Mueen Nawaz writes:
> On 12/19/09 06:06, Matt Lundin wrote:
>> Mueen Nawaz writes:
>>
As an aside, I've found that it's very fast to use the new speed
commands to change todo states. If org-use-speed-commands is turned on,
all one needs to do is hit "t" at the start of a headline.
On 12/19/09 06:06, Matt Lundin wrote:
Mueen Nawaz writes:
As an aside, I've found that it's very fast to use the new speed
commands to change todo states. If org-use-speed-commands is turned on,
all one needs to do is hit "t" at the start of a headline.
Hmm...I don't seem to have that
Mueen Nawaz writes:
>> As an aside, I've found that it's very fast to use the new speed
>> commands to change todo states. If org-use-speed-commands is turned on,
>> all one needs to do is hit "t" at the start of a headline.
>
> Hmm...I don't seem to have that command. Is this only in the
>
On 12/17/09 05:53, Matt Lundin wrote:
The reason I kept it as separate sets is that I anticipate
WAITING to be infrequent compared to TODO. So I don't want to put TODO
and WAITING in the same set. I think there's another (more standard)
way of setting the TODO state (I forget the shortcut
Mueen Nawaz writes:
> From the docs:
>
> "S-<> and S-<> and walk through all keywords from all sets"
>
> What I would /really/ like is for S-<> and S-<> to _stay_
> within the same set, with me using C-S-<> (or right) to
> _switch_ to another set.
>
> What I have (so far) on the top of the file