d just remove the deadline from the task itself, but I kinda
like having the historical info (that I finished a week and a half early).
Is there a way to remove deadlines for DONE tasks from the Agenda?
hymie!
hy...@lactose.homelinux.net
In our last episode, the evil Dr. Lacto had captured our hero,
SabreWolfy , who said:
> (setq org-agenda-skip-deadline-if-done t)
Perfect! Thanks!
--hymie!http://lactose.homelinux.net/~hymiehy...@lactose.homelinux.net
create backup
State: (DONE) DONE machine backups
machine 4
create backup
Is this possible?
--hymie!http://lactose.homelinux.net/~hymiehy...@lactose.homelinux.net
otes (mostly
tasks) available, and that's what counts. I can update them whenever.
--hymie!http://lactose.homelinux.net/~hymiehy...@lactose.homelinux.net
o still maintains "No active clock."
I don't have the self-confidence to ask "How do I file a bug report?"
Instead I will ask "What did I do wrong?"
--hymie!http://lactose.homelinux.net/~hymiehy...@lactose.homelinux.net
In our last episode, the evil Dr. Lacto had captured our hero,
Joost Helberg , who said:
>Dear Hymie,
>
>The customizable variable:
> org-clock-persist
>
>is used for solving this.
Thanks for the info. However, when I tried it out, I get asked
"Resume clock (test) (y
In our last episode, the evil Dr. Lacto had captured our hero,
Nick Dokos , who said:
>hy...@lactose.homelinux.net (hymie!) writes:
>
>> In our last episode, the evil Dr. Lacto had captured our hero,
>> Joost Helberg , who said:
>>>Dear Hymie,
>>>
>>
In our last episode, the evil Dr. Lacto had captured our hero,
Nick Dokos , who said:
>hy...@lactose.homelinux.net (hymie!) writes:
>
>> (This is the "Messages" that you asked for in the other post)
>>
>> ("emacs" "zz.org")
>> For in
IMPORTANT NEW DISCOVERY
By default, I use emacs in a terminal window (emacs -nw)
When I use emacs as an X program, the clock persistence works successfully
and I do not get any errors.
Only when I use emacs with the -nw flag do I get the clock persistence
error below.
--hymie!http
In our last episode, the evil Dr. Lacto had captured our hero,
Nick Dokos , who said:
>hy...@lactose.homelinux.net (hymie!) writes:
>
>> IMPORTANT NEW DISCOVERY
>>
>> When I use emacs as an X program, the clock persistence works successfully
>> and I do not get any
then.
In our last episode, the evil Dr. Lacto had captured our hero,
hy...@lactose.homelinux.net (hymie!), who said:
>In our last episode, the evil Dr. Lacto had captured our hero,
> Nick Dokos , who said:
>>hy...@lactose.homelinux.net (hymie!) writes:
>>
>>Are you s
27;t
seem to make that happen, either automatically or manually.
What am I doing wrong?
--hymie!http://lactose.homelinux.net/~hymiehy...@lactose.homelinux.net
etq org-agenda-files (quote ("~/org/agenda.file.list")))
A single file name.
--hymie!http://lactose.homelinux.net/~hymiehy...@lactose.homelinux.net
much.
I have and/or see things like this:
(setq org-tags-exclude-from-inheritance (quote ("crypt")))
org-agenda-span (quote month)
org-agenda-files (quote ("~/org/project.org"))
and I know that "cons" makes a list. I didn't realize that "quote
p to week 12
>in 2007. If such a year specification has only one or two digits,
>it will be mapped to the interval 1938-2037.
This does not work with day. "1407w" indeed takes me to the 7th week of
2014. From there, "1407d" takes me to December 8th 2017, which I haven't
counted but I think is the "1407th day of February 2014".
--hymie!http://lactose.homelinux.net/~hymiehy...@lactose.homelinux.net
Greetings. I have two questions about the default time slots in the Agenda.
First question
When I open the Agenda Day View, I get a bunch of blank lines at the
default times 8am, 10am, 12noon, 2pm, 4pm, and so on.
Friday 3 October 2014
8:00..
that Orgmode (or emacs) can combine
line-wrapping with indent levels, so that if I were to write this all as
a single line, the word-wrapping would put the text in the correct column?
