Thank you, Bastien!
On Wed, Mar 13, 2013 at 4:59 AM, Bastien wrote:
> Hi Rick,
>
> Rick Hanson writes:
>
> > Based your advices, I used org-clone-subtree-with-time-shift for my
> > application today -- worked like a charm. Thanks to the both of you!
>
> Yes, that's what the manual advised too.
Hi Rick,
Rick Hanson writes:
> Based your advices, I used org-clone-subtree-with-time-shift for my
> application today -- worked like a charm. Thanks to the both of you!
Yes, that's what the manual advised too.
But I find your request to be useful in another circumstance: when
there is a re
Based your advices, I used org-clone-subtree-with-time-shift for my
application today -- worked like a charm. Thanks to the both of you!
Best, --Rick
On Tue, Mar 12, 2013 at 12:58 PM, Brian van den Broek
wrote:
>
> Hi Rick,
>
> I know of no way to do exactly what you are after. But, for things
Instead of using a repeater you can clone the task. Just create the task
the way you like it (with a schedule and a deadline) for the first day and
then call 'M-x org-clone-subtree-with-time-shift'. Org-mode will ask you
the number of clones it should create and the time shift. Just specify the
t
On 12 March 2013 11:06, Rick Hanson wrote:
> Hi everyone,
>
> I've already RTFMed for this, but I still don't see how to do the following.
>
> Fact: I can add a repeater to a time stamp (like "+1d") in org-mode so that
> a task shows up in my agenda as an every day item.
>
> Question: Can I restri
Hi everyone,
I've already RTFMed for this, but I still don't see how to do the following.
Fact: I can add a repeater to a time stamp (like "+1d") in org-mode so that
a task shows up in my agenda as an every day item.
Question: Can I restrict this repetition to, say, 1 week?
For instance, I have