Hello!
** Jacopo De Simoi via General discussions about Org-mode.
[2021-07-06 01:09:30 -0400]:
> Hi Greg,
> thanks for your comments!
> On Tuesday, July 6, 2021 12:43:54 AM EDT Greg Minshall wrote:
>> hi, Jacopo,
>>
>> i'm not convinced this is needed over and above your old "solution" of
>>
I've put
(setq org-return-follows-link t)
(custom-set-variables
'(org-modules (quote (org-wikinodes)))
'(org-return-follows-link t))
in my config, but making a camel case headline does not create a link
when repeating the word in a paragraph. I've also tried activating
org-wikinodes with m-x cu
Nearly every day, I'm filled with joy because I no longer have to battle
brain dead LMS!
If your forced to use HTML tables, that is a pain - it will be like
stepping back to the turn of the century when we used tables as the
basic layout structure.
It may be worthwhile verifying what/which styl
Hi Greg,
thanks for your comments!
On Tuesday, July 6, 2021 12:43:54 AM EDT Greg Minshall wrote:
> hi, Jacopo,
>
> i'm not convinced this is needed over and above your old "solution" of
> using <> witn N-different source blocks, each :tangle'ing to a
> different file.
To be honest I never quit
hi, Jacopo,
i'm not convinced this is needed over and above your old "solution" of
using <> witn N-different source blocks, each :tangle'ing to a
different file.
but, i'm curious -- in the example you sent, did you miss a ":tangle" on
the "#+begin_src" line?
> #+begin_src sh '("filename1" "filen
Hi,
Please consider: I added full native notification support to the popular OS X Emacs build
available in homebrew. This supports rewrites notifications-notify defun to use the
native code rather than dbus, and so everything "Just Works".
Info can be found here:
https://github.com/choppsv1/
Eric,
> But I feel your pain. I have to collaborate with people using Excel &
> co. and it is a nightmare.
to be fair, though (though, who says you have to?), imagine some poor
excel user receiving your .org file and trying to decode
org/calc-inspired formulae! :)
cheers, Greg
On Thu, Jul 1, 2021 at 12:18 PM Timothy wrote:
>
> Matt Price writes:
>
> >> I would like to be able to surround some portion of a subtree with a
> tag,
>
> > Sorry for the noise, I believe this is user error. I misread the
> exported
> > source code, and firefox's developer tools added the cl
Thanks for the thoughts, Tim.
My preference is generally to work in HTML, and in fact if I had a decent
platform to work on I could just use a container class and grid or flex
layouts, but the learning management system at my institution strips out
most styling information when HTML is uploaded, s
Does anyone know if attributes get attached to headline elements during the
export process? I am writing a derived backend in which I would like to
have a line like
(let (add-toggle (org-export-read-attribute :attr_canvas_html headline
:toggle))
)
But as var as i can tell, the call to org-rex
Hello
** Jacopo De Simoi [2021-07-05 18:54:14 +]:
> Dear All,
I do use 'tangle' feature and I have several Org documents that tangle shell
scripts as well as shell configurations so I could comment your proposal a
bit.
> Please find attached a patch (against master) that adds a feature to t
Here is the new patch which invokes notifications though Emacs built-in API
`ns-do-applescript`.
0001-org-clock.el-Make-org-notify-support-macOS-notificat.patch
Description: Binary data
> On Jul 6, 2021, at 8:06 AM, Tim Cross wrote:
>
>
> stardiviner writes:
>
>>> On Jul 5, 2021, at 7:55
> On Jul 6, 2021, at 8:06 AM, Tim Cross wrote:
>
>
> stardiviner writes:
>
>>> On Jul 5, 2021, at 7:55 PM, Maxim Nikulin wrote:
>>>
>>> On 05/07/2021 10:50, stardiviner wrote:
I updated the patch, I found the package `osx-lib` contains solution.
So I removed the directly osascri
Matt Price writes:
> I have to write a number of text-heavy documents which need to be delivered
> as tables with wrapped paragraphs in most cells. Working directly in
> table format is pretty arduous and uncomfortable. Has anyone ever written a
> function to accept a list or subtree as inpu
* The context
I constantly perform searches in the Agenda, and sometimes I search for
properties (which is currently supported by the search feature). For
example, some of my headlines have :URL: property, so I can list all the
headlines which contain a :URL: property that contain the string
"gi
stardiviner writes:
>> On Jul 5, 2021, at 7:55 PM, Maxim Nikulin wrote:
>>
>> On 05/07/2021 10:50, stardiviner wrote:
>>> I updated the patch, I found the package `osx-lib` contains solution.
