By default, title, author, date and email lines appear in dark blue
with the initial keywords greyed out. The title is in a larger font
than the others. This is implemented by the following new faces:
org-document-title
org-document-info
org-document-info-keyword
In addition, the variable org-hidden-keywords can be used to make the
corresponding keywords disappear.
Magnus Henoch writes:
> This patch has been sitting in my tree for a while... It's a fix to
> org-map-dblocks, to make it use save-excursion instead of remembering
> position values. I need this since I have a dblock function that
> asynchronously updates dblocks from HTTP responses, and some dblocks
> ended up getting updated twice or thrice.
[...]
> My dblock-write function calls url-retrieve, to asynchronously retrieve an
> HTML page. The callback function I pass to url-retrieve will then fill
> in the information I need into the dynamic block.
>
> So in the following case:
>
> * Find start of dblock 1, store as pos
> * Make HTTP request for dblock 1
> * Go back to pos
> * Find end of dblock 1
> * Find start of dblock 2, store as pos
> * Make HTTP request for dblock 2
> * Asynchronous event: HTTP response for dblock 1 arrives, insert lots of
> data in dblock 1
> * Go back to pos
> * Find end of dblock 2
>
> the last step will actually find the end of dblock 1, if the amount of
> data inserted in dblock 1 is great enough that pos suddenly points
> inside it. (Then it will of course find dblock 2 again, request its HTML
> page again, and thus insert the data twice.)
>
> An equivalent fix would be to make pos a marker instead.
Ryan Thompson writes:
> I have found a bug. When the point is at the end of an empty headline
> and you press M-RET (or C-RET) to make a new headline, it deletes all
> the whitespace at the end of the empty headline first, which causes
> the headline to break. I'm not sure if the correct behavior is to
> leave an empty headline, or maybe just do nothing and leave the point
> at the end of the empty headline without creating a new one, but the
> correct thing is definitely *not* to break the headline.
Patch by Jan Bker.
Jan writes:
> What is this?
> =============
>
> This patch changes the way extension regexps in `org-file-apps' are
> handled. Instead of against the file name, the regexps are now matched
> against the whole link, and you can use grouping to extract link
> parameters which you can then use in a command string to be executed.
>
> For example, to allow linking to PDF files using the syntax
> file:/doc.pdf::<page number>, you can add the following entry to
> org-file-apps:
>
> Extension: \.pdf::\([0-9]+\)\'
> Command: evince "%s" -p %1
>
> In a command string to be executed, the parameters can be referenced
> using %1, %2, etc. Lisp forms can access them using (string-match n link).
>
>
> Where to get it?
> ================
> Either apply the patch by hand or
>
> git pull git://github.com/jboecker/org-mode.git org-file-apps-parameters
>
>
> What's next? / Feedback
> =======================
>
> - Find the bugs. Since this messes with links, a central concept of Org,
> I probably have missed some edge cases; so please test this and
> report if it works for you.
>
> I also appreciate any feedback on code quality or the design decisions
> made. I am learning elisp along the way, so you may be able to write
> some changes in a more idiomatic and/or elegant way.
>
> - Add a mechanism for org-mode modules to add default values to
> org-file-apps, similar to the variables org-file-apps-defaults-*.
> This could be used by modules to define their own extensions to the
> syntax of file: links.
>
> - Modify org-docview.el to use this and deprecate the docview: link syntax.
>
>
> What does it (intentionally) break?
> ===================================
>
> This patch introduces a backwards-incompatible change. If LINE or SEARCH
> is given, the file is no longer guaranteed to open in emacs: if IN-EMACS
> is nil and an entry in org-file-apps matches, that takes precedence.
>
> A grep of the lisp/ and contrib/ directories showed that no code in the
> org-mode distribution was relying on this behaviour; whereever LINE or
> SEARCH is given, IN-EMACS is also set to t.
>
> I decided against adding an additional parameter because that would be
> redundant; the original link as seen by org-open-at-point can be
> reconstructed from PATH, LINE and SEARCH.
>
> I am not that sure if this is the right way to do this, but it seems to
> break as little as possible while hopefully avoiding to add too much
> complexity.
Patch by Dan Hackney.
Dan Hackney writes:
> For paragraph text, `org-adaptive-fill-function' did not handle the
> base case of regular text which needed to be filled. This commit saves
> a buffer-local value of `adaptive-fill-regexp' and uses it if none of
> the org-specific regexps match. This allows email-style ">" comments
> to be filled correctly.
John Wiegley writes:
> I have the following data in my Org-mode file:
>
> #+LINK: cegbug https://portal/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=
>
> ** TODO [[cegbug:351][#351]] Bizcard: Fix Maven build setup
> - State "TODO" from "STARTED" [2010-03-01 Mon 14:42]
>
> Now, in the Agenda and in the Org-mode buffer, everything looks fine.
> I can also use C-c C-o if my cursor is within the #<NUMBER> text.
>
> However, if I'm in the Agenda and I hit C-c C-o, it says 'No match'
> after about a second. Is there any reason I can't open these links
> from the Agenda view?