When a note is taken, the new drawer is created before the note is
taken. Now the drawer is removed again if the note gets aborted and
if the drawer is empty.
Anupam Sengupta writes:
> I routinely use time ranges (and occasionally time-stamp ranges)
> in my org files to document the scheduled block of time for a
> meeting or activity. As an example, I will mark meetings as:
>
> * A Meeting
> <2009-03-12 Thu 10:00-11:00>
>
> As often happens with meetings, rescheduling needs to be done and
> I use S-<up> or S-<down> on the time-stamp to make the
> modifications. While this works fine, it usually leads to a
> duplication when the *time* part of the time-stamp needs to be
> changed.
>
> For the same example above, if the time-block has now changed to
> 11:00-12:00, then I need to do S-<up> on both the "10:00" and the
> "11:00" string. I.e,
>
>
> * A Meeting
> <2009-03-12 Thu 11:00-11:00>
> ^
> +---------------- After the first S-<up>
>
> * A Meeting
> <2009-03-12 Thu 11:00-12:00>
> ^
> +---------------- After the second S-<up>
>
> Can we have a feature (with a toggle option perhaps) which would
> *move* the block (i.e., both time entries) by the same amount
> when either one is moved in the same direction. I.e., the
> proposal is to have:
>
> * A Meeting
> <2009-03-12 Thu 11:00-12:00>
> ^ ^
> | |
> | +---------- Automatically shifted
> +---------------- After the S-<up>
This is in fact how changing time works in many applications, and
it does make sense here as well. The commits implements this
change.
It also implements a way to change the start time of an entry from
the agenda. The date is normally changed with S-right/left.
Now, if you add a C-u prefix, the hour will be changed. If you
immediately press S-right/left again, hours will continue to be
changed.
A double prefix will do the same for minutes.
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.
Installation of info files works differently in Debian. There is now
a new Makefile target `install-info-debian' to handle this, and this
fact is mentioned in the manual as well.
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.
Wanrong Lin writes:
> Suppose I have an org file with following lines:
>
> * Test1
> Test2
>
> Now if I put the cursor at the beginning of the "Test2" line and
> press "M-S-RET" (Alt-Shift-Return on my machine), I got this:
>
> * Test1
> * Test2TODO
>
> The "TODO" keyword was inserted at the end instead of the
> beginning of the task text. This seems a bug to me.
Yes, this is a bug that occurs in the special case when the
heading stars are inserted in front of an existing line. The
commit adds code to make sure the correct position is used.
The default for the sitemap file was "index.org" which is really
terrible because it will overwrite the index.html file. Now the
default is "sitemap.org".
Adam Elliott writes:
> When run in day-step mode, the clocktable header line for each day's
> table contains an active timestamp. I figure it should be an inactive
> timestamp, since otherwise I get a junk entry in the agenda each day
> (whatever heading was previous to the clocktable).
>
> I'm talking about the output from a spec such as the following:
>
> #+BEGIN: clocktable :block thisweek :step day
This commit is the patch Adam sent in.
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.
Running a command that would use the tag scanner could suffer a large
slow-down when many entries match, because the tag list with
inheritance forces each matching entry to walk the hierarchy.
Now, it is possible to avoid this penalty by using the variable
`org-scanner-tags', or by binding the `org-trust-scanner-tags' to t
around calls to `org-get-tags-at' and `org-entry-properties' when
retrieving tags and properties for the current entry in the
scanner/mapper.