[O] Org Grep news
Hi, gang. :-) I took last two days as holidays, to let the pressure out a bit, and used them to have mere fun with a few things, among which, Org Grep. The tool used to have one main output, with Emacs commands to transform that output "one-way" into two other formats. I shuffled the code and added more, so it can switch freely between those three formats, now called "views". Buttons on the title line ease that switching. 1. The [browse] view is read-only, with a few extra Emacs commands. 2. The [edit] view is full-Org editable, and uses transient checklists. 3. The [tree] view regroups grep hits by directory, hierarchically. Org Grep yields [browse] view initially. When there are many hits, one can switch to the [tree] view and go pruning, using C-x C-c C-w, say, retaining only what is most promising. Then switch back to either [browse] or [edit] on the reduced set of hits. Convenient for me! :-) François P.S. For the curious, it's still https://github.com/pinard/org-grep .
Re: [O] org-grep news
François Pinard writes: > This is about my little org-grep tool, available at: > >https://github.com/pinard/org-grep This is great -- thanks, and a happy new year! -- Bastien
Re: [O] org-grep news
Hi François, François Pinard writes: > This is about my little org-grep tool, available at: > >https://github.com/pinard/org-grep > > Right out of the README: "This tool allows for grepping files in a set > of Org directories, formatting the results as a separate Org buffer. > This buffer is assorted with a few specific navigation commands so it > works a bit like M-x rgrep." This is very nice. I'm using deft at the moment (http://jblevins.org/projects/deft/) but I'm trying this as a lightweight replacement. It looks promising. Thanks a lot, Alan
[O] org-grep news
Hi, Org people. First of all, let me wish a Much Nice Year to everybody here! :-) This is about my little org-grep tool, available at: https://github.com/pinard/org-grep Right out of the README: "This tool allows for grepping files in a set of Org directories, formatting the results as a separate Org buffer. This buffer is assorted with a few specific navigation commands so it works a bit like M-x rgrep." When I announced it, a while ago, someone reported to me that it was not finding anything at all for him. As it worked well for me, and the reporter did not pursue the exploration of the problem with me, I almost forgot it. Yesterday, I stumbled on a tiny bug visible to those using org-grep all bare, with no configuration. This is now corrected. People hit by this problem could happily retry the latest version. Yesterday, to cover one of my own needs, I added the capability to simultaneously search for other files, would they be Org or not. This is implemented by offering hooks able to receive user-defined Emacs Lisp functions. These functions return shell code. So, this capability requires some Emacs Lisp fluency to be activated, yet maybe not that much. The README file contains a small and simple example. While a few problems remain in the tool, it is already very usable in my opinion, and surely useful to me daily. By mere friendship, I feel like recommending it a bit to my Org fellow friends! François P.S. Who is not as pushy as he appears to be. Forgive him! :-)