Hello Sacha and Nicolas,
Answering after a (too) long time with very intermittent Internet
access...
Sacha Chua wrote:
Sebastien Vauban writes:
Why are Emacs Lisp minor modes loaded for exporting the Org document
to HTML? If not necessary, this seems suboptimal (performance-wise).
Hello,
Incidentally, because I had removed `paredit.el' from my load-path,
I could not export any Org file anymore which contained just one simple
`emacs-lisp' code block, such as:
--8---cut here---start-8---
* ECM
Type:
#+begin_src emacs-lisp
M-x
Sebastien Vauban sva-n...@mygooglest.com
writes:
Hello, Sebastien!
Why are Emacs Lisp minor modes loaded for exporting
the Org document to HTML?
If not necessary, this seems suboptimal (performance-wise).
org-export-format-source-code-or-example loads the mode associated with
the
Hello,
Sebastien Vauban sva-news-D0wtAvR13HarG/idocf...@public.gmane.org
writes:
What I don't understand is:
Why are Emacs Lisp minor modes loaded for exporting
the Org document to HTML?
As a final filter, `set-auto-mode' is called in order to indent the
buffer properly. See
Nicolas Goaziou n.goaz...@gmail.com writes:
Correcting myself,
Sebastien Vauban sva-news-D0wtAvR13HarG/idocf...@public.gmane.org
writes:
What I don't understand is:
Why are Emacs Lisp minor modes loaded for exporting
the Org document to HTML?
As a final filter, `set-auto-mode'