Erik Butz writes:
> Hi,
>
> people with more git experience should comment here, but it seems with:
> ~/elisp/org-mode $ git status
>
> you will get a list of currently untracked files in the local working
> directory. These are of course both files or directories deleted from
> the repository (a
Hi,
people with more git experience should comment here, but it seems with:
~/elisp/org-mode $ git status
you will get a list of currently untracked files in the local working
directory. These are of course both files or directories deleted from
the repository (as /lisp/babel) but also files that
For the record, I was having the exact same problem, just didn't have the time
to post it. So it's not just you!
I just deleted the babel directory now everything is fine again. git didn't
even notice it was gone.
Thanks for finding the culprit!
Sebastian
At Thu, 25 Nov 2010 22:04:22 +0100,
Eri
Hi,
thanks for the replies. It obviously was something stupid. I did not
execute babel code for quite some time, and for some reason I still
had a
(setq load-path (cons "/home/erik/elisp/org-mode/lisp/babel" load-path))
in my .emacs and apparently I did not clean up enough and so the
ob.elc file
Hi Erik,
Erik Butz wrote:
> I am trying to run some org-babel code, but while this used to work in
> the past, I am now getting an error which says
>
> "Symbol's function definition is void: org-babel-get-header"
The function is defined in my installation. Git version of yesterday.
> Somehow I a
Erik Butz writes:
> Hi all,
>
> I am trying to run some org-babel code, but while this used to work in
> the past, I am now getting an error which says
>
> "Symbol's function definition is void: org-babel-get-header"
>
> Somehow I am puzzled, since this function is defined in lisp/ob.el and
> sin