Bastien writes:
One thing I need to understand: what are the warnings that you have
when compiling within a single process and you don't when compiling
with one process per file?
Emacs Lisp as a dynamic language has no concept of a well-formed
program that can be verified by just looking at
Is there any way I can find out more?
On Aug 13, 2012, at 5:44 AM, Bastien b...@gnu.org wrote:
Neuwirth Erich erich.neuwi...@univie.ac.at writes:
Any ideas why the tests are failing?
It looks like there is a missing dependancy related to org-element
somewhere. But I can't reproduce the
Hi Erich,
Neuwirth Erich erich.neuwi...@univie.ac.at writes:
Is there any way I can find out more?
By looking for an actual bug related to the failed test?
I have no other idea, sorry.
--
Bastien
Please give me an example of a warning that is shown while compiling
within a single Emacs process and not shown while compiling files with
one Emacs process per file.
--
Bastien
Hello Brian,
brian powell wrote:
* Some people have expressed interest in Elnode in the past: ELNODE is soon
to be released as version 1.0
** Video mentions Emacs OrgMode (and includes an example) and Node.js:
http://www.youtube.com/embed/TR7DPvEi7Jg
** Elnode - the EmacsLisp Async
On Sun, Aug 12, 2012 at 7:34 PM, Christopher Allan Webber
cweb...@dustycloud.org wrote:
This is *very* exciting. I'm definitely interested in using this for
MediaGoblin if I can.
Thanks. I've just looked at MediaGoblin but I don't think it fits what
Org-sync was designed for, which is sync
Morning,
I just want to know if there is there exists a 'tidy' module/command
that can be run on a file to tidy it?
I often find myself going back and adding extra line breaks and
padding, and wondering if there exists something that can do this for
me?
Thanks,
'Mash
Bastien bzg at gnu.org writes:
Please give me an example of a warning that is shown while compiling
within a single Emacs process and not shown while compiling files with
one Emacs process per file.
I don't know if something like that currently exists, if you want to check set
_COMPILE_=slint2
Aurélien Aptel writes:
On Sun, Aug 12, 2012 at 7:34 PM, Christopher Allan Webber
cweb...@dustycloud.org wrote:
This is *very* exciting. I'm definitely interested in using this for
MediaGoblin if I can.
Thanks. I've just looked at MediaGoblin but I don't think it fits what
Org-sync was
I tried _COMPILE_ = single
and I tried
~$ emacs -batch -Q --eval (byte-compile-file
\~/install/git/org-mode/lisp/ob.el\)
I get warnings in the second case, not in the first case.
Is there anything that _COMPILE_=single loads/expands on top of a
bare Emacs when compiling using one Emacs
Achim Gratz strom...@nexgo.de writes:
Eric Schulte writes:
But we certainly shouldn't (and currently aren't?) inhibit the display
of any warnings when the default make is run. I was surprised to run
make compile-source and see additional warnings which weren't shown
during regular make.
Bastien b...@gnu.org writes:
Bernt Hansen be...@norang.ca writes:
That doesn't work. There's a missing ) at the end of the defalias and
after I add that I get
Er, sorry for the typo.
I've reverted this commit for now, I'll see if I can get rid of
cl-labels another way.
I've just
Let's summarize.
It is no a matter of exposing the user to the warnings or not.
It is a matter of exposing the user to the warnings that might be
useful to him -- i.e. the ones he might want to report to the list
just to let the developers know, or in the context of a bug hunt.
The warnings
Hi Eric,
Eric Schulte eric.schu...@gmx.com writes:
I've just pushed up another version of this commit, which I believe
removes cl-labels while still preserving tangling behavior. If you have
a chance please re-check tangling with the latest Org-mode.
`letrec' is not available on Emacs 24.1
Bastien bzg at gnu.org writes:
~$ emacs -batch -Q --eval (byte-compile-file
\~/install/git/org-mode/lisp/ob.el\)
I get warnings in the second case, not in the first case.
You should, because the command line you use does not set up the load-path
correctly. The requires will now use the
Bastien b...@gnu.org writes:
Hi Eric,
Eric Schulte eric.schu...@gmx.com writes:
I've just pushed up another version of this commit, which I believe
removes cl-labels while still preserving tangling behavior. If you have
a chance please re-check tangling with the latest Org-mode.
Hi Eric,
Eric Schulte eric.schu...@gmx.com writes:
I'm surprised that elisp doesn't provide any mechanism for local
anonymous functions.
(let ((my-local-func (lambda (a) (message a
(funcall my-local-func Hello!))
is fine.
