Thank you Bastien,
I didn't get what the updated patch with shorter lines meant, the only
thing I could see difference between that patch and my previous patch
was the line breaks using CR LF instead of LF. I generate my patch
with git format-patch
Here is the updated patch using mapconcat.
Best
Gustavo Barros writes:
> this is a friendly ping on this export dispatcher regression.
> (Considering
> https://lists.gnu.org/archive/html/emacs-orgmode/2020-06/msg00038.html).
Hmm regression? Do you suspect this worked for you at one time? If so,
it'd be helpful if you tried to bisect the iss
Anthony Carrico writes:
> Recently, Bastien pointed me to org contribute documentation:
>
> On 5/22/20 11:10 AM, Bastien wrote
>> See https://orgmode.org/worg/org-contribute.html on how to contribute.
>
> And I found my way to:
> https://orgmode.org/worg/dev/org-build-system.html
>
> This docume
No Wayman writes:
> Saw this error after `org-lint'ing ORG-NEWS while I was adding an
> entry for another patch.
> The attached patch fixes a broken link for `org-clock-in-last'.
Thank you. Pushed (99acb17d0).
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA256
Ivan Yonchovski writes:
> Hi all,
>
> lsp-mode -> org-mode integration allows using Language Server Protocol
> features (e. g. completion, on-the-fly diagnostics, references,
> refactoring, etc.) in org-mode source blocks. This was the most wanted
Kyle Meyer writes:
> Thank you for the excellent bug report. This is should be fixed by
Guh, "is should be". Apparently I started off feeling bold,
reconsidered, and then did a sloppy job of switching to a more cautious
claim :/
Jeremias Gonzalez writes:
> I cannot seem to be able to make org-babel-tangle respect the setting of
> org-babel-tangle-use-relative-file-links to t. Here is my process after
> launching "emacs -Q" (the default for
> org-babel-tangle-use-relative-file-links appears to be true in this
> configu
With some further testing regarding the issue, I have been able to
replicate the problem, with the relative links setting in org babel
being ignored, using "emacs -Q" on Ubuntu with the emacs version
installed from their package repository.
The test.org file is the same as before, and again th
Leo Vivier writes:
> Yeah, I’ve reached the same conclusion, and I agree that we could
> mention the normalisation in a docstring. Do you want me to take care
> of it?
Sure! Thank you.
Hi there,
Nicolas Goaziou writes:
> IMO, this is not worth changing. Besides, I'm quite sure it will break
> some code elsewhere. Why bother?
Yeah, I’ve reached the same conclusion, and I agree that we could
mention the normalisation in a docstring. Do you want me to take care
of it?
Best,
-
Leo Vivier writes:
> I understand, but I think the function is also used to modify
> file-parameters like `#+title`. If you run `org-element-parse-buffer`
> on a buffer with the following content:
>
> [START]
> #+title: Foo
> --
Saw this error after `org-lint'ing ORG-NEWS while I was adding an
entry for another patch.
The attached patch fixes a broken link for `org-clock-in-last'.
>From f5b6859031d2bf487b26475d84420363b5b29f02 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001
From: Nicholas Vollmer
Date: Mon, 8 Jun 2020 14:59:44 -0400
Subjec
Nicolas Goaziou writes:
Could you add the modified function in the commit message, add
TINYCHANGE cookie if you haven't signed FSF papers yet, and add
an entry
in ORG-NEWS about it?
I've modified the commit message and added an ORG-NEWS entry in
the attached patch.
My FSF papers have rece
>>> "JD" == Jude DaShiell writes:
> paste is a unix command outside of emacs used to concatenate files
> horizontally as opposed to vertically as cat does.
Ok, but I was thinking of a lot of tables in one file, so that solution
looks complicated, while terry's lisp solution will do that
Hello,
Kévin Le Gouguec writes:
> I don't know how useful my feedback will be, since I'm not a heavy user
> of paragraph-based movement[1], but here goes!
Thank you!
> I've danced around ORG-NEWS to assess the changes; what I observed does
> feel closer to text-mode (point moves to the blank l
Recently, Bastien pointed me to org contribute documentation:
On 5/22/20 11:10 AM, Bastien wrote
> See https://orgmode.org/worg/org-contribute.html on how to contribute.
And I found my way to:
https://orgmode.org/worg/dev/org-build-system.html
This document doesn't have a simple 5 step process
Hi Nicolas!
I don't know how useful my feedback will be, since I'm not a heavy user
of paragraph-based movement[1], but here goes!
Nicolas Goaziou writes:
> In any case, the purpose of this rewrite is to mimic more closely
> expected behaviour from `forward-paragraph' and `backward-paragraph'
>
John Kitchin writes:
> Here is one approach:
>
> https://pank.eu/blog/pretty-babel-src-blocks.html
There’s some work to generalize this here:
https://github.com/integral-dw/org-menu-mode
I have not had a chance to try it myself yet.
That being said, the above approach still lives in my se
Hi,
TEC writes:
> This is fairly simple, it means inherit the file name, and apply the relevant
> extension. For example a python block in demo.org with :tangle yes exports to
> demo.py.
That would work you may open lsp-mode issue to track it. We are in a
middle of some huge refactoring so I wil
Ivan Yonchovski writes:
That sounds great! Just to check, in the demo you have :tangle
"demo2.cpp", this would also work with :tangle yes, yes?
lsp-mode will need actual file path to work. I am not sure what
"yes" will mean in this context.
