I love orgmode, but the inability to close an outline section without
starting a new one makes it tough for me to structure some documents the
way I'd like.
The FAQ suggests several workarounds; one is
You can create a temporary heading, such as ** Continue main section and
then remove it when
of reminders distributed through a document.
Does that make things clearer?
Sam
John
On Tue, Sep 7, 2010 at 9:28 PM, Sam Cramer samcra...@gmail.com wrote:
When working on a document, I tend to sprinkle TODO headlines throughout
the doc. These are really very loosely structured
Ah, org-inlinetask.el, correct? Looks great -- thanks for the advice!
Sam
On Wed, Sep 8, 2010 at 9:14 AM, Sebastian Rose sebastian_r...@gmx.dewrote:
Sam Cramer samcra...@gmail.com writes:
When working on a document, I tend to sprinkle TODO headlines throughout
the
doc. These are really
On Wed, Sep 8, 2010 at 12:40 PM, John Hendy jw.he...@gmail.com wrote:
On Wed, Sep 8, 2010 at 2:34 PM, Sam Cramer samcra...@gmail.com wrote:
The situation is one that arguably results from a lack of discipline on my
part (hence my interest in org-mode!): I add TODO items to documents I'm
When working on a document, I tend to sprinkle TODO headlines throughout the
doc. These are really very loosely structured; they just represent things
that I need to do somewhat near the area that I'm looking at.
I mark these lines with a :noexport: tag in order to prevent them from being
I'm a new org-mode user. It's a really nice piece of work, and I'm having a
good time using it to organize a bunch of work-related tasks!
I can't figure out how to create a list of all the TODO items in an org file
in a new buffer. I'd like to have the TODO list in one buffer and the org
file