On 18.11.2011, at 10:29, Sebastien Vauban wrote: > Hi Carsten, > > You committed: > >> Use prefix arg 0 to inhibit note taking for TODO change >> >> * lisp/org.el (org-todo): Interpret 0 prefix arg as note inhibitor. >> >> Sometimes I want to quickly make a few TODOs done in the agenda and I >> want to bypass the note taking I have normally set up. With this >> change, I can press `0 t d' in the agenda to do this. > > But isn't "dangerous" to use the `0' for that, as it is used, with other > effects, as a speed command.
As a speed command, you would use C-u 0 t d. In the agenda, numbers are special, they set the prefix argument. One could do the same in speed commands, of cause. > > I know that `0' does not work as of today in the agenda view, but I think > speeds commands (I mean: one-letter shortcuts) should work in both places > (that is, in the agenda, and in column 0 of Org headlines), and quite a lot > already are shared (`I' for clocking, `t' for changing states, etc.). > > Wouldn't we want to try to make those two sets equal? > > Best regards, > Seb > > PS- It's true that we can see inconsistencies, as of today, between some > one-letter keys in the agenda and the speed commands. An example that comes to > mind is: > > - `;' is used to set tags in *speed commands* > - `:' is used to set tags in *agenda* (and `;' is used for starting the time) I think you are right here - it is not good that these are different. Numerical prefix commands are different a bit, but maybe you are even right there. - Carsten > > -- > Sebastien Vauban > >