Hi Richard

Fantastic, thx alot for the code snippet and detailed explanation, it
really helps to understand what goes on. unfortunately i get an error:

Wrong type argument: commandp, (lambda nil (org-agenda nil "s" "<"))

any clue?

best

Z.


On Fri, Jun 7, 2013 at 5:50 PM, Richard Lawrence <
richard.lawre...@berkeley.edu> wrote:

> Xebar Saram <zelt...@gmail.com> writes:
>
> > Thank you both Thorsten and Seb, i really appreciate the help!
> >
> > Seb, you wrote: The programming equivalent to C-c a s is:
> >
> >     (org-agenda nil "s")
> >
> > That's what you'd have to bind to a key (using a "lambda" function).
> >
> > im a complete neewb and dont really have any idea on how to do the above,
> > can you show me an example?
>
> I think you're looking for something like:
>
> (define-key org-mode-map (kbd "C-M-h") (lambda () (org-agenda nil "s"
> "<")))
>
> You could put a line like that in your .emacs.  Here's what it does:
> #+BEGIN_SRC emacs-lisp
> (define-key    ;; insert a new keybinding
>   org-mode-map ;; into the Org mode map (so this won't affect bindings in
> non-Org buffers)
>
>   ;; This is the key we're binding: C-M-h, for "headline" search
>   ;; You can use whatever key you like, but you might want to check first
> that it isn't
>   ;; already bound to something else (e.g., via C-h k from an Org buffer).
>   ;; The kbd macro converts a string representation to the appropriate key
> code.
>   (kbd "C-M-h")
>
>   ;; This is the function to run when the key is pressed.  The lambda
>   ;; form creates an anonymous function which calls org-agenda with
>   ;; the "s" argument and a restriction to current buffer.
>   (lambda () (org-agenda nil "s" "<")))
> #+END_SRC
>
> Best,
> Richard
>
>
>

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