That being said, I store all my sensitive information in a huge
reference.org file that is added to the agenda. I sync this (among
other org files) to MobileOrg through a HTTPS-secured WebDav server.
I do this, but I use my own server, not dropbox.
It would be nice if there were some inter
I am trying to test encryption for MobileOrg via a beta from Richard.
(We're still playing the 'convince itunes to let you run code on your
own phone game', so this report is preliminary about what Org itself is
doing.)
I have in .emacs-local.el:
(setq org-mobile-use-encryption t)
(setq org-mobi
Carsten Dominik writes:
> On Oct 13, 2010, at 2:23 AM, Greg Troxel wrote:
>
>> I am trying to test encryption for MobileOrg via a beta from Richard.
>> (We're still playing the 'convince itunes to let you run code on your
>> own phone game', so this repo
I think the problem is that I have org-mobile-directory set to
"/ssh:foo.example.com:/usr/home/gdt/ORG"
then in here the encryption tries to be done in place, which means (I
think) a tramp pathname is passed to openssl.
Probably agendas.org needs to be created in a staging area and then the
e
In creating agendas, follow the way all other org files are handled by
encrypting locally and then using copy-file, so that remote agenda.org
paths with tramp will work.
---
lisp/org-mobile.el |3 +--
1 files changed, 1 insertions(+), 2 deletions(-)
diff --git a/lisp/org-mobile.el b/lisp/org-
Carsten Dominik writes:
> thank you very much vor putting in the time to test the encryption
> for MobileOrg.
No problem - thank you for writing and sheparding Org.
>> But for org files on servers we believe are not messing with them,
>> this is probably in the 'best is the enemy of the good'
Rodney Price writes:
> I've been trying to get MobileOrg set up with Dropbox, and I seem to
> have done something to make it impossible for MobileOrg to sync.
> Whenever I try, I get an error message like,
>
> Unexpected error: error getting mobileorg.org
>
> (paraphrased somewhat)
>
> It was sy
Sébastien Vauban writes:
> Hi Eric,
>
> "Eric Schulte" wrote:
>> The snippets used by the starter kit are available in their own git
>> repository at http://github.com/eschulte/yasnippet-org-mode
>
> Trying to clone it, I get:
>
> #+begin_src sh
> [...@mediacenter] ~/src>git clone
> http://gith
Rainer Thiel writes:
> I have a strange problem with timestamps with repeater intervals and
> think I am doing something wrong.
>
> I had assumed that entering in a new TODO item a timestamp like "oct
> 19 10:00 +14w" pressing C-c . would show the entry in the next 15
> weeks including the day o
Carsten Dominik writes:
> On Oct 21, 2010, at 10:52 AM, Rainer Stengele wrote:
>
>> My guessing is that a naive user (like me ...) does expect any
>> defined priority (like #D in this case) to have a higher priority
>> than a "non" priority item.
>
> I see how that makes sense. However, the oth
Jeff Horn writes:
> I keep wanting to test out MobileOrg on my Android phone, but I'm
> having a heck of a time figuring out why the SD sync isn't working
> like I expect. I'd like to sync org files with a WebDAV server, if
> possible. I currently use Dropbox, but it doesn't offer WebDAV. I can
2. Encrypt files on the Dropbox server, in a "transparent" way, so that I do
not need to use passwords to sync between org and Iphone (which I let Emacs
do automatically once each day).
This is what MobileOrg's encryption is for. You set a password in your
.emacs and then the same one on Mo
Martin Stemplinger writes:
>> Does MobileOrg support "reminders", like a buzz from the phone 10 (or a
>> customizable number of) minutes before any appointment from the agenda?
> As far as I know (and see on my iPhone) it does not yet provide such a
> feature. But i agree that it would be really
Noorul Islam writes:
> I am not sure why this conflict is arising even after resetting to
> head and then doing a pull
>
> $ noo...@sajida:~/emacs/org-mode$ git reset --hard
> HEAD is now at ba6b6f3 Merge branch 'master' of git://repo.or.cz/org-mode
>
> $ noo...@sajida:~/emacs/org-mode$ git pull
sergio_101 writes:
> how would i go about making items/tasks that didn't get completed last
> week carry over into this week?
