> On Apr 6, 2018, at 4:59 PM, Thomas S. Dye wrote:
>
[Tom's response covering the main issues deleted]
> hth,
> Tom
>
> Lawrence Bottorff writes:
>
>> I guess I need more information. For example, what is C-c C-v v doing
>> exactly? Then C-x C-e? And M-x (symbol-function 'myelsquare) doesn
Aloha Lawrence,
#+name: myelsquare
#+header: :var x=0
#+begin_src emacs-lisp :var x=0
(defun myelsquare (x)
(* x x))
#+end_src
#+RESULTS: myelsquare
: myelsquare
Assuming myelsquare has been evaluated:
#+name: eval-myelsquare
#+header: :var y=2
#+BEGIN_SRC emacs-lisp
(myelsquare y)
#+END_S
Someone has indeed: https://github.com/rexim/org-cliplink
It's designed around a linux system, but I am using it just fine on my mac. If
you are not on either of those OSs it might still be a good starting point.
Alternately/additionally, if you are on a mac,
https://orgmode.org/worg/org-contri
I guess I need more information. For example, what is C-c C-v v doing
exactly? Then C-x C-e? And M-x (symbol-function 'myelsquare) doesn't work.
Again,
#+name: myelsquare
#+header: :var x=0
#+begin_src emacs-lisp :var x=0
(defun myelsquare (x)
(* x x))
#+end_src
is Lisp code where the last
Hello,
Brad Knotwell writes:
> The attached file adds m4 support. It was tested against org-9.1.7
> and used ob-sed.el and ob-shell.el for inspiration. Both code
> execution and tangling have been tested with simple inputs as well as
> tables (easiest way to verify correctness is to inspect th
Hi,
Thanks for looking at this. I’ll definitely use this.
Alex Branham writes:
> + (setq-local prettify-symbols-alist org-prettify-alist)
Hmm, wouldn’t this "break" the "normal" usage of prettify-symbols-mode?
I guess it would be better to simply add symbols to prettify-symbols-alist
(I bel
Cecil Westerhof writes:
> There is something I want to do on Monday, Wednesday and Friday. So I tried:
> *** TODO Monday, Wednesday and Friday
> SCHEDULED: <%%(memq (calendar-day-of-week date) '(1 3 5))>
>
> This seems to work: I see the activity on the correct days.
> But then I changed tod
Cecil Westerhof writes:
> I have created some links to web pages. In almost al cases I want the
> description to be the title of the
> page. Is there a way to make the default description the title of a web page?
>
Write a function that uses the link to fetch the page and parse it for the
titl
Sorry! I see that is exactly what you said.
Best wishes,
Brian
> On 6 Apr 2018, at 17:46, Brian Shine wrote:
>
> An alternative, which isn’t as neat as you would like, would be to set up the
> 3 days as separate events, with 7-day repeats.
>
> Best wishes,
> Brian
>
>> On 6 Apr 2018, at 15:
An alternative, which isn’t as neat as you would like, would be to set up the 3
days as separate events, with 7-day repeats.
Best wishes,
Brian
> On 6 Apr 2018, at 15:16, Nick Dokos wrote:
>
> Cecil Westerhof writes:
>
>> There is something I want to do on Monday, Wednesday and Friday. So I
You can use effort estimates for this. They are covered in the manual
here: https://orgmode.org/manual/Effort-estimates.html#Effort-estimates
After assigning an effort estimate to a task, you can filter all tasks
with an estimate less-than, equal-to, or greater-than a specified number
of minut
Cecil Westerhof writes:
> There is something I want to do on Monday, Wednesday and Friday. So I tried:
> *** TODO Monday, Wednesday and Friday
> SCHEDULED: <%%(memq (calendar-day-of-week date) '(1 3 5))>
>
> This seems to work: I see the activity on the correct days.
> But then I changed toda
Hi,
I am using date trees with org-capture with the =:empty-lines n= directive.
The list item of =org-capture-templates= looks similar to this one:
#+BEGIN_EXAMPLE
(list "j" "Journal" 'entry
(list 'file+olp+datetree journal-file)
"* %^{Entry}\n%?\n"
:empty-lines 1)
#+END_EXAMPLE
Is it possible to schedule a task on a day without a time, but have a
duration?
I have several tasks that are not bound to a time, but will be done when I
have some spare time. It would be handy if there was a way the estimated
duration of those tasks so I can choose the right one.
And in general
I have created some links to web pages. In almost al cases I want the
description to be the title of the page. Is there a way to make the default
description the title of a web page?
--
Cecil Westerhof
Eric Abrahamsen writes:
> Probably org-log-states-order-reversed?
That's it! I guess I glossed over that option originally. Thank you!
Hi,
I've encountered an issue trying to write a function to toggle between
two org-latex-pdf-process states (short & long). The function works as
intended when using synchronous export (the PDF is created with the
appropriate number of steps), but it doesn't work with asynchronous
export (org
So I just searched the org sources and stumbled upon
org-latex-prefer-user-labels, which needs to be t for this to work in
newer emacs versions.
Sorry for the noise
On Fri, Apr 6, 2018 at 10:28 AM, beckonsmorbid wrote:
> Emacs : GNU Emacs 27.0.50 (build 1, x86_64-pc-linux-gnu, GTK+ Version
> 3.
Emacs : GNU Emacs 27.0.50 (build 1, x86_64-pc-linux-gnu, GTK+ Version 3.22.29)
of 2018-04-05
Package: Org mode version 9.1.9 (release_9.1.9-65-g5e4542 @
/usr/share/emacs/27.0.50/lisp/org/)
--
Hi,
It seem
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA256
You might want to try some org-habit stuff.
Like:
** HABIT Hand Craft Time
SCHEDULED: <2017-11-28 Tue .+2d/5d>
:PROPERTIES:
:STYLE:habit
:LOGGING: TODO DONE(!)
:END:
Cecil Westerhof writes:
> There is something I want to do on Monday, Wedne
There is something I want to do on Monday, Wednesday and Friday. So I tried:
*** TODO Monday, Wednesday and Friday
SCHEDULED: <%%(memq (calendar-day-of-week date) '(1 3 5))>
This seems to work: I see the activity on the correct days.
But then I changed today's entry to DONE. But then all are g
2018-04-05 17:53 GMT+02:00 John Kitchin :
> You can use diary sexps (https://www.gnu.org/software/
> emacs/manual/html_node/emacs/Sexp-Diary-Entries.html). For example:
>
> * TODO something Mon, Wed and Fri
> SCHEDULED: <%%(memq (calendar-day-of-week date) '(1 3 5))>
>
> See the bottom of https:
22 matches
Mail list logo