Hi John That's working well. Thank you very much. And thousand thanks for org-ref in general.
Sven Am Mon, Feb 20, 2023 at 01:07:49PM -0500 schrieb John Kitchin: > The quickest thing might be to remove the store properties on the ref links. > This should do it. > > #+BEGIN_SRC emacs-lisp > (cl-loop for reflink in '("ref" "pageref" "nameref" "eqref" "autoref" "cref" > "Cref" "crefrange" "Crefrange") > do > (setf (cdr (assoc reflink org-link-parameters)) > (org-plist-delete (cdr (assoc reflink org-link-parameters)) :store))) > #+END_SRC > > I guess I don't have that setup quite right in org-ref, it seems like it > should > not clobber other ways to store links. > > On Sun, Feb 19, 2023 at 10:39 AM Sven Bretfeld <[1]sven.bretf...@ntnu.no> > wrote: > > Hi everybody > > I'm looking to create labels/links to specific text positions in org > files (not line number, not header). > > I know that [[file:~/path_to_file::target]] can be used to jump to > <<target>>. That would be fine and works for me -- IF I write the link > manually. > > However, org-ref which I use for citations seems to overwrite the > default behaviour of org-store-link and org-insert-link. So when the > point is on <<target>> and org-store-link is called (C-c l), I get a > prompt "Store link with (default org-ref-store-ref)". No alternatives > are offered when TAB is hit. Hiting RET saves the link as > "Crefrange:target". A corresponding org-insert-link (C-c C-l) produces > a link of the form [[Crefrange:target]] which, when in another file, > of course leads nowhere ("search failed"). How to get the file name > into these links without manually rewriting the link? > > I couldn't find anything on this issue in the org-ref manual or on the > internet. > > Thanks for help, > > Sven > > > > References: > > [1] mailto:sven.bretf...@ntnu.no