Bernt Hansen <be...@norang.ca> writes:

> Dave Abrahams <d...@boostpro.com> writes:
>
>> Org-babel does a magic thing where you get to edit and view your
> source
>> code blocks in their native modes.  Wow!
>>
>> I also happen to use markdown-mode to write blog articles. How hard,
> on
>> a scale from "read the source and figure it out" to "org-babel already
>> has the hooks; you can do it in 5 minutes," would it be to integrate
> the
>> org-babel stuff with markdown?
>>
>> Seems like this trick would be extremely useful for quite a few modes
>> (RestructuredText, anyone?)
>>
>> Thanks,
>
> Is it just a matter of defining the mode to use for some new source?
>
> For plantuml I have the following:
>
> (org-babel-do-load-languages
>  (quote org-babel-load-languages)
>  (quote ((emacs-lisp . t)
>        (dot . t)
>        (ditaa . t)
>        (R . t)
>        (python . t)
>        (ruby . t)
>        (gnuplot . t)
>        (clojure . t)
>        (sh . t)
>        (ledger . t)
>        (org . t)
>        (plantuml . t)
>        (latex . t))))
>
> (add-to-list 'org-src-lang-modes (quote ("plantuml" . fundamental)))
>
> This enables fundamental-mode when I C-c ' on a plantuml block
>
> #+begin_src plantuml :file foo.png
>
> #+end_src

Hey Bernt, there is a plantuml-mode. Just google it. ;)

>
>
> Does that help?
>
> Regards,
> Bernt


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