* org-footnote.el (org-footnote-create-definition): Place Footnotes
section before message-signature-separator also in modes derived
from message-mode.
* lisp/org-list.el (org-list-top-point-with-indent,
org-list-bottom-point-with-indent): Pay also attention to
'original-indentation property of text, as blocks are put to column
0 upon exporting.
* lisp/ob.el (org-babel-remove-temporary-directory): Handle exception
with message informing of failure to remove directory.
Thanks to Antti Kaihola for the bug report:
http://thread.gmane.org/gmane.emacs.orgmode/34394
From: Antti Kaihola <akaihola <at> gmail.com>
Subject: Can't close Emacs+org-mode if /tmp and /home on different partitions
Newsgroups: gmane.emacs.orgmode
Date: 2010-12-02 08:33:28 GMT (6 days, 1 hour and 22 minutes ago)
I have /tmp on my root partition and a separate partition for /home.
When trying to close an Emacs session which is using org-mode, I get
this error:
move-file-to-trash: Non-regular file: Is a directory, /tmp/babel-XXXXXXX
(where XXXXXXX are random characters).
I tracked down the problem to org-babel-remove-temporary-directory
which ob.el adds to kill-emacs-hook. It tries to remove the temporary
directory using delete-directory, which in turn tries to move the
directory (by renaming) into trash, which is in my home directory.
I added this to my ~/.emacs.d/init.el:
(custom-set-variables '(temporary-file-directory "/home/akaihola/tmp/"))
and closing Emacs works correctly again. However, since my init.el is
part of emacs-starter-kit which I update frequently, I'd prefer not to
modify that file. Unfortunately the customization hook
emacs-starter-kit provides (~/.emacs.d/custom.el) is loaded too late
to affect the temporary directory.
I'm running emacs-snapshot 1:20090909-1 in Ubuntu 10.10. Looks like
this is really an Emacs bug and is already fixed:
http://groups.google.com/group/gnu.emacs.bug/browse_thread/thread/0446b8684a8ef504
* lisp/ob-clojure.el (org-babel-header-arg-names:clojure): Adding
`package' to the list of Clojure header arguments which will be read
from heading properties.
* lisp/org-inlinetask.el (org-inlinetask-export-templates): added
Sébastien Vauban's suggestion for LaTeX export in docstring. This is
not default as it requires an additional LaTeX package: "todonotes".
* org-inlinetask.el (org-inlinetask-export-templates): new variable
* org-inlinetask.el (org-inlinetask-export-handler): make use of
templates to export inline tasks
* org-inlinetask.el (org-inlinetask-outline-regexp): new function
* org-inlinetask.el (org-inlinetask-goto-beginning): new function
* org-inlinetask.el (org-inlinetask-goto-end): new function
* org.el (org-mark-subtree): new command
* org.el (org-speed-commands-default, org-mode-map): make use of new command
This reverts commit 383802d063.
The commit had org-mode process the headlines from bottom to top, which
meant that any changes to the visibility of lower headlines were
overridden/modified by changes higher up the tree. Reverting the commit
causes VISIBILITY to work correctly.
* lisp/org.el: (org-make-heading-search-string) Optionally limit
number of lines stored in file link search strings.
(org-context-in-file-links) Add option to set to integer specifying
number of lines.
B S will cause tasks to be rescheduled a random number of days into the
future, with 7 as the default. This is useful if you've got a ton of
tasks scheduled for today, you realize you'll never deal with them all,
and you just want them to be distributed across the next N days.
* org-agenda.el (org-agenda-custom-commands-local-options):
Allow org-agenda-span to be a symbol.
(org-agenda-ndays): Make obsolete.
(org-agenda-span): New variable superseding org-agenda-ndays.
(org-agenda-menu): Use org-agenda-current-span.
(org-agenda-current-span): New local variable storing current
span.
(org-agenda-list): Take a span instead of ndays as argument.
This function is now responsible for computing the ndays based
on span.
(org-agenda-ndays-to-span): Return span only if number of days
really matches.
(org-agenda-span-to-ndays): New function.
(org-agenda-manipulate-query): Use org-agenda-compute-starting-span.
(org-agenda-goto-today): Use org-agenda-compute-starting-span.
(org-agenda-later): Do not give compute a new span, use the
current one.
(org-agenda-day-view, org-agenda-week-view)
(org-agenda-month-view, org-agenda-year-view): Stop touching
org-agenda-ndays.
(org-agenda-change-time-span): Only compute starting-span.
(org-agenda-compute-starting-span): New function derived from
the old org-agenda-compute-time-span.
(org-agenda-set-mode-name): Compute mode based on
org-agenda-current-span.
(org-agenda-span-name): New function.
* org-mouse.el: Replace Replace org-agenda-ndays by
org-agenda-current-span.
* org.texi, orgguide.texi: Replace org-agenda-ndays by
org-agenda-span. Add a paragraph about org-agenda-span and say that
org-agenda-ndays is now deprecated.
This patch is pretty huge, so I'll give a bit of context about it.
I'm weird, but I used org-agenda-ndays set to 14. Unfortunately, this
settings was interpreted as a month view. Pressing 'f' key to see later,
would show me the next month, which was not at all what I wanted.
On the same idea, day view or week view would change my org-agenda-ndays
settings, which I think is not a good idea. Changing user setting is *bad*.
:-)
So I rewrote the things this way:
- Rename org-agenda-span to org-agenda-current-span
Which has the same meaning has before, except it can be numeric.
- Rename org-agenda-ndays to org-agenda-span
I think the name is better choosen. You can set it to a symbol instead of
only a numeric value. That means you can set it to 'month and it will show
you the number of days of the current month in your agenda. Better than
30. But you can still set it to 30, or 31, or whatever you want.
- Do not change org-agenda-span. Never.
- Use org-agenda-current-span for navigation.
That means if you press 'f', it will shows you really the next
org-agenda-current-span ndays, and not something based on "I think you
want a weekly view".
* lisp/org-agenda.el: (org-format-agenda-item) The value of
org-category is not converted to a string unless it is defined.
