Hello Charles,
"Charles C. Berry" writes:
> Further Daniele's response to '[bug] Removing the Babel results':
>
> http://article.gmane.org/gmane.emacs.orgmode/94604
>
> See below.
>
>> But why a `native' function? You know how to achieve this result and
>> can
>>
>> 1. add a customized functi
Hello,
I try to export a somewhat long file but the process fails echoing
"Reference wdp not fond in buffer"
I didn't manage to locate the wpd related occurence using I-Search.
Is there another method to locate it?
Thanks,
Thierry
Thierry Pellé wrote:
> I try to export a somewhat long file but the process fails echoing
> "Reference wdp not fond in buffer"
^^^
> I didn't manage to locate the wpd related occurence using I-Search.
^^^
> Is there another method to locate it?
Didn't
Thanks everyone for thinking about citations. I wish I knew enough lisp
to make a contribution to this work... for now I can only sit on the
side and clap.
I am also a big fan of org-ref. Although my needs are not complex
(basically citing from a BibLatex file and exporting to LaTex), I found
th
Hello,
Erik Hetzner writes:
> I concentrated on getting the parser to recognize valid citations
> first. I have now finished this part (excepting any bugs, of course :)
> and will need to add code to generate a proper parse tree. Then it can
> be integrated into org-element.el.
The point of "or
I plan out my days in the agenda using `i d` (org-agenda-diary-entry). I then
move to the newly added entry to edit todo status, the hour of the item,
deadlines, tags, and schedules. This would be tremendously facilitated if point
automatically moved to the newly created item, rather than my hav
This sounds interesting, but I don't understand what you are trying to
do.
In my agenda, when I press `i d` i get a new diary entry, and the point
is on that entry. But it is a diary entry with no todo, and no new org
entry. Do you do something else for that?
Tory S. Anderson writes:
> I plan ou
Your point is on the created entry? When I do `i d` the entry is created
somewhere down in the midst of my big list, and I have to use C-s to search for
it and then I add things (such as with `t` for todo, `C-d` for deadline, `>`
for additional time details). The trouble is finding it in the lis
#+TITLE: ECM Links for HTML only
* Test
If I want to include a link (GPL logo, here) to the HTML export, I should put it
in a block, right?
#+begin_html
[[http://opensource.org/licenses/GPL-3.0][http://img.shields.io/:license-gpl-blue.svg]]
#+end_html
Well, that does not work: the link is n
On Wed, Feb 4, 2015 at 10:15 AM, Sebastien Vauban
wrote:
>
> #+TITLE: ECM Links for HTML only
>
> * Test
>
> If I want to include a link (GPL logo, here) to the HTML export, I should put
> it
> in a block, right?
>
> #+begin_html
> [[http://opensource.org/licenses/GPL-3.0][http://img.shields.
Erik Hetzner writes:
>> The ideal would be if citeproc would take care of proper formatting
>> of all such citation types, given just an ordered list of the fields
>> that should appear. I don't know if CSL supports this, though; do
>> you?
>
> I’m not entirely sure what you mean. The authors of
Hi Sebastien,
Sebastien Vauban
writes:
> #+TITLE: ECM Links for HTML only
>
> * Test
>
> If I want to include a link (GPL logo, here) to the HTML export, I should put
> it
> in a block, right?
>
> #+begin_html
> [[http://opensource.org/licenses/GPL-3.0][http://img.shields.io/:license-gpl-bl
None of those features need to change, don't worry!
Julian M. Burgos writes:
> Thanks everyone for thinking about citations. I wish I knew enough lisp
> to make a contribution to this work... for now I can only sit on the
> side and clap.
>
> I am also a big fan of org-ref. Although my needs ar
Hi Nicolas, org-mode developers,
there is still a glitch. If I now add two items at the same day.:
rm /tmp/*diary* ; emacs-snapshot -Q -L /home/grfz/src/org-mode/lisp/ -nw --eval
'(setq org-agenda-diary-file „/tmp/diary.org“)' "/tmp/diary.org" -f org-agenda
a
i
d
error1
i
d
error2
the result
Hi!
Org-mode version 8.3beta (release_8.3beta-721-gd1c5dc) on GNU Emacs
24.3.1 (i386-mingw-nt6.1.7601) of 2013-03-17
When I export a simple heading like below, which contains an URL
with an ampersant (&), FreeMind throws an error:
,[ The exported heading ]
| ** Freemind-Tests
|
| -
[[https:
Hi Nicolas,
Nicolas Goaziou writes:
> Also, AFAIU, the syntax for valid citations is not defined explicitly so
> far. For example, I don't think it was discussed if any subset of Org
> objects (e.g., macros or bold text) is allowed in a citation.
