Thanks to Neeum Zawan for suggesting this behavior
* lisp/ob-tangle.el (org-babel-tangle-named-block-combination): Block
combination can now take a number of values.
(org-babel-tangle-combine-named-blocks): More sophisticated block
combination behavior.
* lisp/ob-tangle.el (org-babel-tangle-do-combine-named-blocks):
Switch to turn on the combination of code blocks of the same name.
(org-babel-tangle-combine-named-blocks): Combine blocks of the same
name.
Thanks to Avdi Grimm for suggesting this addition
* lisp/ob-ruby.el (xmp): Declaring this function to appease the
compiler.
(org-babel-execute:ruby): "xmp" result option for outputting
annotated source code.
* lisp/org-list.el (org-list-to-latex): the enumerate environment in
latex increments the counter before using it. Therefore, org-mode
should set the enumeration counter to the desired value minus one.
Patch from Darlan Cavalcante Moreira
TINYCHANGE
Fix the format specification for clock tables.
Niels writes:
Bernt was right in that there were more arguments to format than the
format string specified. I guess I must not have noticed that there was
a call to format (all the other times properties columns are 'maybe
inserted' go directly to `insert-before-markers'), and I must have
forgotten to test the multifile case (I never used multifile clock
reports myself).
However, to keep the layout of the table consistent the *File time*
cells should be in the Headline column. Attached patch fixes this by
putting the (empty) properties cells *before* the *File time* cell.
* lisp/org-taskjuggler.el (org-taskjuggler-clean-effort): handle any
effort that is accepted by `org-duration-string-to-minutes´.
* doc/org.texi (TaskJuggler export): Modified the example to reflect
the new effort durations.
The Effort property previously had no unit attached. With release 7.5
of orgmode you can now attach units to it such as 4h, 2d or 2m. This
patch enhances the exporter to accept the same effort specifications.
Note: This change is NOT BACKWARDS COMPATIBLE. Where the exporter
previously assumed a plain number was meant to be days, it now assumes
it to mean minutes. You will have to change existing effort
specifications from e.g. '2' to '2d'. A simple M-x
query-replace-regexp should do.
Hi,
When evaluating shell code blocks in org-babel, the execution seems to hang
indefinitely. The following patch is trying to fix this problem by modifying
the way shell code is send to comint and the way the end-of-evaluation
indicator is looking for.
As I am far from an emacs lisp expert and as the patch modifies the widely use
org-babel-comint-with-output function, it certainly needs some testing. I've
made some tests with shell and R code blocks, but I'm not sure it's enough.
Thanks !
Julien
Fix sh block execution in a session
* lisp/ob-sh.el (org-babel-sh-evaluate) : when sending input to comint, wait
until previous line execution is finished
* lisp/ob-comint.el (org-babel-comint-with-output) : when looking for
end-of-evaluation indicator, search forward for the indicator before searching
forward for the prompt
* lisp/org.el (org-auto-align-tags): change docstring.
(org-update-parent-todo-statistics): keep tags aligned even when
statistics cookies are shifting them.
* lisp/org-list.el (org-update-checkbox-count): keep tags aligned even
when statistics cookies are shifting them.
* lisp/ob.el (org-babel-sha1-hash): Don't modify info argument by
side-effect when sorting result-params list.
copy-sequence only does shallow copies, so if we're going to modify a
sub-list, we need to make sure we copy it first.
* lisp/ob.el (org-babel-result-regexp): Use non-shy group around
org-babel-data-names.
By default regexp-opt returns a shy group around its arguments. But
users of org-babel-result-regexp expect the third match-string to
contain the hash. With a shy group, the second match-string contains
the hash.
Once again, thanks to Mark Cox for raising these issues.
* lisp/ob-lisp.el (org-babel-lisp-dir-fmt): Defcustom for use in
changing how/if the current directory is represented to lisp code.
(org-babel-execute:lisp): More general handling of the default
directory value.
Thanks to Mark Cox for suggesting this change.