This fixes commit 3061c7083d, which
resulted in org-format-agenda-item always returning the symbol-name for
org-category even if it was not defined. I.e., in some instances,
org-format-agenda-item returned the string "nil", thus bypassing the
buffer-file-name method of deriving the category.
* lisp/ob-python.el (org-babel-execute:python): Pass the new "prefix"
header argument through to external evaluation.
(org-babel-python-evaluate): Pass the new "prefix" header argument
through to external evaluation.
(org-babel-python-evaluate-external-process): When specified prepend
"prefix" to the file used in external evaluation.
* lisp/ob-sql.el (org-babel-expand-body:sql): Expand the body of a sql
code block.
(org-babel-execute:sql): Use sql specific body expansion function.
(org-babel-sql-expand-vars): Insert variables into a sql code block.
* lisp/ob-sqlite.el (org-babel-execute:sqlite): Remove unused variable
declaration.
* lisp/org-clock.el (org-day-of-week): New function.
(org-quarter-to-date): New function.
(org-clock-special-range): Implement quarters.
Patch by Erwin Vrolijk
* org-agenda.el (org-format-agenda-item): Convert category to a string
if it is a symbol. This fixes the following call to
org-agenda-get-category-icon which fails if category is not a string.
Signed-off-by: Julien Danjou <julien@danjou.info>
* lisp/ob-clojure.el: Updated requirements documentation to mention
the minimum version of Clojure.
(org-babel-expand-body:clojure): Fully qualified function name.
* lisp/org-latex.el (org-export-latex-lists): do not add an
unnecessary newline character after a list.
* lisp/org-list.el (org-list-bottom-point-with-indent): ensure bottom
point is just after a non blank line.
* lisp/ob-python.el (org-babel-execute:python): Use a :return header
argument for external evaluation in which the code block body need
be wrapped in a function
Thanks to Darlan Cavalcante for proposing this feature.
* lisp/ob-clojure.el (org-babel-execute:clojure): Remade using slime
for all code evaluation.
(org-babel-expand-body:clojure): Remade in the image of
`org-babel-expand-body:emacs-lisp'.
* lisp/org-beamer.el (org-beamer-sectioning): Allow overlay arguments for
the column as well.
* doc/org.texi (Beamer class export): Document that also overlay arguments
can be passed to the column environment.
Eric Fraga writes:
> I am trying to create a beamer slide which has two columns. The second
> column should only appear after a while (the 6th uncovering operation).
> In latex, I would do:
>
> : \begin{column}<6->{0.4\textwidth}
>
> say. In org, I would expect to be able to get this latex code generated
> by the following:
>
> --8<---------------cut here---------------start------------->8---
> ***** column heading :BMCOL:B_block:
> :PROPERTIES:
> :BEAMER_col: 0.4
> :BEAMER_envargs: c<6->
> :BEAMER_extra:
> :BEAMER_env: block
> :END:
> --8<---------------cut here---------------end--------------->8---
>
> according to the info documentation (Beamer class export).
>
> However, this does not work: the "c<6->" is placed verbatim in
> the \begin{block} that comes after the \begin{column}. Furthermore, if
> I ask for the heading to be ignored (instead of defining a block), the
> envargs are lost completely!
* doc/org.texi (Template elements): Document the new entry type.
* lisp/org-capture.el (org-capture-templates): Add new option to customize
type and docstring.
(org-capture-set-target-location): Interpret the file+datetree+prompt
entry.
* lisp/ob.el (org-babel-insert-result): Responds to new "wrap" header
argument.
(org-babel-merge-params): Includes new "wrap" header argument in
one of the results header argument exclusive groups.
* lisp/org.el (org-additional-option-like-keywords): Fontify begin and
and results lines as comments.
Thanks to Charles C. Berry for insisting on this issues existence
This change is now secured with a unit test
* lisp/ob.el (org-babel-parse-header-arguments): Stripping trailing
spaces off of header arguments (even the first one).
* lisp/ob-sh.el (org-babel-sh-var-to-sh): Wrap end token of heredoc in
single quotes which is the best practice.
(org-babel-sh-table-or-results): Use `org-babel-script-escape' for
more robust parsing of shell output.
* lisp/ob-eval.el (org-babel-error-buffer-name): Define new variable.
(org-babel-eval-error-notify): Use new variable `org-babel-error-buffer-name'
(org-babel-eval): Make temp error buffer invisible to the user with
initial space in name.
(org-babel-eval-wipe-error-buffer): New function to wipe the error message buffer.
* lisp/ob-exp.el (org-babel-eval-wipe-error-buffer): Declare external function
`org-babel-eval-wipe-error-buffer'.
(org-babel-exp-results): Wipe error buffer clean at outset of execution
* lisp/ob.el (org-babel-execute-src-block-maybe): Wipe error buffer clean at
outset of execution
(org-babel-eval-wipe-error-buffer): Declare external function
`org-babel-eval-wipe-error-buffer'.
* lisp/ob-python.el (org-babel-python-table-or-string): Using
`org-babel-script-escape' for reading string input from scripting
languages.
* lisp/ob-ruby.el (org-babel-ruby-table-or-string): Using
`org-babel-script-escape' for reading string input from scripting
languages.
* lisp/ob.el (org-babel-script-escape): Using
`org-babel-script-escape' for reading string input from scripting
languages.
* lisp/ob-haskell.el (org-babel-haskell-table-or-string): Using
`org-babel-script-escape' for reading string input from scripting
languages.
* lisp/org-latex.el (org-export-latex-make-header): Run the title through
`org-export-latex-fontify-headline'.
(org-export-latex-fontify-headline): Do the protection of math
snippets also here
* lisp/org-latex.el (org-export-as-latex): Sent the section title
through the preprocessor.
Hi all,
This patch fixes the issue I originally described here:
http://article.gmane.org/gmane.emacs.orgmode/32281
It preserves math-mode delimiters (e.g. "$" and "\(") in the document
title when exporting to LaTeX. (That is, it prevents them from being
escaped, by running the title through org-export-preprocess-string,
which marks them with the org-protected property.) It should work
regardless of whether the title is pulled from a headline, from the text
before the first headline, or from an explicit #+TITLE declaration.
