* org-agenda.el (org-agenda-clock-goto): Use `\C-c\C-x\C-j' for
`org-clock-goto' and `J' for `org-agenda-clock-goto'. If the heading
currently clocked in is not listed in the agenda, display this entry
in another buffer. If there is no running clock, display a help
message.
* org-clock.el (org-clock-set-current): append the filename after the
heading.
* lisp/org-agenda.el (org-agenda-menu-show-match): New option.
(org-agenda-menu-two-column): New option.
(org-agenda-get-restriction-and-command): Implement dispatch menu
without showing the matcher, and with two-column display.
This command jumps to the headline of the clocking task within the
agenda buffer. `org-agenda-clock-goto' is bound to `C-c C-x C-j'.
It is different from `org-clock-goto', which jumps to the currently
clocking entry itself (bound to `J').
* lisp/org-agenda.el (org-agenda-filter-preset): Document the limitation
for the filter preset - it can only be used for an entire agenda view,
not in an individual block in a block agenda.
* doc/org.texi (Agenda commands): Document the limitation
for the filter preset - it can only be used for an entire agenda view,
not in an individual block in a block agenda.
This patch makes some straightforward corrections to a number of
docstrings. Each change is normally to:
- correct a typo, or
- fix up hyperlinks to function or variable names, or
- ensure slightly better conformance with the documentation guidelines
and tips given in the Elisp manual
No attempt is made to provide missing docstrings or document arguments.
Cheers,
Phil
* org-agenda.el (org-search-view): Fixed inclusion of agenda-archives
in org-agenda-text-search-extra-files.
org-search-view lacked a local binding for
org-agenda-text-search-extra-files. Thus when pop was called on the
variable, the agenda-archives symbol was removed and subsequent
searches failed to include the archives.
* lisp/org-agenda.el (org-agenda-action): Document capture key and add it
to the prompt.
TINYCHANGE
A trivial patch to add some documentation for 'capture' to org-agenda (against
HEAD).
* 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.
* lisp/org-agenda.el (org-agenda-get-progress): Avoid reusing previous
value of EXTRA.
Sebastien Vauban writes:
> Finally reporting the following bug. Has been there for as long as I can
> remember, but never did report it when seeing it. And kept forgetting.
>
> So, now...
>
> --8<---------------cut here---------------start------------->8---
> * 2010
>
> ** 2010-06 June
>
> *** Admin
>
> **** Organization
> :LOGBOOK:
> CLOCK: [2010-06-30 Wed 13:30]--[2010-06-30 Wed 17:50] => 4:20
> - DUPLICATED TeXt.
> :END:
>
> **** Emails and News
> :LOGBOOK:
> CLOCK: [2010-06-28 Mon 09:10]--[2010-06-28 Mon 10:40] => 1:30
> CLOCK: [2010-06-30 Wed 10:30]--[2010-06-30 Wed 12:30] => 2:00
> :END:
>
> *** ABC
> :LOGBOOK:
> CLOCK: [2010-06-30 Wed 09:30]--[2010-06-30 Wed 10:30] => 1:00
> - Transfer of files to ABC.
> :END:
> --8<---------------cut here---------------end--------------->8---
>
> generates the following timeline:
>
> --8<---------------cut here---------------start------------->8---
> Timeline of file /home/sva/Projects/ecm.org
>
> 2010-06-28 Mon _________________________________
> Clocked: (1:30) Emails and News
>
> 2010-06-29 Tue _________________________________
>
> 2010-06-30 Wed _________________________________
> Clocked: (1:00) ABC - Transfer of files to ABC.
> Clocked: (2:00) Emails and News - DUPLICATED TeXt.
> Clocked: (4:20) Organization - DUPLICATED TeXt.
> --8<---------------cut here---------------end--------------->8---
>
> As you can see, the fact that I never put a descriptive text for "reading
> emails" is wrongly reported: previous text is used in the timeline, instead.
* lisp/org-agenda.el (org-agenda-get-timestamps): No errors
while getting TODO state.
(org-agenda-highlight-todo): No error when no keyword has
been matched.
