Hi Eric,
Eric Schulte wrote:
However try replacing
:var: foo=a
with
:var+: foo=a
which is valid and should work for your use case below.
I'm not sure if I understood you correctly, but even if I replace var
with var+ in the child's property drawer, the value of bar that is set
in the
Hi,
Viktor Rosenfeld listuse...@googlemail.com writes:
Hi Eric,
Eric Schulte wrote:
Viktor Rosenfeld listuse...@googlemail.com writes:
Hi Eric,
thanks for your input. I just pulled the latest code from git and while
my original example works, the following does not:
Hi Eric,
Eric Schulte wrote:
Viktor Rosenfeld listuse...@googlemail.com writes:
Hi Eric,
thanks for your input. I just pulled the latest code from git and while
my original example works, the following does not:
:PROPERTIES:
:var: foo=1
:var+: bar=2
:var+: baz=3
:END:
Viktor Rosenfeld listuse...@googlemail.com writes:
Hi Eric,
thanks for your input. I just pulled the latest code from git and while
my original example works, the following does not:
:PROPERTIES:
:var: foo=1
:var+: bar=2
:var+: baz=3
:END:
#+BEGIN_SRC sh
echo foo: $foo
echo bar:
Viktor Rosenfeld listuse...@googlemail.com writes:
Hi,
after following the discussion about the new BABEL syntax I was under
the impression that the following should work to set two variables in
one PROPERTIES drawer:
:PROPERTIES:
:var: foo=1
:var+: bar=2
:END:
However, the definition
Hi Eric,
thanks for your input. I just pulled the latest code from git and while
my original example works, the following does not:
:PROPERTIES:
:var: foo=1
:var+: bar=2
:var+: baz=3
:END:
#+BEGIN_SRC sh
echo foo: $foo
echo bar: $bar
echo baz: $baz
#+END_SRC
If I evaluate the source block I
Hi,
after following the discussion about the new BABEL syntax I was under
the impression that the following should work to set two variables in
one PROPERTIES drawer:
:PROPERTIES:
:var: foo=1
:var+: bar=2
:END:
However, the definition of bar is ignored. It turns out that there can
only be one