Hello,
>>>>> John Hendy writes:
> Suddenly I'm getting a line with nothing but "nil" between the caption and
> the table when exporting from org-mode to LaTeX. I swear this not happening.
> I believe I did a git pull on Friday or some time last week. The only reason
> I noticed is that I just set up emacs, org, and LaTeX on a new computer and
> tested an old file to make sure the export was working. I then checked my
> other computer with what I thought was a fine install and it's doing it now,
> too. I originally thought I missed something on the new computer, but now
> I'm wondering if it's from the fresh pull.
This patch (needed by my own mistake) should correct the problem.
Regards,
-- Nicolas
>From 38a3ae8cf8716af0db87a47a421b6d5af654d045 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001
From: Nicolas Goaziou <n.goaziou@gmail.com>
Date: Tue, 10 Aug 2010 22:43:35 +0200
Subject: [PATCH] Fix empty label bug
* org-latex.el (org-export-latex-tables): Return "" instead of nil
when no label is attached.
* lisp/org-agenda.el (org-agenda-menu-show-match): New option.
(org-agenda-menu-two-column): New option.
(org-agenda-get-restriction-and-command): Implement dispatch menu
without showing the matcher, and with two-column display.
* contrib/lisp/org-collector.el (org-read-prop): added a more detailed
comment, changed 2 if stements to 1 cond to make the code more
comprehensible, added
(condition-case nil
(read prop)
(error prop))
instead of
(read prop)
so, if any error occurs during the conversion of prop to lisp
expression - a string will be returned.
#+source: table
#+begin_src emacs-lisp
(mapcar
(lambda (el) (number-sequence el (+ el 3)))
(number-sequence 0 4))
#+end_src
writes the results out as csv file
#+call: write(data=table, file="~/Desktop/example.csv") :results silent
writes the results out as tab separated file
#+call: write(data=table, file="~/Desktop/example.tsv") :results silent
write the results out as a normal org-mode file
#+call: write(data=table, file="~/Desktop/example.org") :results silent
* contrib/babel/library-of-babel.org: more control over exporting
results to files
On Fri, Jul 30, 2010 at 4:38 PM, Rainer Stengele
<rainer.stengele@online.de>wrote:
> Having
>
> * headline 1
> :PROPERTIES:
> :VISIBILITY: folded
> :END:
> ** headline 2.1
> - stuff
> ** headline 2.1
> :PROPERTIES:
> :VISIBILITY: folded
> :END:
> - stuff
>
> C-u C-u <TAB>
> Switch back to the startup visibility of the buffer, i.e. whatever is
> requested by startup options and VISIBILITY properties in individual
> entries.
>
>
> does not result in
>
>
> * headline 1...>
>
>
> as expected. Instead I get:
>
>
> * headline 1...>
> ** headline 2.1...>
> ** headline 2.1...>
>
>
> removing the second folded propertiy results correctly in:
>
> * headline 1...>
>
>
> This looks like a bug in the :VISIBILITY: handling!?
>
>
>
I am not sure whether this is a bug. But it looks like the above scenario
was not considered initially. I might be wrong.
The attached patch seems to solve this problem.
* lisp/org.el: org-set-visibility-according-to-property ()
Use backward search instead of forward, so that top hierarchy gets
priority.
Thanks and Regards
Noorul
This command jumps to the headline of the clocking task within the
agenda buffer. `org-agenda-clock-goto' is bound to `C-c C-x C-j'.
It is different from `org-clock-goto', which jumps to the currently
clocking entry itself (bound to `J').
http://article.gmane.org/gmane.emacs.orgmode/28415
,----
| From: Carsten Dominik <carsten.dominik@gmail.com>
| Subject: Re: [Orgmode] Change resolution of LaTeX formulas in HTML output?
| To: Bastien <bastien.guerry@wikimedia.fr>
| Cc: amscopub-mail@yahoo.com, emacs-orgmode@gnu.org
| Date: Fri, 6 Aug 2010 12:46:28 +0200
|
| On Aug 5, 2010, at 12:32 AM, Bastien wrote:
|
| > amscopub-mail@yahoo.com writes:
| >
| >> Is there a way to control the resolution of PNG LaTeX formulas when
| >> you export to HTML?
| >
| > I've implemented this.
|
| I would not think that we need this change, the :scale and :html-scale
| parameters do this for in-buffer display and html formatting,
| respectively.
|
| Please revert this change.
|
| - Carsten
`----
* contrib/lisp/org-wikinodes.el: New file.
* lisp/org-exp.el (org-export-preprocess-after-radio-targets-hook):
(org-export-define-heading-targets-headline-hook): New hooks.
* lisp/org.el (org-modules): Add entry for org-wikinodes.el.
(org-font-lock-set-keywords-hook): New hook.
(org-open-at-point-functions): New hook.
(org-find-exact-headling-in-buffer):
(org-find-exact-heading-in-directory): New functions.
(org-mode-flyspell-verify): Better cursor position for checking if
flyspell should ignore a word.
* lisp/org-indent.el (org-indent-remove-properties):
(org-indent-add-properties): Make sure changing these properties does
not trigger modification hooks
* lisp/org.el (org-link-search-must-match-exact-headline): New option.
