On Thu, Dec 6, 2012 at 6:25 AM, Rainer M Krug <r.m.k...@gmail.com> wrote: > -----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE----- > Hash: SHA1 > > On 06/12/12 11:51, David Engster wrote: >> Rainer M. Krug writes: >>> On 06/12/12 09:36, Jambunathan K wrote: >>>> On the left is the navbar. - You can quickly navigate to any heading, a >>>> table or a >>>> captioned figure. >>> >>> Couldn't the navbar from emacs be used for that? I haven't used it in a >>> long time, but in >>> ecb (Emacs Code Browswer) it is used for this - see Screenshots on >>> http://ecb.sourceforge.net/ for how it looks there. >> >> Speedbar can use 'imenu' to get a list of tags, and org supports 'imenu', so >> it pretty much >> works right away, also without ECB. Just do >> >> (require 'speedbar) (speedbar-add-supported-extension ".org") >> >> and fire up speedbar with >> >> M-x speedbar You can now be able to click on org files and you should see >> the section headings. >> It should also be possible to generate a speedbar frame or > > Very nice - and much easier. > >> buffer which only shows the tags of the current file, like ECB does, but I >> would have to look >> that up if that's important. > > I actually like, that it shows all buffers, which makes switching much easier. > > And also, multi file setup can be handled much easier this way. > > Now the next step would be to > a) automatically start the speedbar when an org file is opened and > b) shows the buffers.
It would be neat if clicking on a link in speedbar opened up an _indirect_ buffer using org-tree-to-indirect-buffer. I like having just the one node available as a way to ensure concentration on the task at hand. >