Nicolas Goaziou <m...@nicolasgoaziou.fr> writes: > Hello, > > Nick Dokos <ndo...@gmail.com> writes: > >> I have a table with column width cookies. I shrink the columns with >> C-u C-c TAB and then I recalculate with C-c C-c on the #TBLFM >> line. The columns then get expanded and I have to do the C-u C-c TAB >> again after every recalculation. Is there a way to have the columns >> stay shrunk? >> >> Example: An unsolved problem in number theory: for what values of n >> is n! - 1 a prime? >> >> | n | n! -1 | prime? | >> |----+-------------------------------------------+--------| >> | / | <10> | | >> | 30 | 265252859812191058636308479999999 | 1 | >> | 31 | 8222838654177922817725562879999999 | 0 | >> | 32 | 263130836933693530167218012159999999 | 1 | >> | 33 | 8683317618811886495518194401279999999 | 1 | >> | 34 | 295232799039604140847618609643519999999 | 0 | >> | 35 | 10333147966386144929666651337523199999999 | 0 | >> >> #+TBLFM: @3$2..@>$2 = fact($1) -1 :: @3$3..@>$3 = prime($2, 10) > > Fixed. Thank you. >
Indeed - thank you! But since no good deed shall go unpunished, here's another related problem I ran into: with shrunk columns, I add a few more rows to the table with S-RET on the first column, recalculate to populate the added rows and then do an undo. That undoes the results of the recalculation but it also unshrinks the column. Thanks again! -- Nick "There are only two hard problems in computer science: cache invalidation, naming things, and off-by-one errors." -Martin Fowler