I think this is exactly what I want (with just a little moreprocessing).
Thank you so much for the idea!
I'm having a little bit of trouble getting the same output as you though,
and I'm wondering if there might be a setting that I need to change.
Here is what I tried, and the result. Do you have an idea of what is going
wrong here?
Thank you!
------------
#+NAME:essay-rubric
- Category
- A
- B
- C
- D
- F
- Writing
- great
- good
- ok
- lousy
- awful
#+begin_src emacs-lisp :var contents=essay-rubric :results table
contents
#+end_src
#+RESULTS:
#+begin_src emacs-lisp
| (("Category" |
#+end_src
-------------
On Wed, Jul 7, 2021 at 6:29 AM tbanelwebmin <[email protected]> wrote:
> Hi Matt
>
> Le 05/07/2021 à 21:44, Matt Price a écrit :
> > I have to write a number of text-heavy documents which need to be
> > delivered as tables with wrapped paragraphs in most cells. Working
> > directly in table format is pretty arduous and uncomfortable. Has
> > anyone ever written a function to accept a list or subtree as input
> > and process it into a table?
> >
> > If anyone has done something similar, I'd love some tips!
>
> Maybe you could use builtin Babel
> Hereafter you have a starting point
> - Give a name to your input Org list
> - Process it with Emacs-Lisp (or whatever language you are comfortable
> with) to output it as a table
>
>
> ____ self contained Org Mode example _____
>
> Example of a named list
> #+NAME: BBB
> - abc
> + 123
> + 456
> - def
> + red
> + blue
> - ghi
> + big
> + small
>
> Example of converting the named list into a table with Emacs-Lisp
> #+begin_src elisp :var bbb=BBB :results table
> bbb
> #+end_src
>
> #+RESULTS:
> | abc | (unordered (123) (456)) |
> | def | (unordered (red) (blue)) |
> | ghi | (unordered (big) (small)) |
> ___________________________________________
>
>
>