Re: [O] org-element-property syntax (turning strings into keyword symbols)
On Sat, Nov 9, 2013 at 2:48 AM, Nicolas Goaziou n.goaz...@gmail.com wrote: Hello, Matt Price mopto...@gmail.com writes: This works fine. Now when I come back to this buffer I want to check whether any of the properties are actually there. So I am trying something like this: (let ((hasprops nil)) (dolist prop org-writers-room-properties (if (org-element-property (car prop) (org-element-at-point)) (setq hasprops t)) (if (hasprops) (etc.)) However this doesn't work because (1) the car of prop (which is in fact the property name) is not necessarily capitalized and Then `upcase' the property name first. I assume you will only refer to user-defined properties so their equivalent keyword will always be in upper cases. (2) the property parameter of org-element-property is not a string, but a keyword symbol. Somehow I have to turn my string into the appropriate keyword symbol. Does anyone know how to do this? Use `intern'. For efficiency reasons, I also suggest to store `org-element-at-point' in a variable instead of computing it again each time you are looking for a property: (let ((hashprops nil) (element (org-element-at-point))) (dolist (prop org-writers-room-properties) (if (org-element-property (intern (concat : (upcase prop))) element) ...))) ah, thank you so much for this. I don't know how I would ever have found intern on my own. makes my life much easier! Regards, -- Nicolas Goaziou
[O] org-element-property syntax (turning strings into keyword symbols)
Hi, I'm trying to write a query that will check to see if the current element has any of several properties set; the properties are defined in a defcustom so I don't know in advance which properties I'm interested in. So I have the following code which INSERTS properties: (defcustom org-writers-room-properties '((Synopsis . Put a short summary here) (Role in Book . Describe what you want this section to accomplish) (Characters . who is in this section)) alist of properties to be inserted automatically on heading creation :group 'org-writers-room :type 'alist) (defun org-wr-main-heading-hook () Adds a properties drawer populates it with several properties. Intended to be used with org-insert-heading-hook, but is also interactive. (interactive) (save-excursion (dolist (this-property org-writers-room-properties) (org-set-property (car this-property) (cdr this-property)) ) (org-flag-drawer 'nil) (select-window (window-with-name guide)) (org-cycle-hide-drawers 'all) ) ) This works fine. Now when I come back to this buffer I want to check whether any of the properties are actually there. So I am trying something like this: (let ((hasprops nil)) (dolist prop org-writers-room-properties (if (org-element-property (car prop) (org-element-at-point)) (setq hasprops t)) (if (hasprops) (etc.)) However this doesn't work because (1) the car of prop (which is in fact the property name) is not necessarily capitalized and (2) the property parameter of org-element-property is not a string, but a keyword symbol. Somehow I have to turn my string into the appropriate keyword symbol. Does anyone know how to do this? Thank you! Matt
Re: [O] org-element-property syntax (turning strings into keyword symbols)
Hello, Matt Price mopto...@gmail.com writes: This works fine. Now when I come back to this buffer I want to check whether any of the properties are actually there. So I am trying something like this: (let ((hasprops nil)) (dolist prop org-writers-room-properties (if (org-element-property (car prop) (org-element-at-point)) (setq hasprops t)) (if (hasprops) (etc.)) However this doesn't work because (1) the car of prop (which is in fact the property name) is not necessarily capitalized and Then `upcase' the property name first. I assume you will only refer to user-defined properties so their equivalent keyword will always be in upper cases. (2) the property parameter of org-element-property is not a string, but a keyword symbol. Somehow I have to turn my string into the appropriate keyword symbol. Does anyone know how to do this? Use `intern'. For efficiency reasons, I also suggest to store `org-element-at-point' in a variable instead of computing it again each time you are looking for a property: (let ((hashprops nil) (element (org-element-at-point))) (dolist (prop org-writers-room-properties) (if (org-element-property (intern (concat : (upcase prop))) element) ...))) Regards, -- Nicolas Goaziou