d, concert
rehearsals etc in Org-mode, and to be able to easily transpose songs
(its ob-lilypond) for Bb or Eb instruments or so.
OTOH isn't managing a choir or band quite similar to managing a project,
and thus (ob-)taskjuggler would be a very helpful tool here?
--
cheers,
Thorsten
holydays, and then call the functionality with a specific
calendar. Even within Germany e.g. the states have different holydays,
so an enterprise with plants in different states needs to create
different calenders.
--
cheers,
Thorsten
llows this line--
>> | Uwe Brauer writes: ...[]
>> `
>
>
> I found the culprit
>
> (setq message-yank-prefix " > ")
>
> No idea why I had this, but may be it is ages there. Just moving it out
> my init files and everything worked as expected. Thanks
Ok, good ... ;-)
--
cheers,
Thorsten
llows this line--
>> | Uwe Brauer writes: ...[]
>> `
>
> I almost see the same but indented since I user supercite.
Isn't that the problem already?
In an org file, this:
,
| * headline
| * headline
| hello
`
has only one headline, indentation for the * is not allowed.
--
cheers,
Thorsten
Uwe Brauer writes:
>>>> "Thorsten" == Thorsten Jolitz writes:
>
>> A good start would be to try outshine with emacs-lisp mode.
>> With your outshine config done, write a file like foo.el
>
>> ,
>> | ;;
s/
| ;; :part-of-emacs: no
| ;; :author: Jonathan Leech-Pepin
| ;; :author_email: jonathan.leechpepin AT gmail DOT com
| ;; :keywords: emacs org-mode export
| ;; :END:
`
This is the README
,
| outorg-export
| =
|
| Automated exporting of sections of source files to any format org can export
to.
`
--
cheers,
Thorsten
Uwe Brauer writes:
>>>> "Thorsten" == Thorsten Jolitz writes:
>
>> Uwe Brauer writes:
>>>>>> "Thorsten" == Thorsten Jolitz writes:
>>>
>>> > Joseph Vidal-Rosset writes:
>>> > Hallo
>>>
&
Thorsten Jolitz writes:
> Uwe Brauer writes:
>
>>>>> "Thorsten" == Thorsten Jolitz writes:
>>
>>> Joseph Vidal-Rosset writes:
>>> Hallo
>>
>>>> I know that the subject of my email exists already.
>>
Uwe Brauer writes:
>>>> "Thorsten" == Thorsten Jolitz writes:
>
>> Joseph Vidal-Rosset writes:
>> Hallo
>
>>> I know that the subject of my email exists already.
>>>
> [[https://lists.gnu.org/archive/html/emacs-orgm
Uwe Brauer writes:
>>>> "Thorsten" == Thorsten Jolitz writes:
>
>> Joseph Vidal-Rosset writes:
>> Hallo
>
>>> I know that the subject of my email exists already.
>>>
> [[https://lists.gnu.org/archive/html/emacs-orgm
> Professor John Kitchin
> Doherty Hall A207F
> Department of Chemical Engineering
> Carnegie Mellon University
> Pittsburgh, PA 15213
> 412-268-7803
> @johnkitchin
> http://kitchingroup.cheme.cmu.edu
>
> On Sat, Mar 3, 2018 at 12:26 PM, Thorsten
Thorsten Jolitz writes:
PS
Ups ... a few little bugs in the code, here is version 2
#+BEGIN_SRC emacs-lisp
(defconst tj/radio-rgxp "^#\\+attr_org:[[:space:]]+:radio")
(defconst tj/radio-temp "temp")
(defconst tj/radio-wind "wind")
(defvar tj/radio-rw '(&qu
-property itm :checkbox 'on))
((and (string-equal label "yellow")
(or (member temp tj/radio-temp-yellow)
(member temp tj/radio-wind-yellow)))
(org-element-put-property itm :checkbox 'on))
((and (string-equal label "green")
(or (member temp tj/radio-temp-green)
(member temp tj/radio-wind-green)))
(org-element-put-property itm :checkbox 'on)))
itm))
#+END_SRC
--
cheers,
Thorsten
Thorsten Jolitz writes:
PS
One more to show that one can not only easily modify a certain
org element, but that its just as easy to convert it to another type of
org element.
Use this (call M-x tj/obch)
#+BEGIN_SRC emacs-lisp
(defun tj/obch ()
"docstring"
(interactive)
(org
; (insert new-header-string)
> (unless we-were-before-replacement-zone
> (incf default-position-to-return-to (length new-header-string)))
> (goto-char (if (<= fallback-position
> default-position-to-return-to
> (+ fallback-position (length new-header-string)))
> fallback-position
> default-position-to-return-to)
>
> ;; example for mailing list
> ;; Common Lisp assumed!
