Eric Schulte writes:
> This new patch looks great, and the test suite passes locally. I've
> just applied it.
You also get a warning from the byte-compiler on something that is
clearly a bug. I think the fix should be:
--8<---cut here---start->8---
diff --git
The problem was that
a) I'm using tcsh.
b) Some part of the system-wide csh.cshrc related to Emacs' shell-mode
was also run for non-interactive shell invocation while only
appropriate for interactive use (that's where the errors from tset
and stty came from).
c) Your second patch 6fb03
Mark Edgington writes:
> Eric Abrahamsen ericabrahamsen.net> writes:
>>
>> It looks like a groundswell for remove-andor-promote tags for headlines,
>> but for the sake of argument let me propose the use of blocks. It seems
>> to me that something like a "generic block" (a block that does nothin
Eric Abrahamsen ericabrahamsen.net> writes:
>
> It looks like a groundswell for remove-andor-promote tags for headlines,
> but for the sake of argument let me propose the use of blocks. It seems
> to me that something like a "generic block" (a block that does nothing
> but delete its begin/end de
Eric Schulte gmail.com> writes:
> Ken Mankoff gmail.com> writes:
> >
> > I don't think the word "inline" signifies that a heading will or won't
> > be exported and/or its children promoted.
> >
>
> Can you suggest a more intuitive/appropriate tag name?
Would it be possible / sensible to allow
Hi Eric, On 2014-06-12 at 20:46, Eric Schulte wrote:
Can you suggest a more intuitive/appropriate tag name? I'm not
personally partial to "inline", it was just the first thing that
occurred to me. Previous implementations of similar behavior
used the tag "prelim".
I posted the following b
Mark Edgington writes:
> In using org-mode, there is one problem that has always irked me (and
> is apparently also closely related to the FAQ "How do I ignore a
> headline?"). When I am writing something, I sometimes want to group
> things by concept or by work to be done, or any other number o
if i were a newcomer i'd wonder how these affected babel, agenda, etc.
maybe noexport, noexportheading, noexportcontent, exportpromotechildren?
On 6/12/14, Ken Mankoff wrote:
> + :noexport: Does not export item, content, and children.
> + :ignoreheading: Does not export heading. Exports content
Ken Mankoff writes:
> On 2014-06-12 at 16:13, Eric Schulte wrote:
>> What do you think about the attached patch which should add this
>> functionality to the core.
>
> Why "inline"?
>
> Org already has "inline TODO items" which is a different thing.
>
> I don't think the word "inline" signifies
On 2014-06-12 at 16:13, Eric Schulte wrote:
> What do you think about the attached patch which should add this
> functionality to the core.
Why "inline"?
Org already has "inline TODO items" which is a different thing.
I don't think the word "inline" signifies that a heading will or won't
be e
"Charles C. Berry" writes:
> On Thu, 12 Jun 2014, Eric Schulte wrote:
>
>> Charles Berry writes:
>>
>>> The following
>>>
>>> ,
>>> | #+PROPERTY: tangle yes
>>> |
>>> | #+NAME: print-abc
>>> | #+BEGIN_SRC emacs-lisp
>>> | (format
>>> | "<<%s>>" "abc")
>>> | #+END_SRC
>>> |
>>> | #+NAME: prin
Nicolas Girard writes:
> 2014-06-12 22:13 GMT+02:00 Eric Schulte :
>>>
>>
>> Why TODO types rather than a tag? IMO using a TODO type would conflate
>> task management and document structuring.
>
> Agreed.
>
>> What do you think about the
>> attached patch which should add this functionality to t
2014-06-12 22:13 GMT+02:00 Eric Schulte :
>>
>
> Why TODO types rather than a tag? IMO using a TODO type would conflate
> task management and document structuring.
Agreed.
> What do you think about the
> attached patch which should add this functionality to the core.
>
Seems fine to me !
I cre
Hi Nicolas,
Thank you for your earlier comments. In order to adjust the scaling of
a graphic generated by a R source block I am doing this ...
** adjusting scaling of a figure generated from source
#+begin_src R :results graphics silent :file foo2.pdf :exports results
plot(c(1:10), c(10:1))
Xebar Saram writes:
> Hi all
Hi,
> i have a weird problem. in the last few weeks i cant get orgmode to show
> inline images anymore. when i use org-toggle-inline-images i get the
> following error:
>
> progn: Wrong type argument: stringp, nil [2 times]
>
> can anyone help me to debug this?
1.
On Thu, 12 Jun 2014, Eric Schulte wrote:
Charles Berry writes:
The following
,
| #+PROPERTY: tangle yes
|
| #+NAME: print-abc
| #+BEGIN_SRC emacs-lisp
| (format
| "<<%s>>" "abc")
| #+END_SRC
|
| #+NAME: print-def
| #+BEGIN_SRC emacs-lisp
| (concat
| "<<" "def" ">>")
| #+END_SRC
|
| #+BEG
Hi John,
This patch looks great. Given it's length FSF copyright assignment will
be required so please begin that process and when it is complete I'll be
very happy to apply this patch.
