Re: Cannot export org mode to collapsible HTML

2020-04-23 Thread Daniel Clemente
> Is this happening because org-info.js is no longer being maintained?
Another solution I saw was Daniel Clemente's tool, though I am at a total
loss for what to specify in the org file to incorporate his esquemadorg.js
script. I appreciate any help that could let me export large org files to
HTML while having the headers be collapsible.

Sorry for the very late answer. I just added some instructions
 about what to add to
the .org file.
But it looks like the best way is to adapt any existing tool to your needs.
Collapsing/expanding headers isn't very hard — the harder parts are things
like how to make links keep working (e.g. links to sections which are now
collapsed should auto-open it).


On Wed, Nov 6, 2019 at 12:04 AM Kris Brown  wrote:

> Hi, I am trying to have basic folding functionality for my org file that
> has been exported to HTML. I am using Emacs 26.2 (9.0) and Org 9.1.9 on a
> Mac.
>
> This seems to be a built-in feature: JavaScript supported display of web
> pages
> .
> I downloaded my own copy of org-info.js
> . However, I cannot see any
> difference when I use the #+INFOJS_OPT commands or not (org with
> , org without
> , html with
> , html without
> ). I would expect
> to see collapsible headers and no TOC displayed when I use those commands.
>
> There *is* a difference in the generated HTML files (an extra CDATA
> region with a bunch of statements like: *org_html_manager.set("VIEW",
> "info");*) but nothing different visually.
>
> Is this happening because org-info.js is no longer being maintained
> ?
> Another solution I saw was Daniel Clemente's tool
> ,
> though I am at a total loss for what to specify in the org file to
> incorporate his esquemadorg.js script. I appreciate any help that could let
> me export large org files to HTML while having the headers be collapsible.
>


Cannot export org mode to collapsible HTML

2019-11-09 Thread Kris Brown
Hi, I am trying to have basic folding functionality for my org file that
has been exported to HTML. I am using Emacs 26.2 (9.0) and Org 9.1.9 on a
Mac.

This seems to be a built-in feature: JavaScript supported display of web
pages
. I
downloaded my own copy of org-info.js
. However, I cannot see any
difference when I use the #+INFOJS_OPT commands or not (org with
, org without
, html with
, html without
). I would expect to
see collapsible headers and no TOC displayed when I use those commands.

There *is* a difference in the generated HTML files (an extra CDATA region
with a bunch of statements like: *org_html_manager.set("VIEW", "info");*)
but nothing different visually.

Is this happening because org-info.js is no longer being maintained
?
Another solution I saw was Daniel Clemente's tool
,
though I am at a total loss for what to specify in the org file to
incorporate his esquemadorg.js script. I appreciate any help that could let
me export large org files to HTML while having the headers be collapsible.


Cannot export org mode to collapsible HTML

2019-11-05 Thread Kris Brown
Hi, I am trying to have basic folding functionality for my org file that
has been exported to HTML. I am using Emacs 26.2 (9.0) and Org 9.1.9 on a
Mac.

This seems to be a built-in feature: JavaScript supported display of web
pages
. I
downloaded my own copy of org-info.js
. However, I cannot see any
difference when I use the #+INFOJS_OPT commands or not (org with
, org without
, html with
, html without
). I would expect to
see collapsible headers and no TOC displayed when I use those commands.

There *is* a difference in the generated HTML files (an extra CDATA region
with a bunch of statements like: *org_html_manager.set("VIEW", "info");*)
but nothing different visually.

Is this happening because org-info.js is no longer being maintained
?
Another solution I saw was Daniel Clemente's tool
,
though I am at a total loss for what to specify in the org file to
incorporate his esquemadorg.js script. I appreciate any help that could let
me export large org files to HTML while having the headers be collapsible.