[This post concerns what have become, for me, conflicts between the
scopes of org-agenda-files and the universe I would like to search
within all org files, in particular. I hope I will be forgiven for
drifting substantially from that focused topic]
Org-mode is well entrenched in
I am studying some text in an org file, some comments from a colleague
on a research project. I need to do a little google search about a
term (something that happens quite often). It would be convenient to
produce a note elsewhere, perhaps in a different file, or perhaps
under a diffe
It occurs from time to time that I wish to refile to an open file, that
is not one of my org-refile-targets. It doesn't make sense to use
org-agenda-files for refile targets since I might have other files open
for various reasons. So I thought, why not either declare that any open
file is a ref
The following was my help for the /Cx-6 keymap. I cleaned it up a
little, but it seems to also insert an expanded minibuffer on my
system, with a second copy of this momentarily displayed screen. (The
functions were little utilities for a lexicon project).
Hope it makes it across.
This feature has apparently crept into emacs and orgmode within the last
year or so, and I've come to rely on it. I don't remember anything I
may have done to make this happen, but now I can have a persistent
record of my last capture. Wow! Love it.
Can this feature be tweaked to list, say, th
My need is for a simple work flow/usage of Orgmode to annotate and
organize existing BibTex *.bib files. I have mentioned on this list
that I had found Cb2Bib to work extremely well for, so to speak,
harvesting references from Google Scholar. In fact, Pere Constans,
developer of Cb2Bib, recently