> (defun akater/org-babel-cycle-header nil
> (interactive)
> (org-babel-cycle-src-block-header-string
> '("lisp :tangle no :results none" ;; type 2 above
> "lisp :tangle yes :results none" ;; type 3 above
> "lisp :results type verbatim" ;; type 1 above
> )))
> #+end_src
>
> Ideally, I envision something along these lines (some specific
> choices
> below don't really make sense):
> #+begin_src emacs-lisp
> (defcustom org-babel-standard-header-sequences-alist
> '((development-setup-1
> (lisp
> (((:tangle . "no")
> (:results . "none"))
> ((:tangle . "yes")
> (:results . "none"))
> ((:results . "type verbatim"
> (python
> (((:tangle . "no")
> (:results . "none"))
> ((:tangle . "yes")
> (:results . "none"))
> ((:results . "type output"
> )
> (development-setup-2
> (C
> (((:tangle . "no")
> (:results . "none"))
> ((:tangle . "yes")
> (:results . "raw"
> (julia
> (((:tangle . "no")
> (:results . "none"))
> ((:tangle . "yes")
> (:results . "none")))
> #+end_src
>
>
--
cheers,
Thorsten
Nicolas Goaziou writes:
> Thorsten Jolitz writes:
>
>> You used the word 'discrepancy',
>
> True. I inferred it from
>
> (funny enough, some org elements have 'value' as their content, others
> 'content').
>
> which, IMO, sounds
babel-picolisp-eoe
| : -> 7
| : -> org-babel-picolisp-eoe
| : (setq X2 (+ X1 1))
| 'org-babel-picolisp-eoe
| -> 8
| : -> org-babel-picolisp-eoe
| : (de foo1 (X) (+ X 2))
| 'org-babel-picolisp-eoe
| -> foo1
| : -> org-babel-picolisp-eoe
| : (setq X3 (foo1 8))
| 'org-babel-picolisp-eoe
| -> 10
| : -> org-babel-picolisp-eoe
| :
`
Hope that helps
--
cheers,
Thorsten
Nicolas Goaziou writes:
> Thorsten Jolitz writes:
>
>> I have defined these two constants in org-dp.el to work around this
>> discrepancy (and to know which elements do not have interpreted content
>> at all):
>>
>> ,
>> | (defconst org-dp-no-con
Nicolas Goaziou writes:
Hello,
> Thorsten Jolitz writes:
>
>> (funny enough, some org elements have 'value' as their content, others
>> 'content').
>
> Could you point out where there is such discrepancy in "org-element.el"?
I have define
[...]
`
and tells you how to exit again: M-#
--
cheers,
Thorsten
,
| (org-dp-rewire 'example-block nil t ;cont ins
| nil ;aff
| nil ;elem
| :switches '(lambda (old elem) )
| :preserve-indent '(lambda (old elem) )
| :value '(lambda (old elem) )
`
Again, check the docstring of org-dp-rewire for more info on its args.
I hope this helps already, feel free to ask any further questions (maybe
put me in Cc since I'm not a very frecuent visitor of the list).
If I find time and motivation I might look at your specific example/use
case, but I cannot promise that.
--
cheers,
Thorsten
x27; utility commands without much programming.
Hope this is not off-topic.
--
cheers,
Thorsten
won't conflict with major modes.
--
cheers,
Thorsten
uot;s" "Schule" todo "SCHULE"
((org-agenda-overriding-header "Schule")
(org-agenda-prefix-format "○ %t%s")
(org-agenda-entry-types '(:scheduled))
))
...
what can I do to solve this problem?
Regards
Thorsten Grothe
Alan Schmitt writes:
Hi Alan,
> On 2016-09-30 22:52, Thorsten Jolitz writes:
>
>>> Are there functions for manipulating org-tables using emacs-lisp? More
>>> precisely, I would like to refer to a table by its name, read some cells
>>> (either by position or
tab |
| 1 | 2 |
=>
(("my" "tab") ("1" "2"))
--
cheers,
Thorsten
.2 (info "(emacs)Echo Area") [#4]
| 516:;; *** 1.3 (info "(emacs)Mode Line") [#4]
| 521:;; *** 1.4 (info "(emacs)Menu Bar") [#2]
`
--
cheers,
Thorsten
Adam Porter writes:
Hi Adam,
> Thorsten Jolitz writes:
>
>> [WARNING: this is an extremely long post with lots of boxquotes that
>> might turn out unreadable, you might want to consider this as spam
>> and just ignore it]
>
> Hi Thorsten,
>
> I guess I h
Philip Hudson writes:
[WARNING: this is an extremely long post with lots of boxquotes that
might turn out unreadable, you might want to consider this as spam
and just ignore it]
Hi Philip,
> On 12 September 2016 at 23:10, Nick Dokos wrote:
>> Thorsten Jolitz writes:
>>
>
ff (actually creating and inserting the new/modified
element in text form) is left to the interpreters (from org-element.el).