Type 'm' in front of each and then "B s" to a new date. If you want to
move them all forward one week to the same day, I think you'll have to
write some elisp.
pgpds
Basically, when reading an email (in gnus, in wl, in other emacs MUAs
possibly), type "C-c l" (org-store-link) which will /store/ a link to
that email ("store" is the wrong word, in my view; it should arguably be
"make" or "create" or "define" or ... but that's neither here nor
there).
Martin Stemplinger writes:
> today I upgraded to org-mode 7.4 (I'm using GNU Emacs 24.0.50.1
> (i386-mingw-nt6.1.7600) should that matter). Since then I receive the
> message "Unexpected Error" when I try to sync from Dropbox.
I've been using 7.4 with my own webdav server (apache 2.2) with
Mob
I've been noticed extra lines in archive files. I did a controlled test
by creating a simple foo.org:
* test item 1
this is a test item
* test item 2
this is a test item
I then moved to the first * and did C-x
I just started using Org mode and MobileOrg and have a few comments.
First, thanks to everyone who's written/etc. org - it's nice to step
into already-baked software.
* Mobileorg
** removed files
I had a foo.org that I pushed with others, and then deleted, and it
didn't go away from my phone.
I have this 99% working, but I'm unclear on what the permission plan
should be. My apache 2.2 config is
DavLockDB "/usr/pkg/var/DavLock"
Alias /org/gdt "/home/gdt/ORG"
Options Indexes
AllowOverride AuthConfig
Order allow,deny
Allow from all
DAV On
AuthType Digest
> Since this slowness is caused by vc-mode, I wonder if it's possible
>for Org to open the agenda files without enabling vc-mode, for vc-mode
>is not necessary for org-mode.
I suspect part of the problem is that vc-mode is slower than it should
be. Probably almost all of this time is 'git
Sebastian Rose writes:
> On Linux, BSD and MAC OS X there is `gpsd'. I don't know how useful
> it is --- I don't own a GPS yet.
>
> http://gpsd.berlios.de/ states:
>
>gpsd is a service daemon that monitors one or more GPSes or AIS
>receivers attached to a host computer through serial or
Carsten Dominik writes:
> On Jun 28, 2010, at 1:36 PM, Leo wrote:
>
>> On 2010-06-28 11:19 +0100, Tassilo Horn wrote:
>>> (setq org-link-frame-setup '((vm . vm-visit-folder)
>>> (gnus . org-gnus-no-new-news)
>>> (file . find-file-other-wi
Torsten Wagner writes:
> this problem was described by Xin already some monthes ago. Following
> the thread, the solution was to remove the customisation of the variable
> "org-todo-keywords".
>
> Today, I faced the exact same problem. Removing seems not the correct
> solution to me so I searche
I have successfully used repeating times on TODO entries, and seen the
scheduled time move forward when I do C-c C-t d (d is my DONE shortcut).
I have a meeting on the 2nd monday of each month and am responsible for
inviting people ahead of time, and I've picked the first monday for
that. I think
There are a few touch regions on each table row in an outline in
MobileOrg. If you tap the blue icon at the right of each row, you
will view the details for that node (IMG_0019.PNG). This is useful
for editing a node's contents, todo state, etc.
If you want to dig into the outline, ju
Richard Moreland writes:
> On Jul 30, 2010, at 10:17 AM, Erwin Panen wrote:
>
>> Further to the app badge: Would this then show the number of changes
>> like it shows on the Outlines icon or analoguous to e.g. the Mail
>> icon in the iPhones dock? If yes, on what basis will synching
>> happen..
I tried to set a timestamp "thu 12:00+1.5", using C-c . and typing the
characters in quotes. What I got was
<2010-08-12 Thu 12:00-13:00>
I found that 12:00+1:30 works fine, but it seems like 1.5 should be
parsed.
Separately, I'd like 24-hour time without colons to work. "thu 1400"
seems unambi
This may not technically be a bug, but it violated my expectations:
setup:
(setq org-capture-templates
'(("t" "task" entry
(file+headline "notes.org" "Refile")
"* TODO %?\n %U\n")))
Use 'C-c r' to start capturing.