(This is my first time contributing a patch to a Free Software project
-- so please, let me know what you think!)
Best,
Richard
* lisp/org.el (org-open-at-point): Don't do footnote action if cursor is
on a bracket link.
Sebastian Mengin writes:
> Hi,
>
> Consider the following minimal example:
>
> Text[fn:1]
>
> * Footnotes
> [fn:1] Note with a [[file:abecedaire.jpg][link]].
>
> Here with orgmode 7.02, doing C-c C-o on the link moves the cursor on
> [fn:1] and says in the minibuffer: "Position saved mark to ring, go back
> with C-c &", instead of opening the linked file.
>
> Is this a bug?
>
* lisp/org-clock.el (org-get-clocktable)
previous patch incorrectly required whitespace in front of #+BEGIN: and #+END:
TINYCHANGE - This patch is in the public domain.
* lisp/org-src.el (org-edit-src-code): Allow region to be inherited by
edit buffer when mark is one character beyond end of src block.
Thanks to Jambunathan K. for the bug report:
C-c C-v C-M-h and C-c C-v C-x interaction
In the block below do
1. C-c C-v C-M-h, C-c C-v C-x C-M-\
2. Mark (just) the code-block with C-SPC etc etc. C-c C-v C-x C-M-\
See the difference in behaviour.
<text:p text:style-name="Standard">This is a xref to
<text:bookmark-ref text:reference-format="text"
text:ref-name="__RefHeading__1669_1684552201">Heading8
</text:bookmark-ref>.</text:p>
I have transient mark mode on.
Thanks to Nicolas Goaziou for pointing this out
* lisp/ob-ref.el (org-babel-ref-at-ref-p): Use higher level function
for testing list membership.
* lisp/ob.el (org-babel-read-result): Use higher level function for
testing list membership.
(org-babel-result-end): Use higher level function for testing list
membership.
* lisp/ob-sqlite.el (ob-eval): require ob-eval for external command
execution
(org-babel-execute:sqlite): no longer uses the init option for
passing commands to sqlite
* lisp/org.el (org-indent-line-function): drawers and blocks have no
influence on indentation of text below. Also fix indentation problem
with a block at column 0 and add a special case for literal examples.
* lisp/ob-ref.el (org-babel-ref-resolve): Recognize `list' as a unique
type of data
(org-babel-ref-at-ref-p): Recognize `list' as a unique type of data
* lisp/ob.el (org-babel-read-result): Recognize `list' as a unique
type of data
(org-babel-read-list): A function to read a textual Org-mode list
into an emacs-lisp list.
(org-babel-insert-result): Recognizes the "list" result param to
insert data as an Org-mode list.
(org-babel-result-end): Find the end of an Org-mode list.
(org-babel-merge-params): Add "list" as a result param.
* doc/org.texi (results): Documentation of the new "list" results
header argument.
* lisp/org-table.el (orgtbl-after-send-table-hook): New hook.
(orgtbl-ctrl-c-ctrl-c): Run `orgtbl-after-send-table-hook' when a
table was sent.
(orgtbl-send-table): Return the number of sent tables, or nil if no
sending has happened.
Patch by Seweryn Kokot. TINYCHANGE
* lisp/org-clock.el (org-get-clocktable):
(org-in-clocktable-p):
(org-clocktable-shift):
(org-clocktable-steps): Fix regexp to allow for indented clock tables
#+BEGIN: and #+END: were expected only at the first column in some
places.
#BEGIN: and #END: were erroneously recognized inside normal lines in
other instances.
always allow whitespace after #BEGIN: and #END:, not just a single space
TINYCHANGE - This patch is in the public domain.
* doc/org.texi (Include files): Document :minlevel.
* lisp/org-exp.el (org-export-handle-include-files): Support :minlevel
property.
(org-get-file-contents): New argument minlevel to demote included
content.
On Sat, Nov 13, 2010 at 1:12 AM, Carsten Dominik
<carsten.dominik@gmail.com> wrote:
>
> On Nov 10, 2010, at 3:46 AM, Jianshi Huang wrote:
>
>> Hi,
>>
>> I know I can include any file using #+INCLUDE.
>>
>> I need to include several org files, but they were edited
>> independently as a complete document.
>>
>> Now I want to lower the levels of headers in these org files
>> automatically during inclusion. Is there a way to do that?
>
> No. But since #+include accepts arguments, it could be implemented,
> something like
>
> #+include "aaa.org" :minlevel 4
>
> or so. I would accept a good patch to this effect.
Here's a patch. I tested it with a simple document and works fine.
Thanks,
Puneeth
Carsten Dominik <carsten.dominik@gmail.com> writes:
> On Oct 29, 2010, at 5:22 AM, Jambunathan K wrote:
>
>> "Thomas S. Dye" <tsd@tsdye.com> writes:
>>
>>> Aloha Jambunathan K.,
>>>
>>> Yes, thanks for that suggestion. It should work on your example, but
>>> it breaks external links, like this:
>>>
>>> \hyperref[http://www.ctan.org/tex-archive/macros/latex/contrib/koma-script/
>>> ]{KOMA-script}
>>>
>>> External links require the \href{}{} command. It appears the LaTeX
>>> export process no longer distinguishes internal and external links,
>>> as
>>> I believe it used to do.
>>>
>>
>> This is the problematic commit:
>>
>> commit f5918bdcc0
>> parent df5894cdcb
>> Date: Sun Oct 17 08:29:51 2010 +0000
>>
>> LaTeX export: use org-export-latex-hyperref-format
>
> I have just reverted this commit.
>
> - Carsten
>
Looks like time to change the variable name which is actually confusing.
Since href and hyperref are two different things, I renamed the existing
`org-export-latex-hyperref-format' variable as
`org-export-latex-href-format' and introduced a new one
`org-export-latex-hyperref-format'.
* org-latex.el (org-export-latex-hyperref-format): New option.
