Thank you for all the quick responses :) Unfortunately, none of the proposed solutions really applies to the problem I have (That's however entirely my fault, I should have made things a bit clearer.).
The workarounds (except for one) concentrate on making a link caused by a literal invalid address to become a valid link. However, what I like to achieve is some sort of escaping that prevents org-mode from generating a link at all (especially for HTML exporting). Giovanni Ridolfi <giovanni.rido...@yahoo.it> wrote: > You can write: > > 1. [[ ][http://gateway.example.org]] > ^^^ please note the space here > when converted it should refer to > http://your-server/yourfile# Works, but still creates a link. > 2. use valid addresses ;-) Unfortunately, this isn't an option. Sebastian Rose <sebastian_r...@gmx.de> wrote: > a dirty hackish aproach: > > (defun sr-no-link (href) > "Links, that are no links" > "#") > > (setq org-link-abbrev-alist > '(("man" . "http://localhost/devel/man.php?q=man&what=%s") > ;; ... many more ... > ("dummy" . sr-no-link)) > > [[dummy:][http://gateway.example.org]] > > It's still displayed as link then, but the browsers do nothing ;-) Goes in the same direction: a link is still created. Matthew Lundin <m...@imapmail.org> wrote: > You can customize the variable org-activate-links and remove "plain" > from the list. This would work (I guess), but is AFAIK to be set globally, thus resulting in the loss of all other plain text links. What I was originally looking for was some sort of escape character/special markup that would prevent creating links at all, like \http://...\ . This would also allow us to use other markups on plain text links, something that - AFAIK - is currently not possible (like =\http:...\=). Ulf _______________________________________________ Emacs-orgmode mailing list Remember: use `Reply All' to send replies to the list. Emacs-orgmode@gnu.org http://lists.gnu.org/mailman/listinfo/emacs-orgmode