You just declare what you want and don't worry anymore how it is done
(=> dp stands for declarative programming, in this context at least ;-)
--
cheers,
Thorsten
Uwe Brauer writes:
>>>> "Thorsten" == Thorsten Jolitz writes:
>> Peter Davis writes:
>>> I realize this would require somehow converting the original message
>>> to org-mode markup, and that seems very tricky. I just wondered
|
| (outorg-copy-edits-and-exit)
|
| Replace code-buffer content with (converted) edit-buffer content and
| kill edit-buffer
`
--
cheers,
Thorsten
t
#+END_SRC
#+results:
: tj/node-to-src-block
Calling this function with point on the following headline appends
the (working) src-block that results from transforming the headline:
* Hello World :elisp:results:
(print "Hello World")
#+BEGIN_SRC elisp :exports results
(print "Hello World")
#+END_SRC
--
cheers,
Thorsten
John Kitchin writes:
> On Wed, Feb 10, 2016 at 3:13 PM, Thorsten Jolitz
> wrote:
>
> #+BEGIN_SRC emacs-lisp
> (defun my-foo (_)
> "Hello World.
> Argument _ unknown argument."
> (+ 1 1))
> #+END_SRC
>
> strange. in Emacs
be
,
| C-h v org--indent TAB
`
shows you some potential culprits?
--
cheers,
Thorsten
art for "_" to the docstring.
I don't remember that I've seen this before, so maybe this is a rather new
feature/convention?
> Thorsten Jolitz writes:
>
>> Hi List,
>> just out of curiosity, a few functions in org-element.el contain _ in
>> t
Hi List,
just out of curiosity, a few functions in org-element.el contain _ in
their parameter list, but its not used in the body.
What does it stand for?
--
cheers,
Thorsten
> function definition is void: org-find-property.
> What’s the problem?
> Thank you for your help!
What does
,[ C-h f org-find-property RET ]
| org-find-property is a compiled Lisp function in `org.el'.
| [...]
`
say?
Your "M-x org-version"?
Do you have more than one Org-mode installed?
--
cheers,
Thorsten
Rasmus writes:
> Thorsten Jolitz writes:
>
>> Its not wrong or unfair, but not what I would say
>> either. org-element does the same thing - parse the given text, work
>> on the internal representation, write the new text by interpreting
>> the modified interna
Rasmus writes:
> Thorsten Jolitz writes:
>
>> Xebar Saram writes:
>>
>> Hi Xebar,
>>
>>> Thx Thorsten
>>>
>>> i still use it daily :D
>>
>> I did not know that I have a user actually, because when I announced
>> i
Xebar Saram writes:
Hi Xebar,
> Thx Thorsten
>
> i still use it daily :D
I did not know that I have a user actually, because when I announced it
a year ago or so it never drew much attention (a bit to my surprise, I
must admit). So I'm happy about the news ;-)
You just used a f
Rasmus writes:
Hi Rasmus,
> I’m happy to see you in this neck of the woods.
thanks, I really hope that becomes a habit again ...
> Thorsten Jolitz writes:
>
>> Not sure if I understand what "base your work off master" refers to,
>> but I'll try cl-lib,
-cmd) t) ;or
|
| (org-dp-apply (org-dp-prompt) 'rewire) ; or
| (org-dp-apply (my-custom-org-prompt-cmd) 'rewire)
`
The advantage of this style of programming is that the internal Org element
representation is so uniform (and the number of interpreted properties
quite limited) that one solution might fit all (elements).
--
cheers,
Thorsten
Nicolas Goaziou writes:
Hello,
> Thorsten Jolitz writes:
>
>> Hi List,
>> again an Org function I used in one of my libraries has disappeared.
>>
>> ,
>> | org-dp-lib.el:483:1:Warning: the function
>> | `org-end-of-meta-data-and-dr
date
here ...
