Ah, yes, thank you for that detail.
Fixed now.
- Carsten
On Sep 2, 2009, at 9:40 AM, Nick Dokos wrote:
Carsten Dominik <carsten.domi...@gmail.com> wrote:
I am not able to reproduce the problem.
If the comment in a.sh starts with a space like this:
,----
| #!/bin/sh
|
| ## shell comment
| echo "This is a test"
`----
then the .txt file has a comma before the comment:
,----
| ...
| 1 test
| ~~~~~~~
|
| #!/bin/sh
|
| , ## shell comment
| echo "This is a test"
`----
If there is no space, then the comma is not present. I'm really not
sure how this is supposed to work - is that the intention?
Thanks,
Nick
Versions: GNU Emacs 23.1.50.1 (i686-pc-linux-gnu, GTK+ Version
2.12.9) of 2009-08-09 on gamaville.dokosmarshall.org
Org-mode version 6.30 (release_6.30.8.g8b6ff)
(that includes my local changes, but nothing relating to this
problem).
Carsten Dominik <carsten.domi...@gmail.com> wrote:
Hi Hsiu-Khuern,
I am not able to reproduce the problem.
- Carsten
On Sep 2, 2009, at 12:03 AM, Hsiu-Khuern Tang wrote:
* On Fri 05:45AM +0000, 24 Jul 2009, Tang, Hsiu-Khuern (hsiu-khuern.t...@hp.com
) wrote:
* On Fri 01:22AM +0000, 24 Jul 2009, Bastien (bastiengue...@googlemail.com
) wrote:
Hi Hsiu-Khuern,
I've just pushed a fix for this: when the "src" switch is present,
including a file won't escape org-like lines. With a bare #
+include
we still escape lines starting with * or #.
Please test it and report any problem.
It works beautifully now. Thank you very much for the fix!
It looks Org has reverted to the old behavior: inserting a comma at
a beginning
of every line in the #INCLUDE'd file that starts with whitespace
followed by #.
For example, if you export this as ascii (see
http://article.gmane.org/gmane.emacs.orgmode/15718):
File 1: a.org
==================================================
* test
#+INCLUDE: "a.sh" src sh
==================================================
File 2: a.sh
==================================================
#!/bin/sh
## shell comment
echo "This is a test"
==================================================
the output contains the line ", ## shell comment".
Related question: what git commands does one use to obtain all the
commits that
changed a particular range of lines in a file? I'm quite lost with
git.
--
Best,
Hsiu-Khuern.
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