(org-export-latex-href-format): Renamed the existing variable
`org-export-latex-hyperref-format' as `org-export-latex-href-format'
(org-export-latex-links): Use `org-export-latex-hyperref-format' and
`org-export-latex-href-format'
Thanks and Regards
Noorul
>>
>> * lisp/org-latex.el (org-export-latex-links) : Replaced hard coded
>> hyperref format with custom
>> variable `org-export-latex-hyperref-format'
>>
>> Note that href is not same as hyperref.
>>
>> Jambunthan K.
>>
>>
>>> All the best,
>>> Tom
>>>
>>> On Oct 28, 2010, at 3:30 PM, Jambunathan K wrote:
>>>
>>>>
>>>> Thomas
>>>>
>>>> There was a hint at possible solution (or atleast a partial
>>>> solution) in
>>>> my original post. Did you try it before jumping in to rough waters
>>>> or
>>>> digging deeper?
>>>>
>>>> Do
>>>>
>>>> ,----
>>>> | M-x customize-variable RET org-export-latex-hyperref-format'
>>>> `----
>>>>
>>>> so that your .emacs has an entry like this
>>>>
>>>> ,---- [.emacs]
>>>> |
>>>> | (custom-set-variables
>>>> | '(org-export-latex-hyperref-format "\\hyperref[%s]{%s}"))
>>>> |
>>>> `----
>>>>
>>>> The above setting solves the problem for me with the following
>>>> simple
>>>> Org file.
>>>>
>>>> * Heading1
>>>> Make this section as large as possible so that it fills atleast a
>>>> page.
>>>>
>>>> * Heading2
>>>> Links to [[Heading1]]
>>>>
>>>> Jambunathan K.
>>>>
>>>> "Thomas S. Dye" <tsd@tsdye.com> writes:
>>>>
>>>>> On Oct 28, 2010, at 12:35 PM, Nick Dokos wrote:
>>>>>
>>>>>> Thomas S. Dye <tsd@tsdye.com> wrote:
>>>>>>
>>>>>>> On Oct 28, 2010, at 11:01 AM, Jambunathan K wrote:
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> This is a regression. release-7.01h is good. HEAD is bad. I get
>>>>>>> the
>>>>>>> following line with release-7.01h.<
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> Links to \hyperref[sec-1]{Heading1}
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> Jambunathan K.
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> Aloha Jambunathan K.,
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> Very many thanks for this information. I have Org-mode version
>>>>>>> 7.01trans
>>>>>>> (release_7.01h.880.g7531f). I take it the problem I'm having is
>>>>>>> due to a relatively recent change
>>>>>>> to Org-mode. If there is anything I can do to help isolate the
>>>>>>> problem, please let me know.
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>
>>>>>> Tom,
>>>>>>
>>>>>> If you have the time and the inclination, you might try bisecting
>>>>>> your
>>>>>> way through. Bisecting org-mode problems is actually a very good
>>>>>> way
>>>>>> to
>>>>>> practice because the turnaround time is very small.
>>>>>>
>>>>>> Prerequisites:
>>>>>>
>>>>>> * you have a clone of the org-mode git repository.
>>>>>>
>>>>>> * you have an org test file.
>>>>>>
>>>>>>
>>>>>> Steps:
>>>>>>
>>>>>> * [optional, but it makes me feel a little safer] create a test
>>>>>> branch
>>>>>> and switch to it:
>>>>>>
>>>>>> git checkout -b test-branch master
>>>>>>
>>>>>> * I clean out all the compiled files while doing a bisection: it's
>>>>>> quicker
>>>>>> than regenerating them every time and I don't have to worry (much)
>>>>>> about
>>>>>> emacs loading a wayward .elc file:
>>>>>>
>>>>>> make clean
>>>>>>
>>>>>> * start the bisection and tell git which commit is known good and
>>>>>> which is known bad:
>>>>>>
>>>>>> git bisect start
>>>>>>
>>>>>> # current version is bad
>>>>>> git bisect bad
>>>>>>
>>>>>> # release_7.01h was good - I got the name with ``git tag''
>>>>>> git bisect good release_7.01h
>>>>>>
>>>>>> That checks out a revision half-way in between the bad and good
>>>>>> commits: since
>>>>>> there are about 900 commits in between, you'll be at approx the
>>>>>> 450-
>>>>>> mark and it
>>>>>> should take about 10 bisections to get it down to a single commit.
>>>>>>
>>>>>> * LOOP Now all you have to do is repeat the following steps:
>>>>>>
>>>>>> # since you did ``make clean'' you don't have to worry about .elc
>>>>>> files
>>>>>> # just reload all the .el files.
>>>>>> M-x org-reload
>>>>>>
>>>>>> visit your org test file, export to LaTeX, check for \href/
>>>>>> \hyperref (or
>>>>>> whatever other telltale sign shows badness/goodness).
>>>>>>
>>>>>> # tell git about it
>>>>>> git bisect good *OR* git bisect bad
>>>>>>
>>>>>> This last step will check out another revision and in about 10
>>>>>> repetitions
>>>>>> of the loop, you are done.
>>>>>>
>>>>>> * Tell git you are done, so it can clean up:
>>>>>>
>>>>>> git bisect reset
>>>>>>
>>>>>> Theoretically, you could do all of this in your master branch
>>>>>> without
>>>>>> creating a test-branch and this last step will reset everything to
>>>>>> the
>>>>>> way it was before ``git start''.
>>>>>>
>>>>>> * Post the offending commit to the list.
>>>>>>
>>>>>> * Get back to your master branch:
>>>>>>
>>>>>> git checkout master
>>>>>>
>>>>>> * If you created a test-branch, clean it out:
>>>>>>
>>>>>> git branch -d test-branch
>>>>>>
>>>>>> * [Optional] Recreate your .elc files and reload them:
>>>>>>
>>>>>> make
>>>>>> M-x org-reload
>>>>>>
>>>>>>
>>>>>> And that's it: a half-hour of fun and games. Unless of course, you
>>>>>> hit upon a revision that is neither good nor bad (in the above
>>>>>> restricted
>>>>>> sense): you might get some other problem that prevents you from
>>>>>> being
>>>>>> able to answer. That might or might not be easy to resolve, so
>>>>>> I'll
>>>>>> leave that as an advanced topic (truth be told, I came up against
>>>>>> this
>>>>>> situation a couple of days ago and I didn't know how to proceed:
>>>>>> so
>>>>>> it's ignorance more than anything else that prevents me from
>>>>>> saying
>>>>>> anything more).
