Exporting drawers was not really supported, now it is.
Drawers that are selected for export are formatted using the function
specified in the variable `org-export-format-drawer-function'. If
that is nil, the default `org-export-format-drawer' will publish the
drawer as a colon example, i.e. verbatim and in fixed-width.
Martin Skjaeveland writes:
> Hi all,
>
> when I import the file
>
> --8<---------------cut here---------------start------------->8---
> -----------------
> | grandmother |
> =================
> | sim:Jackeline |
> | sim:Mona |
> -----------------
> --8<---------------cut here---------------end------------->8---
>
> using the command
>
> #+INCLUDE "grandmothers.txt" example
>
> and export to latex it turns into
>
>
> \begin{verbatim}
> -----------------
> | grandmother |
> \texttt{===============}
> | sim:Jackeline |
> | sim:Mona |
> -----------------
> \end{verbatim}
>
>
> I would like to remove \texttt{ }. I have tried different export
> option settings, but I can't make it work.
>
When a backend selects its #+begin_backend ... #+end_backend
code, the markers need to be removed so that a package like
org-special-blocks.el does not try to work on the block again.
There was an issue that lines starting with a space followed by #
would be protected when importing the file, but not unprotected when
formatting the example. The reason for this issue is that we recently
changed to protect indented #+ lines.
The width and alignment in table columns can be set with a cookie like
"<10>" or "<r>" or "<r10>". In order to keep Org from exporting such
lines, the first column of a line can contain only "/". However, for
convenience, this commit implements a special case: If the entire row
contains only sch markers, the line will automatically be discarded
during export.
Eric Schulte writes:
> Attached is a small patch for a small issue.
>
> Sometimes a language uses a major mode which can't be guessed
> from it's name. This patch introduces the `org-src-lang-modes'
> variable which can be used to map language names to major modes
> when this is the case. This is used when editing a source-code
> block, or when exporting fontified source-code with htmlize.
>
> So far the only instance of this that I know of is ocaml and
> tuareg-mode, so that's the only thing that `org-src-lang-modes'
> is pre-populated with. Maybe there are other instances as well?