The ongoing discussion about inline tasks and drawers withhin lists much depends on the way you use Org, I think. Perhaps it is a good idea to brainstorm some fundamental aspects in regard to headlines and lists.
Why and in which situations do we use lists? I use lists a lot to write down my thoughts. I think there are mainly two reasons for this: - Headlines are exported as headlines, not as list items. ;-) - In Headlines you do not have word wrap. So you always have to phrase a headline and then write your text below this headline. For me it is much easier to use lists and write, write, write... with word wrap. I think these are the reasons for me to use lists a lot. But if I do so, I cannot define tasks in my texts - the core concept of Org. To solve this dilemma, I can think of two different approaches: 1. Make it possible to use inline tasks withhin lists. This is what Nicolas implemented (thanks a lot!!!) and what works very well. But it is not a "nice" concept. We discussed this already and I understand the reasons why Carsten and Nicolas himself have reservations. It it only a workaround. 2. Make headlines behave like list items. This means enabling word wrap for headlines and export the headlines as lists. If a headline should be exported as a headline you could use a tag :HEADLINE:. If this would be possible, I cannot see a reason why I should make such extensive use of lists. What do you think? How do you use lists? Do you think the second approach would make sense? Or do I miss something essential? Regards, Karl _______________________________________________ Emacs-orgmode mailing list Please use `Reply All' to send replies to the list. Emacs-orgmode@gnu.org http://lists.gnu.org/mailman/listinfo/emacs-orgmode