Hi Bastien,
Thanks for the idea.
Doesn't work.
Maybe it's an emacs bug.
On Fri, Jul 3, 2009 at 02:18, Bastien wrote:
> My other guess would be that the macro execution is too fast for the
> display engine. Maybe the trick is to insert a command in your macro
> sequence that makes sure the tab
> Maurizio Vitale
> writes:
> Is anybody working on making orgstruct work with programming modes (or
> other modes that require the org "markup" to be hidden in comments)?
Samuel Wales writes:
>> It might be nice to have these solutions in one place.
Yes, an overview/tutorial of the various
It happens in s and in a.
--
Myalgic encephalomyelitis makes you die decades early (Jason
et al. 2006) and suffer severely. Conflicts of interest are
destroying research. Silence = death.
http://www.meactionuk.org.uk/What_Is_ME_What_Is_CFS.htm
___
My idea was to be thorough, documenting the idea even if it is too
hard to implement. I think the interface would be the same as now,
except that clicking on the mode line cycles among the timers.
In principle you might be clocking a task while timing a few
tea-time-type tasks (e.g. your tea has
At Sat, 25 Jul 2009 19:34:01 + (UTC), User wrote:
[...]
> You simply load the elisp file and from that on folding state is
> automatically saved and restored for org mode files. The folding
> information is saved at the end of the org file itself every time
> the buffer is saved.
I wonder if
I should point out that I am assuming that #2 supersedes previous
solutions in which structure information is put in comments.
On 2009-07-25, Samuel Wales wrote:
> It might be nice to have these solutions in one place.
>
> I know of hideshow, hideshow-org, the email thread,
> outline-minor-mode
It might be nice to have these solutions in one place.
I know of hideshow, hideshow-org, the email thread,
outline-minor-mode plus regexp fixes, orgstruct, orgstruct++,
orgtbl, and org-babel so far.
I guess there are several categories. This is very rough.
1) code folding (e.g. hiding the con
Hi Bastien,
On Sat, Jul 25, 2009 at 3:24 PM, Bastien wrote:
> Hi Gregory,
>
> gregory mitchell writes:
>
> > I was wondering if anyone has found a way to toggle cells so that
> > formulas could be shown/hidden in place of calculated results in
> > org-mode tables.
>
> This is not what you're loo
Samuel Wales writes:
> Very often, when I do a keyword search in the agenda (m-x
> agenda RET s), org-agenda-switch-to (RET) goes to the wrong
> location in the target file. To sync it, the easiest way that I have
> found so far is
> to open all agenda buffers, kill all agenda buffers, open
> al
User writes:
> I don't need this feature at the moment, but the problem
> intrigued me, so I came up with a quick implementation.
Great!
> I don't plan to work on it further, since I don't really need it
> yet (I'm a novice org user), but I put it here if someone wants
> to develop the idea.
>
Hi Gregory,
gregory mitchell writes:
> I was wondering if anyone has found a way to toggle cells so that
> formulas could be shown/hidden in place of calculated results in
> org-mode tables.
This is not what you're looking for but perhaps it comes close: the
C-c ' key edits the cell at point i
Samuel Wales writes:
> On 2009-07-17, Bastien wrote:
>> The steps are these:
>>
>> - create a task
>> - add an effort estimate
>> - clock in
>>
>> Let me know if this needs to be refined.
>
> If a remember template could be made to do it, then maybe the user
> could do org-remember, the key for
meingbg writes:
> And while I'm at it - my employer requires me to report not only what I'm
> doing
> and how long it takes, but also when I'm doing it. I assume most people
> wouldn't benefit from a feature like this, and that there are many other
> things
> on the wish list with higher priori
Stefan Vollmar writes:
> I just observed that in
>
> #+BEGIN_VERSE
> =A= B
> =C=
> #+END_VERSE
>
> the first line is exported in HTML as expected (with A in "code" style),
> B in default text style. However, the second line yields "=C=" with
> default text style, rather than just "C" in "code" s
Ilya Shlyakhter writes:
> A suggestion for a simple but useful command: convert a plain list to
> a full-blown org subtree.
I have implemented this.
C-c C-* will convert the plain list at point into a subtree, projecting
the structure of the list into the hierarchy of the tree.
Of course, thi
On 2009-07-17, Bastien wrote:
> The steps are these:
>
> - create a task
> - add an effort estimate
> - clock in
>
> Let me know if this needs to be refined.
If a remember template could be made to do it, then maybe the user
could do org-remember, the key for the template, the number of
minutes,
Bastien googlemail.com> writes:
>
> Nope. As this is becoming a FAQ, I've added this sad answer to the
> org-faq.org file in Worg.
>
I don't need this feature at the moment, but the problem
intrigued me, so I came up with a quick implementation.
I don't plan to work on it further, since I don
Dan Griswold writes:
> I took a few minutes to go through the info file correcting spelling
> errors. Then I made a patch file. (I'm more of an editor than a
> programmer, so it's the way I think I can best help.) I hope this can be
> of some help.
It certainly is!
> Could somebody with access
User writes:
> Is there a way to do it? I use saveplace.el which puts me back to
> the position where I was last time. I use nofold, so the place is
> not hidden when opening the file. Currently, I'm satisfied with
> this setup, but it would even be nicer if the previous folded
> state was also r
User writes:
> Is there a way to do it? I use saveplace.el which puts me back to
> the position where I was last time. I use nofold, so the place is
> not hidden when opening the file. Currently, I'm satisfied with
> this setup, but it would even be nicer if the previous folded
> state was also r
Is there a way to do it? I use saveplace.el which puts me back to
the position where I was last time. I use nofold, so the place is
not hidden when opening the file. Currently, I'm satisfied with
this setup, but it would even be nicer if the previous folded
state was also restored.
Does org-mode h
I took a few minutes to go through the info file correcting spelling
errors. Then I made a patch file. (I'm more of an editor than a
programmer, so it's the way I think I can best help.) I hope this can be
of some help. Could somebody with access apply it to the file on the git
repository?
Dan
--
meingbg writes:
> Just looking at the output, maybe this could be implemented as a regexp
> replace
> on the entire block performed after putting together the tables? Just thinking
> it might save you some headache, if you don't think it's too ugly of a hack.
Well, it *is* to ugly of a hack, bu
Raffi ---
The answer addresses the question behind "I've never tried to do this in
LaTeX", where 'this' is a group of figures.
> Dear community,
>
> How do I stick a group of figures together (i.e. so that I have Fig. 1
> and then a, b, c)?
The short answer is to use the ~\subfloat~ command fr
Christian Egli writes:
> I'm not such a big fan of code or documentation duplication. Here's a
> patch that removes this duplication and simply refers to the original
> section on C-c *.
Well spotted, thanks, I applied the patch.
--
Bastien
___
Em
Hi Yuri,
Yury GEORGIEVSKIY writes:
>> |-+-+|
>> | / | < | < |
>> | pca/ellse1 | 1 | none |
>>
>>> This was OK before.
>>
>> This what? Could you, please, add more detail, add an example of t
I was wondering if anyone has found a way to toggle cells so that
formulas could be shown/hidden in place of calculated results in
org-mode tables.
Also wanted to test this list since I haven't posted to it yet.
Hoping to hear back.
GJM
___
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