Hi Jean, This is a partial answer to:
https://lists.gnu.org/archive/html/eev/2023-01/msg00012.html There you said: > I have feeling that you may thinkg of "logs" as something else then > what I think. > > My logs look similarly like this: > (...) My logs are in many places - a part in my ~/TODO, a part in my main Org file, and parts in places that are "more specific". For example, in the last few three days I worked mainly on revising an article - my notes on that are not public - and on these things, that are public: 1. The six videos of the workshop about saving links were nearly unusable without subtitles. Now that they have subtitles I'm trying to make their subtitle files easier to read by people who don't want to watch the videos, and I've restructured (find-saving-links-intro) a few times, but many more restructurings and rewritings are still needed. I also added a few more features to Subtitles.lua. Links: (find-saving-links-intro) (find-angg "LUA/Subtitles.lua") (find-1stclassvideolsubs "2021workshop1") (find-1stclassvideolsubs "2021workshop2") (find-1stclassvideolsubs "2021workshop3") (find-1stclassvideolsubs "2021workshop4") (find-1stclassvideolsubs "2021workshop5") (find-1stclassvideolsubs "2021workshop6") 2. Right now my htmlizer doesn't have a good way to convert an id for a video, like "2021workshop1", to its corresponding "mp4stem", that in this case is "2021-workshop-1". The best way to make that conversion is to have Lua functions that parse the list of first-class videos. I _almost_ have a parser in Lua that can parse that, but it uses "pure LPeg" and its grammar is bigger than it should. It seems that the right way to go would be to use lpegrex, so I went back to my notes about lpegrex - I started studying it in march/2022 - and I'm trying to decypher more of its examples, and write more tests. I also enhanced my quickref for lpeg a bit. Links: (find-eev "eev-videolinks.el" "ee-1stclassvideos-info") (find-es "lpeg" "lpeg-quickref") (find-es "lpeg" "lpegrex") (find-es "lpeg" "lpegrex-json") (find-angg "LUA/Lisp1.lua") (find-angg "LUA/Lisp2.lua") The intro, the subtitle files, the files with "real" Lua code, and the notes on lpeg and its variants in (find-es "lpeg") are not logs in the usual sense, but are places into which I've been saving new hyperlinks and sometimes new pieces of text in English or new snippets of code. Cheers, Eduardo