Hello,
If I have a babel block that generates a table and I'd like latex attributes
associated with that table, it seems to work well if I do this:
#+NAME: foo
#+BEGIN_SRC bash :results table
echo "${RANDOM}|${RANDOM}|"
echo "${RANDOM}|${RANDOM}|"
#+END_SRC
#+caption: foo
#+latex_attr: :placeme
... attached
Jarmo
>From bbc3f977d6b98240834af8fb009a2a080813f30b Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001
From: Jarmo Hurri
Date: Wed, 6 Nov 2019 12:21:16 +0200
Subject: [PATCH] ob-java.el: Add header argument to pass command line args.
* lisp/ob-java.el (org-babel-execute:java): Handle new header argument `
Am 05.11.19 um 22:26 schrieb Nathan Neff:
> Hello all,
>
> I know I've asked this before, but can't remember the quick & easy path (TM)
> to creating an org-capture template which will capture to the current
> heading?
prepend the capture command (C-C C in my setting) by C-0
I think it puts the r
Hi,
In the recent days, I've been busy migrating orgformat[1] from Memacs[2] and
lazyblorg[3] to a repository on its own. It's a utility library that provides a
variety of Python functions that help dealing with generating non-trivial Org
mode content such as date- or time-stamps. I've added good
Hello all,
I am interested in a search/indexing engine targeting the org format,
too.
My interest comes from the fact that I have a growing number of org
files and as org-mode has no file archiving feature, AFAIK, searching
needs more and more time to complete.
Moving files, that are no more nec
> On Nov 6, 2019, at 1:55 AM, Ken Mankoff wrote:
>
> Hello,
>
> If I have a babel block that generates a table and I'd like latex attributes
> associated with that table, it seems to work well if I do this:
>
> #+NAME: foo
> #+BEGIN_SRC bash :results table
> echo "${RANDOM}|${RANDOM}|"
> ec
On 2019-11-06 at 17:05 +01, Berry, Charles wrote...
> M-: (org-babel-map-src-blocks nil (org-babel-insert-result ""
> '("replace"))) RET
>
> HTH,
Yes that helps! A simple solution. Thank you.
-k.
I use Recoll. It has a GUI, a CLI, and I use a script with dialog to popup
results.
I index all my org files, all my PDFs (vendor technical documentation), email,
etc.
Works great, refreshes daily.
On Wed, Nov 06, 2019 at 05:02:07PM +0100, Roland Everaert wrote:
> Hello all,
>
> I am interested
Roland Everaert writes:
> Hello all,
>
> I am interested in a search/indexing engine targeting the org format,
> too.
>
> My interest comes from the fact that I have a growing number of org
> files and as org-mode has no file archiving feature, AFAIK, searching
> needs more and more time to compl
The way I got Swish to index org files was to create a script that
generated an xml file
(https://kitchingroup.cheme.cmu.edu/blog/2015/07/06/Indexing-headlines-in-org-files-with-swish-e-with-laser-sharp-results/)
or html
(http://kitchingroup.cheme.cmu.edu/blog/2015/07/03/Using-swish-e-to-index-org
Eric Abrahamsen writes:
> I think this last point is key. Most full-text search engines provide
> config options for defining fields, or "facets", which in theory we
> could set up to parse tags/properties/timestamps.
Of course it's an Emacs-based tool, but please note that org-ql has
extensive,
Thanks for working on and sharing this, Karl. It's great to see the Org
format getting more support in other languages and contexts.
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