Hi Sebastian, Sebastian Rose wrote: > Sébastien Vauban <zthjwsqqa...@spammotel.com> writes: >> I'd like to use Org exclusively for composing and then publishing my Web >> site. >> I've done it so far with Emacs Muse, but I have a strong deepish attraction >> to >> go the Org way, for many different reasons you must be aware of -- more than >> I >> am... >> >> [...] >> >> The only real problem that I see (the above being nice-to-have's) is the >> following: I want to have a common navigation menu, but whose current >> page is highlighted. To do so, I just have to add the class `current' to >> the current entry, but this means the navigation menu is not constant >> between pages! >> >> I did that with Muse doing so: >> >> (setq nav-menu '((\"Home\" . \"index.html\") >> (\"About Me\" . ( (\"CV\" . >> \"curriculum-vitae.html\") >> (\"PGP Public Key\" . >> \"pgp-public-key.html\") >> (\"Contact Me\" . >> \"contact-me.html\"))) >> (\"Resources\" . ( (\"Ubuntu\" . >> \"ubuntu.html\") >> (\"Emacs\" . >> \"dot-emacs.html\"))))) >> >> and in the footer file: >> >> <div id=\"navigation\"> >> <h2>Navigation</h2> >> <lisp>(my-muse-generate-nav-menu)</lisp> >> </div> >> >> with: >> >> (defun my-muse-generate-nav-menu () >> [...] >> (if (string-match >> (concat ".*" (cdr (car >> nav-submenu)) "$") >> cur-path-html) >> " class=\"current\"" >> "") >> [...] >> >> How can I do such a thing in Org? > > #+begin_html > > your menu here > > #+end_html
Thanks for the other (useful) info. But, here, your answer is not adequate as I don't want to have almost identical information duplicated in each page of my site. Just imagine the pain it is if I want to change the structure (adding a new page in my menu -- I have to update all my pages!). The trick I used with Muse was to make that automatically computed: o having a menu defined only once; o per page, adding the `current' keyword on the adequate item -- automatically done by the above function. Adding a page in my Web site means just updating one variable: the menu definition. Nothing more to do... Is there, then, a similar solution? Or, at least, one achieving the same results by other means? Best regards, Seb -- Sébastien Vauban _______________________________________________ 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