Hello, Tassilo Horn <t...@gnu.org> writes:
> lately, I've used ox-reveal.el to create a presentation. Thereby, I > found out that inline source code blocks are ignored, i.e., the text is > simply not there in the HTML5 output. > > Here's a test heading: > > * Test Heading > > - Here's some inline code: src_clojure{(+ 1 2 3)} > - Here's some more inline code: src_clojure{(- 1 2 3)} > > > ox-reveal.el derives the export from ox-html. That defines > > (inline-src-block . org-html-inline-src-block) > > with > > (defun org-html-inline-src-block (inline-src-block contents info) > "Transcode an INLINE-SRC-BLOCK element from Org to HTML. > CONTENTS holds the contents of the item. INFO is a plist holding > contextual information." > (let* ((org-lang (org-element-property :language inline-src-block)) > (code (org-element-property :value inline-src-block))) > (error "Cannot export inline src block"))) > > and ox-reveal doesn't (yet) override that. So in theory, exporting the > entry above should signal an error, but it doesn't > > I also tried the plain html export. Still, there's no error. The > function is simply not called at all. > > So there seems to be a bug in the exporter which doesn't seem to > recognize inline source code. There's no bug. Babel simply removes all inline source blocks when executing source blocks. Hence, they cannot be parsed (and therefore exported). This function is just a placeholder for now. Regards, -- Nicolas Goaziou