Avoid closing the currently clocking entry when clocking in the same task
again. Leave the clock entry open until some other task is clocked in.
This allows us to clock in tasks with hooks that are called frequently without
generating lots of short sequential clock entries for the same task.
Patch by Bernt Hansen.
Modified by Carsten
Scot Beker writes:
> I cite my references in org like
> this.\autocite[231]{bibtexkey_2009}, where '231' is the
> relevant page number. When exporting to LaTeX, Org thinks
> that the value in square brackets is a footnote number and
> produces a document with a "footnote definition not found:
> 231" error message at the bottom of the document. My
> settings are below, and I've searched pretty hard through
> them to look for anything that might have caused it. Any
> ideas?
Lukas Stelmach writes:
> Isn't it wrong when a note like this:
>
> * A very interesting meeting 11:15-12:00
> <2009-11-30 Mon>--<2009-12-01 Tue>
>
> Shows up in the agenda time gird only on monday while being untimed on
> tuesday? To make it right I do
>
> * A very interesting meeting
> <2009-11-30 Mon 11:15>--<2009-11-30 Mon 12:00>
> <2009-12-01 Tue 11:15>--<2009-12-01 Tue 12:00>
>
> or simply
>
> * A very interesting meeting 11:15-12:00
> <2009-11-30 Mon>
> <2009-12-01 Tue>
>
> Which works but doesn't show the recurrence counter.
Ian Barton writes:
> I am not sure if this is intended behaviour or not.
> If I start a new document with no headings and type:
>
> - item 1
>
> then press M_Ret, I get:
>
> - item 1
> *
>
> If my document is like:
>
> * Heading
> - item 1
>
> M-Ret works as expected.
If there was a title set for a column, org-agenda-colview-summarize would look
for the title instead of the property, resulting in empty summaries. This is now
fixed.
Francesco Pizzolante writes:
> Exporting multiple references to the same footnote to LaTeX lead to a wrong
> generated code.
>
> The following example:
>
> --8<---------------cut here---------------start------------->8---
> * Title
> This is my text[fn:1:This is my footnote.]. And another one[fn:1].
> --8<---------------cut here---------------end--------------->8---
>
> Will produce the following LaTeX code:
>
> --8<---------------cut here---------------start------------->8---
> \section{Title}
> \label{sec-1}
>
> This is my text\footnote{This is my footnote. }. And another one\$$^{1}$\$.
> --8<---------------cut here---------------end--------------->8---
>
> The correct code should be:
>
> --8<---------------cut here---------------start------------->8---
> \section{Title}
> \label{sec-1}
>
> This is my text\footnote{This is my footnote. }. And another one$^{1}$.
> --8<---------------cut here---------------end--------------->8---
Bernt Hansen writes:
> When org-agenda-diary-file is set to a special org file for diary
> entries and transient mark mode is enabled 'i' in the agenda fails
> with 'mark is not active now'
>
> My workaround for this is C-SPC to set the mark anywhere legal in the
> agenda display (ie not on the first or last line) and then hit 'i'
> to insert my diary entries.
Matt Lundin writes:
> The new org-agenda-diary-entry looks quite convenient.
>
> Would it be possible to add an option to bypass the date tree so as to
> add each new appointment as a simple first level heading? I prefer to
> keep my appointments organized by project and/or category and have no
> real use for the date tree. Ideally, new appointments would appear as
> first level headlines in the org-agenda-diary-file (i.e., my inbox),
> ready to be refiled.
Bernt Hansen writes:
> The org-agenda multi-occur search command (C-c a /) does not return
> results on buffers that are currently narrowed if the search would
> normally match outside the narrowed region. This prevents possible
> matches from being displayed.