* lisp/org-list.el (org-list-send-list): Parse list from its true beginning.
* lisp/org.el (org-ctrl-c-ctrl-c): Maybe send the list when at a list item.
* doc/org.texi (Radio lists): Fix bug in description of radio lists.
* lisp/org-latex.el: items are no longer skipped when their first line
ends on a protected element.
* lisp/org-list.el: protected environments looking like lists are not
exported anymore.
Thanks to Nicolas Goaziou <n.goaziou@gmail.com> for this patch.
* doc/org.texi (Plain lists): Document
`org-list-demote-modify-bullet'.
* lisp/org-list.el (org-list-demote-modify-bullet): Improve docstring
by showing an example.
This change was triggered by a request by Livin Stephen Sharma.
This behavior is now parallel to the treatment of outline nodes.
This commit also introduces another change. When an outline node or a
plain list item is folded by outline and contains hidden children,
M-left/right will refuse to act on this item. You must either open
the tree, or use the subtree commands M-S-left and M-S-right.
Based on a patch by Matti De Craene, but significantly modified after
a discussion involving Bernt Hansen and others.
David Maus writes:
> When `org-previous-item' is called on an item with nothing above it
> Orgmode enters an infinite loop. The reason is that
> `org-previous-item' searches for non-empty lines by moving point up
> line by line and if there is nothing above an item point gets stuck on
> begin of buffer.
>
> example.org
> ,----
> |
> | - Item
> `----
>
> Move point on Item, M-x org-previous-item RET and Orgmode enters the
> infinite loop.
>
> Attached patch adds a conditional clause to `org-previous-item' that
> leaves the search loop if point reaches beginning of buffer.
Nicolas Girard writes:
> My point was, in the following two examples, the empty lines right
> before "C" should be preserved in the LaTeX output.
>
> Cheers,
> Nicolas
>
> #===
> - A2
> - B2
>
> C
> #===
>
>
> #===
> - A3
> - B3
>
>
> C
> #===
Daniel Hackney writes:
> When attempting to use radio lists for exporting in LaTeX, I
> found that they didn't work. I am using the example file shown
> below:
>
> ---BEGIN_EXAMPLE---
>
> #+LaTeX: % BEGIN RECEIVE ORGLST programs
> #+LaTeX: % END RECEIVE ORGLST programs
>
> #+ORGLST: SEND programs org-list-to-latex
> - Emacs text editor
> - Ubuntu Linux
> - Git version control system
> - Firefox web browser
> - Drupal content management system
> - Subversion version control system
> - Eclipse integrated development environment
>
> ---END_EXAMPLE---
>
> I eventually ran `org-list-send-list' manually on the list, and
> got the following error:
>
> funcall: Wrong type argument: number-or-marker-p, (unordered
> #("Emacs text editor" [snip...]
>
> I started debugging `org-list-send-list' and found that the error
> occurred when calling (funcall transform list). Looking back, I
> saw that `transform' was assigned (in the let*) after
> `item-beginning'. Stepping through the execution, I saw that
> `transform' was being assigned a value of `-'. It turns out when
> assigning to `item-beginning', (org-list-item-beginning) is
> called, which runs a regular expression with a capture group,
> overwriting the previously matched capture group.
>
> Luckily, the fix is simple; all that needs be done is to switch
> the assignment to `transform' with `item-beginning' so the regex
> in (org-list-item-beginning) doesn't override the match-string
> data. I tried this fix out and it worked perfectly.
Dan Davison writes:
> If you start a numbered list with
>
> 1.
>
> and hit M-RET then you get
>
> 2.
> ^
> with a space, i.e. '2. '
>
> However, when creating the 10th list item, there is no space after
> '10.'. Same for 99 -> 100. This isn't entirely trivial, because if you
> start typing blindly after hitting M-RET, then the line you have created
> (lacking the space) will not be recognised as a list item and so
> e.g. the next M-RET will create a new heading, not a list item. [Has
> this changed recently? This seems like something obvious that others
> would have noticed.]
>
> Here's my patch.
>
> --8<---------------cut here---------------start------------->8---
> diff --git a/lisp/org-list.el b/lisp/org-list.el
> index 2fea57b..8ece3ea 100644
> --- a/lisp/org-list.el
> +++ b/lisp/org-list.el
> @@ -813,7 +813,7 @@ with something like \"1.\" or \"2)\"."
> (buffer-substring (point-at-bol) (match-beginning 3))))
> ;; (term (substring (match-string 3) -1))
> ind1 (n (1- arg))
> - fmt bobp old new)
> + fmt bobp old new delta)
> ;; find where this list begins
> (org-beginning-of-item-list)
> (setq bobp (bobp))
> @@ -835,7 +835,9 @@ with something like \"1.\" or \"2)\"."
> (delete-region (match-beginning 2) (match-end 2))
> (goto-char (match-beginning 2))
> (insert (setq new (format fmt (setq n (1+ n)))))
> - (org-shift-item-indentation (- (length new) (length old))))))
> + (setq delta (- (length new) (length old)))
> + (org-shift-item-indentation delta)
> + (if (= (org-current-line) line) (setq col (+ col delta))))))
> (org-goto-line line)
> (org-move-to-column col)))
> --8<---------------cut here---------------end--------------->8---
>
> Dan
Rainer Stengele writes:
> using org-mode for quite some time now I always look at
> operations (key sequences) I repeat a lot of times.
>
> A lot of times I start a list with an item and immediately
> indent the next item as subitem.
>
> From
>
> - item 1
> - subitem 11
>
> I go to
>
> - item 1
> - subitem 11
>
> via "M-right". Then I always want to change the style of the
> subitem list to "*". I do this via "S-right-right".
>
> I wonder how others work. I would like to automatically have
> changed the subitem list type to "*" as soon as I indent via
> "Alt-right". Next indentation should go back to "-". etc.
>
> Maybe we could introduce a variable that sets the order of
> standard list item types, in my case: "- * - * - * - *" as
> in
>
>
> - item 1
> * subitem 11
> - subitem 111
> * subitem 111
> ...
>
> very special I know but I try to reduce the keypressings as
> much as possible. Any other suggestions?
This commits adds the variable
`org-list-demote-modify-bullet' for this purpose.
TAB now cycles visibility in plain lists if the cursor is in a plain
list. This corresponds now to the new default value `t' of
`org-cycle-include-plain-lists'. If you want to treat plain list
items as part of the outline hierarchy during cycling of outline
headings (this is what a `t' value used to mean), set this variable to
`integrate'.
Setting the new option `org-hierarchical-todo-statistics' to nil will
make TODO statistics to be computed recursively. This means, not only
the direct children of a node contribute to its TODO statistics, but
the entire subtree.
You can also set the COOKIE_DATA property and add the word "recursive"
there to get recursive statistics for a specific tree.
When inserting new list entries, sometime empty lines will be
inserted automatically. This, however, makes only sense if empty
lines do not terminate the list, as configured by
`org-empty-line-terminates-plain-lists'.
This commit makes sure that, if
`org-empty-line-terminates-plain-lists' is set, automatic empty lines
will never be inserted.
Using `C-c C-x C-b' in a headline now again toggles all checkboxes
below hat headline. This feature got lost during a recent overhaul of
this function.
Reported by Chris Randle.