* This worked for me: ** apt-get install pandoc * Booted up an EMACS that has the menus enabled. ** Install pandoc-mode.el (see http://wwwuser.gwdg.de/~jkremer/pandoc-mode.html ) ** Goto buffer with .html doc in it. *** Get OrgMode and PanDocMode running simultaneously in the same buffer. ** Click on the PanDoc menus in EMACS: *** Chose PanDoc->Files->OutputFile->SetOutputFile (and I typed /tmp/test.org) *** Chose PanDoc->OutputFormat->OrgMode *** Chose PanDoc->RunPanDoc * /tmp/test.org was created--looked pretty good; but, "your mileage may vary"--depends on the structure of the HTML file. ** PanDoc has a lot of filetype conversions! ** I often use "html2csv" --by Author: Sébastien SAUVAGE <sebsauvage at sebsauvage dot net> http://sebsauvage.net *** And/or use PERL or EMACS to go the rest of the way.
Thanks Puneeth for the link to PanDoc (and the sublink to PanDocMode for EMACS)! * PanDoc also has interesting file inclusion and elisp “double-at directives”: See http://wwwuser.gwdg.de/~jkremer/pandoc-mode-manual.pdf ** Someone sought to include the "markdown" in their doc I believe. ** Can do things like this (when using PanDoc/PanDoc-mode.el @@include{blah.txt} @@lisp{(format-time-string "%d %b %Y")} On Thu, Jul 21, 2011 at 3:34 PM, Charles Philip Chan <cpc...@bell.net> wrote: > <#secure method=pgpmime mode=sign> > Puneeth Chaganti <puncha...@gmail.com> writes: > >> Org-mode cannot import html files. But, you could try using Pandoc[1] >> for this. >> >> [1] - http://johnmacfarlane.net/pandoc/ > > There is also an Emacs mode for pandoc: > > http://user.uni-frankfurt.de/~kremers/pandoc-mode.html > > Charles > > -- > Why use Windows, since there is a door? > (By fac...@galileo.rhein-neckar.de, Andre Fachat) > >