M-x org-store-link tells me "No method for storing a link from this
buffer", and info: type is not in the list when I try to insert a link
via C-c C-l. Has the support been deprecated or is there a problem
with my system?
Consider the following text:
begin example
---
---
Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit, sed do
---
---
end example-
With auto-fill mode on, continuing to type on the "Lorem ipsum"
line results in the following:
begin example
---
---
Lorem ipsum dolor
I am using org-invoice.el, which expects either CLOCKSUM or WORK properties
to exist in an item; these properties contain some time duration record in
HH:MM format.
I can't figure out how to generate those properties from a series of clock
entries with any built-in user-facing functions, so I
Greetings all,
I am looking into using `org-invoice` to generate some invoices. It uses
the CLOCKSUM property, which according to the docs gets auto-generated when
the clock entries are summed in a subtree.
Concretely, docs say: "CLOCKSUM: The sum of CLOCK intervals in the
subtree.
org-store-link fails inside org-git-link if org-git-link is enabled with
(require 'org-git-link)
>From what I can tell in the debugger, the code walks up the directory tree
looking for .git files in a parent directory. However, when I am inside
e.g. "~/foo.el", at some point the code will
I've been observing a very annoying behavior with auto fill; it persist in
the latest org from git, as well as the version shipped with Emacs 24.3 for
OS X.
Consider starting a clean Emacs session with emacs -Q. Start a new file,
foo.org. Do M-x org-mode and M-x auto-fill-mode. Now enter the
On Fri, May 10, 2013 at 3:32 PM, Nick Dokos ndo...@gmail.com wrote:
Leo Alekseyev dnqu...@gmail.com writes:
I've brought this up before, but I think there's value in SRC blocks
/not/ being indented, and in fact, I would love it if there were a way
to make the contents of the SRC blocks
On Thu, May 9, 2013 at 8:32 PM, J. David Boyd da...@adboyd.com wrote:
Julien Cubizolles j.cubizol...@free.fr writes:
Eric Schulte schulte.e...@gmail.com writes:
Julien Cubizolles j.cubizol...@free.fr writes:
I'm new to babel and I'm experiencing a strange problem. A
src_block
Nice! Short and sweet, and works great. It should go on
orgmode.orgsomewhere in the cool hacks section.
On Thu, May 2, 2013 at 7:07 AM, Rick Frankel r...@rickster.com wrote:
On 01.05.2013 18:41, Leo Alekseyev wrote:
Howdy Org-folks,
Something that I've found myself wishing for time
Howdy Org-folks,
Something that I've found myself wishing for time and time again is to be
able to follow the link to a file and immediately pop into a set of M-x
occur results given some search term for that file. That way I could link
to an overview of a file's class/function definitions, or
On Mon, Mar 5, 2012 at 10:24 AM, Eric Schulte eric.schu...@gmx.com wrote:
Andreas Leha andreas.l...@med.uni-goettingen.de writes:
Eric Schulte eric.schu...@gmx.com writes:
Leo Alekseyev dnqu...@gmail.com writes:
I was wondering if there was an easy way to execute some shell
commands
I have the following source block that I tangle to produce a short script:
#+begin_src sh :tangle code/get_wavs.sh
#!/bin/bash
for fn_in in $@; do
fn_out=$(sed -e 's|\.3gp$||g' -e 's|$|.wav|g' $fn_in)
ffmpeg -i $fn_in -vn -f wav -acodec pcm_u8 $fn_out
done
#+end_src
However,
I was wondering if there was an easy way to execute some shell
commands contained in a src block as root. Alternatively, is there a
quick way to export _just_ that one source block to a temp file so
that I could run it as root manually?
I noticed that strings like ='foo'= or =di= don't get recognized by
org as code, which is somewhat unfortunate because it forces me to
edit exported HTML by hand. Are there any workarounds for this
behavior?
--Leo
Null character /sort of/ works: it makes org-mode insert the code
delimiters on export, but the presence of null characters breaks
export down the road, at least in my case. This time, I could
intercept the exported text and remove the null characters by hand,
but it might not always be the case.
