On Mon, Feb 26, 2018 at 5:54 PM Samuel Wales wrote:
> On 2/26/18, Nicolas Goaziou wrote:
> > I guess these are rhetorical questions because I answered them above.
> real questions, fyi, but never mind.
> >> if not, then i will have to use local
quite useful to have this for reference in the org mailing list, as we
are discussing it.
On 2/26/18, Nicolas Goaziou wrote:
> I guess these are rhetorical questions because I answered them above.
real questions, fyi, but never mind.
>> if not, then i will have to use local mark
>> ring. this means i have to think about whether the file i was in was
>> the
Hello,
Brent Goodrick writes:
> Thanks. This is close, but not completely fixed: When I have the point at
> the start of a line in a Org file, and type the TAB key, it does not move
> like it should up underneath the prior heading.
I see. I pushed another fix into master.
Alex Branham writes:
> Done, thanks
>
>
>
> From 66a394b3736306e4039b29393915b4ca1821a86b Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001
> From: Alex Branham
> Date: Mon, 26 Feb 2018 18:39:50 -0600
> Subject:
On Mon 26 Feb 2018 at 18:30, Nicolas Goaziou wrote:
> Hello,
>
> Alex Branham writes:
>
>> I've attached a patch which gives a name to the 0.0 face in
>> org-agenda-deadline-faces. This lets themes customize the value more
>> easily. (I've
Hello,
Alex Branham writes:
> I've attached a patch which gives a name to the 0.0 face in
> org-agenda-deadline-faces. This lets themes customize the value more
> easily. (I've already signed the FSF copyright papers)
Thank you. Could you also provide a short ORG-NEW
Hello,
Samuel Wales writes:
> On 2/25/18, Nicolas Goaziou wrote:
>> If you're still in the same document, the local mark ring moves you back
>> to the previous location. If you are not in the same document anymore,
>> the global mark ring brings
Hello,
Dima Kogan writes:
> Hi. Consider this org-mode file:
>
> =
> *
> b
>
> *
> [[]]
> =
>
> With the point at the [[]] link, I can visit the heading with
> C-c C-o (org-open-at-point), and I can go back
Hello,
Allen Li writes:
> I modified the example a bit and made the undesired behavior unclear.
>
> * foo
> :PROPERTIES:
> :ID: a
> :END:
> * bar
> :PROPERTIES:
> :ID: b
> :END:
>
> Folded, this looks like
>
> * foo...
> * bar...
>
> With point on the f in foo, press
I've attached a patch which gives a name to the 0.0 face in
org-agenda-deadline-faces. This lets themes customize the value more
easily. (I've already signed the FSF copyright papers)
Thanks again!
Alex
--
>From
On Mon 26 Feb 2018 at 16:16, Nicolas Goaziou wrote:
> Hello,
>
> Alex Branham writes:
>
>> Is there a face that controls agenda items with an upcoming deadline are
>> displayed? It seems to just use "default" for me. I'm talking about
>> items
Hello,
Alex Branham writes:
> Is there a face that controls agenda items with an upcoming deadline are
> displayed? It seems to just use "default" for me. I'm talking about
> items with a deadline within 'org-deadline-warning-days' number of days
> from now.
See
I have been working on converting ICal format files (.ics, .vcs, etc.)
into org content. This is now ready to share (by adventurous users
only).
What it does now:
It is a command line executable, written in Go. It takes one or more
arguments that are either local files or URLs to be fetched.
Alex Bennée writes:
> Hi,
>
> I've been using these for a while but I recently wanted to add a
> function at the head of the ctrl-c-ctrl-c processing:
>
> (defvar my-org-default-action nil
> "Default action for this document to run on `org-ctrl-c-ctrl-c'.
> \\
>
Is there a face that controls agenda items with an upcoming deadline are
displayed? It seems to just use "default" for me. I'm talking about
items with a deadline within 'org-deadline-warning-days' number of days
from now.
If not, is there any way of getting someone to implement that? I'd do it
It can be many things. My emacs was taking 6 minutes to open for some
years, due to many reasons: a slow computer, many org files and very large
(>100 files, >25 Mb in total), lack of optimizations from my side and from
org-mode's side. I got used to it but it's a very bad experience, specially
Something besides:
#+BEGIN_EXPORT html
mailto:some...@example.com?Subject=Hello%20again; target="_top">Send
Mail
#+END_EXPORT
or
@@html:mailto:some...@example.com?Subject=Hello%20again;
target="_top">Send Mail@@
?
H. Dieter Wilhelm writes:
> John Kitchin writes:
>
Hi,
I've been using these for a while but I recently wanted to add a
function at the head of the ctrl-c-ctrl-c processing:
(defvar my-org-default-action nil
"Default action for this document to run on `org-ctrl-c-ctrl-c'.
\\
This will run via `org-ctrl-c-ctrl-c-hook' and should return
Hello,
Tyler Smith writes:
> I am running a short bash command from an org mode code block, using
> the program `fold` to wrap it at 60 characters. If I run the code
> without a session argument, the results display as expected. However,
> when I set the session argument
Hello,
John Kitchin writes:
> org-latex-default-figure-position is defined as "htbp"
>
> where as :placement is usually defined as "[H]". One has brackets, and
> one doesn't. This is reflected in ox-latex too.
>
> For example in this code (line 3219. ox-latex.el)
>
>
Hello,
John Kitchin writes:
> I am trying to find some ways to programatically modify org-elements that
> use fewer regexps and motion commands. It seems like org-dp (
> https://github.com/tj64/org-dp) was intended to do that but it is not clear
> enough how you might
Hello,
John Kitchin writes:
> Wow. I would not have guessed either one of these! Thanks for sharing
> them. Is that documented somewhere?
[...]
> For elements with a :contents-begin where does :post-affiliated come in?
See
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