Eric Arneson writes:
> I've discovered a bug in `org-agenda-get-timestamps' wherein an active
> timestamp before the first headline causes it to fail. I realize that
> this is probably an error in my use of active timestamps, but there was
> no really handy error message and this bugged me for weeks.
>
> I'm not familiar enough with org-mode to know what the correct behavior
> should be here (it'd be nice to get an error message saying "Don't use
> active timestamps that way!"), but here's an example .org file that will
> trigger the bug:
>
> --8<---------------cut here---------------start------------->8---
> #+BEGIN: clocktable :maxlevel 3 :scope today
> Clock summary at [2010-06-20 Sun 13:09]
>
> | L | Headline | Time |
> |---+---------------------------------------+--------|
> | | *Total time* | *0:13* |
> |---+---------------------------------------+--------|
> | 1 | Track down funky bug <2010-06-20 Sun> | 0:13 |
> #+END:
>
> * Track down funky bug <2010-06-20 Sun>
> :LOGBOOK:
> CLOCK: [2010-06-20 Sun 12:43]
> CLOCK: [2010-06-20 Sun 12:30]--[2010-06-20 Sun 12:43] => 0:13
> :END:
> --8<---------------cut here---------------end--------------->8---
>
> I hope this can help somebody else track down the right place to fix
> this bug.
Bernt Hansen writes:
> I was talking to Jeff Stern about tags todo matching offlist and we
> think the documentation for tags-todo matching can probably be improved.
>
> The description of C-c a M at
> http://orgmode.org/manual/Matching-tags-and-properties.html
> states
>
> C-c a M
>
> Like C-c a m, but only select headlines that are also TODO items and
> force checking subitems (see variable
> org-tags-match-list-sublevels). To exclude scheduled/deadline items,
> see the variable org-agenda-tags-todo-honor-ignore-options. Matching
> specific TODO keywords together with a tags match is also possible,
> see Tag searches.
>
> When I read this I think TODO items is any todo keyword but this isn't
> the case. It is only non-done TODO state keywords. This makes
> tags-todo matching not work for finding tasks to archive (normally
> DONE | CANCELLED keywords in my setup)
>
> Should we explicitly state that 'headlines that are also TODO items'
> does not match DONE state keywords? Or alternatively should TODO items
> and DONE items be separate (and explicitly defined) in the documentation
> -- like org-todo-keywords and org-done-keywords?
>
> I still think 'TODO keyword' matches any todo keyword defined in
> org-todo-keywords and maybe I need to be re-educated :)
Bernt is right, and this patch tries to clarify the issue.
* lisp/org-agenda.el (org-agenda-action): Make `c' key call org-capture.
* lisp/org-capture.el: New file.
* lisp/org-compat.el (org-get-x-clipboard): Function moved here from
remember.el.
* lisp/org-mks.el: New file
* lisp/org.el (org-set-regexps-and-options): Allow statistic cookies as
part of complex headlines.
(org-find-olp): New argument THIS-BUFFER. When set, assume that the
OLP does not contain a file name.
(org-agenda-get-scheduled):
* lisp/org.el (org-time-string-to-seconds):
For deadline and scheduled agenda display ignore the cyclic repeater
when calculating how many days late the task is. If you have a weekly
task and miss the date the agenda view will show more than a week late
now instead of resetting on the cyclic repeating date. This makes it
much more obvious when you missed a repeating task after the repeater.
Thanks to Bernt Hansen for this patch.
Hello, Org mode hackers,
This patch defines a variable `org-agenda-persistent-filters'.
When it is set, filters persist from one agenda view to the next.
I've found this convenient when using tags for contexts like @home,
@net, etc., some of which commonly remain applicable for a while.
Thanks,
Thomas
From 052ef9205845c78cb24d6fea8f89484bbe12a528 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001
From: Thomas Morgan <tlm@ziiuu.com>
Date: Fri, 23 Apr 2010 11:48:03 +0200
Subject: [PATCH] New option `org-agenda-persistent-filters'.
When set, keep filters from one agenda view to the next.
Patch by Matt Lundin
Matt writes:
> The missing piece of the puzzle is integration with "diary" and
> "cal-tex" functions via the org-diary sexp. I have found org-diary to be
> excruciatingly slow when called for anything more than a couple of days.
