On 2015-12-16, at 02:54, Nick Dokos wrote:
> Marcin Borkowski writes:
>
>> On 2015-12-14, at 21:48, Nick Dokos wrote:
>>
>>> Marcin Borkowski writes:
>>>
> On 2015-12-12, at 09:53, Nicolas Goaziou
On 2015-12-14, at 21:48, Nick Dokos wrote:
> Marcin Borkowski writes:
>
>>> On 2015-12-12, at 09:53, Nicolas Goaziou wrote:
>>>
You can use a dedicated function in `org-agenda-skip-function' for that
(e.g., ignore task if
Marcin Borkowski writes:
> On 2015-12-14, at 21:48, Nick Dokos wrote:
>
>> Marcin Borkowski writes:
>>
On 2015-12-12, at 09:53, Nicolas Goaziou wrote:
> You can use a dedicated function in
> On 2015-12-12, at 09:53, Nicolas Goaziou wrote:
>
>> You can use a dedicated function in `org-agenda-skip-function' for that
>> (e.g., ignore task if one of its parents is a done task).
OK, so it doesn't work (probably because I'm doing something wrong...)
I did this:
Marcin Borkowski writes:
>> On 2015-12-12, at 09:53, Nicolas Goaziou wrote:
>>
>>> You can use a dedicated function in `org-agenda-skip-function' for that
>>> (e.g., ignore task if one of its parents is a done task).
>
> OK, so it doesn't work (probably
Hello,
Marcin Borkowski writes:
> I have org-agenda-todo-list-sublevels set to nil. However, given this
> tree:
>
> * DONE task
> ** TODO subtask
>
> it turns out that the todo list in the agenda shows the "subtask" anyway.
>
> Should it be so? I would guess not.
It's not
On 2015-12-12, at 09:53, Nicolas Goaziou wrote:
> Hello,
>
> Marcin Borkowski writes:
>
>> I have org-agenda-todo-list-sublevels set to nil. However, given this
>> tree:
>>
>> * DONE task
>> ** TODO subtask
>>
>> it turns out that the todo list in the
Hi list,
I have org-agenda-todo-list-sublevels set to nil. However, given this
tree:
* DONE task
** TODO subtask
it turns out that the todo list in the agenda shows the "subtask" anyway.
Should it be so? I would guess not.
The reason I'd like to exclude this "subtask" from displaying is