>>>>>>
>>>>>> If you want to try, I'd be happy to answer questions - I might try
>>>>>> the
>>>>>> bisection later on tonight myself in any case. And btw, this is of
>>>>>> course archeology of a different (and much easier) kind, so I
>>>>>> imagine
>>>>>> you'll take to it like a fish in water :-)
>>>>>>
>>>>>> HTH,
>>>>>> Nick
>>>>>
>>>>> Hi Nick,
>>>>>
>>>>> Irresistible hook at the end there. I wish this stuff were as easy
>>>>> as
>>>>> archaeology is for me. Your instructions are terrific, though.
>>>>>
>>>>> I did hit on a revision that was neither good nor bad:
>>>>>
>>>>> commit 8562273b27
>>>>> Author: Eric Schulte <schulte.eric@gmail.com>
>>>>> Date: Sat Oct 16 13:21:47 2010 -0600
>>>>>
>>>>> ob-ref: don't forget arguments to referenced code blocks
>>>>>
>>>>> * lisp/ob-ref.el (org-babel-ref-resolve): bringing the referent
>>>>> arguments back to their params before evaluation
>>>>>
>>>>> This one puts these lines in *Messages* when I export to LaTeX
>>>>>
>>>>> executing Org code block...
>>>>> if: Symbol's value as variable is void: result-type
>>>>>
>>>>> I tried using different commits for the initial git bisect good,
>>>>> hoping that would skip by the problem, but this one appears to have
>>>>> stuck around a while. My other two tries both ended with this same
>>>>> error, but with different commits.
>>>>>
>>>>> I'm not sure what to do next. This problem isn't yielding to my
>>>>> archaeo-logic. :)
>>>>>
>>>>> All the best,
>>>>> Tom
>>
>> _______________________________________________
>> Emacs-orgmode mailing list
>> Please use `Reply All' to send replies to the list.
>> Emacs-orgmode@gnu.org
>> http://lists.gnu.org/mailman/listinfo/emacs-orgmode
>
>
> _______________________________________________
> Emacs-orgmode mailing list
> Please use `Reply All' to send replies to the list.
> Emacs-orgmode@gnu.org
> http://lists.gnu.org/mailman/listinfo/emacs-orgmode
* lisp/org-agenda.el (org-agenda-timegrid-use-ampm): New option.
(org-agenda-time-of-day-to-ampm): New function.
(org-agenda-time-of-day-to-ampm-maybe): New function.
(org-format-agenda-item): Call org-agenda-time-of-day-to-ampm-maybe.
Patch by Christoph Allen Webber
* lisp/org-faces.el (org-cycle-level-faces): New option.
* lisp/org.el (org-get-level-face): Honor org-cycle-level-faces
Original patch by Jonathan BISSON, modified by Carsten Dominik
* lisp/org-agenda.el (org-agenda-today): New function.
(org-agenda-get-day-face): New function.
(org-timeline): Use org-agenda-today and org-agenda-get-day-face.
(org-agenda-list): Use org-agenda-today and org-agenda-get-day-face.
(org-todo-list): Use org-agenda-today.
(org-get-all-dates): Use org-agenda-today.
(org-agenda-day-face-function): New variable.
(org-agenda-get-day-face): Use org-agenda-day-face-function.
Signed-off-by: Julien Danjou <julien@danjou.info>
* lisp/org-html.el (org-export-as-html): Do not treat partially
protected lines as if they were fully protected.
Nicolas Goaziou writes:
> Here is a problem when a latex fragment is split across two lines and
> an emphasize follows. The text won't be italicized upon exporting to
> HTML.
>
> =====
> * latex-fragments bug
>
> Imagine we have a formula starting here $e^{i\pi} +
> 1 = 0$. Now we have a problem with /emphasize/.
> =====
>
> This is because the line starts with a char with 'org-protected
> property and, thus, get caught by the "Protected HTML" (org-html.el
> l. 1216) part of `org-export-as-html'. In others words, the line is
> inserted as-is in the output buffer, before getting any
> transformation.
>
> I'm not sure how it should be done (I don't get yet the usefulness of
> this "Protected HTML" part), but that piece of code may be moved after
> the `org-html-expand' call, as long as every sub-function in
> `org-html-expand' has a check to prevent modifying protected stuff
> (this not yet the case for `org-export-with-emphasize' and
> `org-html-protect' while others seem ok).
>
> But even in this case, every function getting called after that would
> be ignored. So, for example, links would not be inserted.
>
> Couldn't the "Protected HTML" part be removed altogether?
* org-clock.el (org-dblock-write:clocktable): fix double
reference to `link' in let construct.
(org-clock-clocktable-formatter): Fix typo in docstring.
(org-clocktable-write-default): Fix typo in docstring.
* org-protocol.el (org-protocol-unhex-string): Normalize percent
escape sequence to upper case letters.
Otherwise the underlying function produces wrong results for percent
escape sequences that happen to use lower case characters.
* lisp/ob-lob.el (org-babel-lob-get-info): including pass-through
header arguments in results variable header argument string
* lisp/ob.el (org-babel-execute-src-block): working with new header
argument setup
(org-babel-parse-header-arguments): only split header argument
strings when []'s are balanced
* org.el (org-open-at-point): Remove stale link handler for news:
links.
This condition case is never evaluated because the news: link is
already passed to `browse-url'.
* lisp/org-clock.el (org-clocktable-write-default): Better handling of
narrowing.
Liang Wang writes:
> After I upgrade orgmode to latest version, clock report shows link
> text literally.
>
> For example,
>
> [[file:/home/liang/gtd/todo.org::Task...
>
> Unfortunately, in this way, I can not see what this task actually is.
> I have to temporarily disable link in clock report.