> I have the following line in my diary file:
>
> &%%(org-diary :timestamp :sexp)
>
> If I try to view 20 or so upcoming days in the diary by typing C-u 20 d
> on a date in the calendar, it can take upwards of 30 seconds to generate
> the diary display. This is of little consequence, since I can, after
> all, simply use the custom agenda command. But I often want to print out
> a nice LaTeX calendar of my appointments with cal-tex-cursor-month. And
> that takes upwards of 50 seconds (see attached elp-results file).
>
> Judging from the elp-results, the culprit seems to be
> org-prepare-agenda-buffers (46 seconds), which is called 31 times (once
> for each day). It seems to me that since org-diary is being called 31
> times in quick succession by the same function (diary-sexp-entry), one
> should only need to call org-prepare-agenda-buffers once.
>
> The only solution I could see to this problem was to add a test to see
> if org-diary had been called less than 1 second ago. Thus, I added the
> variable org-diary-last-run-time and a conditional in org-diary that
> only runs org-prepare-agenda-buffers if org-diary-last-run-time is less
> than 1 second in the past.
>
> With the patch, it now takes appr. 5 seconds to generate the LaTeX
> calendar with cal-tex and org-prepare-agenda-buffers is called only
> once.
Allow C-2 C-c C-w to work in the agenda.
Update agenda after refiling
This rebuilds the agenda buffer after the refile operation completes.
It was removing the to-be-refiled task before prompting for the location
which felt a little strange. While on the prompt you can't see
the task you are refiling anymore since it was just removed from the
agenda list and if you aborted from the refile operation
with C-g then the task to be refiled has already been removed.
org-agenda.el (org-agenda-include-deadlines): Added new
customization variable to determine whether unscheduled tasks
should appear in the agenda solely because of their deadline.
Default to true, which was the previous behavior (it just wasn't
configurable).
(org-agenda-mode-map, org-agenda-view-mode-dispatch): Bind ! in
the agenda to show/hide deadline tasks.
(org-agenda-menu): Added menu option for show/hide deadlines.
(org-agenda-list): Make the agenda list sensitive to the value of
`org-agenda-include-deadlines'.
(org-agenda-toggle-deadlines): New function to toggle the value of
`org-agenda-include-deadlines' and repaint the modeline
indicators.
(org-agenda-set-mode-name): Show "Deadlines" in the agenda
modeline if deadline tasks are being displayed.
Patch by Matt Lundin
Matt writes:
> Below is a patch I've been using to speed up the construction of
> agenda views limited to certain types of entries (e.g., timestamps and
> sexps). Previously, I had constructed "calendar" views consisting
> only of timestamps and sexps by using the variable
> org-agenda-skip-function to exclude scheduled items and deadlines from
> the agenda. This, however, proved somewhat slow (3-4 seconds for
> weekly calendars, 10-12 seconds for monthly calendars). The patch
> below cuts the times to 1 and 3 seconds respectively. I believe it
> provides an efficient alternative to the skip function by allowing the
> user to tweak the arguments passed to org-agenda-get-day-entries.
Patch by Stephen Eglen, who writes:
> Just a small suggestion here. In the agenda, an entry like:
> * <2010-01-20 Wed 09:00-09:30> test
>
> gets formatted as follows:
>
> Wednesday 20 January 2010
> 8:00...... ----------------
> test: 9:00- 9:30 test
> 10:00...... ----------------
>
> the leading whitespace before '9:00' and '9:30' is needed to align the
> times, but having the space after the dash looks odd (at least to my
> latex-trained eyes). Would it be possible to patch org-agenda to put a
> leading zero rather than leading whitespace. With this patch, I see:
>
> Wednesday 20 January 2010
> 08:00...... ----------------
> test: 09:00-09:30 test
> 10:00...... ----------------
This patch introduces a new user option to select this behavior.
