On Sun, Feb 24, 2013 at 10:50 AM, D M German <d...@uvic.ca> wrote: > > hi everybody, > > > I have been testing babel with perl and I am very puzzled by the > following: > > > Say I have the following script that outputs 10 numbers. org/babel wraps > it as a begin_example > > > #+begin_src perl :results output > for (my $i=0;$i<10;$i++) { > print "$i\n"; > } > #+end_src > > #+RESULTS: > #+begin_example > 0 > 1 > 2 > 3 > 4 > 5 > 6 > 7 > 8 > 9 > #+end_example > > > But if my script only outputs 9 lines then the format is not wrapped by > #+begin_example, and instead is prefixed by : > > #+begin_src perl :results output > for (my $i=0;$i<9;$i++) { > print "$i\n"; > } > #+end_src > > #+RESULTS: > : 0 > : 1 > : 2 > : 3 > : 4 > : 5 > : 6 > : 7 > : 8 > > Is this behaviour expected? Is the threshold at which it happens > configurable?
Yes - it's controlled by =org-babel-min-lines-for-block-output= in lisp/ob-core.el: #+BEGIN_QUOTE (defvar org-babel-min-lines-for-block-output 10 "The minimum number of lines for block output. If number of lines of output is equal to or exceeds this value, the output is placed in a #+begin_example...#+end_example block. Otherwise the output is marked as literal by inserting colons at the starts of the lines. This variable only takes effect if the :results output option is in effect.") #+END_QUOTE Regards, Sean