El 2022-07-19 17:38, Eduardo Ochs escribió: > On Tue, 19 Jul 2022 at 15:31, Quiliro Ordóñez <[email protected]> wrote: >> >> Hello. Sorry for not sending to the mailing list on my previous post. >> >> I still have the problem that I forget to mark the place where I left >> the (find-eev-quick-intro). I know the way by which I can make a link to >> the place where I am at the moment and use it to open the file at the >> same place some time later. Is there a way to place this link on the >> (find-eev-quick-intro) generated file? > > Hi Quiliro, > > this is going to be a very short answer because I am in the middle of a > long sequence of horribly busy days... > > What you need is explained in this video: > > (find-1stclassvideo-links "2021workshop4") > Title: Invisible text (workshop 2021-dec-04) > Play: (find-2021workshop4video "0:00") > Index: http://angg.twu.net/.emacs.videos.html#2021workshop4 > > At this moment that video doesn't have subtitles and its index is a > stub with only one entry, and I won't be able to fix that in the next > two weeks. > > You will need to create a personal, private, draft-ish index for it. > It will look like this: > > (find-2021workshop4video "0:00") > (find-2021workshop4video "1:23" "Here foo happens") > (find-2021workshop4video "2:34" "Here bar is explained - WATCH AGAIN") > (find-2021workshop4video "3:45" "Boring part") > > To create a new line in your index you will have to duplicate an > existing line with your favorite keys for copy and paste, then edit > both the timestamp and the comment by hand, and then run M-e on the > newly created line to check that it points to the right place. > > Please do that. It will be much easier to help you if we can > communicate by exchanging sexp hyperlinks, and you will probably find > hyperlinks to positions in a video much easier to create by hand than > hyperlinks to sections of an intro... > > Hope that helps =/, > E.
Thank you for your response. I have read many of your tutorials in all this time. My question was not about how to create hyperlinks. That is crealy explained by (find-eev-quick-intro) and other tutorials. My question was about how to use the generated hyperlinks in the following way, for example: I am reading (find-escripts-intro) and I would like to remember where I left off. So I create the following hyperlink # (find-escripts-intro"3. Sharing") But since (find-escripts-intro) is generated every time, I cannot paste the link at the top of that buffer for next Emacs startup and I am forced to place it on the ~/TODO file.