Type 'foo'.
C-c C-w to start r
Jing Su writes:
> I just tried the MobileOrg on an iPhone 4 and a desktop (Windows 7 Home) via
> Dropbox, and found the following problems. Most likely it's due to my wrong
> configurations. Would someone kindly help me out please? The version of
> Org-mode is 6.33x, and Emacs 23.2.1.
You didn'
When doing capture, after selecting 'task', I get:
Template key:
call-interactively: Symbol's value as variable is void: dired-buffers
This is on:
GNU Emacs 23.3.1 (i386--netbsdelf, GTK+ Version 2.24.4) of 2011-06-25 on
fnord.ir.bbn.com
I suspect it may be this commit:
commit 819fbe
Nicolas Goaziou writes:
> Greg Troxel writes:
>
>> When doing capture, after selecting 'task', I get:
>>
>> Template key:
>> call-interactively: Symbol's value as variable is void: dired-buffers
>
> This has (hopefully) been fixed on
Bastien writes:
> Jason Dunsmore writes:
>
>> Carsten Dominik writes:
>>
>> Yes, that was my original reason. But your suggestion of adding a
>> special keyword for events is another good reason. Also, as recently
>> discussed, consistent formatting conventions and clarifying the
>> frequent
I recently updated to the latest git, and found that while everything
else I tried was ok, I got a backtrace when doing org-mobile-push.
Bisecting, I found that the problem commit is:
commit dc62cdcdf11f305149281d16ef2200e18c7abd43
Author: Nicolas Goaziou
Date: Sun Oct 23 22:42:48 2011 +0200
[problem with org-mobile-push from commit
dc62cdcdf11f305149281d16ef2200e18c7abd43
]
I've recently pushed a patch around that area. Does the problem persist
with the latest git ?
Thanks. I updated (to 7c21098323bf0097c7903b014564cd6056bda374) and now
all is well.
pgp3WO1QFGRo
I often discover that I completed something a few days ago and I would
like to mark it done with the appropriate date as though I had marked it
done in the past. That means, e.g., for a repeating event it might
repeat sooner than if it had been done today. Is there a way?
I also want to
Please keep in mind that C-ret is not an ascii or 8-bit character (or
even a character, really), so people using emacs in an xterm (rather
than via X) do not have C-ret available. In general I find that org
mode becomes a little awkward in a terminal due to usage of
ungeneratable characters.
p
Torsten Wagner writes:
> Since I use my Android-based phone on a daily basis (after all it is a
> mobile phone), I got tempted to use more and more the google
> calendar. I know about mobileorg and all this. However, the calendar
> is so highly integrated with many applications on the phone that
Mark Elston writes:
[google calendar]
> I wasn't all that keen on it at first but I really got to like it when
> I was able to update my calendar from my phone or my laptop or my
> desktop at work and all three would see it.
>
> When I found I could create multiple calendars and share *some*
[I replied privately to the my-own-fault OT part.]
Mark Elston writes:
> On 1/29/2011 12:44 PM, Greg Troxel wrote:
>>
>> I think the only tricky part is somehow push UUIDs during scyning, and
>> then you'll need an operation to merge an org event and an ical event
&
I use MobileOrg with webdav, both remote over ssh/tramp, and locally
(two separate setups).
On the ssh one:
(setq org-mobile-directory "/ssh:foo.example.org:/usr/home/gdt/ORG")
(setq org-mobile-inbox-for-pull
(concat org-directory "/from-mobile.org"))
(setq org-mobile-use-encryption t)
(se
I should have pointed out the causes of the two problems the script
resolves:
ssh tramp at least sometimes preserves gid, and the gid on my org
machine is an allowed gid on the webdav server, so files can end up
with my normal gid instead of www.
when mobileorg.org is rewritten by org (a
Richard Riley writes:
> Greg Troxel writes:
>
>> An alternative would be to have a webdav fs on the machine with the org
>> files, and to use that to write to the webdav area.
>>
>
> I'm not sure I parse that properly. Do you mean mounted and owned as
>
Richard Riley writes:
> Greg Troxel writes:
>
>> An alternative would be to have a webdav fs on the machine with the org
>> files, and to use that to write to the webdav area.
