Marcin Borkowski <mb...@wmi.amu.edu.pl> writes:

Hello,

> now that I learned how to use a hammer, everything looks like a nail.
> So I want to use Org-mode for this; my question is, did anyone do
> anything similar and has some suggestions how to structure this
> material?
>
> I'm going to prepare a course in mathematical analysis (together with
> the former-Scrivener-user-friend, btw).  The course will be divided
> into very small modules (one proof, for instance, will correspond to
> *at least* one module, and often more).  We want to emphasize the
> connections between the ideas behind the theorems, proofs and
> calculation methods, so basically the whole material will be divided
> into these modules and partially ordered by the relation "... has to be
> studied before ...".  How to represent such a partially ordered set in
> Org-mode?  One idea that comes to my mind is writing a normal outline
> (tree) with all the modules (possibly nested), and including links to
> all "prerequisites" in every such module.  Any other ideas?

Sounds for me like a typical taskjuggler project, and fortunately there
is ob-taskjuggler.el. See

,----
| http://orgmode.org/worg/org-tutorials/org-taskjuggler.html. 
`----

-- 
cheers,
Thorsten


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