--
cheers,
Thorsten
the code example - I used it.
--
cheers,
Thorsten
p:
>
> ~/.emacs.d/elpa_25_0/outshine-20151203.802/outshine.elc:Warning:
> reference to
> free variable ‘org-log-note-marker’
>
> @ Thorsten, Nicolas: What would be the best way to fix that?
>
> My org version:
> Org-mode version 8.3.2 (release_8.3.2-469-ga902c8 @
> /ho
mode.org/cgit.cgi/org-mode.git/commit/?id=07e16c2fc5687de5e1761bbf4ba3cf1777de15eb
>
Yes, thanks.
Only that org-set-local took a quoted first arg, while setq-local takes
an unquoted variable.
--
cheers,
Thorsten
Hi List,
After updating Org from Git I get this error:
,
| and: Symbol's function definition is void: org-set-local
`
Has it been replaced - with what?
TIA
--
cheers,
Thorsten
or writing:
- use orgstruct or
- use outorg/outshine, and this:
(add-hook 'message-mode-hook 'outline-minor-mode)
- use ... (there might be more options)
--
cheers,
Thorsten
Jonas Bernoulli writes:
Hi List,
> Aaron Ecay writes:
>
>> Thorsten Jolitz wrote the outshine library
>
> I know. I used it for a while and contributed a few commits. But I
> pretty much only used the cycling functionality at the time and when
> I discovered that `or
helps a bit ...
--
cheers,
Thorsten
Kaushal writes:
Hi all, Hi Bastien,
> I don't know the outshine and outorg code in and out. But I wouldn't
> mind keeping it maintained with the pull requests I get.
>
> That said, adding Thorsten Jolitz to this discussion.
> @Thorsten Would you mind making me (
(when (or (and negate-p (not memberp))
(and (not negate-p) memberp))
(setq filtered-props
(cons (cons key val) filtered-props))
filtered-props)))
#+END_SRC
maybe thats somehow related...
--
cheers,
Thorsten
Thank you John and Michael for your suggestions, I will see if my
knowledge is wide enough to understand this, unfortunately I'm a emacs
newbie :-)
Anyway I will answer after testing your suggestions!
Regards
Thorsten
t possible?
Thanks in advance!
Regards
Thorsten
Alan Schmitt writes:
Hi Alan,
> On 2014-11-03 09:06, Thorsten Jolitz writes:
>
>> Grant Rettke writes:
>>
>>> On Sat, Nov 1, 2014 at 5:58 AM, Thorsten Jolitz
>>> wrote:
>>>> And there is a new library
>>>>
>>>> [[http:/
Hello List,
I'm trying to assign a new shortcut for the function "Set field formula",
but what is the command for that function? For "Set column formula" it is
org-table-eval-formula &optional but I cannot find the command for the
above function? What I'm doing wrong?
Regards
Thorsten Grothe
Grant Rettke writes:
> On Sat, Nov 1, 2014 at 5:58 AM, Thorsten Jolitz wrote:
>> And there is a new library
>>
>> [[http://goo.gl/pYYzS6][outorg-export]]
>
> I just used http://goo.gl/pYYzS6 and it worked fine; that looks like
> an org mode link.
It is an Org-m
and exported for a
> suitable vignette engine.
>
> If you already use Rmarkdown, etc, you get the ease of editting and
> working in org-mode - cycling visibility of headlines, lists, src
> blocks, and results, and of storing results inline, previewing latex
> fragments, and all.
>
> HTH,
Yes, definitely, thanks for the info. So it makes sense to add another
tool ;)
--
cheers,
Thorsten
c backup files in a /tmp folder
(one file for each explicit save with C-x C-s, and one saved when
killing the *outorg-edit-buffer*).
And there is a new library
[[http://goo.gl/pYYzS6][outorg-export]]
by Jonathan Leech-Pepin that keeps source-files and (Org) exports in
sync.
--
cheers,
Thorsten
remember that orgstructs default conventions are
different.
Well, thinking about it, its probably a matter of buffer-local vars for
outline-mode, and orgstructs sets its own variables leaving the outline
vars as-is (correct?), but outshine uses the outline vars and thus does
not find regexps for Org-style headers. Or so...
--
cheers,
Thorsten
http://orgmode.org/cgit.cgi/org-mode.git/plain/contrib/lisp/ox-gfm.el
>
> [builds on an existing exporter]
> http://orgmode.org/manual/Adding-export-back_002dends.html
--
cheers,
Thorsten
Karl Voit writes:
> Hi!