>>> So I removed the directly osascript process invocation.
>>
>> I have no objections any more. On
i am referring to this code in org-agenda-date-later. i do not
understand why there is (equal arg 1):
(when (and org-agenda-move-date-from-past-immediately-to-today
(equal arg 1)
(or (not what) (eq what 'day))
(not (save-match-data
> On Jul 5, 2021, at 7:55 PM, Maxim Nikulin wrote:
>
> On 05/07/2021 10:50, stardiviner wrote:
>> I updated the patch, I found the package `osx-lib` contains solution.
>> So I removed the directly osascript process invocation.
>
> I have no objections any more. On the other hand I have no acc
Uwe Brauer writes:
> [[S/MIME Signed Part:Undecided]]
>
>> Uwe Brauer writes:
>
>
>> The big problem here is that there is no single format understood by all
>> these different programs which you can use. While CSV works OK for data,
>> it does not support formulas and other meta data. In part
Hi Matt,
Matt Price writes:
> I have to write a number of text-heavy documents which need to be
> delivered as tables with wrapped paragraphs in most cells. Working
> directly in table format is pretty arduous and uncomfortable. Has
> anyone ever written a function to accept a list or subtree as
Mohsin Kaleem writes:
> Nicolas Goaziou writes:
>
>> Mohsin Kaleem writes:
>>
>>> Which question do you refer to?
>>> If its reproducing with `emacs -Q` I believe I did?
>>
>> It's not.
>>
>> I asked if replacing '(lambda ...) with #'org-latex-compile would work too.
>
> Apologies I seem to hav
Nicolas Goaziou writes:
> Mohsin Kaleem writes:
>
>> Which question do you refer to?
>> If its reproducing with `emacs -Q` I believe I did?
>
> It's not.
>
> I asked if replacing '(lambda ...) with #'org-latex-compile would work too.
Apologies I seem to have missed that. Yes quoting the lambda
I have to write a number of text-heavy documents which need to be delivered
as tables with wrapped paragraphs in most cells. Working directly in table
format is pretty arduous and uncomfortable. Has anyone ever written a
function to accept a list or subtree as input and process it into a table?
I
>>> "KV" == Karl Voit writes:
Hi Karl,
> Hi Uwe,
> * Uwe Brauer wrote:
>>
>> Is there any way to document or comment such a formula, since I am sure
>> that within days I don't remember why I chose that formula?
> This is not a solution for really complex formulas. However, please
> do note
Dear All,
Please find attached a patch (against master) that adds a feature to the tangle
framework. Essentially, the following block would now tangle to two files
#+begin_src sh '("filename1" "filename2")
#my script
#+end_src
Usecases
- literate config (e.g. .zshrc) of several machines at onc
So long as each piece of documentation has a continuation pointer to the
next piece of documentation in the chain I think that would work.
On Mon, 5 Jul 2021, Uwe Brauer wrote:
> >>> "JD" == Jude DaShiell writes:
>
> > Why not use functional narrative form to document complex formulas?
> > form
>>> "JD" == Jude DaShiell writes:
> Why not use functional narrative form to document complex formulas?
> formula name:
> formula function:
> formula uses:
> formula returns:
That would be also nice, however the problem I am facing to have a long
and complicated expression with a lot of ifs, ma
Hi Uwe,
* Uwe Brauer wrote:
>
> Is there any way to document or comment such a formula, since I am sure
> that within days I don't remember why I chose that formula?
This is not a solution for really complex formulas. However, please
do note that standard org has:
Named references: https://orgm
>>> "TV" == Tim Visher writes:
> On Mon, Jul 5, 2021 at 10:14 AM Eric S Fraga wrote:
>> Sorry; I cannot help you directly.
>>
>> My rule of thumb is that if formulas are getting too complex to
>> understand/recall clearly, it's time to use a proper programming
>> language instead. The nice thi
Hi,
I simply cannot ignore this opportunity to expose my utter Org Mode ignorance!
Emmanuel > ... and how to use it with captions, labels and cross-references.