--hymie!http://lactose.homelinux.net/~hymiehy...@lactose.homelinux.net
---
In our last episode, the evil Dr. Lacto had captured our hero,
Thorsten Jolitz , who said:
>hy...@lactose.homelinux.net (hymie!) writes:
>
>> *** This is a very long line which is way too long to fit on a single line
>> so I have it broken up into smaller lines so
Org For
Notepad, Org For Whatever Mac Uses, Org for Vile ... is duplicating
too much effort that a single Org For Java might simplify.
Anyway, just thinking out loud.
--hymie!http://lactose.homelinux.net/~hymiehy...@lactose.homelinux.net
---
to have a "headline"
in my notes. Is this possible?
--hymie!http://lactose.homelinux.net/~hymiehy...@lactose.homelinux.net
In our last episode, the evil Dr. Lacto had captured our hero,
Michael Strey , who said:
> On Mo, 2016-02-22 at 21:09, hymie! wrote:
>
>> I'd really like to have my specific "note" listed in the agenda, but
>> what I need to do is so minor that I don't want
tions org-latex-export-to-pdf and
org-latex-export-to-latex. I don't think org does plain TeX; I'd be
thrilled if it does.
--hymie!http://lactose.homelinux.net/~hymiehy...@lactose.homelinux.net
memory didn't resolve the problem
CLOCK: [2015-01-29 Thu 09:12] -- [2015-01-29 The 11:30]
finally found it -- it was the video driver
that would still leave the clock lines "attached" to the main task, but
still keep some individual notes about the various pieces of the task?
--hymie!
That is perfect! Thank you!
--hymie!http://lactose.homelinux.net/~hymie hy...@lactose.homelinux.net
My fitbit says I've walked 1582 steps today (as of 08:54).
Subhan Michael Tindall writes:
>Try
>'(org-log-note-clock-out t)
>
>This gives you something like this:
#+END_SRC
is just IMO ugly.
Is there something I can do, where I can get output similar to
- ~command1~
- ~command2~
- ~command3~
without the tildes blocking my text?
--hymie!
In our last episode, the evil Dr. Lacto had captured our hero,
jorge.alfaro-muri...@yale.edu (Jorge A. Alfaro-Murillo), who said:
>hymie! writes:
>
>> I'd like to be able to have a series of commands in my raw org
>> file that I can copy-n-paste into my shell window.
t;
>#+RESULTS:
>: myserver_host_name
That is a very neat feature. However
>if I can ssh to a server called "myserver"
I cannot.
--hymie! http://lactose.homelinux.net/~hymiehy...@lactose.homelinux.net
>> >hymie! writes:
>> >
>> >> I'd
Jorge A. Alfaro-Murillo yale.edu> writes:
>
> hymie! writes:
>
> > I think you are making the incorrect assumption that the machine
> > on which I maintain my Org files is the same machine that I wish
> > to execute commands on.
>
> Yes, or that you
hymie! lactose.homelinux.net> writes:
> So while I strongly prefer the exported version of
> - ~command1~
> - ~command2~
> - ~command3~
> it's hard to copy-n-paste with the tildes in the way.
org-hide-emphasis-markers is the answer. Setting this to true, the tildes
disappear.
--hymie!
Sorry to resurrect an old thread, but this isn't actually working.
hymie! lactose.homelinux.net> writes:
>
> hymie! lactose.homelinux.net> writes:
>
> > So while I strongly prefer the exported version of
> > - ~command1~
> > - ~command2~
> > - ~
ed as verbatim, but the word "/test"
along with the - on the next line are all formatted as code.
Am I misunderstanding what is supposed to happen, or is this a bug?
--hymie!
MRrkcdGeNHLT5b$password0ISmGZSsILOyV/WJnpassword//' \
accountname
Is such a thing possible?
--hymie!
"Charles C. Berry" writes:
>On Mon, 16 Mar 2015, hymie! wrote:
>> useradd -U -G wheel -p \
>> '$6$wcMRrkcdGeNHLT5b$password0ISmGZSsILOyV/WJnpassword//' \
>> accountname
>>
>> Is such a thing possible?