* lisp/org.el (org-diary-sexp-entry): Split sexp result strings at semicolon.
When evaluating my %%(org-calendar-holidays) on October 31st, I got a
line like:
"Halloween; Daylight Saving Time Ends 3:00am (CEST)"
And it displays in calendar:
3:00 .... Halloween; Daylight Saving Time Ends (CEST)
This is wrong since Halloween is all day, not only at 3:00.
Splitting results on "; " allows to have an independant entry on each
event and displays things correctly.
Signed-off-by: Julien Danjou <julien@danjou.info>
Signed-off-by: Julien Danjou <julien@danjou.info>
* doc/org.texi (Categories): Document category icons.
* lisp/org-agenda.el (org-agenda-prefix-format): Insert place holder for icon.
(org-agenda-category-icon-alist): New option.
(org-agenda-get-category-icon): New function.
(org-format-agenda-item): Support for icons.
(org-compile-prefix-format): Support for icons.
* lisp/org.el (org-shorten-string): New function.
* lisp/org-exp.el (org-export-convert-protected-spaces): New function.
(org-export-preprocess-string): Call
`org-export-convert-protected-spaces' to handle new hard spaces.
* lisp/org-clock.el (org-clocktable): New customization group.
(org-clocktable-defaults): New option.
(org-clock-clocktable-formatter): New option.
(org-clock-clocktable-default-properties): New option.
(org-dblock-write:clocktable): Rewrite to split out functionality
into separate functions.
(org-clocktable-write-default):
(org-clocktable-indent-string):
(org-clock-get-table-data): New functions.
* lisp/org-agenda.el (org-agenda-list):
(org-agenda-redo):
(org-agenda-clockreport-mode):
(org-agenda-set-mode-name): Rewrite to implement filtered clock tables.
* doc/org.texi (Clocking commands):
(The clock table): New sections.
(Agenda commands): Document filtered clock reports.
* lisp/ob.el (org-babel-execute-src-block): If ":results file" is in
effect, then ensure that the value of :file is returned as the result;
don't rely on language files for this.
Examples of languages that were not honouring :file are sh and
emacs-lisp.
* org-list.el (org-list-bottom-point-with-indent): do not check
indentation of a non-empty blank line.
* org-list.el (org-sort-list): sort a list with point anywhere inside
it.
* lisp/ob-tangle.el (org-babel-update-block-body): declaring function
for updating code block bodies
(org-babel-spec-to-string):
(org-babel-detangle): detangle all tangled and commented code blocks
in the current file back to org
(org-babel-tangle-jump-to-org): jump from a tangled and commented
file back to the originating org-mode code block
ob-tangle: detangle changes in code files back to the original org files
* lisp/ob-tangle.el (org-babel-update-block-body): declaring function
for updating code block bodies
(org-babel-spec-to-string):
(org-babel-detangle): detangle all tangled and commented code blocks
in the current file back to org
(org-babel-tangle-jump-to-org): jump from a tangled and commented
file back to the originating org-mode code block
* lisp/org-exp.el (org-export-format-source-code-or-example): Use
minted for latex source code export if `org-export-latex-listings' has
the value 'minted
* lisp/org-latex.el (org-export-latex-listings): Document special
value 'minted
* lisp/org-latex.el (org-export-latex-minted): Delete variable
Update org.texi with a new section: Countdown timer.
Update ORGWEBPAGE/Changes.org with a section about timer/clock.
Also fix a small typo in a org-timer.el.
Thanks to Nick Dokos and Nigel Beck for raising the issue.
* lisp/ob-gnuplot.el (org-babel-variable-assignments:gnuplot): fixed
bug in gnuplot data file assignment using user variables
* lisp/org-capture.el (org-capture-templates): New capture
property `:kill-buffer'. (org-capture-finalize): Kill target buffer
if that is desired.
(org-capture-target-buffer): Remember if we have to make the buffer.
Proposal by Samuel Wales.
* lisp/org-clock.el (org-dblock-write:clocktable): Fix bug
when computing clock tables.
Ouch, bad bug. Resetting the clock file time was always
happening in the same file, not in the different files
visited by the summer.
* lisp/org-clock.el (org-dblock-write:clocktable): Pass file minutes
up to caller even if no table is generated.
Rainer Stengele writes:
> 1. Without maxlevbel I get I get
>
> #+BEGIN: clocktable :scope ("file1.org" "file2") :timestamp t :tstart "<2010-05-01 Sa 00:00>" :tend "<2010-07-31 Sa 23:55>"
> Clock summary at [2010-07-22 Do 09:07]
>
> | File | L | Timestamp | Headline | Time | | |
> |-------------------+---+---------------------+----------------+----------+--------+--------|
> | | | Timestamp | *Total time* | *327:51* | | |
> ...
>
>
>
> with :maxlevel 0 I get
>
>
> #+BEGIN: clocktable :maxlevel 0 :scope ("file1.org" "file2") :timestamp t :tstart "<2010-05-01 Sa 00:00>" :tend "<2010-07-31 Sa 23:55>"
> Clock summary at [2010-07-22 Do 09:11]
>
> | File | L | Timestamp | Headline | Time |
> |------+---+-----------+--------------+----------|
> | | | Timestamp | *Total time* | *232:17* |
> |------+---+-----------+--------------+----------|
> #+END:
>
>
> I would like to get the same results!
> Is ":maxlevel 0" intended to not include the sublevel clocks?
* lisp/org-agenda.el (org-agenda-get-sexps): Handle lists as return values
from diary entries
* lisp/org-bbdb.el (org-bbdb-anniversaries): Handle lists of anniversaries
* lisp/org.el (org-diary-sexp-entry): Handle lists as return values
from diary entries.
ukasz Stelmach <lukasz.stelmach@iem.pw.edu.pl> writes:
> I've disovered, that %%(org-bbdb-anniversaries) returns (as every other
> sexp) a string. Which is OK if there is only one.
