documents
> ** Literate programming
>
> Each of the above could then be linked to relevant pages of the manual
> or worg.
Vikas Rawal writes:
>> like the following:
>>
>> * Org mode is useful for
>> ** Organising projects
>> ** Maintaining TODO lists and calendars
>> ** Keeping notes
>> ** Creating high quality formatted documents
>> ** Literate programming
>>
>> Each of the above could then be linked to relevant
How many of y'all have changed the default priorities from 'A', 'B', and
'C' to something else.
I've changed mine to '1' - '5', which showed up a bug in MobileOrg, and
I'm curious why no one else has seen this.
Am I the only one that doesn't like letter priorities?
Dave
You need to escape the backslash inside the string, I think. "\1" is
interpreted as a string consisting of one character, the ASCII character
with hex code 0x01, which happens to be C-a. "\\1" is a 2-character
string: backslash, then one.
--
Aaron Ecay
>
> Org-mode is useful for
> - Organising projects, maintaining TODO lists and calendars
> - Creating high quality formatted documents
> - Keeping notes
> - Literate programming and Reproducible Research
Use lower case for RR, since everything else is lower case?
Vikas
Vikas Rawal writes:
>>
>> Org-mode is useful for
>> - Organising projects, maintaining TODO lists and calendars
>> - Creating high quality formatted documents
>> - Keeping notes
>> - Literate programming and Reproducible Research
>
> Use lower case for RR, since everything else is lower case?
>
"Axel E. Retif" writes:
> What about starting with a quote by Dr. Stefan Vollmar:
>
>
>
> It's difficult to say what exactly Emacs' Org-mode will do for you;
> it's easier to list all things it doesn't do
I'm not SO sure that it's difficult. Let me try:
Org-mode is a set of processors tha
I can't give you the answer, only the tools, as my setup contains
years of stuff.
The manual says how to do sorting in the outline and the agenda using
user-defined functions.
The key thing is converting timestamps into something that you can use
reliably. I wrote these over a long period years
I think your setup is only by time, so you don't really need to
convert the timestamps, and you don't really need the generalized get
function. You can just use org-entry-get.
--
The Kafka Pandemic: http://thekafkapandemic.blogspot.com
The disease DOES progress. MANY people have died from it.
On 6 Dec 2012 13:46, "Samuel Wales" wrote:
>
> Has anybody encountered ellipses instead of the first line of the window?
>
> On 8/21/12, Samuel Wales wrote:
> > === beginning of window
> > ...
> > *** Above all
> > Above all, it is a collapse of the uneasy and corrupt
I have. Haven't noticed
On 12/06/2012 06:18 PM, David Rogers wrote:
"Axel E. Retif" writes:
What about starting with a quote by Dr. Stefan Vollmar:
It's difficult to say what exactly Emacs' Org-mode will do for you;
it's easier to list all things it doesn't do
I'm not SO sure that it's difficult. Let me tr
>
> Org-mode is a set of processors that work in the background of Emacs to
> convert your text into action and your chaos into structure. With the
> help of those processors, almost anything you type while using Org-mode
> is already a computer program.
Well said.
Vikas
> Suggested slight change which mentions RR in addition to LP, and doesn't
> abuse the outline syntax (one of the most common beginner mistakes IMO).
>
> Org-mode is useful for
> - Organising projects, maintaining TODO lists and calendars
> - Creating high quality formatted documents
> - Keeping n
David Rogers writes:
> "Axel E. Retif" writes:
>
>> What about starting with a quote by Dr. Stefan Vollmar:
>>
>>
>>
>> It's difficult to say what exactly Emacs' Org-mode will do for you;
>> it's easier to list all things it doesn't do
>
>
> I'm not SO sure that it's difficult. Let me try:
Volker Grabsch writes:
> Dear Org-Mode Gurus,
>
> I noticed some strange behaviour in Org Mode. I'm not sure
> if this happens for a good reason, or is simply a bug.
> Either way, it's pretty annoying.
>
> Normally, C-RET inserts a new empty headline directly after
> the previous one, i.e.
Check
> 6. Org-mode: It's difficult to say what exactly Emacs' Org-mode will
> do for you; it's easier to list all things it doesn't do.
Wow! Great thread.
I was going to ask the question "what @isn't@ Emacs OrgMode"--and not in a
trite way at all; in a serious way.
Emacs is a mode-less (concurrent ma
Hello,
A user emacs conference would consist of talks of about an hour. I think
a week end should be sufficient. If we don't have enough talks we can
split workshops in smaller group on a given topic.
They are plenty of talk proposals listed on this web site.
http://emacsconf.herokuapp.com/
I c
Burton Samograd writes:
> Ivan Kanis writes:
>
>> Hello,
>>
>> A user emacs conference would consist of talks of about an hour. I think
>> a week end should be sufficient. If we don't have enough talks we can
>> split workshops in smaller group on a given topic.
>>
>> They are plenty of talk pro
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