Hi,
"Loris Bennett" writes:
> Hi,
>
> I capture journal entries such as
>
> * 2024-01 January
>
> ** 2024-01-03 Wednesday
>
> *** Did this
> Added: [2024-01-03 Wed 10:35]
> - foo
>
> *** Did that
> Added: [2024-01-03 Wed 12:13]
> - bar
>
> ** 2024-01-04 Thursday
>
> *
Hi,
I wanted to play with special blocks and started by installing the
package org-special-block-extras and defining a new block:
(org-defblock hmwfoo nil (reps 3)
"Ahoj"
(message "ahoj: %s" contents)
(org-parse (s-repeat reps contents)))
For the tests I started with exporting to html.
A
Hello,
Ihor Radchenko writes:
> Michael Welle writes:
[...]
>> {{{img(./foo, foo, barfoo)}}}
>>
>> That kind of works (and breaks if I want commas in the caption)
>
> Re: commas. See 13.5 Macro Replacement
I found that shortly after posting. Works as expected.
>
Hello,
I want to export to different output formats. Trouble is the way ox-gfm
exports images. So I thought, hm, why not utilise macros to abstract away
the differences. Well, that escalated quickly:
#+macro: img_gfm (eval (concat "#+begin_export md\n![img](" $1 " \"" $2
"\")\n*Abb.: " $2 "* (Q
Hello,
Rudolf Adamkovič writes:
> Hello there!
>
> I noticed today that Bash source blocks with ':session" does not seem to
> work with Org 9.6-pre (3e8648775). Does anyone else have the problem?
funnily I observed something similar while generating semester projects
for my students.
Example:
Hello,
Matt Price writes:
> I am getting used to calling library-of-babel functions with local data
> structures as input variables, e.g. in this line:
>
> #+CALL: list2table(data=common-issues-list, order="rows") :results table
> raw
[...]
> In this particular case, I'd like to maintain a sin
Hello,
Eric S Fraga writes:
> Hello all,
>
> TL;DR: I have the need to reference a table that is in another file to
> pass as data to a src block in the current file. Is this possible?
> Hints welcome!
I smell something strange going on here ;). For every Org related
question I had in the last
Hello,
the subject is a bit unmeaning, so let me explain. I have an Org file
implementing a real use case. The file consists of documentation of the
use case, of code blocks and all the other stuff. That's mostly fine.
Now I want to use this file to showcase the use case a bit, but also to
produc
Hello,
William Denton writes:
> On 3 April 2021, Greg Minshall wrote:
>
>> #+begin_src shell :results output :var n=numbers
>> echo ${n[1]}
>> #+end_src
>
> Aha, it's in an array but I didn't see it! Thanks. Org was doing it magic
> but
> I got confused by bash.
interestingly I asked a simila
Hello,
Bastien writes:
> Dear all,
>
> Org 9.4 is out. Enjoy!
I do!
Thank you! And thank you to all contributors.
All the best
hmw
Hello,
Samuel Wales writes:
> more than one clock can be useful, but maybe need not be org-related,
> even if that would be nice? for example, your laundry is due in 45m,
> tea will be steeped in 8m, etc.
for that exactly that use case ;) I have a small shell script that
creates at jobs and pop
Hi Charles,
"Berry, Charles" via "General discussions about Org-mode."
writes:
>> On Jul 9, 2020, at 12:09 AM, Michael Welle wrote:
[...]
> Not stupidity. AFAICS there is no call in org-sbe to
> org-babel-lob-get-info, so the params are not updated. I supposed
Hi Douglas,
Douglas Perrin writes:
> Hi Michael,
> Maybe I am not understanding what you want to do but I use
> org-babel-lob-ingest/org-sbe to execute blocks from other files on
> start-up like this:
> # Local Variables:
> # eval: (org-babel-lob-ingest "Template-Loader.org")
> # eval: (org-sbe
Hi Eric,
Eric S Fraga writes:
> * org-babel-lob-ingest
ah, I learned something new here. Unfortunately, it seems like org-sbe
doesn't look into the list spit out by org-babel-lob-ingest.