Thanks,
Eric
"John Dell'Aquila" writes:
> Hi,
>
> This patch makes Oracle a supported database for SQL sour
>
> I also ran across this need. What I had in mind was that certain todo
> types would be treated as inline.
> For instance, if "P" was a member of this hypothetical
> org-inline-todo-keywords, then
>
> * P a paragraph
> some contents
>
> would be rendered as
>
> some contents
>
> by the exporte
Grant Rettke writes:
> Hi,
>
> My goals was to have a simple makefile to tangle and weave a document;
> so org-mk was out of scope.
>
> Just wondering; how could I have done it better?
>
> ##
> INIT=.emacs.el
>
> $(INIT): TC3F.org
> time emacs --batch --no-init-file --load .org-mode.emacs
Charles Berry writes:
> The following
>
> ,
> | #+PROPERTY: tangle yes
> |
> | #+NAME: print-abc
> | #+BEGIN_SRC emacs-lisp
> | (format
> | "<<%s>>" "abc")
> | #+END_SRC
> |
> | #+NAME: print-def
> | #+BEGIN_SRC emacs-lisp
> | (concat
> | "<<" "def" ">>")
> | #+END_SRC
> |
> | #+BEGIN_SR
>
> How do I make the code comment specify the actual location of the source block
> ref, not just where it was expanded and tangled?
>
Currently inserting comments around snippets of code expanded with noweb
is not supported. You may be able to fake this through the clever use
of variables along
Sébastien Delafond writes:
> Hello,
>
> from Debian bug #751014 (http://bugs.debian.org/751014):
>
> When org-mime-library is set to semi, org-mime generates a spurious
> alternative section around the HTML part. This is due to two bugs in
> the function org-mime-multipart:
>
> 1. it att
2014-06-12 21:26 GMT+02:00 Ken Mankoff :
>
> On 2014-06-12 at 15:21, Nicolas Girard wrote:
>
> I vote for the following tags:
>
> + :noexport: Does not export item, content, and children.
> + :ignoreheading: Does not export heading. Exports content and children.
> + :ignorecontent: Does not export
On 2014-06-12 at 15:21, Nicolas Girard wrote:
> I also ran across this need. What I had in mind was that certain todo
> types would be treated as inline.
> ...
> Such a feature is more generic and would be useful in other contexts ;
> and the LaTeX-related issues discussed in this thread would b
2014-06-12 21:21 GMT+02:00 Nicolas Girard :
> 2014-06-12 20:54 GMT+02:00 Aaron Ecay :
>> Hi Eric, hi all,
>
>
> I also ran across this need. What I had in mind was that certain todo
> types would be treated as inline.
> For instance, if "P" was a member of this hypothetical
> org-inline-todo-keywor
2014-06-12 20:54 GMT+02:00 Aaron Ecay :
> Hi Eric, hi all,
>
> 2014ko ekainak 12an, Eric Schulte-ek idatzi zuen:
>>
>> I just ran across this need myself, and updated an old solution to work
>> with the new exporter. See the thread and my solution at the following.
>>
>> http://lists.gnu.org/archi
Hi Eric, hi all,
2014ko ekainak 12an, Eric Schulte-ek idatzi zuen:
>
> I just ran across this need myself, and updated an old solution to work
> with the new exporter. See the thread and my solution at the following.
>
> http://lists.gnu.org/archive/html/emacs-orgmode/2014-06/msg00238.html
It’
Hi all
i have a weird problem. in the last few weeks i cant get orgmode to show
inline images anymore. when i use org-toggle-inline-images i get the
following error:
progn: Wrong type argument: stringp, nil [2 times]
can anyone help me to debug this?
best
Z.
On 2014-06-12 at 14:11, Thorsten Jolitz wrote:
> Ken Mankoff writes:
>
>> Another common (for me) example is to have a heading called "*
>> Appendix" in a paper, and then the LaTeX "\appendix" command. The Org
>> heading is just for me. It should not be exported. All headings below
>> the \append
+1 to the OP.
On 2014-06-12 at 13:32, Thorsten Jolitz wrote:
>
> In a tree structure, when ignoring the parent node, it seems only
> logical that the siblings are ignored too.
I'm found myself in all of the following situations:
1. I want the heading and everything below not-exported
2. I w
Mark Edgington writes:
> In using org-mode, there is one problem that has always irked me (and
> is apparently also closely related to the FAQ "How do I ignore a
> headline?"). When I am writing something, I sometimes want to group
> things by concept or by work to be done, or any other number o
Ken Mankoff writes:
> Another common (for me) example is to have a heading called "* Appendix"
> in a paper, and then the LaTeX "\appendix" command. The Org heading is
> just for me. It should not be exported. All headings below the \appendix
> command are Org sub-sections but should be promoted
Thorsten Jolitz gmail.com> writes:
>
> In a tree structure, when ignoring the parent node, it seems only
> logical that the siblings are ignored too.