It's just for recursive local function -- letrec provides
Eric Schulte eric.schu...@gmx.com wrote:
Bastien b...@gnu.org writes:
Hi Eric,
Eric Schulte eric.schu...@gmx.com writes:
I've just pushed up another version of this commit, which I believe
removes cl-labels while still preserving tangling behavior. If you have
a chance please
Achim Gratz strom...@nexgo.de writes:
Bastien bzg at gnu.org writes:
~$ emacs -batch -Q --eval (byte-compile-file
\~/install/git/org-mode/lisp/ob.el\)
I get warnings in the second case, not in the first case.
You should, because the command line you use does not set up the load-path
Hi Nick,
Nick Dokos nicholas.do...@hp.com writes:
Can't the definition of letrec in emacs24 be lifted bodily into org-compat.el
(or whatever the correct place is) as a compatibility-with-emacs-23 macro?
I don't think it's worth the effort.
The current code works and compiles without warnings
Hello,
Bastien b...@gnu.org writes:
Eric Schulte eric.schu...@gmx.com writes:
I'm surprised that elisp doesn't provide any mechanism for local
anonymous functions.
(let ((my-local-func (lambda (a) (message a
(funcall my-local-func Hello!))
is fine.
It's just for recursive
Bastien b...@gnu.org wrote:
Hi Nick,
Nick Dokos nicholas.do...@hp.com writes:
Can't the definition of letrec in emacs24 be lifted bodily into
org-compat.el
(or whatever the correct place is) as a compatibility-with-emacs-23 macro?
I don't think it's worth the effort.
The
Hi all,
Is it possible with org-capture to create a template that would create
the following:
* Log
** 2012 - Week 33
- One liner of interest
- Another one liner of interest
So that is a capture template that generates the 2nd level heading when
required and the text entered is converted to a
Hi Simon,
I have a capture template that does almost exactly that, I just use a
user entered subheading -- should be easy enough to tweak for your task.
When chosen as a capture option, it asks for a discussion context and
looks up a 2nd level heading below Discussion Items matching that
I recently wrote what I thought to be a very simply she'll script to tangle a
file; simply call the script on a file, e.g. 'tangle corgi.org' and a file,
'corgi.rb' (assuming one uses Ruby) appears in the local directory.
Tangling the file from within Emacs works normally. Tangling from this
On 12.08.2012 17:48, John Hendy wrote:
On Sat, Aug 11, 2012 at 4:34 AM, Bastien b...@gnu.org wrote:
Hi John,
John Hendy jw.he...@gmail.com writes:
Date trees are the obvious way to be able to do this, but they don't
have any of the neat search functionality that I know of.
Can you
I am wondering why people aren't using org-element.el to extract
intelligence from org buffers.
We seem to be living in 2011s. It is already 2012.
--
Jambunathan K kjambunat...@gmail.com writes:
I am wondering why people aren't using org-element.el to extract
intelligence from org buffers.
We seem to be living in 2011s. It is already 2012.
org-element.el is not yet part of a release.
It is only available from the git repository.
The
Bastien writes:
Do you get them with make
~$ make _COMPILE_=single
Not now, but I've seen them before. I think this is one of those cases
where an indirect require provides a dependency.
How do you set up the load-path
The current directory (which is lisp) is prepended to the load-path,
Hi Nick,
Nick Dokos nicholas.do...@hp.com writes:
I'd suggest that that can be a source of bugs that would be
avoided with a compatibility macro.
`org-labels' is an alias for `cl-labels' (when available) or `labels'.
There is no need for a compatibility macro here, as the current code
is
Nicolas Goaziou n.goaz...@gmail.com writes:
You can have recursive local functions:
#+begin_src emacs-lisp
(let* (len ; For byte compiler.
(len (lambda (l) (if (not l) 0
(1+ (funcall len (cdr l)))
(funcall len '(1 2 3)))
Hi Matthew,
On Mon, Aug 13, 2012 at 2:15 PM, Matthew Oesting oesti...@me.com wrote:
I recently wrote what I thought to be a very simply she'll script to tangle a
file; simply call the script on a file, e.g. 'tangle corgi.org' and a file,
'corgi.rb' (assuming one uses Ruby) appears in the
Bastien writes:
However, I would suggest these changes to the current default.mk:
These changes do not belong into default.mk — default.mk is the fallback
for when no changes to local.mk have been made.
- Have a target `make single' (useful for developers)
- `make elint' would run the
Eric Schulte writes:
I don't find the strings single compile, compile-source or elint
anywhere in the Org documentation. Perhaps there is different
documentation for the Makefile?