>
>Yes.
>
>#+BEGIN_SRC emacs
s to work correctly the first time, and I do not see any differences
between the .emacs files on the two machines.
--hymie! http://lactose.homelinux.net/~hymiehy...@lactose.homelinux.net
Nevertheless,
>| savetrees is a simple way to save paper when printing draft copies
>| of a document.
>`
I typically want my draft to look like my finished copy will look, so
>2. Would you find it useful when producing PDF files other that
>scientific articles (using Org-mode or n
In our last episode, the evil Dr. Lacto had captured our hero,
hy...@lactose.homelinux.net (hymie!), who said:
>In our last episode, the evil Dr. Lacto had captured our hero,
> Marcin Borkowski , who said:
>>,
>>| The goal of the savetrees package is to pack as much te
ore?
Finally, how do I get the current date into the preamble? I see that I can
specifically set a date, and I see the current date in a comment at the top
of my exported HTML, but I can't figure out how to get the current date out
of the comment and into my preamble.
Thanks.
--hymie!
m.
However, again, \nbsp is properly processed when I export to ASCII. So I'm
confused as to why it's different for export to HTML.
Am I doing something wrong? Or is there something I need to do to make this
export correctly?
Thanks.
--hymie!
actual headline and hit TAB, I get the
same message, but the subtree is also expanded.
I don't recall offhand how it worked in 8.2.x, but I'm pretty sure it
refused to expand the subtree no matter where the cursor was.
--hymie!
low-up questions.
This function marks my buffer as "modified". Is there any way to
automatically have the org-mark-readonly function turn off the modified flag?
This isn't a major problem, just a nicety.
--hymie!
>
> (defun org-mark-readonly ()
> (interactive)
&g
ay I don't want to mess with my document defaults. I just
want to specify, in this one particular place, that I have the word
fuzzywuzzywuzzabear
and I want "wuzzy" to be italic. Is there a way I can do that?
--hymie!
rk for me. :(
It works to the left of the zwj, such as
=foo=\zwj{}bar
...but not to the right as you did above.
It's hard to read the value I have for org-emphasis-regexp-components
but it looks like } is in there, so I guess it should be working?
--hymie!http://lactose.home
this bug
https://debbugs.gnu.org/cgi/bugreport.cgi?bug=24229
but the eventual work-around:
>
> Setting this variable directly does not have any effect;
> instead use \\[customize] or .
>
>IMO that's all that's needed here too.
makes no sense to me at all.
Can somebody help me get GPG working again?
--hymie!
GPO will let me.
I was hoping to find a place in org-crypt where "gpg" is defined so that
I can specify a full path instead, but as yet, I haven't found it.
Can somebody give me a push?
--hymie! http://lactose.homelinux.net/~hymiehy...@lactose.homelinux.net
Thank you! Your suggestion led me to the answer.
In our last episode, the evil Dr. Lacto had captured our hero,
Jonathan Leech-Pepin , who said:
> On 29 March 2018 at 09:59, hymie! wrote:
>
>> Greetings.
>>
>> I set this all up years ago, I just got a new com
my salary.
So I'm afraid that's my answer. Suck it up and do what the nice person
who is giving you lots of money wants you to do, they way he/she wants
you to do it.
--hymie! http://lactose.homelinux.net/~hymiehy...@lactose.homelinux.net
uot; ? Sounds like maybe you lost the key?
Can you take the encrypted text, put it into its own file, and
use gpg to decrypt that? If not, it should give you a more robust
verbose message.
--hymie! http://lactose.homelinux.net/~hymiehy...@lactose.homelinux.net
(and (>= time (car w))
(< time (cdr w)
windows))
(caddr org-agenda-time-grid)
ad-do-it))
ad-do-it))
(ad-activate 'org-agenda-add-time-grid-maybe)
= 8< ===
o best thing to do is to replace
> `flet' with `cl-flet' and then add `(require 'cl-lib)' somewhere at the top
> of your init file, and you should be good to go.
Looks like that solved it. Thanks much!
--hymie! http://lactose.homelinux.net/~hymiehy...@lactose.homelinux.net
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