In case anyone is curious, C-x C-s functionality in org-edit-special
can be easily restored via
(define-key org-src-mode-map \C-x\C-s 'org-edit-src-save)
On Thu, Feb 9, 2012 at 4:49 PM, Leo Alekseyev dnqu...@gmail.com wrote:
Previously, C-x C-s in an org-edit-special buffer (invoked via C
Yes, but the question is -- what is the desired behavior? If you just
want to autosave the temporary org-src buffer, see my question on
stack overflow:
http://stackoverflow.com/q/8849661/133234
In short, you'd just need to (add-hook 'org-src-mode-hook '(lambda
() (auto-save-mode t))) and
Previously, C-x C-s in an org-edit-special buffer (invoked via C-')
would save the underlying org buffer (provided (setq
org-src-window-setup (quote current-window)) was set; it was buggy
with other settings, see
http://thread.gmane.org/gmane.emacs.orgmode/50979 for discussion).
Currently, C-x C-s
at 9:25 AM, Bastien b...@altern.org wrote:
Hi Leo,
Leo Alekseyev dnqu...@gmail.com writes:
Folks, I still think that the fact that buffer-file-name is not nil is
a bug and should be fixed.
So do I. I think this is fixed now -- thanks!
--
Bastien
I started prefixing certain lines with the colon (:) in my org-files,
because it is a convenient way to get verbatim behavior. It has
advantages over markup such as =code= or ~verbatim~ in that it looks
better, can be used with text that spans multiple lines, and actually
ignores org-markup (for
Is anyone on the list using a recent org-babel with Scheme? I
recently started working through SICP, and I'm running into issues
evaluating scheme src blocks. Org-babel error buffer pops up with
ERROR: Wrong number of arguments to #primitive-generic display,
and the minibuffer prompts me for a
Another possible way to do it might be to create a wrapper around
org-goto with alternative interface where you set org-goto-max-level
to 1. I've been using org-goto (alt. interface) with ido mode for a
while, and it's great (although I haven't tried restricting headlines
to just the top level).
How does one prevent flyspell from operating on code blocks in org?
I've tried adding (+begin_src . +end_src) to
ispell-skip-region-alist, but it didn't seem to work.
-snip--
#+property: session *R-babel*
#+NAME: foo
#+HEADER: :var a=a1.png
#+BEGIN_SRC R :results output silent
cat(in foo block\n)
cat.a - function() { cat(a,\n,sep=) }
cat.a()
#+END_SRC
#+call: foo(a=a1.png)
#+begin_src R :results output raw replace :exports results
If /inline blocks/ above don't replace their results above then that is
expected. If you can find instances where call lines or blocks don't
replace their results then that is a bug.
Yes, I was finding that neither inline nor regular blocks replace: run
the following with C-c C-v b a few
On Mon, Jan 23, 2012 at 11:58 AM, Eric Schulte eric.schu...@gmx.com wrote:
Leo Alekseyev dnqu...@gmail.com writes:
Since all source blocks are evaluated on export, I don't think it
should be necessary to issue org-babel-execute-buffer before invoking
export. However, running HTML export
statement above. The tag-line to the Drawers section in the manual is
Tucking stuff away which I think is often how drawers are used.
Changing the default drawer export behavior from don't export to do
export would be surprising, would break many existing work flows, and
would likely make
On Mon, Jan 23, 2012 at 10:05 PM, Eric Schulte eric.schu...@gmx.com wrote:
Leo Alekseyev dnqu...@gmail.com writes:
On Mon, Jan 23, 2012 at 11:58 AM, Eric Schulte eric.schu...@gmx.com wrote:
Leo Alekseyev dnqu...@gmail.com writes:
Since all source blocks are evaluated on export, I don't think
Suppose I have a code block foo, and I want to call it several times
in my org file. However, foo may be a slow function, and so any time
I evaluate buffer non-interactively (e.g. HTML export) I want to
enable only one out of many calls to :foo
The following doesn't work, but I think it should,
With the latest Org, issuing org-babel-execute-buffer on any buffer
that has inline src_language blocks fails with wrong type argument:
consp, nil
For instance, Eric Schulte's own code sample on
http://eschulte.me/org-scraps/scraps/2011-08-21-inline-code-block-and-downstream-src-blocks.html
On Thu, Jan 12, 2012 at 7:52 PM, Rick Frankel r...@rickster.com wrote:
On Thu, Jan 12, 2012 at 06:07:41PM -0700, Eric Schulte wrote:
Rick Frankel r...@rickster.com writes:
Turns out it was not that difficult to change this behavior. You and
Leo are both correct that in-buffer-order
Currently, my org files look something like this:
* And now, let's do the analysis !
