I guess the rationale behind making M-<up/down> to move lines was to get a similar behavior for this command whatever the context:
- inside a list - inside a table - inside a subtree headlines - inside normal paragraphs But I have the feeling that the current behavior for M-<up/down> inside normal paragraphs is a bit too much... but this is just a feeling. Rick Moynihan <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes: > When the cursor is positioned within a paragraph would M-<up> and > M-<down> not be better set to move the current paragraph above or > below it's surrounding paragraphs respectively? > > e.g. When the point is positioned in the following outline, would a > M-<up> not be better moving the foo paragraph above the bar one, > rather than just repositioning the 6-foo line? > > * Outline > > bar bar bar bar bar bar bar bar bar bar bar bar bar bar bar bar bar bar > bar bar bar bar bar bar bar bar bar bar bar bar bar bar bar bar bar bar > bar bar bar bar bar > > foo foo foo foo foo foo foo foo foo foo foo foo foo foo foo foo foo foo > foo foo foo foo foo foo foo foo foo foo foo foo foo foo foo foo foo foo > foo foo foo foo foo foo | <-- point > > I could see such operations being restricted to only operate with the > current outline level. I realise the M-<up>/<down> behaviour when on > an outline is correct, but I see little need in repositioning lines > within a paragraph if the user is using M-q to wrap paragraphs, as I > do. Moving the paragraph here would surely make more sense. -- Bastien _______________________________________________ Emacs-orgmode mailing list Remember: use `Reply All' to send replies to the list. Emacs-orgmode@gnu.org http://lists.gnu.org/mailman/listinfo/emacs-orgmode