This looks like it is doing the right thing.
- Carsten
On Jun 19, 2006, at 22:09, Piotr Zielinski wrote:
On 12/06/06, Carsten Dominik [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On Jun 8, 2006, at 1:34, Piotr Zielinski wrote:
The following two functions redefine org-show-todo-tree, so that
TODO
items
On Jun 20, 2006, at 17:11, Carsten Dominik wrote:
Yes, looks like this function does not do at all what I think it
should be doing. I'll remove the call, thanks for tracking this down.
Correction: ...what I *thought* it was doing. The function is fine, I
was wrong putting the call
Maybe you are not trying to open the file in emacs?
Following a link picks an application to open the file, depending on
the extension. Under windows, the default is to use open for files,
which is just like double-clicking them. However, open may choke on
an efs path.
You can force the
On Tue, Jun 20, 2006 at 06:36:19PM +0200, Carsten Dominik wrote:
Maybe you are not trying to open the file in emacs?
Following a link picks an application to open the file, depending on
the extension. Under windows, the default is to use open for
files, which is just like double-clicking
Maybe I should force efs/tramp file names to be opened with Emacs/.
What is the best and most general way to test if a file name is efs or
tramp or ange-ftp?
- Carsten
On Jun 20, 2006, at 18:53, Tim O'Callaghan wrote:
On Tue, Jun 20, 2006 at 06:36:19PM +0200, Carsten Dominik wrote:
Maybe
Carsten Dominik [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
I just found file-remote-p, which may be the right solution.
XEmacs and Emacs22 both have this function, but in case you need
backwards compatibility with Emacs21, feel free to use something like
the following. This handles both Tramp and ange-ftp file