#+call: foo(bar)
#+results:
: earth-shattering results
: gonna land me a Nobel /and/ a Fields!
But because #+call is not exported, it's not clear what function was
called and with what parameters. It makes a
Since all source blocks are evaluated on export, I don't think it
should be necessary to issue org-babel-execute-buffer before invoking
export. However, running HTML export without org-babel-execute-buffer
currently produces garbage output.
On the other hand, I have several examples where
A long time ago all capitals was the only way these keywords were
supported. Since then they have become case insensitive and I use all
lowercase for most of my keywords now (#+begin_src:, #+begin_example:
etc)
With fontification these stand out enough now and the capitalization can
be
Why can't you? Wouldn't it be related to drawers configuration
(org-export-with-drawers for example)?
Yes... but I don't think I can configure which drawers I get, and I
don't want my LOGBOOK drawer with all my clock lines in my export.
-Bernt
Is there still a way to hide results output
I would like to have a plain-text URL with no formatting in my HTML
output. I can't figure out how to avoid having it turn into a link on
HTML export. Surrounding it with ~tildes~ puts it in a code block,
which is not what I need; I simply need that particular URL to be
treated as plain text.
You still have to C-c ' to get back to the full buffer, mind you, but
that's better, IMO, than changing the behaviour of such a fundamental
key binding as C-x C-s.
It appears that this bug is Emacs-version dependent: it functions as
you describe with 23.2, but the buffer gets buried (with
On Thu, Jan 12, 2012 at 4:14 AM, Andreas Leha
andreas.l...@med.uni-goettingen.de wrote:
Eric S Fraga e.fr...@ucl.ac.uk writes:
Leo Alekseyev dnqu...@gmail.com writes:
Eric S Fraga e.fr...@ucl.ac.uk writes:
What version of org are you using? I ask because I used to experience
Therefore, when executing an entire buffer, there is no way to have
the execution of a call block dependent on the prior execution of a
source block.
It would be better to make the dependency explicit by passing the
results of the call line as a (potentially unused) variable to the code
Eric S Fraga e.fr...@ucl.ac.uk writes:
What version of org are you using? I ask because I used to experience
the annoyance you describe a while back; more recently (since at least a
few months ago), hitting C-x C-s no longer has any negative impact: it
saves the file, or at least appears
For instance, when I was doing a lot of Java programming, I used
hideshow.el all the time to hide block and function bodies. Works very
well (although the default key bindings are annoying to me). Have a
look! It's a standard package in emacs, at least in Emacs 24 but much
earlier than
On Wed, Jan 11, 2012 at 7:40 PM, Leo Alekseyev dnqu...@gmail.com wrote:
Eric S Fraga e.fr...@ucl.ac.uk writes:
What version of org are you using? I ask because I used to experience
the annoyance you describe a while back; more recently (since at least a
few months ago), hitting C-x C-s
On Tue, Jan 10, 2012 at 3:08 PM, Eric S Fraga e.fr...@ucl.ac.uk wrote:
Giovanni Giorgi j...@gioorgi.com writes:
Hi all,
I'd like to edit some ruby/python/shell script using
functions folding.
I'd like to get a way to fold functions or method.