Regards
hmw
Hello,
I can execute code blocks in different (separate?) files like this:
#+call: ../lob.org:convert-time-range-to-days(range="<2020-02-19
Wed>--<2020-02-21 Fri>")
That is great. Can I call the same function from a table function?
org-sbe doesn't support the above notation extended with an Org
Hello again,
sorry, for the noise. Just minutes after posting the question I
discovered the difference between the org files: they are stored in
different sub-directories. Fixing the path solved my problem:
#+call: ../test.org:hcw(d="foo")
Seems like rubber ducking kind of works ;).
Regards
hmw
Hello,
in a file named test.org I have an elisp src code block and a line like
this:
#+call: test.org:hcw(d="foo")
C-c C-c on that line executes the code block just fine. Copying the line
to another org file and pressing C-c C-c results in nothing obvious. On
the other hand, putting a code block
Hello,
John Kitchin writes:
> yes it is interactive use I am most interested in. I am exploring this as a
> potential option for students to use in a class.
well, I don't do this for Emacs specifically, but for the compilers,
tools, etc. I need in operating system and systems programming courses
Hello,
Albert Krewinkel writes:
> Hi,
>
> Michael Welle writes:
>
>> using ox-gfm to export Org to Gitlab's markup syntax (for the wiki for
>> instance) seems to work quite nice. Gitlab's Org parser has some
>> shortcomings, so using Org syntax directly
Hello,
using ox-gfm to export Org to Gitlab's markup syntax (for the wiki for
instance) seems to work quite nice. Gitlab's Org parser has some
shortcomings, so using Org syntax directly in Gitlab often results in
strangely rendered documents. What I'm interested in is a 'roundtrip
workflow'. If so
Hello,
Christmas time is also the time when the heating in the office is shut
off. Time to think about not so essential things ;).
On [0] you will find an index of reveal based presentations. Is there
something similar for Org based presentations? Maybe even a visual
index? Something where you ca
Hello,
this works as expected:
#+begin_src latex :file foo.png :exports results :results file raw
Hello, crude world
#+end_src
foo.png is created in the org file's directory. Shouldn't the
following do the same, except with a pdf file?
#+begin_src latex :file foo.pdf :exports results :results
Hello,
Nathan Neff writes:
> Hello all,
>
> I think I'm missing something basic: I'd like to have something like this:
>
> #+begin_src python
> #+filename: foo.py
>
> Instead of storing my Python code in the current org file, I would like
> Babel to read foo.py and execute it, as if it was insi
Hello,
"Fraga, Eric" writes:
> On Thursday, 17 Oct 2019 at 15:21, Cecil Westerhof wrote:
>> I tried it out (after a bit of configuring) with the following:
>>
>> #+BEGIN_SRC plantuml :file groupingComponents.eps :noexport
>
> [...]
>
>> It looks a bit different, but I will not worry about it at
Hello,
Raimund Kohl-Füchsle writes:
[...]
> If instead I would use
>
>** TODO Test Time range
>
> <2004-08-23 Mon>--<2004-08-26 Thu>
>
> then this for org-mode would just be one todo; if I mark it done on
> Mon all other days are marked as done, too.
>
> So how would I schedule a dail
Hello,
Stefan Huchler writes:
> I wrote this template to capture my bills from mostly one shop, but it
> has support for multiple shops and the important feature is that it
> suggests previous item names and remembers last prices, that gives you
> lot's of autocompletion if you repetetivly buy o
Hello,
Tim Cross writes:
> I totally agree that block delimiters should be case
> insensitive. However, I think the ability for a user to set their
> preference for either upper case or lower case is reasonable. It does
> not need to affect the syntactic interpretation, just whether the
> templa
Hello,
Amin Bandali writes:
[...]
