* 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.
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-clock.el (org-dblock-write:clocktable): Return total time.
(org-clocktable-steps): Skip step when time is zero and the
:stepskip0 property is set.
Rainer Stengele writes:
> Creating clocktables for each day of a month is an excellent feature
> in org! Problem for me is that many resulting tables have a total
> time of 0:00. The problem is not really the zero time I spent but the
> appearance of the tables with zero total time.
>
> Is there a possibility to skip getting such tables? Rational: I do
> not need to show my boss or customer days where I spent 0:00 time on
> the project.
Now you can set :stepskip0 to achieve this.
Patch by Bernt Hansen:
> When org-clock-report-include-clocking-task is set we always add the
> current clocking task to the clock report. This is incorrect if you
> are looking at an agenda clock report for a time range that does not
> include the current clocking task (e.g. yesterday or last week).
>
> Now we only include the current clocking task if the clock report
> date range includes the current clocking task start time.
i/q/C-g Ignore this question; the same as keeping all the idle time.
k/K Keep X minutes of the idle time (default is all). If this
amount is less than the default, you will be clocked out
that many minutes after the time that idling began, and then
clocked back in at the present time.
g/G Indicate that you \"got back\" X minutes ago. This is quite
different from 'k': it clocks you out from the beginning of
the idle period and clock you back in X minutes ago.
s/S Subtract the idle time from the current clock. This is the
same as keeping 0 minutes.
C Cancel the open timer altogether. It will be as though you
never clocked in.
j/J Jump to the current clock, to make manual adjustments.
For all these options, using uppercase makes your final state
to be CLOCKED OUT.
Adam Elliott writes:
> I have attached a git patch against master that implements a new
> parameter to clock tables, "tags". This parameter is a tags-query as a
> string and is used to filter the headlines which are consulted when
> building the clock table.
>
> In my search of the archives to see if this feature already existed, I
> found a reference here:
> http://article.gmane.org/gmane.emacs.orgmode/17304
> suggesting it was difficult. The patch is not so large, though, so
> perhaps I am missing something.
>
> My rationale in implementing this feature was to keep track of the
> occasional task item that is not billable, yet still makes sense to
> include in the overall project structure. Of course I could just avoid
> clocking the task item, or manually delete clock lines before generating
> a report, but this feature reduces the chance for error; no doubt there
> are other workflows enabled with this feature as well. I don't make
> significant use of tags myself, but I know many do.
>
> In order to maintain a sensible report, headlines that don't match the
> tag filter may be included if they have descendants that do. Any time
> clocked directly on non-matching headlines, however, is excluded.
>
> Specifying even a simple filter noticeably slows down clock table
> generation for non-toy reports, particularly for clock table reports
> with :step. If there is no filter, though, there is no degradation in
> performance.
>
> Tag filter syntax is the standard one, as described at:
> http://orgmode.org/manual/Matching-tags-and-properties.html
> Only tags are considered at the moment, although I suspect querying
> against all properties would be possible (if even slower).
>
> Examples:
>
> * development
> CLOCK: => 1:00
> *** task 1
> CLOCK: => 1:00
> *** task 2 :must:
> ***** task 2a
> CLOCK: => 1:00
> ***** task 2b :mustnot:
> CLOCK: => 1:00
>
> Note I am using an unconventional but legal(ish) clock format for
> brevity. Clock tables are also pruned to only relevant lines.
>
> [1] #+BEGIN: clocktable
> | | *Total time* | *4:00* | | |
> |---+--------------+--------+------+------|
> | 1 | development | 4:00 | | |
> | 2 | task 1 | | 1:00 | |
> | 2 | task 2 | | 2:00 | |
> | 3 | task 2a | | | 1:00 |
> | 3 | task 2b | | | 1:00 |
>
> [2] #+BEGIN: clocktable :tags "must"
> | | *Total time* | *2:00* | | |
> |---+--------------+--------+------+------|
> | 1 | development | 2:00 | | |
> | 2 | task 2 | | 2:00 | |
> | 3 | task 2a | | | 1:00 |
> | 3 | task 2b | | | 1:00 |
>
> [3] #+BEGIN: clocktable :tags "-mustnot"
> | | *Total time* | *3:00* | | |
> |---+--------------+--------+------+------|
> | 1 | development | 3:00 | | |
> | 2 | task 1 | | 1:00 | |
> | 2 | task 2 | | 1:00 | |
> | 3 | task 2a | | | 1:00 |
>
> [4] #+BEGIN: clocktable :tags "must-mustnot"
> | | *Total time* | *1:00* | | |
> |---+--------------+--------+------+------|
> | 1 | development | 1:00 | | |
> | 2 | task 2 | | 1:00 | |
> | 3 | task 2a | | | 1:00 |
>
> [5] #+BEGIN: clocktable :tags "must+mustnot"
> | | *Total time* | *1:00* | | |
> |---+--------------+--------+------+------|
> | 1 | development | 1:00 | | |
> | 2 | task 2 | | 1:00 | |
> | 3 | task 2b | | | 1:00 |
>
> As you can see, in examples 2, 4, and 5, the time clocked on
> "development" itself is being removed. Example 2 illustrates the effect
> of tag inheritance.
