Hi everybody.
I keep my notes in one big org file. It have grown big
One solution could be filtering tree and display only the information I need,
another id to split it into smaller files by topic.
I would appreciate a hint on how to do the later.
Thanks.
Petro.
Piter_ x.pi...@gmail.com:
I keep my notes in one big org file. It have grown big
One solution could be filtering tree and display only the information I need,
another id to split it into smaller files by topic.
I would appreciate a hint on how to do the later.
Not the answer you're looking
Piter_ x.pi...@gmail.com writes:
Hi everybody.
I keep my notes in one big org file. It have grown big
One solution could be filtering tree and display only the information I need,
another id to split it into smaller files by topic.
I would appreciate a hint on how to do the later.
Thanks.
William Gardella gardell...@gmail.com writes:
Thanks for your replies. I will try it.
Another thing I have not been able to find is export current node
command (into pdf or odt (preferably)). Let's say I have a node witch contains
a table and
want to convert it into odt format. Is there a
x.pi...@gmail.com writes:
William Gardella gardell...@gmail.com writes:
Thanks for your replies. I will try it.
Another thing I have not been able to find is export current node
command (into pdf or odt (preferably)). Let's say I have a node witch
contains a table and
want to convert it
Hi,
To export current node:
After `C-c C-e', you get a list of options. Press `1' to export the
current subtree rather than the whole buffer, then go on to specify
the backend (e.g. `O' to export to ODT and open, `d' to export to pdf
and open).
It might be a good idea if the manual page on
On Fri, May 4, 2012 at 10:16 AM, x.pi...@gmail.com wrote:
William Gardella gardell...@gmail.com writes:
Thanks for your replies. I will try it.
Another thing I have not been able to find is export current node
command (into pdf or odt (preferably)). Let's say I have a node witch
contains
John Hendy jw.he...@gmail.com writes:
3) The habit family of features -- set up some initial goals
(recurring todo headlines) and then just got to the headline and mark
done (possibly with a note) to record the event.
org-agenda is a handy way of marking tasks as complete, too. I have an
Org
Ping - I'm still interested in this, if anyone has any recommendations. Thanks.
-Ken
From: Ken Williams
Sent: Tuesday, May 01, 2012 8:51 AM
To: emacs-orgmode@gnu.org
Subject: Auto-fill-mode with code sections
Hi,
I use org-mode extensively with R code sections, as a scientific
Hi, people. I doubt there is an easy solution, but here I go nevertheless.
Many of my Org notes are published to the Web, which have :noexport:
headers. It is very convenient that Org allows me to keep all parts
together, whether parts are published or not, in a single Org file.
There is some
Ken Williams ken.willi...@windlogics.com writes:
Ping - I'm still interested in this, if anyone has any recommendations.
Thanks.
Hi Ken,
I don't know of an automatic solution here. One option is to edit code
sections with org-edit-special, i.e., press C-c ' from within a code
block.
It's a very tiny patch, but one that probably should have
happened before. When org-pretty-entities is enabled, the
entities are displayed as Unicode characters, which is nice, but
if they are in the middle of a word, you need to terminate them
with {}, which are
Bastien,
I've been looking at the bugpile Worg page (very nice page - good work
Thorsten or whomever) and don't see why you say:
I don't see how github could use such
a setup to produce HTML files from Org (unless github runs an Emacs
batch query for exporting HTML... which seems very
Neil Smithline emacs-orgm...@neilsmithline.com writes:
Bastien,
I've been looking at the bugpile Worg page (very nice page - good work
Thorsten or whomever) and don't see why you say:
I don't see how github could use such
a setup to produce HTML files from Org (unless github runs an Emacs
Motivated by the side note by Nicolas in
http://www.mail-archive.com/emacs-orgmode@gnu.org/msg55225.html, I tried
the example at the end of this message, which requires
org-special-blocks.el. It exports nicely to LaTeX-PDF with the new
exporter (not so much with the old), so thanks!
I wonder
On Sun, Apr 29, 2012 at 4:22 AM, Bastien b...@gnu.org wrote:
One thing to be aware of: there is an ongoing work by Nicolas to write a
parser (see org-element.el in contrib/lisp/ from the git repo). It is
already quite useful -- and used in the new exporters (e.g. org-e-latex.el)
One nice
From: Rafael rvf0...@gmail.com
To: org-mode list emacs-orgmode@gnu.org
Sent: Friday, May 4, 2012 5:05 PM
Subject: [O] Theorems in org-mode?
Motivated by the side note by Nicolas in
http://www.mail-archive.com/emacs-orgmode@gnu.org/msg55225.html, I tried
the example at the end of this message,
Steinar Bang s...@dod.no writes:
Bernt Hansen be...@norang.ca:
By default marking it done creates a log entry with just the timestamp
(no log note).
If I'm going to edit the table directly anyway, I don't really need the
habit tracking functionality. Or is there something I will be
Eric Schulte eric.schu...@gmx.com writes:
Ken Williams ken.willi...@windlogics.com writes:
Ping - I'm still interested in this, if anyone has any recommendations.
Thanks.
Hi Ken,
I don't know of an automatic solution here. One option is to edit code
sections with org-edit-special,
Hi Neil,
Neil Smithline emacs-orgm...@neilsmithline.com writes:
I've looked at org-element.el and don't really see how it will make
writing other Org Mode to HTML converter easier. org-element.el is,
well it's elisp. Very elispy. No surprise but I'm not sure that it
can easily be converted
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