>
> * Thorsten Jolitz wrote:
>> Marcin Borkowski writes:
>>
>>> And now there's another problem: I'd like to have my init file
>>> collapsed to only headlines on opening. Since I visit my init file
>>> through a
Jay Iyer writes:
> Hi Thorsten,
> The file entries are as follows and the task/note/project sub-heads generally
> don't have active/inactive timestamps except when a scheduling/deadline is
> specified. Thanks.
> ** 2014-10 October
> *** 2014-10-01 Wednesday
[ C-h f org-element-contents RET ]
> | org-element-contents is a compiled Lisp function in `org-element.el'.
> |
> | (org-element-contents ELEMENT)
> |
> | Extract contents from an ELEMENT.
> `
>
> and then 'org-element-property' and 'org-element-put-property' to get
> and set timestamp info from the parent and any other info from the child
> entries.
--
cheers,
Thorsten
m an ELEMENT.
`
and then 'org-element-property' and 'org-element-put-property' to get
and set timestamp info from the parent and any other info from the child
entries.
--
cheers,
Thorsten
vars x=A y=B (A and B must be named blocks for this,
> use a #+NAME: A line) and then do (list A x B y) in block C and use the
> :results format that outputs a list as a table (often it is the default,
> otherwise try :results table or so).
--
cheers,
Thorsten
use a #+NAME: A line) and then do (list A x B y) in block C and use the
:results format that outputs a list as a table (often it is the default,
otherwise try :results table or so).
--
cheers,
Thorsten
rogramming language the new version seems highly superior,
and will most likely result in much cleaner and more readable code.
Its well documented, search for 'The LaTeX 3 Interface' and 'The expl3
Package and LaTeX 3 Programming'.
--
cheers,
Thorsten
point is at) has
>> some tag (but not inherited)?
>>
>> TIA,
alternatively you could use:
* Headline :tag1:
#+BEGIN_SRC emacs-lisp
(let ((org-use-tag-inheritance nil))
(save-excursion
(outline-previous-heading)
(org-element-property :tags (org-element-at-point
#+END_SRC
#+results:
| tag1 |
--
cheers,
Thorsten
refiling an Org task, but I already reported this a
few weeks ago to the Emacs maintainers and it seems I have a "stripped
binary" that does not deliver useful backtrace info. I don't use
flyspell and I'm on Archlinux.
Not very helpful, I know.
--
cheers,
Thorsten
Nick Dokos writes:
> Thorsten Jolitz writes:
>
>> Your interpretation of 'obvious' seems (obviously?) be a bit overly
>> optimistic sometimes.
>
> Probably apocryphal but ...
>
> http://mystatpage.wordpress.com/tag/g-h-hardy/
Nice.
Whats really obvious
.
--
cheers,
Thorsten
Nicolas Goaziou writes:
> Hello,
>
> Thorsten Jolitz writes:
>
>> ,[ C-h f yes-or-no-p RET ]
>> | yes-or-no-p is an alias for `y-or-n-p'.
>> |
>> | (yes-or-no-p PROMPT)
>> |
>> | Ask user a "y or n" question.
>> `
&g
Nicolas Goaziou writes:
> Thorsten Jolitz writes:
>
>> The conclusion of your answer above is that the item-interpreter cannot
>> produce the complete org-mode syntax for plain-lists that is recognized
>> by the parser and described in the manual?
> This question is
Nicolas Goaziou writes:
Hello,
> Thorsten Jolitz writes:
>
>> One more question: bullet strings are parsed 'as-is', but the
>> interpreter seems to have its own logic that is a bit difficult to grok
>> (or are there syntax errors too?):
>
> This is sim
Thorsten Jolitz writes:
> Nicolas Goaziou writes:
[...]
>> You should not provide 'on, 'off or 'trans, and even less strings, but
>> on, off or trans since your expression is already quoted.
One more question: bullet strings are parsed 'as-is', but the
C-Tab for moving between windows.
Try
,
| (org-defkey org-mode-map "\C-TAB" 'undefined)
`
not sure if the TAB is correct here, maybe try , , etc if it
does not work.
--
cheers,
Thorsten
Nicolas Goaziou writes:
> Hello,
>
> Thorsten Jolitz writes:
>
>> Hi List,
>>
>> evaluating this
>>
>> #+BEGIN_SRC emacs-lisp
>> (org-element-interpret-data
>> '(item (:bullet "1" :tag "hello" :checkbox "tran
on a newline, which looks strange in my
eyes. Is that intended?