>
> Anniversaries: John Doe's 10th wedding anniversary
>
> Unfortunately the agenda view becomes awful if we have noted Jane's
> weeding date too
>
> Anniversaries: John Doe's 10th wedding anniversary; Jane Doe's 10th wedding anniversary
>
> And what if we know 3 Eves and 5 Adams and it's Christmas Eve? (Hint:
> their name day)
[...]
As Thomas Bauman pointed out, there are functions that can be used in
sexps which return cons cells like this
(nil . "Full Moon 3:35am (CEST)")
(this one is diary-lunar-phases), these aren't properly supported by the
previous version of my patch. This one can distinguish between such a
cons cell and a "real" list.
("John Doe's 10th wedding anniversary"
"Jane Doe's 10th wedding anniversary")
This is because
(consp (cdr '(a . b))) ; => nil
so org-diary-sexp-entry can be made return (cdr result) only in case of
the former cons cell. The third condition in the `cond' block is IMHO
enough as it is now, but if you think adding
(listp (cdr result))
may help then be it.
* lisp/org-capture.el (org-capture-empty-lines-before):
(org-capture-empty-lines-after): Make sure the n=0 does not insert any
newlines.
Marcel van der Boom writes:
> I'm in the process of migrating from org-remember to org-capture.
> Pretty easy going so far, but it seems org-capture adds newlines, which
> I think it should not do.
>
> My (test) capture-template is:
>
> (("t" "Todo" entry
> (file "~/.outlet/GTD.org")
> "* TODO %?" :prepend t :empty-lines 0)
>
> with the intention of inserting the captured task on the
> first line of the file ~/.outlet/GTD.org. What happens when I capture
> an task is this:
>
> <beginning of file>
>
> * TODO Captured task
>
> <original first line of file here>
> ....
>
> Both before and after the task is a newline. Also, when capturing and
> cancelling the capture with C-c C-k the newlines remain whereas the
> task is removed.
* lisp/org-html.el (org-format-table-html): New argument DOCBOOK.
(org-format-org-table-html): New argument DOCBOOK. When set, use
align instead of class to align table fields.
* lisp/org-docbook.el (org-export-as-docbook): Specify the docbook argument
for the table converter.
* lisp/org-macs.el (org-called-interactively-p): New macro.
* lisp/org-freemind.el: No longer require 'rx.
(org-freemind): New customization group, use it for all the variables.
(org-export-as-freemind): Add docstring.
(org-freemind-show): Improve filen naming.
(org-freemind-convert-links-helper): New function.
(org-freemind-bol-helper-base-indent): New variable.
(org-freemind-bol-helper): New function.
(org-freemind-node-css-style): New option.
(org-freemind-node-pattern): New variable.
(org-freemind-from-org-mode): Better docstring.
* lisp/org-footnote.el (org-footnote-create-definition)
(org-footnote-goto-local-insertion-point): Add footnotes before
signature when in message-mode.
* lisp/org.el (org-cycle): Make sure resetting to startup visibility
works after another cycle command.
Gez writes:
> I have a query about the C-u C-u TAB command. When I've just edited
> or used S-TAB (no matter which part of the global cycle it's on) C-u
> C-u TAB works as I would expect. But if I've just used TAB, C-u C-u
> TAB cycles hrough -> CONTENTS -> SHOW ALL etc, even while the mini
> buffer displays "startup visibility plus VISIBILITY properties" at
> each stage of the cycle. C-u C-u TAB also cycles when it's repeated.
> I find it hard to keep track of whether it will cycle or not while I'm
> using it to view areas of the outline, so in effect, the only way I
> feel sure I can quickly return to my desired startup visibility is
> with S-TAB C-u C-u TAB, which is a lot of keystrokes! So my questions
> are - is this expected behaviour? Can it be changed?
The attached patch adds a new functions org-export-string.
,----
| org-export-string is a Lisp function in `org-exp.el'.
|
| (org-export-string STRING FMT &optional DIR)
|
| Export STRING to FMT using existing export facilities.
| During export STRING is saved to a temporary file whose location
| could vary. Optional argument DIR can be used to force the
| directory in which the temporary file is created during export
| which can be useful for resolving relative paths. Dir defaults
| to the value of `temporary-file-directory'.
`----
This function should be useful in user code, and can already reduce the
amount of code in ob-org.el and org-mime.el.
>From e51017e4d7051aad31384a470f0a695dca0d6716 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001
From: Eric Schulte <schulte.eric@gmail.com>
Date: Sun, 17 Oct 2010 15:17:13 -0600
Subject: [PATCH] org-export-string -- exports a string of org-mode markup text
* lisp/org-exp.el (org-export-string): new function org-export-string
can be used to convert a string of test in org-mode markup to a
specified format
* contrib/lisp/org-mime.el (org-mime-htmlize): now using new
org-export-string function for exportation
* lisp/ob-org.el (org-babel-execute:org): now using new
org-export-string function for exportation
* doc/org.texi: Document the <c> cookie.
* lisp/org-exp.el (org-store-forced-table-alignment):
(org-export-remove-special-table-lines): Allow the "c" cookie for
table alignment.
* lisp/org-html.el (org-export-table-header-tags):
(org-export-table-data-tags): Add another %s format for the alignment.
(org-export-html-table-align-individual-fields): New option.
(org-format-org-table-html): Implement field-by-field alignment and
support centering.
(org-format-table-table-html): Make sure the new table tag formats
don't break this function.
* lisp/org-table.el (org-table-cookie-line-p):
(org-table-align): Allow for the <c> cookie.
* lisp/org.el (org-set-font-lock-defaults): Allow for the <c> cookie.
* lisp/org-indent.el: (org-indent-add-properties): Use
`with-silent-modificaitons'.
(org-indent-remove-properties): Use `with-silent-modificaitons'.
Julien Danjou writes:
> I'm using org 7.01h with Emacs 24 trunk. When I set org-startup-indented
> to t, I observe the following:
>
> ** TODO Some stuff
>
> I select "stuff" and press M-w. Then I go the the line under and press
> C-y (org-yank).
>
> Now I got:
>
> ** TODO Some stuff
> ** TODO Some
>
> instead of:
>
> ** TODO Some stuff
> stuff
>
> Note that after M-w, `kill-ring' has a correct first entry of "stuff":
>
> (#("stuff" 0 5
> (fontified t face org-level-2))
> ...)