>>
>
> I'm not sure I parse that properly. Do you mean mounted and owned as
>
I have just set up MobileOrg to work with my new iPhone, and have the
following problem: I can view the contents of my various .org files,
but "Agenda Views" appears to be empty. I have the weekly agenda view
open when I push the .org files to Dropbox. I am afraid I am missing
somethin
Bastien writes:
> Bastien writes:
>
>> So I naturally thought of something like an "Org Expert mode": when
>> turned off, the UI would *not* give access to complex features
>
> More precisely: the UI would not _display_ complex features, which will
> still be available anyway (of course).
I st
Joost Kremers writes:
> I got an iPad the other day and of course want to try out
> MobileOrg. The MobileOrg setup instructions say to create a folder
> MobileOrg in your Dropbox root dir, from where MobileOrg will read the
> org files. However, I'm already keeping my org files somewhere in my
>
Ghanashyam writes:
> I have had a problem with the org mode calendar export with emacs.
> It looks like org mode uses some uid generation exe which
> generates non unique UIDs. I am not sure why this is to. Even when I
> set the UID format to include the date format. Because of this, the ics
> f
Richard Riley writes:
> org-mobile allows you to use some form of encryption when pushing to the
> MobileOrg directory. Encrypts and works fine. The issue is that the
> mobile app has a password setting to unencrypt but there is no
> protection on the app itelf meaning anyone can read the org fi
I'm running from git, updating every few weeks, currently on
commit c276eeebeecba23913547f62cf4b8122f0e8efa9
Author: Jambunathan K
Date: Wed Sep 5 03:33:16 2012 +0530
(that commit is surely not relevant to my question...).
I often hope to get more done than I do, so I'm often faced wit
Nick Dokos writes:
> Greg Troxel wrote:
>
>>
>> I'm running from git, updating every few weeks, currently on
>>
>> commit c276eeebeecba23913547f62cf4b8122f0e8efa9
>> Author: Jambunathan K
>> Date: Wed Sep 5 03:33:16 2012 +0530
&
Nick Dokos writes:
> Bastien wrote:
>
>> Hi Nick,
>>
>> Nick Dokos writes:
>>
>> > Well, the non-interactiveness and the next day are because the four
>> > items I marked were the last four items for that date, so after marking
>> > them, the cursor happened to be on the date line for the ne
Kyle Sexton writes:
> ** App Store
> A new version of the application has been published on iTunes connect
> and is awaiting Apple's review before being added to the Apple
> store.
>
> Because of encryption export laws, the feature to do encryption
> on org files has been *removed* until I can g
John Hendy writes:
> I installed android privacy guard on the phone, and can verify that
> staged files are encrypted... but I don't see how to decrypt in the
> app. The documentation states
> (https://github.com/matburt/mobileorg-android/wiki):
> -
> Decrypting encrypted org files via integ
It seems that the android version should act like the ios version and
just use the symmetric cipher. Is that hard, or is there some advantage
to the gpg scheme? Or perhaps the android-style encryption should be
supported directly in org?
pgpZvBw3Y611F.pgp
Description: PGP signature
John Hendy writes:
> Does this make sense? If so, this is my reasoning for thinking the
> change has to be on the org side. Alternatively, an openssl decryption
> method could be integrated into mobileorg Android.
What I meant was that it would be nice if there were a single scheme to
encrypt o
The following fix is in org master, but not in 7.8. I am able to use
org-mobile-push.
commit 71089b7e3b00736f854d6e95a52229853262e12a
Author: Bastien Guerry
Date: Wed Jan 4 16:37:59 2012 +0100
org-mobile.el (org-mobile-push): Use `org-agenda-tag-filter'.
* org-mobile.el (org-mo
I often use org in emacs inside an xterm (because the emacs is running
on a machine far away and remote x emacs is piggy about bandwidth).
Several observations:
keys like shift-up sometimes work I think local xterm is somehow
making a keycode and sending it over ssh. So it seems like in
e
I remember people talking about preparing resumes in org, with the
primary target being latex export. I saved a few postings, but hadn't
really paid attention.