This is a good question that, as you say, deserv
On Wed, 4 Feb 2015 at 04:06:36 PST,
Nicolas Goaziou wrote:
>
> Hello,
>
> Erik Hetzner writes:
>
> > I concentrated on getting the parser to recognize valid citations
> > first. I have now finished this part (excepting any bugs, of course :)
> > and will need to add code to generate a proper
Have you defined org-agenda-diary-file?
--
: Eric S Fraga (0xFFFCF67D), Emacs 24.4.1, Org release_8.3beta-717-gd36bd8.dirty
Hi,
Unfortunately no... this is just a typo in mél.
Thierry
Le 04/02/2015 11:36, Sebastien Vauban a écrit :
Thierry Pellé wrote:
I try to export a somewhat long file but the process fails echoing
"Reference wdp not fond in buffer"
^^^
I didn't manage to locate the wpd relate
On Wed, 4 Feb 2015 at 07:59:46 PST,
Richard Lawrence wrote:
>
> Erik Hetzner writes:
>
> >> The ideal would be if citeproc would take care of proper formatting
> >> of all such citation types, given just an ordered list of the fields
> >> that should appear. I don't know if CSL supports this,
I'm trying to save an agenda view that I can arrive at in the following way:
1. Load agenda (default 1-day view)
2. / TAB "English_Class"(reduce to only entries tagged English_Class)
3. \ - TAB "schedule" (further reduce by removing entries having a
:schedul
Yes. I use the following (possibly relevant) code definition, which sets my
diary to agenda.org.
--8<---cut here---start->8---
(setq org-agenda-include-diary nil)
;; org-agenda
(setq org-agenda-diary-file "~/emacs/agenda.org"
org-special-ctrl-o nil
Erik Hetzner writes:
> On Wed, 4 Feb 2015 at 07:59:46 PST,
> Richard Lawrence wrote:
>> The idea is, a citation like "As Doe says in @Doe99:title, ..." should
>> render like "As Doe says in /The Title/, ...", not like "As Doe says in
>> Doe (1999), ...", even if "@Doe99" citations in the docu
On Wednesday, 4 Feb 2015 at 13:27, Tory S. Anderson wrote:
> Yes. I use the following (possibly relevant) code definition, which sets my
> diary to agenda.org.
>
> (setq org-agenda-include-diary nil)
> ;; org-agenda
> (setq org-agenda-diary-file "~/emacs/agenda.org"
> org-special-ctrl-o ni
Fragment from my agenda.org; basically, it's almost completely just what is
automatically created when you tell agenda to use an org file. It should be
similar to what you have; yes, hitting tab or enter takes me to entries just
fine.
--8<---cut here---start
How do you go back to the agenda from the diary file?
Tory S. Anderson writes:
> Fragment from my agenda.org; basically, it's almost completely just what is
> automatically created when you tell agenda to use an org file. It should be
> similar to what you have; yes, hitting tab or enter takes
On Wednesday, 4 Feb 2015 at 15:23, Tory S. Anderson wrote:
[...]
> My problem is just trying to find my new entry (e.g. "Give John ride
> to church") in the actual agenda view after creating the item; rather
> than going there by default when I create the item, I have to i-search
> my point to i
I actually rarely visit the diary file; I do everything from the agenda view.
In the rare cases I do need to visit the agenda file, I just switch buffers
like usual (`C-x b RET`).
John Kitchin writes:
> How do you go back to the agenda from the diary file?
>
> Tory S. Anderson writes:
>
>> Fr
Okay, I've attempted to use my newbie elisp skills to hack together a solution
but it doesn't work, yelling at me about wrong number of arguments (why?).
Here's what I've put together (clearly inspired by the
`org-agenda-filter-by-tag` function). Can anyone help me piece together what's
wrong h
The important piece of org-mode configuration is:
org-minimal.el
(setq org-todo-keywords '(
(sequence "TODO(t)" "NEXT(n!)" "|" "DONE(d)")))
So I expect the following note to appear in LOGBOOK once I change the state
from TODO to NEXT:
:LOGBOOK:
- State "NEXT" from "T
Hello Ista and Richard,
Ista Zahn wrote:
> On Wed, Feb 4, 2015 at 10:15 AM, Sebastien Vauban wrote:
>>
>> If I want to include a link (GPL logo, here) to the HTML export, I should
>> put it
>> in a block, right?
>>
>> #+begin_html
>> [[http://opensource.org/licenses/GPL-3.0][http://img.shields.io
Hi all,
I use Org (Emacs 24.4.90, with Org mode 8.2.10) to analyze and plan the
development of new projects/features, with a persistent columnview containing
a summary, something like the following:
#+TITLE: Test
#+PROPERTY: Effort_ALL 1:00 2:00 3:00 4:00 5:00 6:00 7:00 8:00
#+COLUMNS
Well, to start with your syntax is WAY off. Org custom agendas can be pretty
arcane.
I'd start with setting up some custom agendas using the customizer, saving
them, and then looking at how they are structured.
Next, C-h v org-agenda TAB in an org buffer should get you a list of the
various set
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