This is fairly simple, it means inherit the fi
paste is a unix command outside of emacs used to concatenate files
horizontally as opposed to vertically as cat does.
On Mon, 8 Jun 2020, Uwe Brauer wrote:
> Date: Mon, 8 Jun 2020 07:09:21
> From: Uwe Brauer
> To: emacs-orgmode@gnu.org
> Subject: Re: [join rows]
>
> >>> "JD" == Jude DaShiell wr
Hello,
Nicolas Goaziou writes:
> This is unrelated to capitalization usage in Org buffers. Upcasing is
> used to tell the difference between, e.g., :value and :VALUE.
I understand, but I think the function is also used to modify
file-parameters like `#+title`. If you run `org-element-parse-buf
Hi Joseph,
this is rather mysterious. I tried to reproduce the bug: Downloaded
the ieee-with-url.csl style you are using and cloned the
org-export-head repository. Added some bibliographic references to the
blog entries in the example blog.org file, and... the whole export
with org-export-head ran
Hello,
Leo Vivier writes:
> I’ve noticed that `org-element-parser` upcases the keywords, even though
> the standard established in 13424336a6f30c50952d291e7a82906c1210daf0 is
> to ‘Prefer lower case letters for blocks and keywords’.
>
> I’ve changed it to `downcase` to maintain consistency. Thi
On Mon, Jun 08, 2020 at 01:09:21PM +0200, Uwe Brauer wrote:
> >>> "JD" == Jude DaShiell writes:
>
>> If what's wanted here is a horizontal join of tables paste(1) might be
>
> I am not sure what paste(1) means here. Could you please explain?
Paste is a classical UNIX command to "join" (not
Hi TEC,
TEC writes:
> That sounds great! Just to check, in the demo you have :tangle "demo2.cpp",
> this would also work with :tangle yes, yes?
lsp-mode will need actual file path to work. I am not sure what "yes"
will mean in this context. Generaly, we could plug a mechanism to
interactively p
>>> "JD" == Jude DaShiell writes:
> If what's wanted here is a horizontal join of tables paste(1) might be
I am not sure what paste(1) means here. Could you please explain?
> used to start the process however the #TBLFMT: line for the new table
> would need new formulas and column head
> Le 07/06/2020 à 17:09, Uwe Brauer a écrit :
> I'm not aware of anything specific for this purpose. A starting point
could be the `append' lisp function:
> #+begin_src elisp :var table1=RK :var table2=SVD :colnames t
> (append table1 table2)
> #+end_src
Thanks works like charm!
Hi there,
I’ve noticed that `org-element-parser` upcases the keywords, even though
the standard established in 13424336a6f30c50952d291e7a82906c1210daf0 is
to ‘Prefer lower case letters for blocks and keywords’.
I’ve changed it to `downcase` to maintain consistency. This might cause
problems with
Ivan Yonchovski writes:
> Hi all,
>
> lsp-mode -> org-mode integration allows using Language Server Protocol
> features (e. g. completion, on-the-fly diagnostics, references,
> refactoring, etc.) in org-mode source blocks.
That sounds great! Just to check, in the demo you have :tangle "demo2.cp
Hello, everyone
The title is a bit of misnomer.
They seem to be "roughly speaking", implementing the citation mode
based on links and link exports roughly as suggested by
http://www-public.imtbs-tsp.eu/~berger_o/weblog/2012/03/23/how-to-manage-and-export-bibliographic-notesrefs-in-org-mode/)
How
If what's wanted here is a horizontal join of tables paste(1) might be
used to start the process however the #TBLFMT: line for the new table
would need new formulas and column headers may need adjusting.
Something like this was possible in dBase III+ using modify structure if
memory serves.
On Mon
Hi Mario,
> On 07/06/2020 04:38, Bastien wrote:
>
> anybody can
> 'vote-for' a bug, and you keep a counter on voted-for.
>
> It would require people to register on updates.orgmode.org.
> I'm not sure the expected benefit is really worth it for now.
>
> why wou
Hi Vladimir,
Vladimir Nikishkin writes:
> Could someone with a right of commit apply this patch?
applied, thanks.
I had to edit the patch to add a changelog.
Please read this page on how to submit your next patches:
https://orgmode.org/worg/org-contribute.html
Thanks,
--
Bastien
Could someone with a right of commit apply this patch?
2020-05-31 12:40 GMT+08:00, Vladimir Nikishkin :
> Hello, everyone
>
> ob-scheme doesn't seem to be respecting geiser-scheme-implementation,
> which is a buffer-local variable to specify which implementation in
> particular to use in an org
Eric Abrahamsen wrote:
> Kyle Meyer writes:
>
> > [ +cc Eric Wong, mostly to say thanks for all the work he puts into
> > public-inbox, which is the software behind these archives, but also so
> > that he can correct me if I misrepresent any capabilities of or plans
> > for public-inbox ]
Hi all,
lsp-mode -> org-mode integration allows using Language Server Protocol
features (e. g. completion, on-the-fly diagnostics, references,
refactoring, etc.) in org-mode source blocks. This was the most wanted
feature in our bug tracker and I think that it provides unique
functionality not ava
Kyle Meyer wrote:
> [ +cc Eric Wong, mostly to say thanks for all the work he puts into
> public-inbox, which is the software behind these archives, but also so
> that he can correct me if I misrepresent any capabilities of or plans
> for public-inbox ]
>
> > Bastien writes:
> >
> >> with
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