Gustav Wikström <gustav.e...@gmail.com> writes:

> 2011/12/23 Nicolas Goaziou <n.goaz...@gmail.com>
>
>> Gustav Wikström <gustav.e...@gmail.com> writes:
>>
>> > If you disable org-mode after the scheduling and just looking at the
>> plain
>> > text you will see no indentation. This is good (according to me ;) )
>> >
>> > Doing the same thing from the start, without org-indent-mode, gives
>> another
>> > result. This is the inconsistency I mention.
>>
>> So, if I get it right, you claim that virtual indentation isn't
>> consistent with real indentation. Well, this is true, but also
>> logical.
>>
>> Disabling Org mode shouldn't remove all real indentation in the buffer,
>> should it?
>>
>>
> I don't see why there is real indentation at all. org-indent-mode should
> not change the behavior of writing content in a file. It should (imho) just
> add virtual indentation to make the presentation better.

> Either org-mode with org-indent-mode adds (non-virtual) space when calling
> C-c C-s (or other similar function that has this behavior) or org-mode
> without org-indent-mode stops adding space when calling these functions.

> My opinion is that there should be no space in either setting as default.

You may want to have a look at both `org-adapt-indentation' and
`org-indent-mode-turns-off-org-adapt-indentation' variables.


Regards,

-- 
Nicolas Goaziou

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