* lisp/ob-tangle.el (org-babel-post-tangle-hook): adding hook which
can be used to call functions from inside of code files tangled by
org-babel-tangle
(org-babel-tangle): added call to org-babel-post-tangle-hook
* lisp/ob-exp.el (org-export-babel-evaluate): customization variable
which can be used to inhibit the evaluation of code blocks on export
(org-babel-exp-results): code block evaluation is now contingent on
the value of org-export-babel-evaluate
* lisp/ob.el (org-babel-default-header-args): Added (:tangle . "no")
to the default header arguments. This is already the intended
behavior, but it's better to be more explicit about such things.
* org-feed.el (org-feed-unescape, org-feed-parse-atom-feed): Load XML
library if necessary.
Function that use xml.el must require 'xml to make sure it is loaded
at runtime.
* lisp/org-beamer.el (org-beamer-amend-header): Put extra header
last in header.
Tassilo Horn writes:
> I'm doing a LaTeX beamer presentation with org. The org doc starts with
> these lines:
>
> --8<---------------cut here---------------start------------->8---
> #+STARTUP: beamer
> #+LaTeX_CLASS: beamer
> #+TITLE: Implementieren, Integrieren, Installieren
> #+AUTHOR: Tassilo Horn
> #+EMAIL: horn@uni-koblenz.de
> #+LANGUAGE: de
> #+BEAMER_FRAME_LEVEL: 2
> #+LaTeX_CLASS_OPTIONS: [presentation]
> #+BEAMER_HEADER_EXTRA: \usetheme[secheader]{Boadilla} \institute{Universitt Koblenz, IST}
> --8<---------------cut here---------------end--------------->8---
>
> In the presentation, the in Universitt is printed as an A with a ~ on
> top, followed by a d'. The reason is that the BEAMER_HEADER_EXTRA is
> put before the input encoding declaration. To be clear, org produces a
> TeX file that starts with
>
> --8<---------------cut here---------------start------------->8---
> % Created 2010-07-06 Tue 08:57
> \documentclass[presentation]{beamer}
> \usetheme[secheader]{Boadilla} \institute{Universitt Koblenz, IST}
> \usepackage[utf8]{inputenc}
> \usepackage[T1]{fontenc}
> --8<---------------cut here---------------end--------------->8---
>
> but it should be at least:
>
> --8<---------------cut here---------------start------------->8---
> % Created 2010-07-06 Tue 08:57
> \documentclass[presentation]{beamer}
> \usepackage[utf8]{inputenc}
> \usetheme[secheader]{Boadilla} \institute{Universitt Koblenz, IST}
> \usepackage[T1]{fontenc}
> --8<---------------cut here---------------end--------------->8---
>
> In general, I'd say that it would be even more safe to put the extra
> headers below all default headers.
Org-publish: correctly find files in projects which didn't define a base-extension.
Previously, (org-publish-get-project-from-filename "~/org/file.org") would return nil because the constructed regular expression "^/home/dc/org/.+\\.\\(\\)$" required a dot at the end.
#+BEGIN_QUOTE
#+END_QUOTE
* org-exp-blocks.el (org-export-blocks-format-ditaa)
(org-export-blocks-format-dot): Remove text properties of body before
calculating cache hash.
Otherwise one and the same ditta/graphviz image has a different hash
depending on the text properties of the body.
E.g. `org-export-region-as-html' with target buffer 'string passed the
body of the block without possible indentation property `wrap-prefix'
while `org-export-as-html' does.
* lisp/org-capture.el (org-capture-templates): Allow the template
to come from a file or function call.
(org-capture-place-entry): Get the template from file or function.
* org-agenda.el (org-agenda-bulk-action): Don't create marker for
position if target is entire file.
If the target of a bulk refile operation is the entire file,
`org-refile-get-location' returns nil for the refile position.
Creating a marker for the target file's buffer at position nil returns
a marker that points nowhere (Cf. GNU Emacs Lisp Reference Manual,
31.6). `org-refile' adds headings to level 1 if the target position
for the target file is nil -- and hence a marker that points nowhere
is not nil, tries to jump to nowhere.
from the comments of the new file
This software provides EMACS org-babel export support for message
sequence charts. The mscgen utility is used for processing the
sequence definition, and must therefore be installed in the system.
Mscgen is available and documented at
http://www.mcternan.me.uk/mscgen/index.html
This code is directly inspired by Eric Schulte's ob-dot.el
Example:
msc {
A,B;
A -> B [ label = "send message" ];
A <- B [ label = "get answer" ];
}
Header for alternative file type:
This differs from most standard languages in that
1) there is no such thing as a "session" in mscgen
2) we are generally only going to return results of type "file"
3) we are adding the "file" and "filetype" header arguments
4) there are no variables
* lisp/ob.el (org-babel-confirm-evaluate): adding a new :eval header
argument which can be used to control evaluation
* doc/org.texi (eval): adding documentation for the new :eval header
argument