* lisp/ob-lisp.el (org-babel-execute:lisp): Setting the value of
*default-pathname-defaults* to either the value of the :dir header
argument or the directory of the containing Org-mode file.
* org.el (org-mode-flyspell-verify): This is useful when using
flyspell with a non-English dictionary, or if some of your
keywords are in another language.
Signed-off-by: Julien Danjou <julien@danjou.info>
* org-exp.el (org-export): Use new compatibility function
`org-activate-mark'.
* org-compat.el (org-activate-mark): New function. Provide
`activate-mark' if not present (e.g. Emacs22).
Emacs 22 misses this function. Defun copied from Emac23's
`active-mark' but removed reference to customization variable
`select-active-regions' which is not present in Emacs22.
* org-bibtex.el (org-bibtex-headline): Don't use equalp at run-time,
compare downcased strings.
Compiler complains about using `equalp' because other than for example
`concatenate' it is not declared 'inline.
Cf. [[info:cl#Declarations]] about the 'inline declaration
...
`inline'
The `inline' DECL-SPEC lists one or more functions whose bodies
should be expanded "in-line" into calling functions whenever the
compiler is able to arrange for it. For example, the Common Lisp
function `cadr' is declared `inline' by this package so that the
form `(cadr X)' will expand directly into `(car (cdr X))' when it
is called in user functions, for a savings of one (relatively
expensive) function call.
The following declarations are all equivalent. Note that the
`defsubst' form is a convenient way to define a function and
declare it inline all at once.
(declaim (inline foo bar))
(eval-when (compile load eval) (proclaim '(inline foo bar)))
(defsubst foo (...) ...) ; instead of defun
*Please note:* this declaration remains in effect after the
containing source file is done. It is correct to use it to
request that a function you have defined should be inlined, but it
is impolite to use it to request inlining of an external function.
In Common Lisp, it is possible to use `(declare (inline ...))'
before a particular call to a function to cause just that call to
be inlined; the current byte compilers provide no way to implement
this, so `(declare (inline ...))' is currently ignored by this
package.
...
Thus other than `concatenate' `equalp' is stored as a function call at
run-time.
* org-id.el (org-id-locations): Fix docstring, remove reference to
non-existent option.
The configuration option `org-id-use-hash' does not exist. Git bisect
and grepping for 'org-id-use-hash' showed that this string never ever
occured more than once, hence it was never there..
* org.el (org-self-insert-command): Use `delete-char' instead of
`delete-backward-char'.
* org-table.el (orgtbl-self-insert-command): Dto.
According to the doc string `delete-backward-char' "is meant for
interactive use only; from Lisp, better use `delete-char' with a
negated argument."
* lisp/org-latex.el (org-export-latex-preprocess): add
`original-indentation' property to footnotes so they cannot possibly
end a list by being less indented than the item they belong to.
Thanks to Mark Cox for suggesting this patch
* lisp/ob-lisp.el (org-babel-expand-body:lisp): No longer wraps
biddies in `progn'.
(org-babel-execute:lisp): Wraps bodies in `progn' as they are passed
to swank.
* doc/org.texi (The clock table): Document the :properties and :inherit-props
arguments for the clocktable.
* lisp/org-clock.el (org-clocktable-write-default): Implement adding property
columns to the clock table.
Patch by Niels Giesen.
* lisp/org.el (org-default-priority):
(org-priority-start-cycle-with-default): Improve docstring.
(org-priority): Throw error when priority is out of range.
Patch by Michael Brand.
* lisp/org.el (org-toggle-heading): region should be considered as
made of full lines, without the last one if region-end is at bol.
Removed unused variables. Refactored and commented code.
* lisp/org-list.el (org-list-to-subtree): if the list is before first
heading and `org-odd-levels-only' is non-nil, the first item gets
two stars instead of one.
* lisp/org.el (org-reduced-level): a level of 0 was reduced to 1 with
`org-odd-levels-only' non-nil.