I have come up with something simple that works: ("X" "ChangeLog README" entry (file+datetree "./00_README.org") "* %? \n %U \n %f" :prepend t)
It looks like it will grow quickly into a long file, with four lines for each entry. For now, it's exactly what I needed. Proof of my instinct that 95% of the time, when I reach out for help, I almost immediately find a solution on my own. I apology for wasted space and time. Alan Davis On Tue, Sep 24, 2019 at 11:06 AM Alan E. Davis <lngn...@gmail.com> wrote: > [I posted almost this exact message to emacs-help by mistake.] > > Many times I have envisioned having an org-mode function that works > similarly to ChangeLog, to save notes as something like a 00_README.org > file in-place, in any directory in which I am working. Maybe my > imagination has just escaped me, and something either already exists or is > so trivial as to have escaped my notice. > > I almost laughed when I saw a ChangeLog exists for the latest org release, > but then thought that ChangeLog is so perfect and ubiquitous as it should > not be replaced. > > However, for my plethora of little projects, scattered all over my home > directory tree, it would be excellent to have a capture template to do this > sort of thing, and store to any existing such file in the current > directory, and be picked up readily by some simple keystroke. As an > example, I might be working on a graph of today's tides, in a new folder, > and work away, and when all is said and done, make a note and add it to the > 00_README.org file. These would be convenient to find without digging > through a lot of cruft (and I have a lot of cruft). > > It seems ChangeLog may sometimes save to a directory a the head of a tree > of directories, though I'm not sure. Perhaps an option would enable this > to be done for a limited number of levels. > > Certainly something like this must have been implemented. I think the > main trick might be to use the current directory, and use many files with > the same filename scattered around all over the place. > > I turn to the list out of a sense that I have already wasted enough time > on trying to search for something of this nature. > > Thank you, > > Alan Davis > -- > [Fill in the blanks] > > The use of corrupt manipulations and blatant rhetorical ploys ...--- > outright lying, flagwaving, personal attacks, setting up phony > alternatives, misdirection, jargon-mongering, evading key issues, feigning > disinterested objectivity, willful misunderstanding of other points of > view---suggests that ... lacks both credibility and evidence. > > ---- Edward Tufte (in context of making presentations) > > > -- [Fill in the blanks] The use of corrupt manipulations and blatant rhetorical ploys ...--- outright lying, flagwaving, personal attacks, setting up phony alternatives, misdirection, jargon-mongering, evading key issues, feigning disinterested objectivity, willful misunderstanding of other points of view---suggests that ... lacks both credibility and evidence. ---- Edward Tufte (in context of making presentations)