I have tried using the code-splicing functionality with some success; The
result from one source code block "foo", can be inserted into
Mohsin Kaleem writes:
> Which question do you refer to?
> If its reproducing with `emacs -Q` I believe I did?
It's not.
I asked if replacing '(lambda ...) with #'org-latex-compile would work too.
Nicolas Goaziou writes:
> Hello,
>
> Mohsin Kaleem writes:
>
>> Hi just following up.
>
> Thanks for the heads up, but you haven't answered my question yet.
Which question do you refer to?
If its reproducing with `emacs -Q` I believe I did?
>
> Regards,
> --
> Nicolas Goaziou
---
Mohsin
On Monday, 5 Jul 2021 at 10:55, Tim Visher wrote:
> I had never heard of using an org table as input into a source block.
> That's really interesting.
Attached, for illustration, is a simple example, extracted from a paper
I'm currently writing. The "input" to the awk script is the table at
the
> From: Maxim Nikulin
> Date: Mon, 5 Jul 2021 20:12:34 +0700
>
> It is about proper way to a launch viewer in
> `mailcap-view-file'. Original `start-process-shell-command' with 'pty
> connection type prematurely kills children of kde-open5 or gio open.
> With 'pipe connection type it or `make-
Why not use functional narrative form to document complex formulas?
formula name:
formula function:
formula uses:
formula returns:
usually one line of text for each of those. I know, this comes from
structured programming where no block of actual code is supposed to go
above 50 lines and that for
Hi
I just started to use the formula debugger (org-table-toggle-formula-debugger)
which is quite nice.
However for large tables with a lot of rows it would be more convenient
to use breakpoints and not start just in the first row.
I can't find any reference for that.
It is not implemented?
On Monday, 5 Jul 2021 at 16:48, Uwe Brauer wrote:
> Well I do that myself basically, but my main problem is now: *formulas*, I
> have to collaborate with colleagues using excel and I have to work with
> their formulas in a way or another.
Tell them to use R... ;-)
But I feel your pain. I have
On Mon, Jul 5, 2021 at 10:14 AM Eric S Fraga wrote:
> Sorry; I cannot help you directly.
>
> My rule of thumb is that if formulas are getting too complex to
> understand/recall clearly, it's time to use a proper programming
> language instead. The nice thing about org is you can have tables as
>
> Uwe Brauer writes:
> The big problem here is that there is no single format understood by all
> these different programs which you can use. While CSV works OK for data,
> it does not support formulas and other meta data. In particular,
> translating formulas is a real challenge.
> I went dow
>>> "DO" == Daniel Ortmann writes:
> I highly recommend a recent LibreOffice. Nearly everything I do is
> through LibreOffice and CSV files. MS Excel has problems when using
> inter-field-separators such as semicolons.
Well I do that myself basically, but my main problem is now: *formulas*, I
>>> "ESF" == Eric S Fraga writes:
> Sorry; I cannot help you directly.
> My rule of thumb is that if formulas are getting too complex to
> understand/recall clearly, it's time to use a proper programming
> language instead. The nice thing about org is you can have tables as
> inputs to and outpu
Sorry; I cannot help you directly.
My rule of thumb is that if formulas are getting too complex to
understand/recall clearly, it's time to use a proper programming
language instead. The nice thing about org is you can have tables as
inputs to and outputs of src blocks...
My papers often have awk
On Saturday, 3 Jul 2021 at 11:09, Bruce D'Arcus wrote:
> On Sat, Jul 3, 2021 at 10:58 AM Eric S Fraga wrote:
>> But that's partly why I mentioned ivy-bibtex: solutions already exist
>> and there should be no need to re-invent the wheel?
>
> I kind of disagree.
>
> There's a middle ground between
By mistake I sent the message below as private one at first. However it
actually does not add anything new to my previous comments to the bug.
On 04/07/2021 20:49, Eli Zaretskii wrote:
From: Maxim Nikulin Date: Sun, 4 Jul 2021 20:37:24 +0700
Sorry, I'm not sure I understand what this is all a
On 05/07/2021 10:50, stardiviner wrote:
I updated the patch, I found the package `osx-lib` contains solution.
So I removed the directly osascript process invocation.
I have no objections any more. On the other hand I have no access to
macOS, so I have not tested this patch. Feel free to ignore
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