Hi Nicolas,
1. create a file with http://orgmode.org; as its contents
2. export it to HTML
3. the exported link is wrong: http:orgmode.org
I guess it has to do with this commit:
http://orgmode.org/cgit.cgi/org-mode.git/commit/?id=3589f6
Can you double-check?
Thanks,
--
Bastien
Hi Ken,
Ken Mankoff mank...@gmail.com writes:
http://article.gmane.org/gmane.emacs.orgmode/84707 appears blank
The article is displayed correctly for me, probably a temporary
issue with gmane.org.
so perhaps the no reply is due to a posting issue. Hence, I send the
email again...
I don't
I've made an update to ob-clojure.el, which wasn't working for me with
the new cider (the required function was removed).
I haven't looked into 'nrepl or 'slime options for evaluation, is
anyone using them?
Eric, should 'nrepl option be removed as obsolete? And maybe 'slime as well?
I'm
Hi Phil,
Could you test my last commit? Your case should be working now.
regards,
Oleh
Hello,
Bastien b...@gnu.org writes:
1. create a file with http://orgmode.org; as its contents
2. export it to HTML
3. the exported link is wrong: http:orgmode.org
I guess it has to do with this commit:
http://orgmode.org/cgit.cgi/org-mode.git/commit/?id=3589f6
Can you double-check?
Hi Bastien,
Thanks for letting me know it displays properly and email received. The
URL works for me this morning too.
On 2014-04-14 at 05:22, Bastien wrote:
Even for those who uses MacOSX, you should perhaps be more specific
on how Org-mode would store such links, then somebody might step up.
On 2014-04-13 00:11, Bastien b...@gnu.org writes:
Hi Alan,
Alan Schmitt alan.schm...@polytechnique.org writes:
I'm trying to write some code to schedule reviews of projects, and I'm
basing it on org-expiry. I found a couple of tiny bugs with it, which
may be fixed with this patch.
I Now
Ken Mankoff mank...@gmail.com writes:
Hi Bastien,
Thanks for letting me know it displays properly and email received. The
URL works for me this morning too.
On 2014-04-14 at 05:22, Bastien wrote:
Even for those who uses MacOSX, you should perhaps be more specific
on how Org-mode would
On 2014-04-14 at 08:42, Nick Dokos wrote:
What does emacs do when you C-x C-f an alias?
Alias in OS X (and Shortcut in Windows) present as files. Org treats it
just as it should - as a file. Everything works.
If it opens it properly (i.e. opens the target file) then why is
anything needed in
Hallo,
I have a small question, I hope it is right here. The following org code:
#+CAPTION: caption of block 1
#+BEGIN_SRC
vmpovapd %%zmm0, %zmm1
#+END_SRC
#+BEGIN_SRC
vmpovapd %%zmm0, %zmm1
#+END_SRC
is exported (in my setup) to latex as:
\lstset{language=phiassembler,caption={caption of
Hello,
I’m looking for a quick way to check the total time spent on a task. I
bet I’m missing something obvious. (I have set
org-clock-mode-line-total to today, so I do not see the total time of a
clocked-in task in the mode line.)
Many thanks,
Christoph
Christoph Groth christ...@grothesque.org writes:
Hello, Christoph!
I’m looking for a quick way to check the total time spent on a task. I
bet I’m missing something obvious. (I have set
org-clock-mode-line-total to today, so I do not see the total time of a
clocked-in task in the mode
David Masterson writes:
What does this mean?
What I said: don't load any part of Org until you have installed the
ELPA package. This usually means not to run any startup scripts.
Does this mean you expect people to build Emacs
from scratch just to ensure they do not have Org built-in?
I
Hi Nick,
I would like to thank you, since your message made me curious about git,
and I started using it. After reading a little bit, I was able to install
it, clone the org repository and revert the commit we were talking about
(that feels good). I can now use Org normally again. I just hope
Ken Mankoff writes:
Aliases are a type of links (ln on linux, shortcut on Windows
alias on OS X (OS X of course also supports ln)). The difference
between an OS X alias and ln is that if the target is moved, the OS X
alias still points to it, and double-clicking on an alias (or issuing
the
On Friday, 11 Apr 2014 at 10:46, Bastien wrote:
[...]
Just checking -- are things better now?
For me, they seem to be but I haven't consciously been thinking about
this problem... too busy with meetings at work! I know that I have
recently upgraded org several times on at least one of my
Hello Sacha,
Thanks for your quick reply.
Sacha Chua sa...@sachachua.com writes:
C-c C-x C-d (org-clock-display) will show the task times as overlays
on the headings.
That seems to be exactly what I need. It works, but only shows times
for top-level headings (i.e. for example miscellaneous
On 2014-04-14 at 12:26, Achim Gratz wrote:
Ken Mankoff writes:
Aliases are a type of links (ln on linux, shortcut on Windows
alias on OS X (OS X of course also supports ln)). The difference
between an OS X alias and ln is that if the target is moved, the OS
X alias still points to it, and
Nicolas Goaziou writes:
Correct. It should be fixed.
It still isn't correct. If you put // after a file: scheme, then
you need to put an authority there (an empty authority means localhost
in some contexts, but then the path has to start with a slash). Also,
with the new implementation
Ken Mankoff mankoff at gmail.com writes:
On 2014-04-14 at 12:26, Achim Gratz wrote:
Ken Mankoff writes:
Aliases are a type of links (ln on linux, shortcut on Windows
alias on OS X (OS X of course also supports ln)). The difference
between an OS X alias and ln is that if the target is
Christoph Groth christ...@grothesque.org writes:
Hello, Christoph!