> I think it would be nice to provide a defcusom to allow choosing between
> upper vs. lowercase.
that would make the exchange of Org files with colleagues and other Org
aficionados complicated, wouldn't it? As Nicolas said, blocks are
case-insensitive, meaning o
Hello,
"Christopher W. Ryan" writes:
> This looks promising. However, the example at the link you referenced
> seems to have its state changes inside a LOGBOOK property drawer. My
> state changes are not inside a drawer. See excerpt below.
the shown code should be able to deal with both situatio
Hello,
"Christopher W. Ryan" writes:
> I try to keep track of books I want to read, and when I eventually read
> them. I use TODO keyword for books I intend to read, and I change the
> state to READING and then DONE, as appropriate. Each state change gets a
> date/time stamp.
at [0] you will fi
Hello,
Emmanuel Charpentier writes:
> As of today, I note that the #+langiage export variable is no longer
> honored when exporting to LaTeX/PDF. See enclosed files :
I noticed this quite some time go (months, last year maybe), but didn't
dived into it because I'm not sure what to expect. ox-lat
Hello,
Marcin Borkowski writes:
> On 2018-10-08, at 09:20, Michael Welle wrote:
[...]
>> Well, on my laptop the initial agenda run takes about 7s or so (150
>> agenda files) using the current day/week agenda ("a"). All subsequent
>> (after loading the files) age
Hello,
Marcin Borkowski writes:
> On 2018-10-09, at 13:47, Julius Dittmar wrote:
>
>> Hi Marcin,
>>
>> I can't advise as to profiling to find out what really bogs down agenda
>> building.
>>
>> I found that log messages do bog it down.
>>
>> I have a lot of recurring tasks, which accumulate log
Hello,
Marcin Borkowski writes:
> Hi Orgers,
>
> my agenda takes almost 10 seconds to show up. Are there any ideas for
> profiling that?
>
> I suspect that archiving a lot of old entries I don't use anymore might
> help, but is there any way to e.g. display some stats on which
> file/headline t
Hello,
Michael Welle writes:
[...]
> (defun hmw/org-prop-append(prop value)
> (save-excursion
> (org-up-heading-safe)
> (format "%s %s" value (cdr (assq prop
>(car
> (org-babel-params-from-properties)))
>
> (defali
Hello,
Kaushal Modi writes:
> On Sat, Sep 29, 2018 at 2:39 PM Michael Welle wrote:
>
>>
>> I asked something similar earlier this year (concatenating compiler
>> flags given as header-args property, used for linking against different
>> libs in different sect
Hello,
Kaushal Modi writes:
> Hello,
>
> Is there a way to achieve something like below? See the content in each
> nested subtree in the example below.
I asked something similar earlier this year (concatenating compiler
flags given as header-args property, used for linking against different
libs
Hello,
I try to fetch some values from an sqlite database (want to grab some
statistics from Zotero ;)):
#+begin_src sqlite :db zotero.sqlite
select value from itemdatavalues where lower(value) like '%gelesen%';
#+end_src
The SQL wildcards cause trouble:
Evaluate this sqlite code block on your
Hello,
Bastien writes:
> Dear Arne,
>
> there was a temporary glitch in earlier version of Org about this,
> please upgrade Org to 9.1.12 through the package system and let us
> know if you still have this issue.
oh, i thought that is a feature of some kind. Let me upgrade... Hm, the
feature|iss
Hello,
stardiviner writes:
> I tried the following example:
>
> ```
>
> #+begin_src shell :mkdir yes :dir "data/tmp" :results file :file
> "crackzor_1.0.c.gz"
> wget -c "http://ben.akrin.com/crackzor/crackzor_1.0.c.gz";
> #+end_src
>
> #+RESULTS:
> [[file:data/tmp/crackzor_1.0.c.gz]]
> ```
>
>
Hello,
Nick Dokos writes:
[...]
> Michael Welle writes:
> If you are trying to produce documentation and want to show commands
> that the user should type then you probably need an example block:
>
> #+begin_example
> # date
> #+end_example
another idea: How about using
Hello,
Abigaile Johannesburg writes:
> Dear community,
>
> I have a minor question about how to escape '#' character in
> #+begin_src bash block. For example, when I export the source code
> block for bash, I can use
>
> #+begin_src bash
> $
> #+end_src
>
>
> But if I want to use # for indicatin
Hello,
Michael Welle writes:
> Hm, the property values can be functions that get evaluated to get the
> actual property values, can't it? I'm not sure though if something like
> :flags (get-em "flags" '("-more" "-values")) is so much nicer t
Hello,
John Kitchin writes:
> I am pretty sure this isn't possible. The headers get overridden by the
> most local settings. There isn't a way to concatenate them. In some cases
> there isn't a way to figure out what you want, e.g. if a heading property
> said ":tangle no" and your header said "
Hello,
how can I concatenate header args? Let's assume I have an Org structure
like follows:
* foo
:PROPERTIES:
:header-args: :flags -Wall
:END:
** bar
#+begin_src C :flags -lm
#+end_src
Now I want the code to be compiled with -Wall _and_ -lm.