Yes, as mentioned several times in this thread:
http://orgmode.org/worg/dev/org-build-system.html
I'll add that
Hi,
I noticed that exporting a document to HTML when exports is set to both
gives an error. Here's an example document:
-
#+TITLE: Example Doc
#+PROPERTY: exports both
The result is src_R{3+4} =[1] 7=.
-
The stack trace looks like this:
Sebastien Vauban
wxhgmqzgw...@spammotel.com writes:
Hello Brian,
brian powell wrote:
* Some people have expressed interest in Elnode in the past: ELNODE is soon
to be released as version 1.0
** Video mentions Emacs OrgMode (and includes an example) and Node.js:
-Original Message-
From: Ken Williams
Sent: Monday, August 13, 2012 3:37 PM
I'm still at version 7.8.03, apologies if this has been addressed in a later
version already.
FWIW, I just downloaded 7.8.11 and confirmed that the problem still exists
there.
I wonder if the inline-code
Hi!
I want to use the column average of the first table to fill the
column h1 in the second one.
#+TBLNAME: 2012-08-12vkmeasure
| tags/item |m1 |m2 |m3 | average |
|---+---+---+---+-|
| 4 | 0.02 | 0.03 | 0.02 |0.02 |
| 5 | 0.06 |
Hi Ken,
Ken Williams ken.willi...@windlogics.com writes:
FWIW, I just downloaded 7.8.11 and confirmed that the problem still
exists there.
Now fixed in git, thanks.
I wonder if the inline-code code could use a little love in general.
Another thing that would be nice to accomplish with it
joa...@verona.se writes:
I intend to use elnode for my own future personal org based website.
Don't forget to send us the link when it's done, I'd love to see this.
Thanks!
--
Bastien
You've hit upon it exactly; this solution works perfectly. Thank you, Andrew!
This little tidbit, a few lines at the header, and a slightly different script
now make my tangled Orgmode files executable at the command line. Ah, the joys
of literate code.
- M
This message was sent from my
-Original Message-
From: Bastien Guerry [mailto:bastiengue...@googlemail.com]
Sent: Monday, August 13, 2012 4:56 PM
Now fixed in git, thanks.
Such service! =)
Yes. Patch welcome!
I'll have a shot at it. I'm very bad at elisp though.
The other thing I just noticed was that
* Russell Adams rlad...@adamsinfoserv.com wrote:
On the semantic note, I found a utility called tmsu recently
(http://tmsu.org/) which allows semantic tagging of files. There was a
cool looking filesystem called Tagsistant too, but it unfortunately
appears abandoned.
I was doing research for
Karl Voit devn...@karl-voit.at wrote:
Hi!
I want to use the column average of the first table to fill the
column h1 in the second one.
#+TBLNAME: 2012-08-12vkmeasure
| tags/item |m1 |m2 |m3 | average |
|---+---+---+---+-|
| 4 | 0.02 |
Hi,
I've recently put together a web server which runs in Emacs and exports
local Org-mode files to HTML in such a way that they may be edited from
within a web browser with the edits saved to local files on disk. The
code is available from github.
repository
brian powell briangpowel...@gmail.com writes:
* Some people have expressed interest in Elnode in the past: ELNODE is soon
to be released as version 1.0
** Video mentions Emacs OrgMode (and includes an example) and Node.js:
http://www.youtube.com/embed/TR7DPvEi7Jg
** Elnode - the EmacsLisp
* Nick Dokos nicholas.do...@hp.com wrote:
Karl Voit devn...@karl-voit.at wrote:
I want to use the column average of the first table to fill the
column h1 in the second one.
#+TBLFM: $2 = remote(2012-08-12vkmeasure, @@#$5)
Thanks!
... and now I also found the corresponding documentation
Achim Gratz strom...@nexgo.de writes:
Bastien writes:
However, I would suggest these changes to the current default.mk:
These changes do not belong into default.mk — default.mk is the fallback
for when no changes to local.mk have been made.
- Have a target `make single' (useful for
Hello Everyone,
I've been working on a merge driver for org-mode documents over the
summer as a Google Summer of Code project. I just wanted to show
everyone some progress on the merge driver.
There are some new examples you can see at the project page [1][2], and
instructions on how to build
Ken Williams ken.willi...@windlogics.com wrote:
The other thing I just noticed was that every time I edit a table.el
table with C-c ', two more spaces get inserted to the left of the
table when it's reinserted into the org buffer. I tried to find where
in the code that's happening (probably
Yann Hodique yann.hodi...@gmail.com writes:
Christian == Christian Egli christian.e...@sbs.ch writes:
I'm trying to understand the use case here. If I understand correctly
the container headline will no longer unconditionally generate a root
task. So you could have multiple root tasks? Does
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