Hi Alan,
Alan Schmitt alan.schm...@polytechnique.org writes:
I make org-agenda-skip-entry-unless-tags as debugged, and when I call
this agenda view, I don't go in the debugger, so I guess it is not
called.
I'd try edebug-defun'ing `org-agenda-skip-eval' and track what's wrong
from there.
Hi Bastien,
b...@gnu.org writes:
Hi Alan,
Alan Schmitt alan.schm...@polytechnique.org writes:
I make org-agenda-skip-entry-unless-tags as debugged, and when I call
this agenda view, I don't go in the debugger, so I guess it is not
called.
I'd try edebug-defun'ing `org-agenda-skip-eval'
strom...@nexgo.de writes:
Alan Schmitt writes:
It would be great except for the following: as soon as I use the
debugger, my function works as intended. Is there any reason why using
the debugger would change the behavior of a function?
Sorry to be of no actual help, but if it's any
Hello,
I'm making some progress, but things are getting stranger.
First, the reason I could not debug the function is because it is called
either using eval or apply, and it seems that in that case one does
not enter the debugger. However, if one is already in the debugger, then
the function
Alan Schmitt writes:
It would be great except for the following: as soon as I use the
debugger, my function works as intended. Is there any reason why using
the debugger would change the behavior of a function?
Sorry to be of no actual help, but if it's any consolation to you, this
is common
Hello,
alan.schm...@polytechnique.org writes:
Hello,
I'm trying to have a custom agenda where I say I want to skip some
tags. I wrote a function that does what I want (it takes two arguments:
the list of tags to keep, and a boolean that says whether entries with
no tags should be kept).
Hello,
I'm trying to have a custom agenda where I say I want to skip some
tags. I wrote a function that does what I want (it takes two arguments:
the list of tags to keep, and a boolean that says whether entries with
no tags should be kept). The function works well, but for some reason it
is not