>
> You seem to use the wrong tool for the task (headlines), this looks like
> a perfect use case for TAGS, i.e. define your (concept) groups as
Mark Edgington writes:
> In using org-mode, there is one problem that has always irked me (and
> is apparently also closely related to the FAQ "How do I ignore a
> headline?"). When I am writing something, I sometimes want to group
> things by concept or by work to be done, or any other number o
jorge.a.alf...@gmail.com (Jorge A. Alfaro-Murillo) writes:
> Thorsten Jolitz writes:
>
>> Just out of curiosity - did you try this on the console (without X) too?
>
> Xmodmap does not work without X, at least I suppose that is what the X
> stands for =)
I know, thats why I asked.
> If someone
Hello,
James Miller writes:
> Thank you very much. That was most informative.
For completeness, you can "escape" an asterisk in Org using entities, in
this case \ast{}, or \star{}:
"The person wanted to say \ast{}BSD. Now this is bold*"
Unfortunately, for obvious reasons, this will not work
In using org-mode, there is one problem that has always irked me (and
is apparently also closely related to the FAQ "How do I ignore a
headline?"). When I am writing something, I sometimes want to group
things by concept or by work to be done, or any other number of
groupings. BUT I do not want t
Thorsten Jolitz writes:
> Just out of curiosity - did you try this on the console (without X) too?
Xmodmap does not work without X, at least I suppose that is what the X
stands for =)
If someone knows how to remap outside of X please let me know.
Since I use emacs not in X in my phone, my wor
jorge.a.alf...@gmail.com (Jorge A. Alfaro-Murillo) writes:
Hi,
> I have the (totally useless) CapsLock key of my keyboard remapped to
> Hyper, which allows me to use an extra modifier for emacs commands.
>
> For your case after you have a Hyper key you could "make" your own arrow
> keys without y
Hi Martin,
"Martin Beck" writes:
> I'm using Shift+RightArrow and Shift+LeftArrow quite often to change
> the scheduled or deadline dates of a task in my agenda view. As I have
> a normal large keyboard (where the arrow keys are between the
> alphanumeric block and the numeric keypad like here:
I'm using Shift+RightArrow and Shift+LeftArrow quite often to change the scheduled or deadline dates of a task in my agenda view.
As I have a normal large keyboard (where the arrow keys are between the alphanumeric block and the numeric keypad like here: http://www.microsoft.com/hardware/_base_
Daimrod writes:
> I've read the fix in org-mode and I understand that it was a silly
> question. Please ignore it.
Well, the whole thread gave me the guts to dive in and to find, as
often, how tiny the challenge was -- so thanks for soft-prodding!
--
Bastien
Daimrod writes:
> Daimrod writes:
>
>> Nicolas Richard writes:
>>
>>> Daimrod writes:
> PS: The change about throwing an error when recentering a window
> that does not display the current buffer breaks ~37 tests in Org
> master branch, even with this fix. I need to digg this furt
I've now fixed this in the maint and master branch of Org's
repository.
Firmly waiting for warnings from the CAR and CDR random checks!
--
Bastien
Daimrod writes:
> Nicolas Richard writes:
>
>> Daimrod writes:
PS: The change about throwing an error when recentering a window
that does not display the current buffer breaks ~37 tests in Org
master branch, even with this fix. I need to digg this further.
>>>
>>> Err, what's th
Thank you very much. That was most informative.
Sent from James Miller's iPhone.
> On Jun 12, 2014, at 3:01 AM, Albert Krewinkel wrote:
>
> Hi James,
>
> James Ryland Miller writes:
>> I'm trying to escape an asterisk character, i.e. "*" to use in regular
>> text. I.e., "The person wanted t
Nicolas Richard writes:
> Daimrod writes:
>>> PS: The change about throwing an error when recentering a window
>>> that does not display the current buffer breaks ~37 tests in Org
>>> master branch, even with this fix. I need to digg this further.
>>
>> Err, what's the rational behind this chan
Daimrod writes:
>> PS: The change about throwing an error when recentering a window
>> that does not display the current buffer breaks ~37 tests in Org
>> master branch, even with this fix. I need to digg this further.
>
> Err, what's the rational behind this change?
It is meant to catch cases w
Hi James,
James Ryland Miller writes:
> I'm trying to escape an asterisk character, i.e. "*" to use in regular
> text. I.e., "The person wanted to say *BSD". And I don't want to use a
> verbatim or code block because monospace is not what I need.
>
> I've tried \* to escape the character and it d
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