These languages are capable of writing results to file; for several of
them this is their only mode of operation. These changes cause the
languages to return to ob.el either the computed result, or nil, when
they have written results to file themselves. This is in place of the
previous method of returning the output file name as a string to
ob.el.
* lisp/ob-asymptote.el (org-babel-execute:asymptote): Return nil to
signal that the intended content has been written to file.
* lisp/ob-ditaa.el (org-babel-execute:ditaa): Return nil to signal
that the intended content has been written to file.
* lisp/ob-dot.el (org-babel-execute:dot): Return nil to signal that
the intended content has been written to file.
* lisp/ob-gnuplot.el (org-babel-execute:gnuplot): Return nil to signal
that the intended content has been written to file.
* lisp/ob-latex.el (org-babel-execute:latex): Return nil to signal
that the intended content has been written to file.
* lisp/ob-mscgen.el (org-babel-execute:mscgen): Return nil to
signal that the intended content has been written to file.
* lisp/ob-octave.el (org-babel-execute:octave): Return result; not
name of output file.
* lisp/ob-plantuml.el (org-babel-execute:plantuml): Return nil to
signal that the intended content has been written to file.
* lisp/ob-python.el (org-babel-execute:python): Return result; not
name of output file.
* lisp/ob-ruby.el (org-babel-execute:ruby): Return result; not
name of output file.
* lisp/ob-sass.el (org-babel-execute:sass): Return nil if result has
been written to file
* lisp/org-compat.el (org-number-sequence): New function.
* lisp/ob-R.el (org-babel-expand-body:R): Use `org-number-sequence'.
* lisp/ob.el (org-babel-where-is-src-block-result): Use `org-number-sequence'.
(org-babel-current-buffer-properties): Fix variable definition.
* lisp/ob-ref.el (org-babel-ref-index-list): Use `org-number-sequence'.
* lisp/ob-latex.el (org-babel-latex-tex-to-pdf): Use the 2-argument version
of `shell-command'.
* lisp/org-latex.el (org-export-as-pdf): Use the 2-argument version
of `shell-command'.
* lisp/ob.el (org-babel-temporary-directory): variable to hold the
value of the Babel temporary directory
(org-babel-temp-file): replacement for make-temp-file with cleanup
on exit of Emacs
(org-babel-remove-temporary-directory): cleanup function run on exit
of Emacs
(kill-emacs-hook): now includes babel cleanup function
* lisp/ob-C.el (org-babel-C-execute): using org-babel-temp-file
instead of make-temp-file
* lisp/ob-R.el (org-babel-R-assign-elisp): using `org-babel-temp-file'
instead of `make-temp-file'
(org-babel-R-evaluate-external-process): using `org-babel-temp-file'
instead of `make-temp-file'
(org-babel-R-evaluate-session): using `org-babel-temp-file' instead of
`make-temp-file'
* lisp/ob-asymptote.el (org-babel-execute:asymptote): using
`org-babel-temp-file' instead of `make-temp-file'
* lisp/ob-clojure.el (org-babel-clojure-evaluate-external-process):
using `org-babel-temp-file' instead of `make-temp-file'
* lisp/ob-ditaa.el (org-babel-execute:ditaa): using
`org-babel-temp-file' instead of `make-temp-file'
* lisp/ob-dot.el (org-babel-execute:dot): using `org-babel-temp-file'
instead of `make-temp-file'
* lisp/ob-gnuplot.el (org-babel-gnuplot-process-vars): using
`org-babel-temp-file' instead of `make-temp-file'
(org-babel-execute:gnuplot): using `org-babel-temp-file' instead of
`make-temp-file'
* lisp/ob-haskell.el (org-babel-load-session:haskell): using
`org-babel-temp-file' instead of `make-temp-file'
(org-babel-haskell-export-to-lhs): using `org-babel-temp-file' instead
of `make-temp-file'
* lisp/ob-latex.el (org-babel-execute:latex): using
`org-babel-temp-file' instead of `make-temp-file'
* lisp/ob-ledger.el (org-babel-execute:ledger): using
`org-babel-temp-file' instead of `make-temp-file'
* lisp/ob-lisp.el (org-babel-execute:lisp): using
`org-babel-temp-file' instead of `make-temp-file'
* lisp/ob-octave.el (org-babel-octave-evaluate-external-process):
using `org-babel-temp-file' instead of `make-temp-file'
(org-babel-octave-evaluate-session): using `org-babel-temp-file'
instead of `make-temp-file'
(org-babel-octave-import-elisp-from-file): using `org-babel-temp-file'
instead of `make-temp-file'
* lisp/ob-perl.el (org-babel-perl-evaluate): using
`org-babel-temp-file' instead of `make-temp-file'
* lisp/ob-python.el (org-babel-python-evaluate): using
`org-babel-temp-file' instead of `make-temp-file'
using `org-babel-temp-file' instead of `make-temp-file'
* lisp/ob-ruby.el (org-babel-ruby-evaluate): using
`org-babel-temp-file' instead of `make-temp-file'
using `org-babel-temp-file' instead of `make-temp-file'
* lisp/ob-sass.el (org-babel-execute:sass): using
`org-babel-temp-file' instead of `make-temp-file'
* lisp/ob-sh.el (org-babel-sh-evaluate): using `org-babel-temp-file'
instead of `make-temp-file'
* lisp/ob-sql.el (org-babel-execute:sql): using `org-babel-temp-file'
instead of `make-temp-file'
* lisp/ob-sqlite.el (org-babel-execute:sqlite): using
`org-babel-temp-file' instead of `make-temp-file'
(org-babel-sqlite-expand-vars): using `org-babel-temp-file' instead of
`make-temp-file'
* lisp/ob-latex.el (org-babel-execute:latex): adding new ":fit" and
":border" header arguments which both use the "preview" latex
package to fit the resulting pdf image to the figure.
(org-babel-latex-tex-to-pdf): updated to the latest code from
org-latex.el
For some reason ob-R refuses to compile when it requires ob-comint.
When (require 'ob-comint) is not included in ob-R.el everything
compiles without error, but warnings are thrown because the
arguments to a macro defined in ob-comint are mis-interpreted as
functions.
When (require 'ob-comint) is added to ob-R.el then it throws errors
complaining that the last argument to a function is nil and should
be a string. I don't understand this error at all and can't fix it.