>
> Adam
The `org-clock-set-current' and `org-clock-delete-current' functions
handle this variable. The variable only stores the last clocked in
entry, not the history of clocked in tasks.
Fixes Lisp error: (error "Not enough arguments for format string") when the
task to be clocked in has both a % in the heading due to the [%] cookie and an effort.
The variable `org-clock-out-when-done' can now also be a list of
states. When the TODO state of a task changes to one of these states,
the clock will stop running in that task.
This extension of the logic was a proposal by Ricard Riley.
Skip clocking out when we are clocking in the same task that
is currently clocking but go through the normal clock-in
setup so a modified task name or effort property is
updated in the modeline.
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.
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
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.
Kai Tetzlaff writes:
> i noticed that when using the org-mode clock persistence, the
> stored clock data gets deleted when i start emacs and exit again
> without turning on org-mode in between.
>
> When looking at org-clock-persistence-insinuate it looks like
> org-clock load will only run after org-mode gets started whereas
> org-clock-save will always be called when exiting emacs:
>
> (defun org-clock-persistence-insinuate ()
> "Set up hooks for clock persistence"
> (add-hook 'org-mode-hook 'org-clock-load)
> (add-hook 'kill-emacs-hook 'org-clock-save))
>
> Not running org-mode-hook (i.e. not starting org-mode) thus does
> not load clock data but org-clock-save overwrites any prviously
> saved data when exiting emacs.
>
> An easy fix for that would be to just add org-clock-load to e.g.
> emacs-startup-hook. But this will only work if the code in
> org-clock-load does not depend on any org-mode initialization
> code (or would require loading org-mode).
>
> So org-clock-save should probably check if org-clock-load has
> been running during the current emacs session (or if clock
> persistence was just enabled) and only then save clock data when
> exiting emacs. I tried to add this to the code in org-clock-save:
Now the recommendation is to use clock persistence only for the
history, and to use John's code for resolving a clock that has been
idle (either because the user stopped working or exited Emacs).
(org-clock-disable-clock-resolution): New customization variable that
disable automatic clock resolution on clock in.
(org-clock-in): If `org-clock-disable-clock-resolution' is set, do not
automatically resolve anything. This is does not affect idle-time
resolution, however, if `org-clock-idle-time' is set.
See the new manual section on "Resolving idle time".
(org-clock-resolve-clock): If keeping or subtracting time results in a
clock out at a time in the past, and if the resolution occurred due to
idleness or invoking `M-x org-resolve-clocks', remember that past moment
in time. On the next clock in, the user will be prompted to see if they
want to back-date their new clock to then.
(org-clock-resolve): Do not jump the user to the location of a dangling
clock if the resolution is occuring due to an idle timeout. In that
case there is typically only one dangling clock, the active one, and
there is no value gained by shuffling their windows around to show it to
them. Being prompted to resolve an idle clock should be as inobtrusive
as possible.
(org-resolve-clocks-if-idle): New function that resolves only the
currently active clock if the user has exceeded the time returned by
`org-user-idle-seconds', based on the value of `org-clock-idle-time'.
(org-clock-in): If, after resolving clocks,
(org-clock-out): Cancel the `org-clock-idle-timer' on clock out.
(org-clock-resolve-clock): New function that resolves a clock to a
specific time, closing or resuming as need be, and possibly even
starting a new clock.
(org-clock-resolve): New function used by `org-resolve-clocks' that sets
up for the call to `org-clock-resolve-clock'. It determines the time to
resolve to based on a single-character selection from the user to either
keep time, subtract away time or cancel the clock.
