I wrote a letter describing the situation, to the maintainer of
Debian's `emacs-snapshot' package and the issue has been fixed in the
latest snapshot for both Ubuntu and Debian.
Andrey Smirnov
Andrey Smirnov andrew.smir...@gmail.com writes:
I wrote a letter describing the situation, to the maintainer of
Debian's `emacs-snapshot' package and the issue has been fixed in the
latest snapshot for both Ubuntu and Debian.
Andrey Smirnov
Fantastic, Thanks for running this issue to
Org-mode has *many* customization variables, and for most problems a
variable will exist to solve the problem,
I understand where you're coming from. True, it is not possible to
handle all obscure and arcane cases, that's what all these variables are
for, but I don't think that a situation
Hi everybody,
I've been using org-mode for quite a while but only recently found
myself in need of using ditaa to draw some simple diagram. As it turns
out my installation of emacs(Ubuntu 10.10, emacs-snapshot from
https://launchpad.net/~cassou/+archive/emacs) doesn't come with
ditta.jar
Hi Andrey,
The variable `org-ditaa-jar-path' can be used to specify a non-standard
location for the ditaa jar file. Org-mode has *many* customization
variables, and for most problems a variable will exist to solve the
problem, the `apropos' command can be very useful for finding these
variables.
Eric Schulte schulte.e...@gmail.com writes:
Hi Andrey,
The variable `org-ditaa-jar-path' can be used to specify a non-standard
location for the ditaa jar file.
True, but my patch is not about doing away with `org-ditaa-jar-path'
variable, it is about broadening the definition of standard