On Sat, Jul 31, 2010 at 12:54 PM, Simon Guest <simon.guest@tesujimath.org>wrote:
> Hi,
>
> I'm making my first real Org mode Beamer presentation, using org-mode
> 7.01g, and trying to set the ignore_heading for a multi-column slide.
>
> In column mode, when I hit 'e' in the Env column, Emacs says:
> Wrong type argument: commandp, org-beamer-set-environment-tag
> (and org-beamer-set-environment-tag does not appear to be defined
> anywhere).
>
> It's triggered from this code in org-colview.el
> ((equal key "BEAMER_env")
> (setq eval '(org-with-point-at pom
> (call-interactively 'org-beamer-set-environment-tag))))
>
> Any idea what's wrong?
>
>
This function was renamed to org-beamer-select-environment and I think it
was not changed here.
The attached patch should solve the problem.
* lisp/org-colview.el
Use org-beamer-select-environment instead
of org-beamer-set-environment-tag
Thanks and Regards
Noorul
* lisp/org-colview-xemacs.el (org-columns-compile-map):
(org-columns-number-to-string):
(org-columns-string-to-number): Handle estimate ranges.
(org-estimate-mean-and-var): New function.
(org-estimate-combine): New function.
(org-estimate-print): New function.
(org-string-to-estimate): New function.
Carsten,
Here is a patch for a new 'est+' summary type, including corresponding changes for xemacs and the manual. I've done basic testing on the GNU emacs version, but not the xemacs code.
I'm not sure the change to the manual provides the right amount of information
in the right place; I'd be happy to re-write to make it find in
better. Similarly, the name of the summary type is entirely up to you.
I didn't know whether to send this directly to you, or to the list; if it should go to the list I'd be happy to send it there directly.
Thanks for the chance to contribute,
Mike
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
If there was a title set for a column, org-agenda-colview-summarize would look
for the title instead of the property, resulting in empty summaries. This is now
fixed.
Make org-agenda-columns-summarize work properly with the new summary types.
It was assuming the values should be summarised by adding them together. It's
now updated to use the summary functions in org-columns-compile-map, and also
handles summary types with calculated values properly.
Leave calculated columns blank if there is no underlying value.
Don't return zero if a property is missing.
Changes are also applied to xemacs colview.
This lets you see how long has passed since the specified timestamp property
each entry. The three operators (@min, @max, @mean) show either the age of the
youngest or oldest entry or the average age of the children.
Mikael Fornius writes:
> This is my suggestion of an implementation of min/mean/max computation
> in columnview summaries. If you like it feel free to use it.
>
> New operators: {min}, {max} and {mean} possibly prefixed with : for use
> with timevalues.
>
> Example from my running exercise diary:
>
> #+COLUMNS: %DISTANCE{+;%.1f} %HEARTRATE{mean;%.1f} %SPEED{:min} %CALORIES{+}
>
> Gives a colview with summaries:
>
> total distance, mean heartrate, fastest speed (min/km) and total
> calories.
>
> I have tested it on emacs-23 and it works well for me now, also with the
> interactive colview functions.
>
> But you never know really. ;-) Anyway, there should not be any emacs-23
> specific elisp code added afik.
>
> (Because I do not use xemacs I have not tested it with xemacs but the
> small changes I made should be compitable to both xemacs and emacs. I
> would appreciate if someone on this list who uses xemacs will give it a
> try for me. Thanks!)
>
> (This fix also opens up for using user defined lisp functions to
> calculate colview summaries, but I am not sure if that is something
> useful. Like this:
>
> (defun std (&rest values)
> "Compute standard deviation."
> ...)
>
> #+COLUMNS: %DATA{eval:std}
>
> If someone finds this attractive it would now be easy to implement as well.)
>