PS
and checkbox is ignored, no matter if I give 'on, 'off and 'trans as
symbols or strings.
--
cheers,
Thorsten
Nick Dokos writes:
> Marcin Borkowski writes:
>
>> On 2014-10-17, at 00:19, Thorsten Jolitz wrote:
>>
>>>> OK, so what is the canonical way of doing this? I don't want to use
>>>> org-dp, since it is another dependency.
>>>
>>&g
Marcin Borkowski writes:
> On 2014-10-17, at 00:19, Thorsten Jolitz wrote:
>
>> However, here is a org-dp solution, use 't' instead of 'prepend to
>> replace the links, and whatever you want instead of "file+emacs" as
>> replacement. Of cour
(cdr
| (split-string
| raw-val ":" t)))
| ":")))
| (org-element-put-property link :raw-link new-val)))
| 'prepend)
|org-link-re-with-space t)
| #+END_SRC
`
--
cheers,
Thorsten
Thorsten Jolitz writes:
> Marcin Borkowski writes:
>
>> On 2014-10-16, at 00:28, Thorsten Jolitz wrote:
>>
>>> Marcin Borkowski writes:
>>>
>>>> I see. What is the most interesting for me is the idea of
>>>> getting/setting propertie
Marcin Borkowski writes:
> On 2014-10-16, at 00:28, Thorsten Jolitz wrote:
>
>> Marcin Borkowski writes:
>>
>>> I see. What is the most interesting for me is the idea of
>>> getting/setting properties, that's what I was looking for.
>>
>> T
ats why I called the library
,
| org-dp.el --- Declarative Local Programming with Org Elements
`
it allows to leave most of the low-level parsing and interpreting stuff
to the parser framework, you only need to 'declare' the element-type and
the property values to create or modify elements.
--
cheers,
Thorsten
Marcin Borkowski writes:
> On 2014-10-15, at 09:16, Thorsten Jolitz wrote:
>
>> Marcin Borkowski writes:
>>
>>> Hi list,
>>>
>>> assume that I have a link object (e.g., I'm in the ellipsis part of
>>> this:
>>>
>>>
:www.orgmode.org"
`
are your candidates for getting and setting with
'org-element-property' and 'org-element-put-property'.
--
cheers,
Thorsten
. put a #+TOC: headlines 2 line
3. copy and adapt (i.e. overwrite) the org-html-keyword transcoder
but wouldn't a toc-filter make more sense? Did I miss it?
--
cheers,
Thorsten
es to the element's
parse-tree in a filter function?
--
cheers,
Thorsten
option,
it *helps* to have balanced brackets w/o breaking your will ;-)
--
cheers,
Thorsten
could try to first install org-mode, then restart Emacs, then
install outshine. Since outline-mode and org-mode are in Emacs core,
I've never seen this problem.
--
cheers,
Thorsten
ut something on the line of
#+BEGIN_SRC emacs-lisp
(org-map-entries 'org-archive-subtree)
#+END_SRC
might do (totally untested!)
--
cheers,
Thorsten
| ** AA
| *** AAA
|
| If I also archive AB after that, it gets inserted in the structure which
| is now identical to the structure we started with.
`
and when you simply mark the done subtrees with tag :ARCHIVE: but only
actually archivate them when the whole tree is done?
--
cheers,
Thorsten
planning, table, list ... handling (only syntax level editing of
course).
I don't know if this could at all be implemented with these extendable
web-editors.
--
cheers,
Thorsten
x27;t know how hard this would be, if at all possible,
but from the user-perspective this might be the easiest solution.
--
cheers,
Thorsten
n call (org-element-parse-buffer ...) or whatever.
PicoLisp is no editor, and there is no editor written in this
language, but assume Java or JS programs can do the same - how would
that help editing Org-mode syntax in editors that are written in that
languages?
Just curious, I would like to find a way to make editing Org syntax
easier for the masses (of non Emacs users).
--
cheers,
Thorsten
would be a start, then maybe some 'quick
navigation' commands. To bad that we can't have this by writing a few
quick Emacs Lisp functions, somebody would need to know enough about
Java, JS, HTML5 etc. and have some insight into the popular editors to
make this happen.
--
cheers,
Thorsten
-10-09 Do>
:PROPERTIES:
:ARCHIVE: foo
:END:
[...]
:END:
but the default org-element-parse-buffer parses everything (when specified), the
contents too, so it would give you
,
| (element-typ (plist) (section))
`
with section recursively containing other elements with the same
structure -> a nested list.
--
cheers,
Thorsten
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