(org-resolve-clocks): New user command which resolves dangling clocks --
that is, open but not active -- anywhere in the file list returned by
`org-files-list'.
(org-clock-in): Automatically resolve dangling clocks whenever a user
clocks in.
(org-clock-cancel): If the user cancels the solely clock in a LOGBOOK,
remove the empty drawer.
(org-clock-idle-time): New user customizable option for detecting
whether the user has left a clock idle. Note: it is only used in this
commit to test whether it's worthwhile to check OS X to get the Mac
user's current idle time. If the Emacs idle time is less than the
value, the user hasn't been away long enough to be worth checking (a
more expensive test than just getting Emacs idle time).
(org-user-idle-seconds, org-mac-idle-seconds)
(org-emacs-idle-seconds): This three functions, in conjunction
with the user customization variable `org-clock-idle-time', return
the number of seconds (as a floating point) that the user has been
away from their Emacs (or, if running on OS X, their computer).
(org-find-open-clocks): New function that returns a list of all open
clocks in the given FILE. Note that each clock it returns is a cons
cell of the format (MARKER . START-TIME). This "clock" value is used by
several of the new clock module utility functions.
(org-is-active-clock): New inline function which tests whether the given
clock value is the same as the currently active clock. Returns non-nil
if this is the case.
(org-with-clock-position): New macro that evaluates FORMS with point in
the buffer and at the position of the given clock. Changes to the
current clock are global.
(org-with-clock): New macro that evaluates FORMS with point in the
buffer and at the position of the given clock. However, changes to the
current clock are local and have no effect on the user's active clock.
This allows, for example, far any clock to be cancelled without
cancelling the active clock.
(org-clock-clock-in): New inline function that switches the active clock
to the given clock. If either the argument RESUME, or the global
`org-clock-in-resume', are non-nil, it will resume a clock that was
previously left open.
(org-clock-clock-out): New inline function that clocks out the given
clock value without affecting the currently active clock.
(org-clock-clock-cancel): New inline function that cancels the given
clock value without affecting the currently active clock.
(org-clock-out): Accept new third parameter `at-time', which permits a
clock to be clocked out at a specific time. Note that no attempt is
made to verify that the clock out time is later than the clock in time.
Bernt Hansen writes:
> If you narrow to subtree when there is a following task the narrowed
> buffer has a blank line at the end. If you are on this line and
> clock-in it starts the clock for the _following_ task (outside the
> narrowed subtree) and not the task you are looking at.
>
> I stumbled across this today because the following task was already
> over the estimated limit when I clocked it in - which triggered my
> alarm sound.
>
> ,----[ test.org ]
> | #+STARTUP:
> | * TODO One
> | * TODO Two
> `----
>
> ,----[ minimal.emacs ]
> | (add-to-list 'load-path (expand-file-name "~/git/org-mode/lisp"))
> | (add-to-list 'auto-mode-alist
> | '("\\.\\(org\\|org_archive\\|txt\\)$" . org-mode))
> | (require 'org-install)
> |
> | (global-set-key "\C-cl" 'org-store-link)
> | (global-set-key "\C-ca" 'org-agenda)
> | (global-set-key "\C-cb" 'org-iswitchb)
> `----
>
> Key sequence to reproduce:
>
> $ emacs -q -l minimal.emacs test.org
>
> | Key | Notes |
> |-------------------------------+-------------------------------|
> | C-n | Go to first task '* TODO One' |
> | M-x org-narrow-to-subtree RET | Narrow to subtree |
> | C-n | Move to last blank line |
> | C-c C-x C-i | Clock in (next) task |
> |-------------------------------+-------------------------------|
>
> -Bernt
>
> Emacs : GNU Emacs 22.2.1 (i486-pc-linux-gnu, GTK+ Version 2.12.11)
> of 2008-11-09 on raven, modified by Debian
> Package: Org-mode version 6.31trans (release_6.31.8.g7485)
Jeff Kowalczyk writes:
> I frequently use clocktables, and always use scope: subtree. The
> default scope is file.
>
> If it doesn't exist already (I didn't find it with grep), an org
> customization variable for this preference would be very helpful.
Emacs recently (when?) changed the abbreviated format for days.
The clock was confused when trying to mach this format. This patch
by Nicolas Goaziou fixes it.
Using :timetamp t as an option in a clock report now allows
insertion of the timestamp for the clocked entry. Timestamps
are searched for in this order: SCHEDULING, TIMESTAMP, DEADLINE
and TIMESTAMP_IA.