Regards
hmw
Hello,
"iany...@163.com" writes:
> I think if I set the variable
> (setq org-log-reschedule (quote time))
>
> When I change the schedule time of a task, a drawer will be created.
> But nothing happened as I did so. Even if I setuped a new emacs, with
> the only conifg line above. It still did
Hello,
i have to correct me.
Michael Welle writes:
> Hello Jens,
>
> Jens Lechtenboerger writes:
[...]
>> The howto for emacs-reveal is available at [1]. First-level
>> headings are centered vertically and horizontally. I just added
>> slide 20 with horizontally
Hello Jens,
Jens Lechtenboerger writes:
> On 2018-02-11, Michael Welle wrote:
>
>> Looks easy, eh? A header at the top, a footer at the bottom and a lot
>> of space in between. In some cases, like in [1], I wanted content (e.g.
>> Ich...OS/2 Warp 4) to be centered horizo
Hello Eric,
Eric S Fraga writes:
> On Sunday, 11 Feb 2018 at 16:29, Michael Welle wrote:
>
> [...]
>
>> Until I will get bored again, I will stick with Org's beamer export
>> :)[2]. But anyways, if you want to share your experience with
>> ox-reveal, you are
Hello,
I just wanted to tell you how my adventure in reveal land ended ;).
Well, I spent a couple of hours last week and the better part of this
weekend with css. I could produce a slide similar to [0]. I couldn't
solve the structure problem I described earlier. And what put me off
in the end is,
Hello,
Piotr Isajew writes:
> Hi,
>
> I wonder if it's possible to have something like a clocktable, but
> based on effort, not the clocked time. My use case is that at the
> beginning of the project, when the effort for each of tasks is
> estimated, but none has been worked on yet, I need to ge
Hello,
Matt Price writes:
> for this issue, I define a class "paired" in my local cass file (or
> actually, I now use a very modestly edited custom theme) :
>
>
> .paired {
> float:left !important;
> max-width:47% !important;
>
> }
>
> and then in the org file:
> :#+ATTR_HTML: :class pai
Hello,
took me the better part of the afternoon, but I came up with the
following approach:
* Was ist Virtualisierung?
- Aus der Wikipedia:
#+BEGIN_QUOTE
Virtualisierung bezeichnet in der Informatik die Nachbildung eines
Hard- oder Software-Objekts durch ein ähnliches Objekt vom selben Typ
mit
Hello,
a new year, a new tool ;). I try to shift a bit away from beamer based
slides to a format, that allows me to create nice html-based slides and
nice pdf-based slides from the same source. It looks like org-reveal and
decktape might be what I want. Maybe. To find out I try to convert an
org-b
Hello,
Eric S Fraga writes:
> On Thursday, 4 Jan 2018 at 15:48, Michael Welle wrote:
>> maybe because Lars considered shutting gmane down and transfered/sold it
>> to a company?
>
> Maybe but also possibly because the org site makes reference to the list
> but not to th
Hello,
Eric S Fraga writes:
> On Thursday, 4 Jan 2018 at 07:57, Dave Marquardt wrote:
>> What about gmane.emacs.orgmode?
>
>
>
> yes, of course. although I have that in my list of newsgroups, I have
> it turned off in preference to the mailing list. Not sure why, mind
> you.
maybe because L
Hello,
thank you all, who are involved in keeping Org going. Not only the
people, who provide infrastructure, but also the people, who do the daily
work, who provide patches and the people, who use Org.
Bastien Guerry writes:
> Dear all,
>
> thanks to Jason Dunsmore, we were able to have our or
Hello,
Paulo Matos writes:
> On 14/12/17 17:57, Michael Welle wrote:
>> it is from org-id.