Stephen Eglen writes
> Within the agenda buffer, if I type 'i j' to jump to the current date I
> get:
>
> Debugger entered--Lisp error: (void-function org-datetree-find-date-create)
> org-datetree-find-date-create((1 20 2010))
> org-agenda-diary-entry-in-org-file()
> org-agenda-diary-entry()
> call-interactively(org-agenda-diary-entry nil nil)
>
> If I then do M-x load-library org-datetree
>
> and repeat 'i j', it works. Should this function be autoloaded?
Patch by Stephan Schmitt, who writes:
> An error was thrown when all tags of a headline are hidden by
> org-agenda-hide-tags-regexp (in this case the function
> get-text-property got nil as third argument)
Samuel Wales writes:
> I found three places where the lowercase version of a todo
> kw is treated specially in the latest org. For example,
>
> * todo this is lowercase
>
> First, in the agenda, they have a special face.
>
> Second, when inserting an id link, they are removed.
>
> Third, when printing the olpath, they are removed. To
> reproduce, place point at bol on 5 and press the spacebar.
> I expect todo to be in the olpath, but it is not.
>
> Thanks.
>
>
> Samuel
>
>
> * 1
> *** 2
> ***** here are some keywords i like
> ******* todo
> ********* 5
When an agenda custom command has an empty string as MATCH element, so
far this would lead to a meaningless search using an empty matcher.
Now and empty (or white) string will be interpreted just like a nil
matcher, i.e. the user will be prompted for the match.
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.
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.
RET will only do this if the cursor is on the link and
`org-return-follows-link' is set. `C-c C-o' will work anywhere in the
line.
Requested by Chris Leyon.
The following keys now do archiving
C-c C-x C-a archive using the command specified in
`org-archive-default-command'
This variable is by default set to `org-archive-subtree', which means
arching to the archive file.
The three specific archiving commands are available through
C-c C-x C-s archive to archive file
C-c C-x a toggle the archive tag
C-c C-x A move to archive sibling
These bindings work the same in an Org file, and in the agenda.
In addition:
- In the agenda you can also use `a' to call the default archiving
command, but you need to confirm the command with `y' so that this
cannot easily happen by accident.
- For backward compatibility, `C-c $' in an org-mode file, and `$' in
the agenda buffer continue to archive to archive file.
Richard Moreland writes:
> (setq org-agenda-custom-commands
> '(("X" agenda "" nil ("agenda.html"))))
> ;; This seems to break org-mobile-push?
> ;;(setq org-agenda-exporter-settings
> ;; '((org-agenda-add-entry-text-maxlines 5)
> ;; (htmlize-output-type 'font)))
>
> I have the lines above in my .emacs file. When I uncomment the 3
> commented lines, org-mobile-push just hangs after OVERVIEW.
>
> I don't understand exactly what is going on, but if I hit C-g or
> C-c enough I can regain control, but the sync never finishes.
org-habit.el (org-habit-get-priority): A new function that determines
the relative priority of a habit, based on how long past its scheduled
date it is, and how near the deadline is.
org-agenda.el (org-agenda-get-scheduled): Set habit priority using
`org-habit-get-priority'.
org-habit.el: New file, which implements code to build a "habit
consistency graph".
org-agenda.el (org-agenda-get-deadlines)
(org-agenda-get-scheduled): Display consistency graphs when outputting
habits into the agenda. The graphs are always relative to the current
time.
(org-format-agenda-item): Added new parameter `habitp', which indicates
whether we are formatting a habit or not. Do not display "extra"
leading information if habitp is true.
(org-agenda-auto-exclude-function): New customization variable for
allowing the user to create an "auto exclusion" filter for doing
context-aware auto tag filtering.
(org-agenda-filter-by-tag): Changes to support the use of
`org-agenda-auto-exclude-function'. See the new manual addition,.
The default in search view is not that the search expression is
searched for as a substring, i.e. the different words must occur in
direct sequence. The old way is only used it the first word in
the search string is preceded by a plus or a minus.
This was, more-or-less, requested by John Wiegley.