This option lets the user customize the notification mechanism.
For example, she might want to use todochiku.el.
This option defaults to nil, hence doesn't change the previous
behavior: if the program notify-send is installed on the system,
use it, and falls back on using (message [notification]) if not.
This hook is called in org-clock-in earlier than the existing
org-clock-in-hook. This is useful for functions that need to
modify the Effort property, for example.
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.
> I just discovered that org-clock-in displays the clocked-in task
> in the mode line, so that I can click it and go back to the Org
> file, which I really like. I changed it to switch to the window
> in which I click, by prepending "@" to the interactive spec of
> org-clock-goto.
Clicking on the clock in the mode line now pops up a menu with
clocking options.
A new command `C-c C-x C-e' allows to set or change the effort
estimate of the task currently being clocked. This is mainly useful
when using an alert notification when the task should be finished.
Based on a patch by Konstantin Antipin.
This patch prevents the org-clock-sound notification and the
"Task'BLAH' should be finished by now."
message when the termination time is reached and the clock is not
running.
Before this patch spurious notifications and messages were generated when
clocking in a task with estimated effort time remaining. After clocking
out the task the remaining minutes would tick by and then the sound
and message that the task should be finished were generated - even though
you are not working on it anymore.
This makes org-clock-sound a little more well-behaved. The clock
sound was only being issued if you were already clocking a task that
was under its limit, and changed to clocking something else. Now each
time you clock in a new task it checks the estimated effort limit and
issues the org-clock-sound if the limit is exceeded.
This patch issues the org-clock-sound whenever you clock in a task
that is already over its estimated effort amount. This allows you to
use the estimated effort as a limit for the amount of time to spend on
a task. Each time you clock in the task you'll be notified that you
are over the limit. This is great for tasks where you want to limit
the amount of time spent (per day, since last repeat) and is a
reminder to go work on something else instead.
This commit changes which time is shown in the mode line while
clocking. Normally this will now be the total time ever clocked on
this task and its children.
However, when the task is a repeating one, only the time since the
last reset of the task will be shown. The time of the last reset is
now recorded in a LAST_REPEAT property.
You can also set the CLOCK_MODELINE_TOTAL property to the value
"current" to only show the current clocking instance. Or it may be
the value "today", to only add up the time spent today on this task.
Other possible values are "repeat", "all", or "auto".
Finally, you can set your default for this property with
`org-clock-modeline-total'.
* nil. No sound played.
* any string, that is not a file. Make a beep
* file name. Emacs tries to play it with aplay, if available.
If not, use standard emacs play-sound-file function.
show notification when time is up.
* Linux only: If libnotify is used - the standard notification
system in linux, then show notification with it.
Note: Additional package libnotify-bin should be installed.
Additionally, use beep if variable org-clock-sound is set.
* If aplay (alsa player) is available, interpret org-clock-sound as
path to the file, which should be played.
This reverts commit 61dfa0c67f.
This wasn't such a great idea after all. There is one case where
this is really annoying - if you are in the middle of displaying
an agenda view with lots of filters active and you change what you
are clocking it jumps away and you lose the agenda view.
This one case makes hitting a dedicated function key that runs
org-clock-goto more desireable.
Move the point to the selected task when clocking in using the clock
history. I find I'm always going to the currently clocked task after
picking it off of the menu and this saves one small step.
This could be optionally controlled by a variable.
Adam Elliot writes:
> Automatically resuming the clock after an Emacs restart
> fails under the following cases:
>
> 1. If org-log-states-order-reversed set to t (default), and
> a state change line precedes the clock line to resume.
> Error message is "Cannot restart clock because task does
> not contain unfinished clock".
>
[...]
> 2. If org-log-states-order-reversed set to nil. Error
> message is the same. Reason: point is placed *after*
> last clock line and so fails looking-at test.
>
This commit fixes the problem, in a slightly different way
than Adam proposed. Instead of trying to fix the old way to
find the position of the clock, we now simple search the
entry if there is an unfinished clock and go there. Since
new clocks are added before older ones, this should be a
safe bet.
Chris Randle writes:
> I have one giant Org-mode file for everything. I frequently use
> `C-c C-x b' to take the current node and show it in a new frame
> with narrow subtree so that I can concentrate on just that region
> of my file. Rather like hoist in GrandView, if anyone remembers
> that.