>
> Can't seem to find org-id on melpa or org mode contrib page.
> http://orgmode.org/worg/org-contrib/
>
> can you please point me to where i can find it?
org-id should be pa
Hello,
Paulo Matos writes:
> On 14/12/17 15:20, Michael Welle wrote:
>>>
>>> I am curious why %hi and %lo would cause any troubles...
>> I can confirm that behaviour, but it doesn't bother me, because I use ;):
>>
>> (setq org-id-link-to-org-use-id &
Hello,
Paulo Matos writes:
[...]
> Interesting but it doesn't really work properly.
>
> My TODO looks like:
>
> * TODO add support for %lo and %hi operands in offsets
>
> I create the link and the link has the name of the todo headline.
> When I try to follow with C-c C-o, it says 'No match - cre
Hello,
Paulo Matos writes:
> Hi,
>
> I have a TODO item that got stuck due to some unforseen circumstances.
> Another TODO item is needed as a workaround therefore I have something like:
>
> * TODO Implement using hash tables
> :LOGBOOK:
> - Note taken on ... \\
> Stuck because...
> :END
Hello,
Xi Shen writes:
> Hi Michael,
>
> Yes, I think this is a way to my previous question. But what I really want
> to achieve is to loop through a list of server names and execute a script
> on them.
>
> Say I have 20 different database server. How can I do a loop with each
> server?
interest
Hello,
Xi Shen writes:
> Hi,
>
> http://orgmode.org/manual/var.html
>
> This wiki explains how to use variable inside a src block. But I wonder if
> it is possible to specify variable to the variables in the src definition.
>
> E.g. for the sql src block, I want to execute a script on different
Hello,
"numbch...@gmail.com" writes:
> Off the topic, I'm curious what is the `:session` in `ob-shell` ?
it basically means that state is preserved for code blocks that run in
the same session (as long as the interpreter is running). Or in other
words, imagine two code blocks: the first sets a
Hello,
Michael Welle writes:
> Hello Eric,
>
> Eric S Fraga writes:
>
>> On Tuesday, 28 Nov 2017 at 13:23, Michael Welle wrote:
>>> I think that last one is what one would expect ;). Anyways, using sessions,
>>> is there a way to get rid off of the she
Hello Eric,
Eric S Fraga writes:
> On Tuesday, 28 Nov 2017 at 13:23, Michael Welle wrote:
>> I think that last one is what one would expect ;). Anyways, using sessions,
>> is there a way to get rid off of the shell's continuation prompts?
>
> PS2=""
>
&g
Hello,
this code block:
#+BEGIN_SRC shell :session n42 :shebang "#!/bin/bash"
for i in "aa" "bb" "cc" ; do
echo "u: $i"
done
#+end_src
produces this output when it first runs:
#+RESULTS:
|||||
| > | > | u: | aa |
| u: | bb |||
| u: | cc |||
After the first ru
Hello,
I want to execute shell blocks like follows:
#+BEGIN_SRC shell :session n42 :dir /127.0.0.1: :shebang "#!/bin/bash"
echo los
echo $SHELL
echo $BASH
echo ready
#+end_src
The trouble is that the shebang property doesn't work in this case. The
script is executed with the login shell of the u
Hello,
Joon Ro writes:
>> 2. Write a function to look up the tree from point and export the first
>> subtree with a certain property.
> I thought about implementing the second approach. I have slides for
> several talks in the same org file. Since I mostly need this
> functionality when I'm dev
Hello,
Adam Porter writes:
> Michael Welle writes:
>
>> Is there an existing way to say that I want to go up to a level n
>> heading and then export, or do I have to implement that by myself?
>
> I think you'll have to do it yourself. Here are a couple of ideas
Hello,
Nicolas Goaziou writes:
> Hello,
>
> Michael Welle writes:
>
>> imagine the following document structure:
>>
>> * talk1
>> * talk2
>> ** foo
>> ** bar
>> ** foobaz
>>
>>
>> Now the point is in section foobaz and I
Hello,
imagine the following document structure:
* talk1
* talk2
** foo
** bar
** foobaz
Now the point is in section foobaz and I want to export the subtree
talk2. C-c C-e C-s doesn't do exactly what I want. I can move the point
up to * talk2, export the subtree and then move the point back.