Peter Westlake writes:
> One small thing, though - in the agenda TODO view, pressing "t"
> to mark the task as Done messes up the layout:
>
> [[http://orgmode.org][Org-Mode]]: TODO Demonstrate problem with link
> in category
>
> (which appears as:
>
> Org-Mode: TODO Demonstrate problem with link in category)
>
>
> Press T on that line:
>
> [[http://orgmode.org][Org-Mode]]: TODO Demonstrate problemDONE
> Demonstrate problem with link in category
>
> (which appears as:
>
> Org-Mode: TODO Demonstrate problemDONE Demonstrate problem with
> link in category)
George Pearson writes:
> I have been getting the following message in the minibuffer
> area when marking tasks done in the daily agenda:
>
> Error in post-command-hook: (error Cannot switch buffers in a dedicated
> window)
>
> The item in the underlying org file IS marked DONE, and items with
> repeaters appear to be rescheduled properly. HOWEVER, the log lines,
> like
>
> - State "DONE" from "TODO" [2009-09-07 Mon 10:36]
>
> do NOT appear.
>
> Note I have been using:
>
> org-agenda-window-setup 'other-frame
>
> for some time now, but I notice there has been a recent change
> related to this variable. Could this be the source of the
> problem?
>
> I believe the error message appears on other operations in the
> daily agenda as well, but have not yet studied this in detail.
Many agenda commands split the current window, which is not allowed on
a frame containing a dedicated window.
Therefore, we now just kill the frame by hand when exiting the agenda.
org.el (org-offer-links-in-entry): Don't use "Select link" as a prompt
in the temporary window.
org-agenda.el (org-agenda-bulk-mark): Use a slightly soberer prefix for
marked entries in the agenda view.
> > New mode to show some entry body text in the agenda
> > ----------------------------------------------------
> > There is now a new agenda sub-mode called
> > `org-agenda-entry-text-mode'. It is toggled with the `E' key.
> > When active, all entries in the agenda will be accompanied by a
> > few lines from the outline entry. The amount of text can be
> > customized with the variable `org-agenda-entry-text-maxlines'.
>
>
> this already avoids displaying drawer lines.
> I also see lines like:
>
> - State "DONE" from "WARTEN" [2009-08-04 Di 16:19]
> - State "DONE" from "WARTEN" [2009-07-02 Do 09:43]
> ...
>
> and in my remeber templates I always create lines like:
>
> created: [2009-08-03 Mo 11:46]
>
> with the creation date of the entry.
> Would it be possible and make sense to set up a variable for a
> regexp to exclude lines like the ones above from showing?
This commit sets up such a variable, and also a hook.
The category can contain a bracket link. This commit makes sure that
the prefix in the agenda looks OK if there is a link, and that the
link is accessible with `C-c C-o 0'.
Peter Westlake writes:
> This is quite obscure, and an odd corner case, but here it is.
>
> If you have an item which is:
>
> - a TODO
> - scheduled
> - ordered
> - blocked by a child TODO
>
> then it leaves an empty line in the agenda.
>
> Here's a test case:
> ,----
> | * Press t r on this line in the agenda
> | SCHEDULED: <2009-09-02 Wed>
> | :PROPERTIES:
> | :ORDERED: t
> | :END:
> | *** TODO Report invisible scheduled items
> `----
>
> C-a a a will show an agenda with "Scheduled: Press t r ...".
> Press "t" on that line to add a TODO.
> Press "r" to redisplay, and see the line go blank.
>
> Peter.
Henry Atting writes:
> If org agenda is displayed in an other frame then windows aren*t
> restored when quitting, I have to kill the frame manually. I
> really would like it to behave like e.g. gnus-other-frame which
> automatically kills his frame on quitting.
The new keys are b and f. This used to be on the cursor keys, but
they do now again do cursor motion.
This is a significant change in the UI, I hope this will not cause too
many problems.
Fix bulk refiling in the agenda due to commit
9ec5529 (Fix jumping to last refile location in agenda, 2009-08-20)
This restores the original behaviour.
This bug was caused by commit
8c177dc832, and reported by Matt
Lundin. The problem was that this commit tried to remove the text
propertes of the MATCH part of an agenda command. However, in block
commands, the MATCH part is not a string.
New variable `org-agenda-skip-scheduled-if-deadline-is-shown' to avoid
that a entry shows up in the agenda for today for both a scheduling
and a deadline entry. See the docstring of the variables for more
details.
