Hello There!
I willing to work for hire. Right now I don't have any copyright
assignment. I am open to signing a assignment.
Reply back in private (or on this forum) with what you have in mind.
On Tuesday 13 January 2015 03:14 AM, Yuri Niyazov wrote:
I'd like to hire a programmer to hack o
Andreas Leha writes:
> Fabrice Niessen writes:
>> Hello,
>>
>> Andreas Leha wrote:
>>> Kodi Arfer writes:
"none" is allowed as an argument to :results (see, for example,
ob-core.el line 704 as of Git d36bd8d), but this isn't mentioned in
results.html. I just learned of its existe
Fabrice Niessen
writes:
> Hello,
>
> Andreas Leha wrote:
>> Kodi Arfer writes:
>>> "none" is allowed as an argument to :results (see, for example,
>>> ob-core.el line 704 as of Git d36bd8d), but this isn't mentioned in
>>> results.html. I just learned of its existence while reading
>>> ob-core.e
Samuel Wales writes:
> if we redo this, perhaps we can also include an option that does
> export like :results verbatim, but does not send to echo area?
>
> unless i am misunderstanding something about babel [which is possible].
I do not think this discussion warrants any re-doing so far. (Only
Hello,
> Does anyone get org-download.el to work under Mac OSX? I'm struggling to get
> it work, but it seems to help a lot, empowering org to handle images a lot
> easier.
>
> I believe I've installed org-download.el correctly, but when I'm dragging
> and drop the image into an org buffer, all I
Andreas Leha wrote:
> Fabrice Niessen writes:
>> Andreas Leha wrote:
>>> Kodi Arfer writes:
"none" is allowed as an argument to :results (see, for example,
ob-core.el line 704 as of Git d36bd8d), but this isn't mentioned in
results.html. I just learned of its existence while readin
Hello Charles,
"Charles C. Berry" wrote:
> On Wed, 14 Jan 2015, Sebastien Vauban wrote:
>> "Charles C. Berry" wrote:
>>> On Wed, 14 Jan 2015, Sebastien Vauban wrote:
This ECM exhibits "wrong type argument".
Carré de 7 :
call_square(x=7)[:results raw].
>>>
>>> Looks like `org-ba
Giulio Petrucci wrote:
> On Wed, Jan 14, 2015 at 2:09 PM, Florian Lindner wrote:
>> 1) How can I configure it to show not the next n days, but the next n events
>> like:
>
> Don't know but I mus confess I am struggling with the same problem in
> these days.
>
>> 2) There is this 75 d. ago Abstract
Hello,
In a long document, I must have ":eval no" at file level, as this is the
common setting for most code blocks. However, how do I unset that for
some call lines.
Export this ECM (to HTML, for example) and see for yourself that it does
not seem evident...
--8<---cut here-
Alan Schmitt writes:
> On 2015-01-09 19:18, phillip.l...@newcastle.ac.uk (Phillip Lord) writes:
>
>>> I've used a similar configuration
>>>
>>> #+begin_src emacs-lisp
>>> (add-hook 'emacs-lisp-mode-hook (lambda () (setq lentic-init
>>> 'lentic-orgel-org-init)))
>>> #+end_src
>>
>> Personally, I
writes:
> Thierry Banel writes:
>
>> Nice!
>
> I also tried it and found it really interesting!
Thank you.
>
>>
>> I spent some time figuring out how to use it.
>>
>> This is what I did eventually:
>> M-xlentic-mode
>> M-xlentic-mode ;; twice
>> M-x lentic-mode-split-window-below
>> T
On Thu, 15 Jan 2015, Sebastien Vauban wrote:
Hello Charles,
"Charles C. Berry" wrote:
On Wed, 14 Jan 2015, Sebastien Vauban wrote:
"Charles C. Berry" wrote:
On Wed, 14 Jan 2015, Sebastien Vauban wrote:
This ECM exhibits "wrong type argument".
Carré de 7 :
call_square(x=7)[:results raw].
On 2015-01-15 15:54, phillip.l...@newcastle.ac.uk (Phillip Lord) writes:
> Good. If you find any examples which fail, I'd be happy to look.
It's not really failing, but I don't know how to put the end of file
markers so that lentic likes it. For instance:
--8<---cut here-
Hi Sebastien,
On Thu, Jan 15, 2015 at 1:47 PM, Sebastien Vauban
wrote:
> Yes, with a custom agenda commands along these lines:
Thanks for the snippet: I tested it and it works.
But I think that's not what Florian asked for (and what I need as well).
I need to remove past deadlines from the the r
Eli Zaretskii wrote:
>> From: Fabrice Niessen
>>
>> With the following file -- and my configuration file (!):
>>
>> --8<---cut here---start->8---
>> #+TITLE: ECM
>> #+LANGUAGE: en
>>
>> #+PROPERTY: eval yes
>>
>> * Macro
>>
>> Date at export time: /{{
Giulio Petrucci wrote:
> On Thu, Jan 15, 2015 at 1:47 PM, Sebastien Vauban
> wrote:
>> Yes, with a custom agenda commands along these lines:
>
> Thanks for the snippet: I tested it and it works.
> But I think that's not what Florian asked for (and what I need as well).
> I need to remove past dead
Hi Sebastien,
On Thu, Jan 15, 2015 at 7:07 PM, Sebastien Vauban
wrote:
> AFAIK, such a thing is not implemented in the standard agenda -- and
> that makes sense.
