Hi Joost, * Joost Kremers <joostkrem...@fastmail.fm> [16. May. 2012]: > On Wed, May 16, 2012 at 07:13:36PM +0000, SW wrote: >> Emacs 23.2.1 with org 7.8.06. Tested with transient-mark-mode enabled and >> disabled. I selected the table and hit <TAB>. Point moved by one tab (if I >> selected from the top to the bottom of the table) or moved into the table >> (if I >> selected the other way round) and, in the one instance, the highlight on the >> region disappeared. But the table remained obstinately unindented. > > the trick is to move point to the line *below* the table. TAB will then do > whatever it does on that line and if it happens to be an empty line or a > line with ordinary text, it indents, taking the entire region (including > the table) with it. > > in essence, TAB will do whatever TAB does, regardless of whether the region > is active. so if point is still within the table, TAB moves to the next > cell, possibly creating a new one. if the line after the table contains a > headline and you move point to it, it (un)folds the headline. so you need > to make sure TAB is on a line that it indents.
Really great. This works for me with Emacs 23.4.1 and it's org version 6.33x, while not with the same Emacs and org-version 7.8.10 (release_7.8.10-529-gc4cad9). I copied the version info from the info file since org-version shows no version any more. My minimal .emacs for this test was: (setq load-path (cons "~/src/org-mode/lisp" load-path)) (setq load-path (cons "~/src/org-mode/contrib/lisp" load-path)) (require 'org-install) (org-reload) Ciao, Gregor -- -... --- .-. . -.. ..--.. ...-.-