Meanwhile have another problem:) When I try to view a page I can see
the basic navigation structure, but no style info or content. I notice
that there is no stylesheet.css in ~/blogs and I tried copying one
from the blorgit directory there. I do have an index.org, but it isn't
being processed
Hi Eric,
Thanks for the help.
It was in the rake themes:default step. I got an error message about a
missing command, which I think was sass. I'll uninstall surfar and
try to get an accurate error message later today.
Hi Ian,
The issue here is that ruby couldn't find the sass executable on
Ian Barton li...@manor-farm.org writes:
[...]
Meanwhile have another problem:) When I try to view a page I can see
the basic navigation structure, but no style info or content. I notice
that there is no stylesheet.css in ~/blogs and I tried copying one
from the blorgit directory there. I do
Ian Barton li...@manor-farm.org writes:
Hi Eric,
It was in the rake themes:default step. I got an error message about a
missing command, which I think was sass. I'll uninstall surfar and
try to get an accurate error message later today.
Hi Ian,
The issue here is that ruby couldn't find
Hi Eric,
It was in the rake themes:default step. I got an error message about a
missing command, which I think was sass. I'll uninstall surfar and try
to get an accurate error message later today.
Meanwhile have another problem:) When I try to view a page I can see
the basic navigation
Hi Eric,
There is one small omission from the installation instuctions. On
Debian/Ubuntu you need to:
apt-get install sufary
Ian.
I hope blorgit works out for you. I've been using it for a couple of
months both at work and at home, and it's starting to get fairly
stable/reliable.
Please
Hi Ian,
Thanks for the feedback.
Do you happen to know which functionality depends on sufary, or where in
the install process it was required? I am currently running a blorgit
instance on two debian machines (one of which is ubuntu) and I don't
have the sufary package installed on either.
On May 13, 2009, at 12:04 PM, Sebastian Rose wrote:
I like the idea of publishing the sources.
I have just pushed a change which implements org-publish-org-to-org,
so you should be able to use this in a publishing setup. It is also
possible to get an htmlized version of the file. The way
Rick Moynihan rick.moyni...@gmail.com writes:
2009/5/13 Sebastian Rose sebastian_r...@gmx.de:
I like the idea of publishing the sources.
Shouldn't we do something like this on worg too?
This is probably overkill, but one option for publishing the raw
org-mode files is blorgit
Carsten Dominik carsten.domi...@gmail.com writes:
On May 13, 2009, at 12:04 PM, Sebastian Rose wrote:
I like the idea of publishing the sources.
I have just pushed a change which implements org-publish-org-to-org,
so you should be able to use this in a publishing setup. It is also
Eric Schulte schulte.e...@gmail.com writes:
Rick Moynihan rick.moyni...@gmail.com writes:
2009/5/13 Sebastian Rose sebastian_r...@gmx.de:
I like the idea of publishing the sources.
Shouldn't we do something like this on worg too?
This is probably overkill, but one option for publishing
Whoa! Blorgit is EXACTLY what I was looking for - was planning on
trying to integrate org-mode somehow with Webby (another ruby-based
site generator), but this blorgit looks great.
Keith
On May 14, 2009, at 2:30 PM, Sebastian Rose wrote:
Eric Schulte schulte.e...@gmail.com writes:
Rick
I hope blorgit works out for you. I've been using it for a couple of
months both at work and at home, and it's starting to get fairly
stable/reliable.
Please don't hesitate to let me know if you run into any issues.
Cheers -- Eric
Keith Lancaster klancaster1...@mac.com writes:
Whoa! Blorgit
I like the idea of publishing the sources.
Shouldn't we do something like this on worg too?
It's amazing to see the too files side by side - both perfectly
readable - visible simplicity and a great source of examples for
(potentially new) users.
BTW: it would be real fun to tranform links for
2009/5/13 Sebastian Rose sebastian_r...@gmx.de:
I like the idea of publishing the sources.
Shouldn't we do something like this on worg too?
It's amazing to see the too files side by side - both perfectly
readable - visible simplicity and a great source of examples for
(potentially new)
Rick Moynihan rick.moyni...@gmail.com writes:
Another comment (and this goes for many documents published in
org-mode) is that it would be nice if the HTML file could link to an
online copy of the raw org file.
More thoughts along this line...
The only downside of doing this automatically is
On May 13, 2009, at 3:50 AM, Bernt Hansen wrote:
Rick Moynihan rick.moyni...@gmail.com writes:
Another comment (and this goes for many documents published in
org-mode) is that it would be nice if the HTML file could link to an
online copy of the raw org file.
More thoughts along this
Carsten Dominik carsten.domi...@gmail.com writes:
On May 13, 2009, at 3:50 AM, Bernt Hansen wrote:
Rick Moynihan rick.moyni...@gmail.com writes:
Another comment (and this goes for many documents published in
org-mode) is that it would be nice if the HTML file could link to an
online copy
cc-ing the org-mode mailing list
Memnon Anon gegendosenflei...@googlemail.com writes:
Hi!
I have one question:
,
| Use the agenda view for STARTED tasks to find stuff in progress and
| things to clock. I clock everything - some tasks are always in a STARTED
| state (Like
Hey list,
Okay, here is another question for all the clocking junkies out there ;).
Is there a way to clock two items at the same time?
This may sound stupid, 'who can do two things at the same time?'
but please let me explain.
Whoever clocks items, wants to keep control of what he/she does.
Memnon Anon gegendosenflei...@gmail.com writes:
Okay, here is another question for all the clocking junkies out there ;).
Is there a way to clock two items at the same time?
This may sound stupid, 'who can do two things at the same time?'
but please let me explain.
Whoever clocks items,
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