I'm wondering if it is possible to see the all links from the target?
for example, I have project B depending on project A like this:
#+SEQ_TODO: TODO NEXT WAITING DONE
* TODO project A
# project A
* WAITING project B
project is waiting completion of [[project A]]
when the project A is
On Jun 8, 2007, at 2:14, Charles Cave wrote:
Carsten,
The quick reference guide has a problem with truncation of the left
margin.
When I print the A4 version, the left 2 centimeters of test is
truncated.
Previous versions of the reference card are fine, so something is
broken!
I modified
I wrote an email a while ago but I guess it must have got lost in the
system.
I have been trying to insert columns on org-tables with M-S - as it
says can be done on the refcard.
It does not work. I wondered if it was because there was a trick to it.
You know, putting point on a line or
This key combination should work. The most likely reasons why
it might not work:
- you are using a terminal window version of Emacs
- your operating system is catching M-S-right as a shortcut
for some command.
To find out what is happening, press
C-h k
and then M-S-right, check what the
I use a lot of explicit targets with angle braces for example, but usually
I do not put them into comments leaving them inline. these braces stress the
attention on the target when read the sentence, it is not always desired. maybe
it is possible to hide them similarly to Clean view but without
On Jun 8, 2007, at 9:20, Maxim Loginov wrote:
I'm wondering if it is possible to see the all links from the target?
for example, I have project B depending on project A like this:
#+SEQ_TODO: TODO NEXT WAITING DONE
* TODO project A
# project A
* WAITING project B
project is waiting
I notice the planner world has some pages where they discuss the
various ways people use planner. I think it would be cool for us to
collectively post some org-mode usage strategies, perhaps on an
emacswiki page.
Or, people could prepare a small .org file and send it to me, and I
could paste it
I think this is a great idea. My use of org-mode is improving, but I'm
not yet 100% comfortable with it. I recently refactored how I have been
using org-mode; and I'm not there yet.
There's no question that org-mode is a fantastic tool for organising
yourself. Its power comes from it not
Rick Moynihan [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
The various org-mode guides out there are a great start, but I like
you think we need something more. I'd also be interested in seeing
the pro's and con's to the various org-mode tools, e.g. KEYWORDS,
TAGS, OUTLINES, and patterns suited to their usage
On 6/7/07, Giovanni Ridolfi [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
So If I'm correct:
Operating system Mac OsX ... version?
emacs version aquamacs ?
org-mode version ?
here I have:
winxp,
GNU Emacs 22.0.990.1 (i386-mingw-nt5.1.2600) of 2007-05-23 on
LENNART-69DE564 (patched)
Org-mode version
Hi Carsten (and list),
Org mode is great!
I use C-c C-v (org-show-todo-tree) alot. One of my org files is getting
rather largish (8200 lines) and it would be really useful if it was
possible to do the org-show-todo-tree on only part of the file.
What I'm really looking for is a way to do C-c
Carsten Dominik [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
the target occurs. is it possible to implement this with special
agenda view?
Not a special agenda view, but you can use `org-occur'
to create the corresponding sparse tree.
In your example:
C-c / \[project A\] RET
thanks, I'll try this
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