Hi Eric, On Thu, Aug 16, 2012 at 3:50 PM, Eric Abrahamsen <e...@ericabrahamsen.net> wrote: > On Fri, Aug 17 2012, Ken Mankoff wrote: > >> Hi, >> >> I find the first thing I do after launching emacs is to load my custom >> agenda, bound to C-c a c. >> >> Is there a way I can launch this from the command-line? I know I can >> run 'emacs -eval "(foo)"', but I haven't been able to determine the >> function that loads my custom agenda. Does such a function exist, or >> is there a way to specific the keystrokes from the command line? > > Hi Ken, > > If you look at the docstring for `org-agenda', you'll see you can call > it with the prefix arg as the first argument, and the selector key as > the second. Assuming you don't need a prefix argument, this should work > for you: > > (org-agenda nil "c") > > Put that at the bottom of your init file (or run it as an after-init > hook), and it will be the first thing you see when you start emacs. >
That works fairly well. I'm doing the CLI --eval version because I often launch emacs w/o wanting to enter org mode. But I get a screen with 90% org and 10% *scratch* buffer... Again, some searching and trying to call the "kill-buffer" function, and I haven't figured it out. Any hints on how to get full-terminal agenda mode? Sorry if these are newbie questions. -k.