>
> My Org Manual (6.24b) says "The indirect buffer...will contain
> the entire buffer, but will be narrowed to the current
> tree. Editing the indirect buffer will also change the original
> buffer, but without affecting visibility in that buffer.
>
> I've noticed that, when working in the new frame, changing the
> TODO state of any item within the frame to DONE (when it is the
> currently clocked in item) does not stop the clock. Going back to
> my main frame and doing the same thing there on the same item
> does stop the clock.
>
> I haven't altered `org-clock-out-when-done', and Emacs reports
> its value as t.
This was caused by the fact that markers seem to point to the
base buffer always, so we need to check if the current buffer's
base buffer is equal to the marker buffer.
David Maus writes:
> When I start to clock a headline (C-c C-x C-i) that does not have a
> LOGBOOK drawer orgmode inserts one but removes the indentation of the
> first line below the headline:
>
> Example:
>
> * TODO Do something
> Do this, do that etc.
>
> after C-c C-x C-i becomes
>
> * TODO Do something
> :LOGBOOK:
> CLOCK: [2009-03-20 Fr 19:03]--[2009-03-20 Fr 19:03] => 0:00
> :END:
> Do this, do that etc.
Fixed with this commit, a patch written by Peter Jones.
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.
Clock lines are now by default captured into the drawer LOGBOOK. This
means that, if state notes are also captured into a drawer, they will
be mixed with notes.
Wanrong Lin writes:
My TODO sequence is set up as following:
(setq org-todo-keywords '((sequence "TODO(t)" "STARTED(s!)"
"WAITING(w@/!)" "MAYBE(m/!)" "DELEGATED(g@/!)"
"DEFERRED(d!/!)" "HOLD(h!/!)" "|" "DONE(x)" "CANCELED(c)")))
The state change logging is great, but I wonder whether we can
further improve it:
1. Can we also include the original state in the log message?
i.e.: instead of having - State "DEFERRED" [2009-02-11 Wed 11:38]
we can have
- State "DEFERRED" from "HOLD" [2009-02-11 Wed 11:38]
The message will be clearer, and useful even when somebody edited
the TODO keyword in place without using the "org-todo" command
(in that case, simply looking at all the "destination states" in
the log message does not give us the right information).
This strikes me like a good idea, so I have implemented it with this
commit.
Consider a file with 2 lines:
------------------
**** heading
------------------
Place the cursor at line 2 (where you can type). Then use C-c C-x C-i
to start a clock.
You have now 3 lines:
------------------
**** heading
CLOCK: [2009-02-07 sb 01:06]
------------------
However, the cursor is still placed at line 2, like before. I think
it would be more useful if it were moved to line 3 so that you can
start writing right away, just as before. This saves you the C-n
needed to move again to a blank line.
This commit implements exactly this request.
Daniel Clemente noticed that the clock drawer, when it is created for
the second clock entry, will swallow a plain list item after it,
because it thinks it might be a clock note.
This commit makes this function check for indentation. If the plain
list item is indented less than the last clock line, it will be
assumed that it does not belong to the clocking line, and the drawer
will not swallow the item.
David Bremner writes:
I have a clocktable that begins like this.
#+BEGIN: clocktable :maxlevel 2 :block 2009-W05 :scope agenda-with-archives
Clock summary at [2009-01-27 Tue 17:15], for week 2009-W04.
[contents snipped]
#+END:
Whatever week I put in :block, it puts one less in the title. It
seems actually gather the clock data from the right week, but the
title is wrong? Or I misunderstand something as usual :-).
There was a problem wit the week starting date.
William Henney writes:
If a heading has tags, then that heading's time summary
overlay (shown by C-c C-x C-d) is displayed using the
org-tag face. This looks a bit strange. Is it intended? It
is especially noticeable in my case, since I have my tags
shown in a smaller font.
This is cause by the fact that we use the `secondary-selection' face
here which only highlights but inherits the rest from what is below.
The idea was that these clock times should have the same color as the
headline they belong to, but this idea is defeated when a line has tags
with a very different face.
This commit introduces a separate face for this purpose, so that users
can customize it.
Unique identifiers for entries can now be used more efficiently.
Internally, a hash array has replaced the alist used so far to
keep track of the files in which an ID is defined. This makes it
quite fast to find an entry by ID.
There is now a new link type which looks like this:
id:GLOBALLY-UNIQUE-IDENTIFIER
This link points to a specific entry. When you move the entry to
a different file, for example if you move it to an archive
file, this link will continue to work.
