Hsiu-Khuern writes:
> Hi all,
>
> The footnote at the bottom of section 13.1.4 ("Publishing
> action") of the Org manual says that publishing org files to
> the same directory using org-publish-org-to-org results in
> files named like file-source.org. It actually results in
> file.org-source, which is not as nice. I believe the
> problem is in the org-export-as-org function in org-exp.el.
Allow whitespace in code references. Allow the -r switch to remove the
references in the source code even when the lines are not numbered: the
labels can be explicit enough. Note that "-r -k" is the same than no
switch - as expected.
Thanks to Ulf Stegemann for bring this up.
As reported by Ulf Stegemann (09/07/2009) the HTML output
of the example in the manual would result in no number for
the first line. It is because `org-export-number-lines' is
told to skip one line while the line inserted previously
(i.e. "<pre class ...>") doesn't end with a newline.
Many different people want to set many different variables in a
buffer-local way for export. This cannot be done with file variables,
because the Org buffer is not current while the exporter is running.
Lots of variables can be set with the #+OPTIONS lines, but finding
abbreviations goes only so far.
Therefore we have now a general mechanism that can be used to bind
variables during export operations.
a line like: #+BIND: variable value
will bind the variable to value. For example,
the line
>> #+OPTIONS: toc:nil
can now equivalently be written as
>> #+BIND: org-export-with-toc nil
Stefan Vollmar writes:
> taking up a nice suggestion from Sebastian Rose, I want to
> present some org source with proper syntax highlighting. However,
> there is a problem when using "BEGIN_SRC" blocks it seems.
>
> If one puts this org contents into a file "test.org":
>
> * One Headline
> Some Text
> #+BEGIN_SRC python
> print "some output"
> #+END_SRC
> * Another headline
> More text
>
> and renders it from another org-file with:
>
> #+INCLUDE: "./test.org" src org
>
> everything will be fine (beautiful, infact) up to and including
> the print-line - the rest of the org file is not rendered as
> source but interpreted.
This commit adds a new hook `org-src-mode-hook'.
The Hook run after Org switched a source code snippet to
its Emacs mode. This hook will run
- when editing a source code snippet with \"C-c '\".
- When formatting a source code snippet for export with htmlize.
You may want to use this hook for example to turn off `outline-minor-mode'
or similar things which you want to have when editing a source code file,
but which mess up the display of a snippet in Org exported files.
As the export preprocessor removes indentation from indented blocks,
this causes conflicts about interpreting indentation as list
termination. Now the original indentation is stored in a text
property, so hopefully the exporters can make use of this information
in due time.
All export commands now push the result to the kill ring by default.
This is subject to the variable `org-export-push-to-kill-ring'.
Also, this commit adds a new variable
`org-export-show-temporary-export-buffer' which can be used to turn
off the display of the temporary buffer containing the exported text.
Since this stuff is now automatically pushed onto the kill ring, some
people might prefer not to see this buffer.
There is now a new export function, `org-export-as-org', which
basically creates a copy of the Org file with things like archived
trees, commented trees, and trees deselected by export tags,
stripped.
This commit adds:
{{{date(FORMAT)}}} current date/time, formatted with
`format-time-string'
{{{modification-time(FORMAT)}}} date/time of last modification of
file, formatted with `format-time-string'
{{{input-file}}} the file name of the source Org file.
Shaun Johanson writes:
> Consider the following Org file:
>
> * Test
>
> See [[(foo)][FOOBIE]]
>
> #+BEGIN_EXAMPLE
> <foo>: blah blah (ref:foo)
> #+END_EXAMPLE
>
> Question 1)
> In Org mode the link displays as FOOBIE, in the exported HTML it
> displays as (foo). Is there any way to cause the link to use the
> description (FOOBIE) in HTML? If not would this be a useful option
> to add?
This was a bug, fixed now.
Jason Riedy writes:
> I'm trying to change org-export-latex-image-default-option
> to "width=.7\\linewidth" in a file local variable. It's set
> correctly as a buffer local variable, and it's having no
> effect on the export. My guess is that the buffer-local
> property is stopping it as soon as org-export-as-latex runs
> set-buffer.
>
> I can smuggle the value in by adding an entry to org-export-plist-vars
> referring to org-export-latex-image-default-option and pulling the value
> from the plist, but that feels incorrect.
It is actually the correct way to do this, and I have
implemented this change.
Samuel Wales writes:
> I frequently export to ascii without wanting a file to be created,
> especially not in a useful directory, as the files are temporary.
>
> Is there a way to export ascii to just a buffer?
There is now, `C-c C-e A'.
This commit also implements commands
- org-export-as-ascii-to-buffer
- org-replace-region-by-ascii
- org-export-region-as-ascii
which are similar to what is available for HTML and LaTeX.
`C-c C-e A' used to be the key for publishing all projects.
This functionality has now been moved to `C-c C-e E'.
Chris Gray had the idea to have arbitrary blocks turned in LaTeX
environments and HTML divs. These three new hooks allow
implementation has an add-on rather than a patch.