I
Hello,
Eric Abrahamsen writes:
> Raymond Zeitler writes:
>
>> Does anyone schedule and "org-clock" interruptions? I really need to
>> quantify how much of a drain they are to my productivity.
>>
>> I thought I'd include a generic "** TODO Interruption" in my
>> todo.org (or an inter.org file) a
Hello,
Kaushal Modi writes:
[...]
> Well, most of the times, I just report them. The org dev community is very
> active and a reported bug usually gets fixed in a day or two.
yes, that's true. The 'core developers' and all the others, developers
as well as users, do an amazing job and invest a lo
Hello,
Xebar Saram writes:
> today i saw this in the DOCU
>
> (file+function "path/to/file" function-finding-location)
> A function to find the right location in the file.
>
> i assume you dont just use "function-finding-location" but rather a
> specific function. are there examples for such fun
Hello,
Roland Everaert writes:
> Maybe you can have a look at this page:
>
> https://docs.plone.org/about/helper_tools.html
hm, aren't that all specialised editors for ReStructuredText? Now that I
have an rst file, I fail to import it into the CMS ;(. But that's more
of a question for the plone
Hello,
it happens to me that I now have to use a CMS named plone to document
things I do ;). Has anyone tried to export to plone? Or wants to share
experiences?
I can use standard html export, change the id of the content div and c&p
that to the plone content editor. That works OKish. But it wou
Hello Carsten,
Carsten Dominik writes:
> Hi MIchael,
>
> the automatic reset of the starting date for a second time stamp on works
> if the command `org-time-stamp' is invoked twice in direct succession. So
> if you press `C-c .' to insert a time stamp, and then you press it
> immediately aga
Hello,
the subject is a bit fuzzy, so let me depict an example use case:
creating an appointment for a multi-day conference. I use a capture
template with the placeholder %T for that (I use the same template for
single day appts, which occur more often.). Then I adjust the inserted
time stamp, add
Hello,
oops, I think the double space after full stop rule applies here, too.
Sorry for the noise.
Michael Welle writes:
[...]
>> Could you provide an ORG-NEWS entry for the feature?
>
>
*** More specific anniversary descriptions
Anniversary descriptions (used in the agenda view,
Hello,
Nicolas Goaziou wrote:
>
> Hello,
>
> Michael Welle writes:
>
> > thank you for the valuable comments. I think I've incorporated them all.
> > Furthermore I reworded some of the comments and I introduced a defvar,
> > so that the point in ti
Hello,
Nicolas Goaziou writes:
> Hello,
>
> Michael Welle writes:
>
>> Maybe it's a tiny change, if we strip the comments ;). It's not too
>> sophisticated, everyone could have done it.
>
> I definitely think it _is_ a tiny change.
>
> Some commen
Hello,
Alan Schmitt writes:
> On 2017-03-01 15:03, Michael Welle writes:
>
>>> I don't think it helps. IIRC, code integration in Emacs is pretty
>>> strict. You could simply sign FSF papers.
>> Yes. Trouble is nobody could explain to me what I have to sign
Hello,
Nicolas Goaziou writes:
> Hello,
>
> Michael Welle writes:
>
>> Even if we assume its quality is high enough to integrate it into Org,
>
> If code quality was a concern, Org would still be in alpha release ;)
thank you for your kind words, Nicolas ;).
>&g
Hello,
Alan Schmitt writes:
[...]
> Sorry for reviving this old thread, but was this added to org? I would
> find it most useful.
no, it's not.
Even if we assume its quality is high enough to integrate it into Org,
there might or might not be another problem: I haven't signed the FSF
papers. I w
Hello,
can I configure org-caldav in such a way, that it doesn't synchronise,
but only pull from the server? I don't want local changes, esp.
deletions in shared calendars, going back to the server.
Regards
hmw
Hello,
Michael Welle writes:
> Hello,
>
> Nick Dokos writes:
> [...]
