Samuel Wales writes:
> nil has always worked for me. i didn't think a new feature was
> necessary, but i am curious. what does your change do?
(See the other message I just sent for a quick explanation.)
--
Bastien
hi bastien,
i deeply apologize. that statement was not clear. as much as
possible i will be more clear in the future. i appreciate your
looking into it.
nil has always worked for me. i didn't think a new feature was
necessary, but i am curious. what does your change do?
samuel
Hi Samuel,
Samuel Wales writes:
> i'd sure like to change physical indentation in org to don't.
please try
(setq org-adapt-indentation 'headline-data)
from latest master branch, and see how it behaves in a new org buffer.
--
Bastien
Texas Cyberthal writes:
> #+begin_src elisp
> ;; prose with markup needs more line spacing
> (defun leo-space-lines ()
> (setq line-spacing 0.175))
> (add-hook 'org-mode-hook 'leo-space-lines)
> #+end_src
This can definitely be part of the Emacs theme you can write to target
prose writers.
--
If a noob is using Emacs for prose, he's using Org, or at least he
should be. Those using other modes for prose are probably more
advanced. Regardless of how it defines itself, today Emacs is
primarily an IDE for programmers. So prose-friendly defaults are
specific to Org.
Emacs doesn't need to be
i get some of your points in these emails.
i'd sure like to change physical indentation in org to don't.
and i think newcomers and advanced alike might want to have org sub
superscript be off by default. one user on this list recently
exported a signature that contained a version number that got
If someone is using optional packages that add markup such as
underlining to code, and the markup is so prevalent that he needs
extra line spacing, he is advanced enough to know how to adjust that.
Line spacing preference is idiosyncratic, and spacing varies by face
as well. I propose adding an Or
Texas Cyberthal writes:
> Code requires less line spacing. It has more whitespace, fewer capital
> letters, and no markup such as underlining. Code is read differently
> than prose; it requires less sequential scanning.
Code certainly can have markup like underlining. For example,
flymake/flych
Code requires less line spacing. It has more whitespace, fewer capital
letters, and no markup such as underlining. Code is read differently
than prose; it requires less sequential scanning.
Prose has big blocks of text with taller capital letters that must be
scanned sequentially. The tall bits bu