The file /org-id.el/ contains an API that can be used to write
code using these identifiers, including creating IDs and finding
them wherever they are.
Org has its own method to create unique identifiers, but if the
system has /uuidgen/ command installed (Mac's and Linux systems
generally do), it will be used by default. You an also select
the method by hand, using the variable =org-id-method=.
If the ID system ever gets confused about where a certain ID is,
it initiates a global scan of all agenda files with associated
archives, all files previously known containing any IDs, and all
currently visited Org-mode files to rebuild the hash. You can
also initiate this by hand: =M-x org-id-update-id-locations=.
Running this command will also dump into the =*Messages*= buffer
information about any duplicate IDs. These should not exist, but
if you /copy/ an entry with its properties, duplicate IDs will
inevitably be produced. This is unavoidable in a plain text
system that allows you to edit the text in arbitrary ways, and a
portion of care on your side is needed to keep this system clean.
The hash is stored in the file =~/.emacs.d/.org-id-locations=.
This is also a change from previous versions where the file was
=~/.org=id-locations=. Therefore, you can remove this old file
if you have it. I am not sure what will happen if the =.emacs.d=
directory does not exists in your setup, but in modern Emacsen, I
believe it should exist. If you do not want to use IDs across
files, you can avoid the overhead with tracking IDs by
customizing the variable =org-id-track-globally=. IDs can then
still be used for links inside a single file.
IDs will also be used when you create a new link to an Org-mode
buffer. If you use =org-store-link= (normally at =C-c l=) inside
en entry in an Org-mode buffer, and ID property will be created
if it does not exist, and the stored link will be an =id:= link.
If you prefer the much less secure linking to headline text, you
can configure the variable =org-link-to-org-use-id=. The default
setting for this variable is =create-if-interactive=, meaning
that an ID will be created when you store a link interactively,
but not if you happen to be in an Org-mode file while you create
a remember note (which usually has a link to the place where you
were when starting remember).
Org-mode still has a few operations that do not work well when the
first line of a buffer is a headline. One was constructing the clock
table, but this one is eliminated by this patch.
This patch compacts the persistence code. It also make sure that no
variables outside Org's name space are created. Finally, it makes
sure that the resumed clock is not hidden after a restart of Emacs.
Saving the clock history and the running clock could lead to pointers
to non-existing buffer, or to dired buffers of directories. This
patch implements more consistency checks.
It also allows a new value for `org-clock-persist'. When this is
`clock', only the running clock, but not the entire clock history
is saved.
Org-mode produces summaries of clocked items in the form of Org-mode
tables. This patch implements the possibility to define formulas that
should be applied to the clock tables, in order to do additional
analysis.
Formulas for clock tables are supported in two ways.
First, a formula can simply be added by hand to a table. Part of this
patch makes sure that, when the previous version of the table contains
a #+TBLFM: line, it will be copied to the new version.
Secondly, the clocktable definition allows a new parameter
`:formula'. The string value of this parameter will be installed as
the formula line for the table. If a formula parameter is given, it
will overrule any previous formula line.
As a special case, using the symbol `%' as the formula will install a
formula that will compute the fraction of total time that was spent in
a subtree.
In both cases, the formulas will be immediately evaluated after the
table has been created.
So far, Org used either `fit-window-to-buffer' or
`shrink-window-if-larger-than-buffer' without any further checks when
displaying one of its many help and selection buffers. This can cause
problems if the user has set up Emacs to split windows horizontally
rather than vertically, because the window being shrunken then may be
side-by-side with another window, and shrinking the height of one will
also change the other.
With this patch, shrinking a window always goes through the new
function `org-fit-window-to-buffer' which only acts if the current
window spans the whole width of the frame.
Furthermore, this function also helps with compatibility, because it
falls back to `shrink-window-if-larger-than-buffer' if
`fit-window-to-buffer' does not exist, as is the case on older version
of Emacs and XEmacs.
Clock-related data are saved when exiting emacs ands restored when emacs
is restarted. The data saved include the contents of `org-clock-history',
and the running clock, if there is one.
To use this, you will need to add
(require 'org-clock)
(org-clock-persistence-insinuate)
to your .emacs and either add
(setq org-clock-persist t)
(setq org-clock-in-resume t)
or set those options to t in custom.
This patch requires the clock resume patch.
Add missing blank line to changelog