>> that, but publishing locally fails at a couple of [[id:][foo]] links:
>>
>>Unable to resolve link: "id:facac2a6-3526-450d-ac42-8d36b16c6bab"
>>
>> What's up wi
Hello,
Nick Dokos writes:
[...]
> that, but publishing locally fails at a couple of [[id:][foo]] links:
>
>Unable to resolve link: "id:facac2a6-3526-450d-ac42-8d36b16c6bab"
>
> What's up with that?
hm, I dimly remember having that (or a similar) problem. (require 'org-id)
fixed that for me.
Hello,
Mikhail Skorzhinskiy writes:
> Take a look to
> http://karl-voit.at/2017/01/15/org-clone-subtree-with-time-shift/
someone (you ;)?) in #emacs suggested that, too. But I don't understand
how that would help. Can you explain, please?
I understand the problem Karl wants to solve, I myself
Hello,
Nick Dokos writes:
> Michael Welle writes:
>
>> Hello,
>>
>> I want to temporary cancel recurring tasks. Let's say I have tasks, that
>> only make sense when I'm in my office. Now I'm away for a few months.
>> The tasks would clutt
Hello,
I want to temporary cancel recurring tasks. Let's say I have tasks, that
only make sense when I'm in my office. Now I'm away for a few months.
The tasks would clutter my agenda. I could comment them, archive them or
use org-cancel-repeater and set the task's state to DONE. But all that
make
Hello,
Nicolas Goaziou writes:
> Hello,
>
> Michael Welle writes:
>
>> what is the correct way to set the property? I tried
>>
>> (org-entry-put pom "SCHEDULED" "<2017-01-01 Sun ++1w>")
>>
>> which results in
>>
>
Hello,
Eric S Fraga writes:
> On Tuesday, 24 Jan 2017 at 14:14, Michael Welle wrote:
>> ohschockschwerenot, I found it. I set org-confirm-babel-evaluate to a
>> function that does look at the body of the code block and then decides
>> if it should be executed withou
Hello,
Nick Dokos writes:
[...]
> Thanks. It is quite likely that I misremembered: I found some things on Worg
> about an org-aware merge tool for git:
>
> http://orgmode.org/worg/org-contrib/gsoc2012/student-projects/git-merge-tool/proposal.html
> http://orgmode.org/worg/org-contrib/gsoc2012/stu
Hello,
Nick Dokos writes:
[...]
> [fn:1] I'd search, but Gmane still seems non-compos-mentis and
>searching in the archives is just awful (or my fu is too
>weak). Anybody know what is happening with Gmane? How do you
>search the list nowadays?
I have a mail folder with ab
Hello,
Eric S Fraga writes:
> On Tuesday, 24 Jan 2017 at 10:52, Michael Welle wrote:
>> Eric S Fraga writes:
>>> Works fine for me with relatively recent org from git.
>> that's strange. I pulled last sunday.
>
> Well, I have just this minute updated and tr
Hello,
Roger Mason writes:
[...]
> #+tblname: display-results
> | skribilo path | infile | engine| To Engine | To
> Typeset |
>
> |-++---+---+|
> | "/opt/skribilo-git/bin" | "skribilo-input-1" | "co
Hello,
Eric S Fraga writes:
> On Tuesday, 24 Jan 2017 at 10:52, Michael Welle wrote:
>> Eric S Fraga writes:
>>> Works fine for me with relatively recent org from git.
>> that's strange. I pulled last sunday.
>
> Well, I have just this minute updated and tr
Hello,
Eric S Fraga writes:
> On Monday, 23 Jan 2017 at 12:04, Michael Welle wrote:
>> Hello,
>>
>> I think there are several problems, starting with BEGIN_SRC sh and some
>> more. But fixing them doesn't bring success. I even have trouble to get
>> a mini
Hello,
Michael Welle writes:
...
> #+NAME: foo
> #+BEGIN_SRC emacs-lisp
>
> (+ 4 4)
> #+END_SRC
>
>
> | bar | foo|
> |+|
> | 42 | #ERROR |
>
> #+TBLFM: $2='(org-sbe "foo")::$1=42
>
> I'm not sure, what th
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