Hi Ken,
Ken Mankoff mank...@gmail.com writes:
http://article.gmane.org/gmane.emacs.orgmode/84707 appears blank
The article is displayed correctly for me, probably a temporary
issue with gmane.org.
so perhaps the no reply is due to a posting issue. Hence, I send the
email again...
I don't
Hi Bastien,
Thanks for letting me know it displays properly and email received. The
URL works for me this morning too.
On 2014-04-14 at 05:22, Bastien wrote:
Even for those who uses MacOSX, you should perhaps be more specific
on how Org-mode would store such links, then somebody might step up.
Ken Mankoff mank...@gmail.com writes:
Hi Bastien,
Thanks for letting me know it displays properly and email received. The
URL works for me this morning too.
On 2014-04-14 at 05:22, Bastien wrote:
Even for those who uses MacOSX, you should perhaps be more specific
on how Org-mode would
On 2014-04-14 at 08:42, Nick Dokos wrote:
What does emacs do when you C-x C-f an alias?
Alias in OS X (and Shortcut in Windows) present as files. Org treats it
just as it should - as a file. Everything works.
If it opens it properly (i.e. opens the target file) then why is
anything needed in
Ken Mankoff writes:
Aliases are a type of links (ln on linux, shortcut on Windows
alias on OS X (OS X of course also supports ln)). The difference
between an OS X alias and ln is that if the target is moved, the OS X
alias still points to it, and double-clicking on an alias (or issuing
the
On 2014-04-14 at 12:26, Achim Gratz wrote:
Ken Mankoff writes:
Aliases are a type of links (ln on linux, shortcut on Windows
alias on OS X (OS X of course also supports ln)). The difference
between an OS X alias and ln is that if the target is moved, the OS
X alias still points to it, and
Ken Mankoff mankoff at gmail.com writes:
On 2014-04-14 at 12:26, Achim Gratz wrote:
Ken Mankoff writes:
Aliases are a type of links (ln on linux, shortcut on Windows
alias on OS X (OS X of course also supports ln)). The difference
between an OS X alias and ln is that if the target is
On 2014-04-14 at 13:42, Charles Berry wrote:
The point of using an alias rather than a filename or the name of a
symbolic link that points to the file is that it inherits the property
of Mac OS X aliases that moving the file does not break the alias ---
it still points to file.
Exactly!
On Apr 14, 2014, at 12:36 PM, Ken Mankoff mank...@gmail.com wrote:
On 2014-04-14 at 13:42, Charles Berry wrote:
For this to work as you fantasize, you would need to enable the Finder
application to modify the part of the *.org file that encodes the
alias when you change the location of the
On Mon, 14 Apr 2014, Ivan Andrus wrote:
On Apr 14, 2014, at 12:36 PM, Ken Mankoff mank...@gmail.com wrote:
On 2014-04-14 at 13:42, Charles Berry wrote:
For this to work as you fantasize, you would need to enable the Finder
application to modify the part of the *.org file that encodes the
On 2014-04-14 at 20:21, Charles C. Berry wrote:
BibDesk has an archive of entries typically stored at
~/Library/Caches/Metadata/edu.ucsd.cs.mmccrack.bibdesk/*.bdskcache
and the 'NS.data' element of Bdsk-File-1 seems to point to one element.
The *.bdskcache file has a bplist and I guess the
Hi,
I posted something at the beginning of the week, and have received no
reply. If nobody had anything to say that is fine. But I notice that my
original post on gmane
http://article.gmane.org/gmane.emacs.orgmode/84707 appears blank, so
perhaps the no reply is due to a posting issue. Hence, I
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