Hello,

Derek Feichtinger <dfe...@gmail.com> writes:

> The thing which made it hard for me to identify the initial problem was
> that the test CLOCK lines I had in the testing file where placed there
> without a heading. When later in the day I wanted to clock in to my tasks,
>  I then just ended up with a "outline-back-to-heading: before first
> heading" error, but with no indicator which of my ~60 open org files was
> the culprit. Maybe one could insert the file location in that error
> message?

Actually, that is the very point of `org-back-to-heading' but... it
wasn't used. I fixed it. Thank you.

> Since org is so extremely useful, and I almost spend 80% of my day in org
> files (also some of my collaborators are beginning to use it... it is
> viral), I often have >50 files with all kinds of purposes open: agenda,
> various notes, beamer, html-exports, wiki-authoring, project-organization,
> bookkeeping... the thing is just too useful. So, I think clashes between
> the many uses of org files probably are natural.
>
> This being emacs  :-) I just decided to advise org-resolve-clocks.

Exactly. Thanks to Emacs, you can bend any part of Org to your needs.


Regards,

-- 
Nicolas Goaziou

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