>
> But on C-y (org-yank) something happens, and it paste the wrong text. I
> think it's trying to be smart but it's not.
>
> I've found that setting org-startup-indented to nil fix that behaviour.
* ob-sh.el (org-babel-sh-var-to-sh): Ensure value has the
structure of an Org-mode table (list of lists)
Non-nested lists can arise either by explicit assignment,
e.g. :var '(1 2), or by assigning a one-dimensional slice of a table.
* lisp/ob-tangle.el (org-babel-tangle-collect-blocks): now explicitly
checks that a code block will actually be tangled before collecting
it's full information (a process which could involve the execution
of other code blocks)
* lisp/ob.el (org-babel-sha1-hash): now handles more complex types in
params
* testing/examples/babel.org: whitespace
* testing/lisp/test-ob.el (test-org-babel/sha1-hash): new test for
babel hashing
* lisp/ob.el (org-babel-execute-src-block): generally using the new
more informative params
(org-babel-process-params): don't forget the :var portion of
variable assignments
* lisp/ob-C.el (org-babel-C-execute): removing call to
org-babel-process-params which should no longer be called from
within a language file
* lisp/ob-R.el (org-babel-execute:R): removing call to
org-babel-process-params which should no longer be called from
within a language file
(org-babel-R-variable-assignments): removing call to
org-babel-process-params which should no longer be called from
within a language file
* lisp/ob-asymptote.el (org-babel-execute:asymptote): removing call to
org-babel-process-params which should no longer be called from
within a language file
* lisp/ob-clojure.el (org-babel-execute:clojure): removing call to
org-babel-process-params which should no longer be called from
within a language file
* lisp/ob-dot.el (org-babel-execute:dot): removing call to
org-babel-process-params which should no longer be called from
within a language file
* lisp/ob-emacs-lisp.el (org-babel-expand-body:emacs-lisp): removing
call to org-babel-process-params which should no longer be called
from within a language file
(org-babel-execute:emacs-lisp): removing call to
org-babel-process-params which should no longer be called from
within a language file
* lisp/ob-haskell.el (org-babel-execute:haskell): removing call to
org-babel-process-params which should no longer be called from
within a language file
* lisp/ob-js.el (org-babel-execute:js): removing call to
org-babel-process-params which should no longer be called from
within a language file
* lisp/ob-lisp.el (org-babel-execute:lisp): removing call to
org-babel-process-params which should no longer be called from
within a language file
* lisp/ob-ocaml.el (org-babel-execute:ocaml): removing call to
org-babel-process-params which should no longer be called from
within a language file
* lisp/ob-octave.el (org-babel-execute:octave): removing call to
org-babel-process-params which should no longer be called from
within a language file
* lisp/ob-perl.el (org-babel-execute:perl): removing call to
org-babel-process-params which should no longer be called from
within a language file
* lisp/ob-python.el (org-babel-execute:python): removing call to
org-babel-process-params which should no longer be called from
within a language file
* lisp/ob-ruby.el (org-babel-execute:ruby): removing call to
org-babel-process-params which should no longer be called from
within a language file
* lisp/ob-scheme.el (org-babel-execute:scheme): removing call to
org-babel-process-params which should no longer be called from
within a language file
* lisp/ob-screen.el (org-babel-execute:screen): removing call to
org-babel-process-params which should no longer be called from
within a language file
(org-babel-prep-session:screen): removing call to
org-babel-process-params which should no longer be called from
within a language file
* lisp/ob-sh.el (org-babel-execute:sh): removing call to
org-babel-process-params which should no longer be called from
within a language file
* lisp/ob-sql.el (org-babel-execute:sql): removing call to
org-babel-process-params which should no longer be called from
within a language file
* ob-haskell.el (org-babel-execute:haskell): Remove reference
to processed params
* ob-clojure.el (org-babel-execute:clojure): Remove reference
to processed params
* ob-R.el (org-babel-execute:R): Remove reference to processed
params
* ob-sh.el (org-babel-execute:sh): Use generic expansion
function
(org-babel-expand-body:sh): Delete function
(org-babel-prep-session:sh): Change name of called function
(org-babel-variable-assignments:sh): Change function name
* ob-screen.el (org-babel-execute:screen): Use generic
expansion function
(org-babel-expand-body:screen): Delete function
(org-babel-prep-session:screen): Remove references to
processed params
* ob-ruby.el (org-babel-execute:ruby): Use generic expansion
function
(org-babel-prep-session:ruby): Use new variable assignment
function
(org-babel-variable-assignments:ruby): New function
(org-babel-expand-body:ruby): Delete function
* ob-python.el (org-babel-execute:python): Use generic
expansion function
(org-babel-prep-session:python): Change name of called function
(org-babel-variable-assignments:python): Change function name
(org-babel-expand-body:python): Delete function
* ob-perl.el (org-babel-execute:perl): Use generic expansion
function
(org-babel-expand-body:perl): Delete function
(org-babel-variable-assignments:perl): New function
* ob-octave.el (org-babel-execute:octave): Use generic
expansion function
(org-babel-variable-assignments:octave): Change name of
function
(org-babel-variable-assignments:matlab): New defalias
(org-babel-prep-session:octave): Change name of function
(org-babel-expand-body:matlab): Delete function
(org-babel-expand-body:octave): Delete function
* ob-ocaml.el (org-babel-execute:ocaml): Use generic expansion
function
(org-babel-variable-assignments:ocaml): New function
(org-babel-expand-body:ocaml): Delete function
* ob-js.el (org-babel-execute:js): Use new variable assignment
function
(org-babel-expand-body:js): Delete function
(org-babel-prep-session:js): Use new variable assignment
function
(org-babel-variable-assignments:js): New function
* ob-haskell.el (org-babel-execute:haskell): Use generic
expansion function
(org-babel-expand-body:haskell): Delete function
(org-babel-prep-session:haskell): Use variable assignment function
(org-babel-variable-assignments:haskell): New function