Bernt Hansen writes:
> I have a monthly repeated task (Archive tasks) that has lots of
> old clock time on it currently but has never been marked DONE
> since the creation of the property LAST_REPEAT_TIME. If this
> task is clocking when Emacs exits and you restart emacs and
> answer Yes to continue the clock - the modeline has the total
> time for the parent task (151:04 instead of the total time for
> this task (5:04). If I clock the task in again the modeline is
> correct.
This skips over blank lines preceeding the next task when archiving a task or
subtree. This allows us to use a keyboard macro to remember the archive key
sequence incantation and skips to the next heading so we don't accidentally
archive the wrong task.
This fixes an issue with blank line handling. Tasks which have blank lines
following them do not include the blank lines -- they are part of the following
task. This moves the point forward to the next visible headline so that if we
repeat the archive operation it affects the following task and not the previous
one by mistake.
When changing the publishing setup, old timestamp files can be left
behind. Forcing publishing of all projects with `C-u C-c C-e E'
will remove all existing timestamp files.
When changing the publishing setup, old timestamp files can be left
behind. Forcing publishing of all projects with `C-u C-c C-e E'
will remove all existing timestamp files.
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
Rainer Stengele writes:
> using org-mode for quite some time now I always look at
> operations (key sequences) I repeat a lot of times.
>
> A lot of times I start a list with an item and immediately
> indent the next item as subitem.
>
> From
>
> - item 1
> - subitem 11
>
> I go to
>
> - item 1
> - subitem 11
>
> via "M-right". Then I always want to change the style of the
> subitem list to "*". I do this via "S-right-right".
>
> I wonder how others work. I would like to automatically have
> changed the subitem list type to "*" as soon as I indent via
> "Alt-right". Next indentation should go back to "-". etc.
>
> Maybe we could introduce a variable that sets the order of
> standard list item types, in my case: "- * - * - * - *" as
> in
>
>
> - item 1
> * subitem 11
> - subitem 111
> * subitem 111
> ...
>
> very special I know but I try to reduce the keypressings as
> much as possible. Any other suggestions?
This commits adds the variable
`org-list-demote-modify-bullet' for this purpose.
Bernt Hansen writes:
> I recently noticed that using SPACE or TAB in the agenda displays
> the task in the other window but all of the drawers are exposed.
> If you fold the org file with S-TAB to Overview or Contents
> display and then switch to the agenda and SPACE or TAB on a
> folded task it unfolds the entire thing including the drawers.
>
> Expanding the file to SHOW ALL and then using follow mode from
> the agenda shows me the view I'm really looking for so that's
> what I'm doing as a workaround right now.
>
> While doing my weekly review of tasks I use follow mode to view
> task detail and the expanded :LOGBOOK: and :PROPERTIES: drawers
> hide detail scrolled off the bottom of the window. My :LOGBOOK:
> drawer for repeated tasks tends to be l-o-n-g and shoves detail
> way down the file (such as my weekly review checklist :) ).
>
> Is it possible to control expansion of the drawers when
> displaying a task from the agenda? The view I'm looking for is
> the same as SHOW ALL from S-TAB. It seems that if the task is
> expanded from the agenda it expands everything including the
> drawers.
Customize the new variable org-footnote-auto-adjust or use the STARTUP
option fnadjust to get automatic renumbering and sorting of footnotes
after each insertion/deletion.
This commit implements better support for publishing the same file in
multiple ways. For example when publishing a Org file both as HTML
and as a plain text or htmlized source file.
It does this by including information about the target directory and
about the publishing function used into the hash that is used as a
file name to keep a time stamp.
Agenda bulk commands on marked entries now can also set the scheduling
date or a deadline. Normally, all entries will be set to the
specified date. However, when writing the change as "++5d" or "++2w",
then each time stamp will independently be shifted by that amount.
This commit adds a new action to the footnote actions:
It allows to renumber footnote marks that have the simple form
fn:N where N is a number. After this action, numbers will start from
1 and increase through the document.
TAB now cycles visibility in plain lists if the cursor is in a plain
list. This corresponds now to the new default value `t' of
`org-cycle-include-plain-lists'. If you want to treat plain list
items as part of the outline hierarchy during cycling of outline
headings (this is what a `t' value used to mean), set this variable to
`integrate'.
- test on line 312 failed because these methods returned a string instead
of a buffer
- requesting 'wget actually executed "curl", with bad parameters
- curl needs --silent, so that progress messages don't interrupt content
- atom parser had code to skip HTTP headers, but these are present only
when using url-retrieve-synchronously; caused errors with curl/wget.
Instead, remove HTTP headers right after feed buffer is populated.