Bernt Hansen writes:
> Every so often I run into a situation where bulk refiling
> doesn't work anymore.
>
> I currently have 15 items in my refile.org file that I want
> to refile to other locations. I marked a few of them and
> bulk refiled them just fine. Then I marked a few more and B
> r fails with "Cannot find entry for marker #<marker at
> 297156 in norang.org>"
>
> I think this happens when I mark multiple tasks in the same
> subtree (i.e. the parent and a sibling) and refile both to
> the same location. After that it gets confused.
>
> If I have a task like this in refile.org
>
> #+FILETAGS: REFILE
> * Test
> ** Test 2
>
> and run a tags match on REFILE I see both tasks. Mark both
> with m in the agenda and B r to some other location. It
> refiles the first (and this moves the sibling too) and then
> it's broken after that.
>
> I get the following backtrace
>
> Debugger entered--Lisp error: (error "Cannot find entry for
> marker #<marker at 297156 in norang.org>")
Indeed the happens because, when a parent gets refiled or
achieved, any entries corresponding to its children are
removed from the agenda.
We address this issue by
- sorting the markers, to make sure parents will be handled
before children
- No longer throwing an error when a bulk action entry no
longer is present in the agenda - most likely it was taken
care of together with its parent.
This commit defines three new functions in org-timer.el:
- org-timer-set-timer, bound to `C-c C-x ;' in Org buffers
and to `;' in Org agenda buffers. This function sets a
timer for the headline the cursor is currently it. Up to
three timers can be set.
- org-timer-show-remaining-time: this shows the remaining
time for the last set timer.
- org-timer-reset-timers: this reset all timers.
This functionality was requested by Samuel Wales and emulates
that of tea-time.el -- see the emacswiki doc about tea-time.el:
http://www.emacswiki.org/emacs/tea-time
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 implements refiling directly from the agenda.
It also implements a mechanism for selecting a number of entries in
the agenda and then executing a command on all of them. Possible
actions include archive, refile, todo state setting, and more.
When the agenda buffer for an agenda series is created, this was so
far done without the options of the custom agenda command in place.
This meant that some options would not take effect, because the only
place where that did would have an effect was during creation of that
buffer.
This commit makes sure that the global options of an agenda series are
in fact in place when the buffer is created.
Nicolas Goaziou writes:
> As I was saying in anoter post, it looks like there's something
> weird happening when using C-k in agenda view:
>
> 1. Create two new remember entries (i.e. test and test2) with the
> same tag (I used @office)
> 2. Narrow down the agenda view to only see the @office entries.
> 3. Kill the last but one entry (it should be "test") : both of
> "test" and "test2" disappear frow the view. Actually, "test2" is
> not properly killed, but it is scary nonetheless.
>
> It only happens with two last entries.
>
> Is anyone able to reproduce this ?
Peter Frings writes:
> Good day, org-ers
>
> I have seen a *small* problem in the Agenda's log mode.
>
> Org-mode version 6.26d
> GNU Emacs 22.3.1 (i386-apple-darwin9.5.0, Carbon Version 1.6.0) of 2008-11-01
>
>
> I have this in time-sheets.org:
>
>
> * Project AI
> ** Enhancement PT <2009-04-30 Thu 10:00-11:00 +1w>
> CLOCK: [2009-05-14 Thu 09:55]--[2009-05-14 Thu 10:45] => 0:50
>
>
> But, the Agenda shows this:
>
> Day-agenda (W20):
> Thursday 14 May 2009
> 9:00...... ----------------
> planning: 9:12- 9:55 Clocked: (0:43) BUSY Notifications
> time-sheet: 10:00-11:00 Clocked: (0:50) Enhancement PT
> time-sheet: 10:00-11:00 Enhancement PT
> 10:00...... ----------------
> 11:00...... ----------------
>
He is right. Progress lines should never take their
time from the headline, always only from the triggering line.
Benjamin Andresen writes:
> I was curious as to why a value such log-mode wasn't customizable
> to be run on start-up as follow-mode and clock-report-mode are.
>
> If Carsten thinks this is a good idea, I've attached a patch that
> may shave of 5 seconds of him adding it. It applies cleanly to
> current git HEAD.