(org-link-search-inhibit-query): New variable.
(org-link-search): Search for exact headline match in Org files
* doc/org.texi (Internal links): Document the changes in internal links.
Internal links used to do a fuzzy text search for the link text. This
patch changes the behavior for Org files. Here a link [[My Target]]
now searches for an exact headline match, i.e. for a headline that
does look like "* My Target", optionally with TODO keyword, priority
cookie and tags.
The new option `org-link-search-must-match-exact-headline' is
`query-to-create' by default. This means that a failed link search
will offer to create the headline as a top-level headline at the end
of the buffer. This corresponds to a wiki-like behavior where missing
targets are automatically created. If you do not like this behavior,
change the option to t.
* ob.el (org-babel-execute-src-block-maybe): remove check for
`org-babel-no-eval-on-ctrl-c-ctrl-c'; this is done in the new
function `org-babel-execute-safely-maybe'
(org-babel-execute-maybe): new function to execute src blocks
or lob/call lines.
(org-babel-execute-safely-maybe): new function to execute src blocks
or lob/call lines via C-c C-c
(org-ctrl-c-ctrl-c-hook): remove
`org-babel-execute-src-block-maybe' and add
`org-babel-execute-safely-maybe'.
* ob-lob.el (org-ctrl-c-ctrl-c-hook): remove
`org-babel-lob-execute-maybe'
* ob-keys.el (org-babel-key-bindings): New function
`org-babel-execute-maybe' is bound to C-c C-v e and C-c C-v
C-e
This parameter default to 140 and controls the resolution of images
created from LaTeX fragments for HTML output. There is no :resolution
parameter: the resolution of images produced for a buffer is computed
from the font height.)
This was suggested by Uriel (amscopub-mail@yahoo.com).
2010-08-03 Dan Davison <davison@stats.ox.ac.uk>
* ob-octave.el (org-babel-octave-wrapper-method): use dlmwrite
to write delimited text instead of save -ascii
(org-babel-octave-import-elisp-from-file): specify that data
written to file is tab-delimited
2010-08-03 Dan Davison <davison@stats.ox.ac.uk>
* ob-R.el (org-babel-R-evaluate): Specify that tabular data is
tab-delimited
Prior to this we had
#+begin_src R
c("some words", "with spaces")
#+end_src
#+results:
| some | words |
| with | spaces |
2010-08-03 Dan Davison <davison@stats.ox.ac.uk>
* ob-python.el (org-babel-python-table-or-string): Fix
recognition of lists and tuples
Prior to this we had
#+begin_src python
return [1, 2]
#+end_src
#+results:
: [1, 2]
Hi,
I'm starting to work with ob-octave and found several problems:
The first, for which I have a fix (see patch below) is that octave's
output was passed on as a string instead of being interpreted as a table:
[diff removed]
Now this works:
8<------------------------------------------------------------
#+source: test_output
#+begin_src octave :results value vector
[[1 2 3];[4 5 6]]
#+end_src
#+results: test_output
| 1.00000000e+00 | 2.00000000e+00 | 3.00000000e+00 |
| 4.00000000e+00 | 5.00000000e+00 | 6.00000000e+00 |
8<------------------------------------------------------------
(before the patch you'd get a single table element with something like
"1 2 3\n 4 5 6\n" inside).
The second problem is that if I use octave table output as input to
another block, it gets interpreted as a string instead of a vector:
8<------------------------------------------------------------
#+results: test_output
| 1.25000000e+00 |
#+source: check_input
#+begin_src octave :var input=test_output() :results output
ischar( input )
size( input )
#+end_src
#+results: check_input
: input = 1.25000000e+00
: ans = 1
: ans =
: 1 14
8<------------------------------------------------------------
This has to do with the EXP notation. The 'e+00' suffix makes the
whole table into a string. The problem is with "%S" in the formatting
inside org-babel-octave-var-to-octave.
The following patch seems to fix it (and makes it possible to work with
complex numbers inside the tables)::
[diff removed]
A third problem is with org-babel-octave-var-to-octave.
For example:
: (org-babel-octave-var-to-octave '( ( 1 2 3 ) ( 4 5 6 ) ))
: -> "[[1, 2, 3], [4, 5, 6]]"
This is not a 2x3 matrix, but a 1x6 vector:
: octave-3.2.3:1> [[1,2,3],[4,5,6]]
: ans =
: 1 2 3 4 5 6
a semicolon ';' or '\n' is needed between rows instead of a comma.
To sum up:
- 2 patches for prepare-session and importing the results back as
org-tables (I don't know if these patches break anything).
- 1 problem with matrix notation in org-babel-octave-var-to-octave.
I'll try to provide a patch for this today.
2010-08-01 Juan Pechiar <Pechiar@computer.org>
* ob-octave.el (org-babel-octave-evaluate-external-process):
use `org-babel-octave-import-elisp-from-file' instead of
`org-babel-eval-read-file'.
(org-babel-octave-var-to-octave): separate matrix rows with
';', and use '%s' as format specifier instead of '%S'