Now, I am paying more attention :-) I tried to chase down the
references, but didn't find a full source example, and no pointers on
worg
For a long time, I've been updating org from git every week or two via:
update-org () {
(cd $HOME/SOFTWARE/EMACS/org-mode && git pull && make)
}
and I have emacs pointed at that directory. This is on NetBSD where
"make" is BSD make.
Today, I updated again and got:
make: "/home/gd
I don't really object to using GNU make; enough things require it
(probably emacs does too) that it's already installed. It's more that
"anyone using a makefile will use gnu make" isn't a valid assumption,
especially when the documentation says "type make".
At the very start of my Makefile bra
Note that building org requires GNU make, and that 3.82 is known to
work.
Begin to list the versions of emacs that org can work with. (It seems
clear taht some versions of XEmacs work, but I couldn't find out
which.)
---
README | 13 +
1 file changed, 13 insertions(+)
diff --git a
Achim Gratz writes:
> Could you please state clearly what you want to have changed and
> possibly how? You keep wandering back and forth in your arguments, but
What I meant was:
If GNU make is required it needs to be documented.
Separately from that, the makefiles look much more complica
Bastien writes:
> http://orgmode.org/w/?p=org-mode.git;a=commit;h=0103d1
>
> I don't want to update the README file each time a new version of
> GNU Make is released and known to work.
Understood - what I meant was to have the oldest version that was
needed, but I suspect that while org need
Marcin Borkowski writes:
> On 2015-01-22, at 17:41, Jose E. Marchesi wrote:
>
>> *NOTE* It's about an app which is *not* open source (some parts of code
>> will opened, see below). If you have a problem with that, you can stop
>> reading right about now...
>>
>> Please stop using t
Greg Troxel writes:
> The point here is that the FSF is a charitable nonprofit which promotes
> free software. Their servers have usage guidelines:
>
> https://savannah.gnu.org/register/requirements.php
>
> Basically, helping Free software to work on non-Free operating s
Frank Terbeck writes:
> (add-to-list 'org-contacts-new-address-ignore
>"notifications@github\\.com")
Amusingly I filed a bug with github, saying that they should not emit
mail with a person's name and an email address that does not belong to
the person. They acknowleged that
Eric Schulte writes:
>> Just an fyi: I had to set org-babel-sh-command to "bash" for this to
>> work. Why is "sh" the default value of this variable?
>>
>
> I think sh is more portable, but I guess almost any system should have
> bash as well, I've just changed this default to bash.
(Assuming y
Eric Schulte writes:
> Greg Troxel writes:
>
>> Eric Schulte writes:
>>
>>>> Just an fyi: I had to set org-babel-sh-command to "bash" for this to
>>>> work. Why is "sh" the default value of this variable?
>>>
>>>
Eric Schulte writes:
> Although purely semantically, in my opinion the "sh" in "#+begin_src sh"
> indicates generic "shell-script", not the POSIX sh. E.g., there is no
> ob-bash.el or ob-csh.el.
I see your point. But stepping back, I have always felt that
"#+begin_src foo" referred to a langu
Daniele Nicolodi writes:
> On 27/07/15 13:52, Marcin Borkowski wrote:
>> I disagree. Licensing a tutorial with GPL is a stupid thing to do.
>> A tutorial may contain code which people naturally mimic (or even
>> copy). Such things should definitely be in PD.
[many excellent comments. As a n
Marcin Borkowski writes:
> after a short discussion in a recent thread, I have a serious technical
> question.
>
> Assume that (for some reason) I want to write an Org-mode exporter which
> won't be GPL'd. (Use-case: having written a few custom exporters, I'm
I will assume that you mean "write
Rainer M Krug writes:
> These packages all depend on R itself.
>
> So isn't this the same as in emacs / elisp? Isn't an exporter / .el file
> the same as a package in R, something which enhances the original
> product using a provided interface (the functions) but does not change
> anything in t
Bastien writes:
> | Key | Command | Proposal | Status |
> |---+---+--+|
> | C-c # | Checkboxes| C-c x| Free |
> | C-c ~ | Cooperation | C-c
Viktor Rosenfeld writes:
> FWIW, I think that the copyright assignment process creates a huge
> barrier of entry to contribute to Orgmode and that it's unfortunate
> that one has to jump through hoops like this to contribute actual code
> (whereas other contributions, e.g., documentation, have n
Esben Stien 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.