This commit applies Beanjamin's patch
Tassilo Horn writes:
> I have this entry in an org-file.
>
> --8<---------------cut here---------------start------------->8---
> ** bung Grundlagen der Softwaretechnik (B 016) :teaching:
> <2009-04-22 Wed 08:30-10:00 +1w>
> <2009-04-29 Wed 10:15-11:45> (Fr Hannes bernehmen)
> --8<---------------cut here---------------end--------------->8---
>
> I expect it to be displayed every wednesday after 2009-04-22
> for 08:30-10:00 and on 2009-04-29 it should be displayed
> twice: one at the usual time and one for 10:15-11:45.
>
> But the agenda shows only the regular entry (08:30-10:00)
> and omitts the exception. If I reorder the timestamps, so
> that the exception comes first, only the exception will be
> shown on 2009-04-29. Every other wednesday shows the
> regular repeater date.
>
> What do I have to do to make that entry showing up twice on
> 29th April?
This commit adds a new option
`org-agenda-skip-additional-timestamps-same-entry'. When set
to t, an entry that has multiple active time stamps will get
multiple lines in the agenda.
If the trigger for a log mode entry in the agenda has notes, for
example a note associated with a state change or with a clock entry,
the first line of the notes will now be added to the logbook entry.
You can turn this off the with new variable
`org-agenda-log-mode-add-notes'.
During secondary agenda filtering, pressing "?" now will install a
filter that selects entries which do not have an effort defined.
This new model was necessary because we needed to stop interpreting
entries with no effort defines as 0 effort. This was inconsistent,
because for normal agenda sorting, the treatment of these entries
depends on the variable `org-sort-agenda-noeffort-is-high'. Now this
variable is also respected during filtering.
The new variable `org-agenda-cmp-user-defined' can contain a function
to test how two entries should be compared during sorting.
user-defined-up and user-defined-down can then be part of any sorting
strategy.
The new variable `org-agenda-search-headline-for-time' also turned off
time searching for diary items as an unwanted side-effect. This
commit makes sure that diary entries are always parsed for a time.
Harri Kiiskinen writes:
> It seems that org-use-tag-inheritance set to regexp, the use of
> #+FILETAGS: and org-todo-list do not work together. It seems, that a
> regexp in org-use-tag-inheritance matching a tag set in #+FILETAGS
> causes this error:
>
> Debugger entered--Lisp error: (wrong-type-argument stringp nil)
> string-match("^ +" nil)
> [...]
> when org-use-tag-inheritance is set to regexp "te"
> with this file:
>
> --------
> #+STARTUP:
> #+FILETAGS: tea
> * TODO testing :test:
> ** TODO too :data:
> -----
>
> When the regexp is "tes", so that the FILETAG does not match,
> org-todo-list produces a correct list.
This is indeed a bug. The all to `org-get-tags-at' does change the
match data if there is a match for the inheritance regexp. This
problem is now avoided by first extracting (match-string 1), and then
getting the tags.
Studying this bug also exposed another one, namely that file tags are
not marked as inherited tags. This is now fixed, immediately when
the #+FILETAGS line is parsed.
Items are listed in the agenda sometimes in bright colors, to draw
attention to important tasks or deadlines. When such an item is
switched to DONE, the state change is reflected by the new TODO
keyword, but the line itself might still be bright. Org de-emphasizes
the line by changing the face of the line. It used to change it to
the face `org-done', but now we use a new, independent face
`org-agenda-done'.
This commit implements an important change: When, during a
stuck-project search, a project tree is identified as not stuck, so
far the search would continue after the end of the project tree. From
now on, the search continues in the subtree, so that stuck subprojects
can still be identified.
> Feature Request: that the pdf saved automatically from agenda be
> immediately displayed
> The saving of a pdf is a really nice feature. I had hacked
> org-agenda, I think, to automatically do this. However, it would
> be nicer if immediate display were optional. I don't know
> whether \C-u makes sense as a prefix to saving a file with \C-x
> \C-w. Perhaps not.
Why not, C-c C-x C-w is a fine idea for this. It should now work.
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.