This seems like a fine option:
#+name: mode_data
| mode | paredit | auto-save |
|+-+---|
| scheme | TRUE| TRUE |
| emacs-lisp | TRUE| TRUE |
| ielm | TRUE| FALSE |
#+begin_src emacs-lisp :var data=mode_data :exports results :fi
Thanks everyone.
My tentative plan is to run some elisp that will dump the table to an
intermediate file and then dependent files may load it themselves.
t...@tsdye.com (Thomas S. Dye) writes:
> Aloha Grant,
>
> Grant Rettke writes:
>
>> Hi,
>>
>> My goal is to define a table in org-mode, display it nicely to humans
>> using export, and tangle that same data table into
>> an elisp data structure for use elsewhere within the program. It might
>> lo
Aloha Grant,
Grant Rettke writes:
> Hi,
>
> My goal is to define a table in org-mode, display it nicely to humans
> using export, and tangle that same data table into
> an elisp data structure for use elsewhere within the program. It might
> look something like this:
>
>
radio tables might be another way.
samuel
On 2/24/14, Grant Rettke wrote:
> Hi,
>
> My goal is to define a table in org-mode, display it nicely to humans
> using export, and tangle that same data table into
> an elisp data structure for use elsewhere within the program. It might
> look something
Hi,
My goal is to define a table in org-mode, display it nicely to humans
using export, and tangle that same data table into
an elisp data structure for use elsewhere within the program. It might
look something like this:
;;;
* Modes
This is a place for humans to kee