Carsten has already given you one possible
On Tue, Jan 10, 2012 at 7:21 PM, David Rogoff da...@therogoffs.com wrote:
David Rogoff da...@therogoffs.com
January 10, 2012 4:34 PM
Carlos Russo mestre.adamastor at gmail.com writes:
I have used both Carsten's and Eric's solution, as well as
hideshow-org
I often edit my org-babel code blocks via org-edit-special (C-'), in
part because I find the tabbing behavior within the code blocks to be
somewhat flaky. Inevitably, when editing the code block I will press
C-x C-s (muscle memory). This causes all sorts of annoying
consequences: the buffer with
the showing of the default prompt.
On Wed, Dec 21, 2011 at 8:31 AM, Yagnesh Raghava Yakkala
yagn...@live.com wrote:
Hi,
Leo Alekseyev dnqu...@gmail.com writes:
I recorded the bug in a short screencast. emacs was started with -Q;
in the second part of the screencast it was restarted
I recently upgraded to the latest version of org (from 7.4) and found
that org-goto started exhibiting the following bugs when used in
outline-path-completion mode:
1. If the point is before the first heading, org-goto will fail with
Before first headline at position 1 in buffer
2. If the
This very much looks like a bug to me. I just upgraded from 7.4 to
7.8 of org and am starting to see this behavior. It's even more
broken when combined with ido completion (which is what I use). I
just wrote a separate post to the mailing list (I wrote it before I
saw this thread); it might be
I recorded the bug in a short screencast. emacs was started with -Q;
in the second part of the screencast it was restarted with a config
file that only included ido mode
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=z6nDUh0RH_cfeature=youtu.be
On Tue, Dec 20, 2011 at 5:27 PM, Bastien b...@altern.org wrote:
Here is what's in my org file:
8
#+title: My org file
#+babel: :session *R-babel* :tangle yes
* The problem
** The code
This is going to fail on export:
#+source: test_code
#+BEGIN_SRC R :results output silent :exports none :var foo
bar - foo
#+END_SRC
Why
,
On my system with the latest Org-mode I get the following slightly more
helpful error message.
variable foo must be assigned a default value
Please add a default value to the foo variable for export and evaluation
of the code block to work.
Best -- Eric
Leo Alekseyev dnqu...@gmail.com
I just pulled the latest org from trunk and byte-compiled under
Windows; I am seeing bizarre behavior, where the point in an org-mode
buffer scrolls to the very bottom of the buffer. It's as if someone
keeps pressing the down arrow key, or even S-M-[period]. Org is now
unusable. Has anyone seen
Please ignore my last post; turns out I've merged some custom changes
with the trunk, and my merge appears to be buggy
On Thu, Sep 29, 2011 at 5:23 PM, Leo Alekseyev dnqu...@gmail.com wrote:
I just pulled the latest org from trunk and byte-compiled under
Windows; I am seeing bizarre behavior
I like using org-indent, however, when I'm on e.g. the third level of
an outline, this means that the effective line starts 7 characters
away from the left buffer edge. Most often, I have two buffers side
by side on a laptop, and they are 77 columns wide. I set fill-column
to 77 in order to not
** Shortcomings of git-link in current org HEAD
Yet, org-git-link currently is too greedy for my daily use:
1. they kill org-links for org headings, if the org files are
versioned in a git repository (and all of mine are!) and
2. they kill in-file-search information for versioned non-org
Christian Moe mail at christianmoe.com writes:
For my money, it's neither bug nor feature, but a (minor) restriction
that follows from the (hugely enabling) feature of simple-to-use
outline folding. An exception would be an added feature. For my part,
I've not yet had a use case where
I am working under Windows, and by default links like file:~/path...
open in Explorer. I can manually change the link to
file+emacs:~/path... and then it opens in dired -- but is there a way
to change the default behavior so that when I press C-c C-l to store
the directory links as file+emacs to
Julian Burgos jmburgos at uw.edu writes:
Dear list,
Hopefully this is not too basic, nor has been answered before.
