Am 21.10.2010 09:07, schrieb Carsten Dominik: > > On Oct 21, 2010, at 9:01 AM, Rainer Stengele wrote: > >> Hi all, >> >> maybe this is a bug: (Org-mode version 7.01trans (release_7.01h.605.gc540) >> >> Having set >> >> ============================================================================== >> Org Enable Priority Commands: Hide Value Toggle on (non-nil) >> State: STANDARD. >> Non-nil means priority commands are active. Hide Rest >> When nil, these commands will be disabled, so that you never accidentally >> set a priority. >> >> Org Highest Priority: Hide Value A >> State: STANDARD. >> The highest priority of TODO items. A character like ?A, ?B etc. More >> >> Org Lowest Priority: Hide Value D >> State: SAVED and set. >> The lowest priority of TODO items. A character like ?A, ?B etc. More >> >> Org Default Priority: Hide Value D >> State: SAVED and set. >> The default priority of TODO items. More >> >> resulting correctly in >> >> (custom-set-variables >> ... >> '(org-highest-priority 65) >> '(org-default-priority 68) >> '(org-lowest-priority 68) >> ... >> ============================================================================== >> >> the custom agenda command >> >> ("Tp" "all todos sorted by prio" >> ( >> (alltodo "all todos" )) >> ((org-agenda-sorting-strategy '(priority-down)))) >> >> will sort correctly by priorities #A, #B, #C, descending, >> but will then mix up the rest of the todos with "#D" or without priority. >> "#D" does not seem to be included in the sorting. > > The meaning of the default priority is that tasks without a priority do have > the default priority. If you need 4 priorities all higher than "normal > tasks", > make E your lowest and default priority > > - Carsten > Yes, works now. A bit counterintuitive, isn't it? Thanks!
- Rainer _______________________________________________ Emacs-orgmode mailing list Please use `Reply All' to send replies to the list. Emacs-orgmode@gnu.org http://lists.gnu.org/mailman/listinfo/emacs-orgmode