Nicolas Goaziou writes on Tue 21 Aug 2018 20:13: > > Now, I visit a file which contains only > > > > * head > > foo[fn:1] bar > > * Footnotes > > > > [fn:1] tnote > > > > If the cursor is anywhere within the 1st instance of '[fn:1] ' (that > > is, including the space) and I type 'C-c C-c' the cursor ends up on > > the 1st letter of 'tnote'. > > > > I am not sure if this corresponds to what the manual says but, if I > > type 'C-c C-c' again, I get > > > > user-error: `C-c C-c' can do nothing useful here > > > > i.e., I don't "jump back."
> As strange as it may sound, I think [this is] correct. > > In 9.1, Org puts point at the location where you can start to edit > the definition right away. If you want to "jump back", you can use > the Org mark ring, or simply move backward -- a single character is > enough but you can also move to the beginning of the line -- and > use `C-c C-c' again. Hello again. What I did not notice earlier is that, while performing `C-c C-c' on the first instance of '[fn:1]' -- which results in the point being put on the 1st letter of 'tnote' --, the minibuffer displays the following message: Edit definition and go back with `C-c &' or, if unique, with `C-c C-c'. So it seems to me that if the behavior is correct, then the message is inconsistent (`C-c C-c' does not go/jump back). Regards -- EOST (École et Observatoire des Sciences de la Terre) IPG (Institut de Physique du Globe) | alain.coch...@unistra.fr 5 rue René Descartes [bureau 106] | Phone: +33 (0)3 68 85 50 44 F-67084 Strasbourg Cedex, France | Fax: +33 (0)3 68 85 01 25