This isn't what you asked, but I would suggest changing your escape key
and perhaps using tmux instead of screen.
I use org for the usual notes-to-self and TODO - nothing super fancy. I
had been running from master of the git repo, but in 2013-01 stopped
updating, probably because I had some issue. The recent release
provoked me to try again, and this note reports some issues.
I had been running (for no re
Greg Troxel writes:
> Exporting to ical as a single file took a really long time, perhaps a
> whole minute, whereas it used to take a second to a few seconds. The
> resulting export did seem ok.
I timed this. With 6161 lines in 14 org-mode files (about 2175 of which
a
Nicolas Goaziou writes:
> Greg Troxel writes:
>
>> I timed this. With 6161 lines in 14 org-mode files (about 2175 of which
>> are due to PROPERTIES/ID/END), doing a combined export took 88s of cpu
>> time. emacs-23.4.1, NetBSD 6, i386, plenty of RAM, Core i5
Nicolas Goaziou writes:
> Nicolas Goaziou writes:
>
>> Greg Troxel writes:
>
>>> I didn't try to turn this on. My icalendar-relevant settings are
>>>
>>> (setq org-icalendar-alarm-time 10)
>>> (setq org-icalendar-use-sched
I use org relatively normally, with notes, TODO items, and appointments
(active timestamps), and way too many of them scheduled to be done on
any given day. I export all agenda files to a combined ics file and
then stick it someplace I can subscribe to it from non-emacs calendaring
software.
To
Peter Davis writes:
> A while ago, I switched from ELPA to Git as my Org-mode
> source. However, I now have three Macs I'm trying to keep in sync, and
> doing Git updates is definitely more labor intensive. Any suggestions
> for good ways to keep three machines all up-to-date with Emacs and
> Or
Bastien writes:
> Greg Troxel writes:
>
>> My proposal is that C-c C-e should behave similarly to when in an org
>> file, but choices that require an associated org file should be omitted.
>> Specifically, I think the following options make sense:
>> c c (ica
Jeff Rush writes:
> I'm a huge fan of Org-Mode and have tried on and off to use it to sync
> tasks with Toodledo.com. There is an Emacs library org-toodledo for
> this but it has fallen into disrepair and the author of the latest fork,
> @myuhe (Yuhei Maeda) can't be found.
>
> This module seem
(OT about free software and android to run mobileorg, so being brief.)
Stefan Huchler writes:
> Greg Troxel writes:
>
>> https://github.com/matburt/mobileorg-android
>>
>> And there is a fork/rewrite which I didn't know about, but looks interesting:
>
Matthew Pritchard writes:
> The mobile org manual says to create a directory (set
> org-mobile-directory “~/Dropbox/MobileOrg”)
That is not creating it so much as configuring org to use it.
> Can I create this directory with a simple command instead of a lisp
> command?
I am not sure if the d
Carsten Dominik writes:
> I'd hate to see Org removed from Emacs. It took a lot of work to get it
> in, and I believe that the vast majority of Emacs users does not install
> packages. For a newbie to get to Emacs and to be able to open a .org file
> is a big plus. So my vote goes toward keep
Alex Roper writes:
> One other thought, if your only concern with orgzly is Dropbox, you
> might consider an open source alternative such as Syncthing. I used to
> use that on my computers and phone to sync my org before moving to
> termux. By default it does use some sort of cloud locator servic
Marcin Borkowski writes:
> On 2018-09-10, at 09:46, Alan Schmitt wrote:
>
>> I use orgzly, and it works great with syncthing https://syncthing.net/
>
> BTW, in my experience syncthing seems quite flaky. I turn it on on both
> the coputer and my phone, but I'm not sure what to do to start syncin
(Thanks for fixing and your efforts on org. I've been an org user since
at least July of 2010.)
Just to be clear, is this the commit that needs applying to emacs
sources, 29.3, 28.x, and so on? It seems so, but I would rather not
guess. I'm asking on behalf of pkgsrc, where I am managing the re
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