I agree, as I pointed out before:
Giulio Petrucci wrote:
> I think makes sense: you need to tell org-mode that your deadline has been
> From: Fabrice Niessen
> Cc: 19...@debbugs.gnu.org
> Date: Thu, 15 Jan 2015 19:04:13 +0100
>
> > Thanks, but what do you expect us to do with this report, without any
> > information whatsoever regarding your customizations?
>
> I thought that, thanks to the backtrace, you could find the culpri
On 1/15/15, Andreas Leha wrote:
> Your suggestion seems like the missing thing here. But I am not sure
> how badly needed that is. As John said, the ":results none" argument
> was added to speed things up when the results are huge. I have no idea
this does not export ime.
> how much overhead
I'm a newbie, just switching to org-mode.
For work, I have to produce quarterly reports that list what I've done. I
want a report of all the items that were closed within a given date range.
I could write some code to do this, but I suspect org-made comes with
something close :-)
-- Pete
Has anyone done any work into allowing for timezones to be specified in
timestamps (and maybe eventually, scheduling/deadlines) in org mode?
I know the last long thread about this in 2008[1] indicated that this
was unlikely to be supported, and a thread in 2011 just referred to the
same issue[2],
Hi Samuel,
Samuel Wales writes:
> On 1/15/15, Andreas Leha wrote:
>> Your suggestion seems like the missing thing here. But I am not sure
>> how badly needed that is. As John said, the ":results none" argument
>> was added to speed things up when the results are huge. I have no idea
>
> this
I'm trying to switch from raw bib/org file management to an ebib system for
managing my bibliographies. I'm quite impressed with ebib so far; however, I'm
having troubles with getting links to work.
I have the following in my config file, as from
http://comments.gmane.org/gmane.emacs.ebib.user
Le 15/01/2015 17:11, Phillip Lord a écrit :
>>> I spent some time figuring out how to use it.
>>>
>>> This is what I did eventually:
>>> M-xlentic-mode
>>> M-xlentic-mode ;; twice
>>> M-x lentic-mode-split-window-below
>>> Then change the new buffer to the desired mode (Java mode, C++ mode,
C++ (or c code for that matter) that needs to link to any libraries will
not compile with babel. In the function org-babel-C-execute, the file name
is given last, making it impossible to pass compiler flags that will effect
linking. A simple fix is to switch the order of the last two arguments to
Here's a simple example of the bug I just sent, if you try to run this with
babel it fails.
#+begin_src C++ :exports both :includes (list "\"boost/filesystem.hpp\""
"") :flags "-lboost_system"
printf("testing\n");
#+end_src
On 13 January 2015 at 17:16, seth andrews wrote:
> C++ (or c code for
Hello, I would like to create a link (exported as html) which allow to prefill
the content of the emai when we click on it.
Something like
To: sub...@bugs.debian.org
Subject: My problem with hkl...
Package: hkl
Version: @VERSION@
I found this problem in hkl..
On 01/15/2015 09:14 PM, Eli Zaretskii wrote:
But you didn't even show the backtrace from the main (a.k.a. "Lisp")
thread. Your backtrace is from thread 15, whereas the main thread is
thread 1.
The output is from 'thread apply all backtrace', AFAICS.
On the other hand, it's not 'bt full' or `
I just want to note that there seems to be a tendency to try and use gdb
to debug Org problems, when debug-on-quit and ctrl-g might work.
Alan Schmitt writes:
> On 2015-01-15 15:54, phillip.l...@newcastle.ac.uk (Phillip Lord) writes:
>
>> Good. If you find any examples which fail, I'd be happy to look.
>
> It's not really failing, but I don't know how to put the end of file
> markers so that lentic likes it. For instance:
>
> ;; #+
Thierry Banel writes:
> Le 15/01/2015 17:11, Phillip Lord a écrit :
I spent some time figuring out how to use it.
>> Of course, even when installed from Melpa it is self-documenting in the
>> sense that the source files are full of documentation. The lentic-org.el
>> file contains a descript
On 1/15/15, Andreas Leha wrote:
> I am sorry, but your message is to short for me to make sense of.
about as short :]: exporting is slow because it echoes to minibuffer.
I don't think a link is what you want here. You only get one piece of
information out of box when you click on a link,
e.g. mailto:jkitc...@andrew.cmu.edu (in my org-mode) will open a message
addressed to me. It is conceivable you could use syntax like
[[mailto:s...@email.com][Some subject]], but y
PICCA Frederic-Emmanuel
writes:
> Hello, I would like to create a link (exported as html) which allow to
> prefill the content of the emai when we click on it.
>
> Something like
>
>To: sub...@bugs.debian.org
>Subject: My problem with hkl...
>
>Package: hkl
>Versi
This is very un-orgish but it seems to do it. (forward-word) goes to the
end the next recognized word, (backward-word) to the beginning of the
word you are now at the end of, and (backward-char) to get to a
space. You just need org to get you on the list ;)
It seems to work on these.
- foo :: bar
Ah, this makes sense. Unfortunately, an additional constraint I failed to
mention in the first email is that it'd be nice if the solution worked for
numbered lists as well. That solution unfortunately breaks on numbered
lists :(
Is there perhaps another way to accomplish this?
P.S. I just noticed
Calvin Young writes:
> How do I need to massage this to give me the beginning of the whole
> list item? Is there a recommended solution that'd work for both
> description lists *and* plain lists?
This seems to work for me:
(defun yf/org-beginning-of-item ()
(let ((element (org-element-at-point
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