I would like to know if there is away to have alll R code blocks in a
document evaluated automatically (i.e. without query) when exporting
to Latex. Now I have to answer
\\Journal.exe))
(\\.pdf\\' . (format %s %%s (w32-short-file-name C:\\Program Files
(x86)\\Adobe\\Acrobat
10.0\\Acrobat\\Acrobat.exe)
(auto-mode . emacs)
(\\.x?html?\\' . default))
Matt
On Jan 15, 2011, at 9:03 PM, Leo Alekseyev dnqu...@gmail.com wrote:
Dear All,
I would like to have links
Dear All,
I would like to have links to PDF files open those files in Acrobat
and links to Windows Journal (JNT) files open them in Windows Journal
-- very simple; same as it would be as if I double-clicked them
anywhere in Windows.
Here is what happens now: PDF files open in emacs doc-view mode,
I rely heavily on org-cycling/org-global-cycling to see an outline
view of the document. It would help if I could use #+begin_src and
#+results blocks, and possibly some others, in this outline view.
Specifically, I would like to be able to do the following:
(a) When cycling with S-Tab, between
I recently started using org-babel with R, and so far I think it's
pretty great! I'm still getting accustomed to org-babel workflow and
am playing with available options. I have a couple of questions:
I noticed that C-c C-o (org-babel-open-src-block-result) always gives
me an empty *Org-Babel
Erik Iverson eriki at ccbr.umn.edu writes:
On 01/11/2011 04:22 AM, Leo Alekseyev wrote:
I recently started using org-babel with R, and so far I think it's
pretty great! I'm still getting accustomed to org-babel workflow and
am playing with available options. I have a couple
Hi All,
I am trying to achieve the following: any link of the form
[[/ssh:host:/path/to/file]] should, when followed, be translated to
[[/plink:host:/path/to/file]] (without being textually altered, of
course).
The reason for this is that Emacs Tramp under Windows refuses to
cooperate with
than I mess with my org outlines.
Surely there must be a way to customize org keybindings without having
to source-dive?..
--Leo
On Thu, Dec 16, 2010 at 3:20 PM, suvayu ali fatkasuvayu+li...@gmail.com wrote:
On Thu, Dec 16, 2010 at 2:24 PM, Leo Alekseyev dnqu...@gmail.com wrote:
Optionally
)] . [(meta shift -)])))
(setq org-replace-disputed-keys t)
On Mon, Dec 20, 2010 at 12:37 PM, Leo Alekseyev dnqu...@gmail.com wrote:
Thanks for the suggestion, but this is a non-solution. My preference
would be to (a) in org-mode, move outline manipulation to e.g.
C-arrows from S-arrows
As per the docs, I have (add-hook 'org-shiftup-final-hook
'windmove-up) and similar hooks set. That way, shift-arrow keys work
as they do in windmove (that is, they switch between windows) _unless_
I am on an org heading.
I would like to make that behavior universal -- I want to disable any
sort
Hi all,
I am unable to open locally linked files if I use angle brackets to
protect spaces, like so:
[[file:E:\ebooks\math\Probability and statistics\The Elements of
Statistical Learning (2nd ed).pdf][Hastie et al]]
-- the echo area displays no such file: E:\ebooks\math\Probability
and
When using org mode under windows, links to local PDF files bring up
Acrobat. However, under linux, these links just spawn a new empty
buffer in emacs in fundamental mode. How can I make PDF links bring
up evince?...
___
Emacs-orgmode mailing list
I could reproduce this, but I don't know if this is really a bug.
(I never heard of protecting spaces with angle brackets.)
Actually, it's right there in section 4.3 of the manual, last
sentence: if you need to remove ambiguities about the end of the
link, enclose them in angular brackets.
I thought it would be a rather useful behavior for isearch to search
only in the displayed text. That is to say, if I have a structure
such as
cursor is here
* Folded Heading 1...
* Folded Heading 2... [ whose body has 1 bazillion occurrences of SearchTerm ]
* Folded Heading With SearchTerm...
I often structure my TODO lists like so:
* TODO a bunch of stuff
- [ ] thing 1
- [ ] thing 2
...
I would like to clock the time spent on thing1 and thing2, however it
seems that all clock operations only pertain to the main * TODO
heading. Is there a way to clock the subitems?
Thanks,
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