Doug Hellmann writes:
> Some calendar systems (Google, Zimbra) handle subscriptions to
> multiple calendars (or to an account) by grouping them under a single
> caldav directory in the calendar tree. org-mac-iCal assumes there is
> only one ics file created per caldav directory, so while it *creates*
> all of the needed merged ics files, it only copies one of them to
> ~/Library/Calendar before importing the contents into the diary.
A "functional-style" source block is one in which the name is followed
immediately by a parenthesised argument. An example is the following
"function", which generates n uniform random numbers:
\#+srcname: rand(n)
\#+begin_src R
runif(n)
\#+end_src
With these changes, such source blocks are passed over to the export
machinery in the following form:
\#+begin_src org-babel-lob
<function-def-keyword> rand(n):
\#+end_src
\#+begin_src R <switches>
<indent>runif(n)
\#+end_src
where <function-def-keyword> is the value of
org-babel-function-def-export-keyword, which defaults to "function",
<switches> are the src block switches that belonged to the original
block, and <indent> is the whitespace indent of the function body, the
width of which is determined by org-babel-function-def-export-indent.
org-babel-lob is a simple major mode responsible for fontification of
the blocks corresponding to the function definition line (as opposed
to the function body).
This adds a new terminal (sixth) element to the list returned from
org-babel-get-src-block-info. It is used when exporting the code of
"functional style" code blocks, i.e. those in which the name of the
block is followed by a parenthesised argument list (or an empty pair
of parentheses).
- org-babel-get-src-block-info returns the name of the block as a new
fifth element.
- org-babel-get-src-block-info incorporates the parenthesised variable
references into the header arg list, with precendence given to
explicit :var references, as before.
- remove function org-babel-get-src-block-name
- remove function org-babel-get-src-block-function-args
org-babel-get-src-block-function-args now returns a list
(lang body params-alist switches srcname)
where, unless a non-nil value for the optional argument is passed,
params-alist contains any :var entries acquired from the parenthesised
argument list following the srcname.
The switches are flags like -n and must *precede* the first colon
after the language (i.e. precede the first header argument). So the
general src block syntax is
\#+begin_src lang <switches> :header1 val1 :header2 val2 ...
...
org-babel-get-src-block-info now returns a list
(lang body params-alist switches)
noweb references which include ()s are now evaluated. It is
possible to pass arguments to the noweb references using the existing
lob argument syntax. So after this commit the following
<<example-block>>
will insert the body of "example-block", and the following
<<example-block()>>
will insert the results of "example-block", and the following
<<example-block(a=9)>>
will insert the results of "example-block" with argument "a" set to
the literal value of 9
This forces the #+lob regexp to match at the beginning of a line (with
optional preceding whitespace), and requires inline code blocks to be
surrounded by some whitespace.
Currently, python fontification is used for export of these lines, due
to some similarity between python function call syntax and #+lob call
syntax. This is implemented as a language type "babel", mapped to
python in org-src-lang-modes.
merging original change by Dan Davison which generalizes the types
of blocks exported by org-babel to include the following types
- inline
- lob
- block
1) source blocks can now reference source-blocks in other files using
the filename:sourcename syntax
2) on export all references are now made to explicitly point to the
original buffer using the filename:sourcename syntax. This ensures
that all references are correctly resolved on export, even when the
referenced source block has already been processed.
org-registry-assoc-all removed matching links from the registry. This meant
subsequent calls with the same parameters would return nothing.
Add another function for finding entries in the register, which used find-if to
get entries satisfying a predicate.
One half of this patch is a revert of c167a4ac32.
These changes are necessary so that :results output works correctly
with #+lob calls. For example the following example did not work:
--------------------------------------------------
3. :results output org -> doesn't work with #+lob:
--------------------------------------------------
\#+srcname: randthree(n,max)
\#+begin_src ruby
number = n
maximum = max
puts "* Random numbers\n" +
"Here are some random numbers: " +
(1..number).collect {|x| (rand * maximum).ceil }.join(", ") +
"."
\#+end_src
\#+lob: randthree(n=3,max=10) :results output org
When evaluating R code in a persistent session, lines of output
typically start with a single prompt character. However, under certain
circumstances, lines start with a concatenation of (primary and
secondary) prompt characters separated by spaces. This seems to be
related to having blank lines in the input. This fix ensures that all
such prompt characters are removed from the output.
And when merging header args, those from enclosing scopes take
precedence. For example, output to file from a source block is
implemented by (a) sending the output to file, and (b) having the
source block return the file name as its result. Before this change,
the file name returned could be set by a referenced source block (a
nested call), regardless of the value of the :file header arg of the
top-level source block.
Prior to this, reference resolution could fail with quoted
strings. E.g. this didn't work:
\#+srcname: py-id(a=1)
\#+begin_src python
a
\#+end_src
\#+lob: py-id(a="1")
This change allows org-file-properties to supply header args, and also
allows property inheritance if it has been enabled. Header-args
aquired from the item (or by inheritance) have precedence over those
aquired from org-file-properties.