C-c C-x C-d (org-clock-display) will show the task times as overlays
on the headings.
That seems to be exactly what I need. It works, but only shows times
for top-level headings (i.e. for example miscellaneous but not the
On 2014-04-14 at 13:42, Charles Berry wrote:
The point of using an alias rather than a filename or the name of a
symbolic link that points to the file is that it inherits the property
of Mac OS X aliases that moving the file does not break the alias ---
it still points to file.
Exactly!
On 2014-02-21 15:06 Olivier Schwander wrote:
Dear list,
I would like to announce the first version of an extension to
call org-capture through org-protocol from Firefox:
- http://chadok.info/firefox-org-capture/
It just does the same thing as the Javascript bookmarklet but without
the
Hello,
Achim Gratz strom...@nexgo.de writes:
It still isn't correct. If you put // after a file: scheme, then
you need to put an authority there (an empty authority means localhost
in some contexts, but then the path has to start with a slash).
The patch didn't change file scheme handling.
Nicolas Goaziou writes:
With latest patch and following Org buffer
file:test.org
file:/test.org
file:///test.org
I get (HTML export)
a href=test.htmltest.html/a
a href=file:///test.htmlfile:///test.html/a
a href=file:///test.htmlfile:///test.html/a
So, it looks good so
On 2014-03-28 14:45 Xebar Saram wrote:
Hi all i was wondering if anyone knew how to set
a org-agenda-custom-command for property AND TODO state? that is create a
custom view that is similar to this sparse tree command:
C-c / M type=main/COOK
where it would match on type=main and have a
Achim Gratz strom...@nexgo.de writes:
groff has this snippet:
(if (file-name-absolute-p raw-path)
(concat file:// (expand-file-name raw-path))
(concat file:// raw-path)))
This needs to be fixed, along with ox-man.el. Anyway, that
I'm trying to figure out how to bind fast access to TODO states, without
using C-t.
The reason is that I have C-t as escape code for my screen session.
The command org-todo is bound to C-c t here, so when I try to fast
access to the TODO state DONE(d!), I can't get to it.
C-c t d just puts
I'm trying to add a few recursive directories to org-agenda-files, but
can't really find any examples doing this
I got like 250 org files spread over a few directories.
I want to add:
~/foo/bar/
~/baz/quux/
~/hukarz/grault/
..which again includes multiple directories with .org files and a few
On Apr 14, 2014, at 12:36 PM, Ken Mankoff mank...@gmail.com wrote:
On 2014-04-14 at 13:42, Charles Berry wrote:
For this to work as you fantasize, you would need to enable the Finder
application to modify the part of the *.org file that encodes the
alias when you change the location of the
On Mon, 14 Apr 2014, Ivan Andrus wrote:
On Apr 14, 2014, at 12:36 PM, Ken Mankoff mank...@gmail.com wrote:
On 2014-04-14 at 13:42, Charles Berry wrote:
For this to work as you fantasize, you would need to enable the Finder
application to modify the part of the *.org file that encodes the
Esben Stien b...@esben-stien.name writes:
I'm trying to figure out how to bind fast access to TODO states, without
using C-t.
The reason is that I have C-t as escape code for my screen session.
The command org-todo is bound to C-c t here, so when I try to fast
access to the TODO state
On 2014-04-14 at 20:21, Charles C. Berry wrote:
BibDesk has an archive of entries typically stored at
~/Library/Caches/Metadata/edu.ucsd.cs.mmccrack.bibdesk/*.bdskcache
and the 'NS.data' element of Bdsk-File-1 seems to point to one element.
The *.bdskcache file has a bplist and I guess the
Thank you for this discussion, John, David and others.
When installing a new distro, it sure seems wise to not include
the Org options at Emacs install time (Ubuntu installers I use).
And to set up the Org location and Git system soonest.
Eric Abrahamsen e...@ericabrahamsen.net writes:
I may be misunderstanding here, but screen will send the escape key to
the running program if you hit it twice, right? I use the StumpWM window
manager, with the escape key also set to C-t, and I think both of them
behave the same way: first
Esben Stien b...@esben-stien.name writes:
Eric Abrahamsen e...@ericabrahamsen.net writes:
I may be misunderstanding here, but screen will send the escape key to
the running program if you hit it twice, right? I use the StumpWM window
manager, with the escape key also set to C-t, and I think
Yes, perfect!
On Mon, Apr 14, 2014 at 6:35 AM, Oleh ohwoeo...@gmail.com wrote:
Hi Phil,
Could you test my last commit? Your case should be working now.
regards,
Oleh
Pascal Fleury fle...@google.com writes:
Hello,
Great, thanks for the guidance. I hope I managed it all correctly.
I've applied this patch.
I made a couple of minor changes in a subsequent commit (a7189aa).
These were indentation and whitespace changes to enforce two coding
conventions,
1.
Also, if you can sign your patches (git format-patch -s) that'd
be even better, but not mandatory.
Should I start signing my patches as well?
I'm very happy to, I've just never thought about it. If so is there an
easy way to make -s a default option for the Org-mode repo?
Thanks,
--
Eric
thx alot Alexander!
this worked. any idea how to bind this to a key?
ie have C-c / m +TODO=TODO+TYPE=main bound to F1-c etc..
best
Z
On Mon, Apr 14, 2014 at 11:03 PM, Alexander Baier lexi.ba...@gmail.com
wrote:
On 2014-03-28 14:45 Xebar Saram wrote:
Hi all i was wondering if anyone
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