Thomas Morgan writes:
> I just tried exporting an Org file with LaTeX fragments to HTML
> on a computer that doesn't have dvipng. There were error messages
> in *Messages* ("Failed to create png file..."), but this wasn't
> obvious to me at first glance because those messages were replaced
> in the echo area by "Exporting... done" before I could see them.
>
> So I was wondering, is there a good way to make the user aware of
> those errors? Maybe by printing "Exporting... done (with errors)"?
There is now a better error message when either the latex or the
dvipng program does not exist.
Matt Lundin writes:
> If it's not too much trouble, I was wondering if I could
> request the following properties to set export options for
> subtrees:
>
> EXPORT_AUTHOR
> EXPORT_DATE
>
> In addition to specifying an EXPORT_FILE and EXPORT_TITLE
> for a subtree, I often find myself wanting to change the
> date and author lines.
Users can now define custom IDs for use in HTML export.
These IDs are stores as property CUSTOM_ID. When present, HTML will
prefer using these over automatic targets like "sec-N.M".
Some of the standard export options are now defined in backend
specific files. This commit makes sure that building the options
property list will not cause an error because of unneeded (for the
backend) undefined variables.
When exporting to a temporary buffer, images to replace LaTeX
fragments cannot be produced, because there is no useful location
where they can be put. Therefore, these images are not produced in
this case.
In verse environments, line breaks are now enforced both in LaTeX and
in HTML. Centering is now implemented using a div rather than a
paragraph, so that there may be several paragraphs in the centering
environment. Blockquotes now also may have several paragraphs.
If a link is [[#name][desc]], the href wil be exacty href="#name".
So starting a link target with # will indicate that there will be an
explicit target for this.
Hsiu-Khuern Tang writes:
> If I export the file
>
> --------------------------------------------------
> #+OPTIONS: ^:{}
>
> * test
>
> a_{\alpha}
>
> a_{foo}
> --------------------------------------------------
>
> as HTML, I get "a_{α}" but "a<sub>foo</sub>": \alpha is not
> subscripted but foo is. I was expecting both to be subscripted,
> since they are in {}.
This is a bug, fixed now.
Message-mode assigns auto-safe file names to temporary buffers, in the
draft directory. This causes problems when running message-mode in a
temporary buffer with with-temp-buffer. When the form tries to kill
the buffer, is asks for saving it....
This commit turns off the buffer-modified flag and so avoids the
query.
Patch by Nick Dokos.
uuidgen ids may start with a number and therefore are not valid names
in HTML. Therefore we now use and "ID-" prefix for such IDs when
exporting to HTML.
Before, the bibliography will exist inside the outline structure, as
part of the last section. This commit adds code to find it, cut it
out, and move it to a better location.
Links with description not create a note before the next headline that
contains the link. In the text, the description will be shown.
The new variable `org-export-ascii-links-to-notes' can be configured
to turn off this behavior, then the reference will be inserted inline
in the text. If the line becomes too long because of this, it will
be wrapped.
A line: #+MARCO: name replacement text
can be referenced by {{{name}}}. As special cases, {{{title}}} will
reference #+TITLE, and similar with similar lines.
Like TODO keywords before, now also tags each get their own CSS class,
given by the tag itself. Invalid characters in tags are all replaced
by "_" to make sure the resulting HTML remains valid.
Two new variables can be used to add a prefix to the class names for
TODO keywords and tags.
Clock lines are now by default captured into the drawer LOGBOOK. This
means that, if state notes are also captured into a drawer, they will
be mixed with notes.
Wanrong Lin writes:
Right now in the HTML export the TODO keywords have either
class="todo", or class="done". That loses all the face properties
in the original TODO keywords. I think the TODO keywords faces are
important visual aids to differentiate different types of TODO
items, so I just wonder whether it is possible to keep the faces
in the HTML.
This makes sense. This commit adds, to each TODO keyword, an
additional class named after the keyword. For example:
<span class="todo WAITING">WAITING</span>
So each todo keyword gets class "todo" or "done" depending on which
general type it is. And in addition it gets itself as class.
So go to your CSS file and configure like this:
.todo { font-weight:bold; }
.done { font-weight:bold; }
.TODO { color:red; }
.WAITING { color:orange; }
.DONE { color:green; }
Thanks to Sebastian Rose for the multiple-classes trick.
William Henney writes:
Consider a structure like this:
* first
** second
*** third
**** fourth
Currently, if I export the "third" sub-tree to html (via "C-c @
C-x C-e h"), then "third" becomes an <h1> heading, but "fourth"
becomes an <h5> heading. I would rather it were <h2>, i.e. that
all heading levels be relative to the root of the sub-tree. Is
there any way to achieve this?
This was not possible so far, but this commit measures the first
headline of the subtree and applies an offset to all level values.
The id for the footnotes div is now called "text-footnotes", not
"footnotes-text", to be more consistent with other divs used in
Org-mode.
Requested by Sebastian Rose.