Karl Stump writes:
> When exporting a table with a horizontal line the column count is wrong.
>
> Output from pdflatex run:
>
> ! Extra alignment tab has been changed to \cr.
> <template> \endtemplate
>
> l.32 ....\multicolumn{4}{r}{Continued on next page}
> \
> ?
>
> Here's the table in the tex file:
>
> \begin{longtable}{||lll||}
> \caption{This is a long table with lines around and between cells}\\
> Heading1 & Heading2 & Heading3 \\
> \hline
> \endhead
> \hline\multicolumn{4}{r}{Continued on next page}\
> \endfoot
> \endlastfoot
> \hline
> alpha & beta & gamma \\
> & & \\
> \end{longtable}
>
> Here's the org file:
>
> ** table export test
>
> #+CAPTION: This is a long table with lines around and between cells
> #+LATEX_HEADER: \usepackage[landscape]{geometry}
> #+LATEX_HEADER: \geometry{left=0.12in,right=0.12in,top=0.25in,bottom=0.25in}
> #+ATTR_LaTeX: longtable align=||lll||
>
> | / | <30> | <10> | <10> |
> | | Heading1 | Heading2 | Heading3 |
> |---+----------+----------+----------|
> | | alpha | beta | gamma |
> | | | | |
Nick Dokos replies:
> I believe it's because of the dummy "calculation-mark" column,
> which is not exported. However, the variable org-table-last-alignment
> (a list, whose length becomes the value of the \multicolumn argument)
> ends up having the value (nil nil nil nil), i.e. it counts the dummy
> column as well. What the proper place to adjust the value is, I don't
> know, but it should be easy for Carsten to fix it. For the time being,
> you can either get rid of the dummy row and column (e.g. if you don't
> need the widths) or fix it by hand in the LaTeX file.
Indeed, and this commit pops `org-table-last-alignment' if the first
column has been removed by `org-table-clean-before-export'. The same
problem must have caused a one-off error when setting the alignment in
LaTeX tables, bu it seems nobody has noticed this so far. Anyway,
also this is fixed now.
Bernt Hansen writes:
> I ran into this a few weeks ago and it's been bugging me.
>
> I reorganized a project which had a deadline on the main task and moved
> it down to multiple subtasks in the project.
>
> ,----
> | * TODO Project task
> | DEADLINE: <2009-08-28 Fri>
> | ** TODO Step 1
> | ** TODO Step 2
> | ...
> | ** TODO Step n
> `----
>
> I decided the DEADLINE really doesn't belong at the top -- since the
> deadline was for step 2 (and a few other tasks)... so I moved it the
> hard way. Instead of cutting it out and pasting it back in the right
> tree I just used C-c C-d and entered the same date on step 2 (because I
> was moving the date a bit from the original date).
>
> ,----
> | * TODO Project task
> | DEADLINE: <2009-08-28 Fri>
> | ** TODO Step 1
> | ** TODO Step 2
> | DEADLINE: <2009-08-28 Fri>
> | ...
> | ** TODO Step n
> `----
>
> Now to remove the deadline from the Project task I just did C-u C-c C-d
> on the Project task but this removed all the deadlines in the subtree
> and my deadline in Step 2 (and others) is now gone.
>
> AFAICT SCHEDULED: works the same way. This doesn't feel natural to me
> but I know it is documented this way.
>
> Does the way it works now really make sense or would just removing the
> deadline from the task you are working on be better.
>
> C-c C-d sets a deadline just for this task, so it felt natural to me
> that C-u C-c C-d would remove the deadline just for this task -- but
> that's what I get for not reading the manual (or forgetting since I read
> it ;)
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.
Bernt Hansen writes:
> I think I have something that is reproducible.
>
> ,----[ /tmp/x.org ]
> |
> | * Refile Targets
> | ** TODO One
> | ** TODO Two
> | ** TODO Three
> | ** TODO Four
> | ** TODO Five
> | ** TODO Six
> | *** TODO Six.one
> | *** TODO Six.two
> | **** TODO Clock me
> | ** TODO Seven
> | ** TODO Eight
> | ** TODO Nine
> | ** TODO Ten
> | * Refile Tasks
> | ** TODO Refile Me
> `----
>
> ,----[ /tmp/minimal.emacs ]
> | (add-to-list 'load-path (expand-file-name "~/git/org-mode/lisp"))
> | (add-to-list 'auto-mode-alist '("\\.\\(org\\|org_archive\\|txt\\)$" . org-mode))
> | (require 'org-install)
> |
> | (global-set-key "\C-cl" 'org-store-link)
> | (global-set-key "\C-ca" 'org-agenda)
> | (global-set-key "\C-cb" 'org-iswitchb)
> |
> | (setq org-log-done (quote time))
> | (setq org-log-into-drawer t)
> | (setq org-agenda-files '("/tmp/x.org"))
> | (setq user-init-file "/tmp/custom.el")
> |
> | (setq org-refile-allow-creating-parent-nodes nil)
> | (setq org-refile-targets (quote ((nil :maxlevel . 2) (org-agenda-files :maxlevel . 2))))
> | (setq org-refile-use-outline-path nil)
> | (setq org-todo-keywords (quote ((sequence "TODO(t!)" "STARTED(s!)" "|" "DONE(d!/!)") (sequence "WAITING(w@/!)" "SOMEDAY(S!)" "OPEN(O@)" "|" "CANCELLED(c@/!)") (sequence "QUOTE(q!)" "QUOTED(Q!)" "|" "APPROVED(A@)" "EXPIRED(E@)" "REJECTED(R@)"))))
> `----
>
> Steps to reproduce:
>
> 1. Save the files /tmp/x.org and /tmp/minimal.emacs
> 2. emacs -q -l /tmp/minimal.emacs /tmp/x.org
> 3. Go to CONTENTS view with S-TAB twice
> 4. Put point on **** TODO Clock Me
> 5. Clock in the task with C-c C-x C-i
>
> This adds a logbook drawer with the clock
>
> 6. Fold to OVERVIEW view with S-TAB
>
> So it looks like this
>
> ,----[ x.org folder ]
> |
> | * Refile Targets...
> | * Refile Tasks...
> `----
>
> 7. M-x org-clock-goto
>
> This reveals the buffer like so:
>
> ,----
> |
> | * Refile Targets...
> | **** TODO Clock me
> | :LOGBOOK:...
> | ...
> | * Refile Tasks...
> `----
>
> I think this is the critical step.
>
> 8. Put point on Refile Tasks
> 9. Show task to refile with TAB
> 10. Put point on ** TODO Refile Me
> 11. Refile to Ten with C-c C-w Ten RET
> 12. Put point on Refile Me
> 13. Reveal with C-c C-r
>
> Shows that we are under TODO Ten. So far so good
>
> ,----
> |
> | * Refile Targets...
> | **** TODO Clock me
> | :LOGBOOK:...
> | ...
> | ** TODO Ten
> | *** TODO Refile Me
> | * Refile Tasks
> `----
>
> 14. Now repeat steps 10-13 but refile to 'Two' instead of 'Ten'
>
> This goes to the wrong place. This files under Nine for me
>
> ,----
> |
> | * Refile Targets...
> | **** TODO Clock me
> | :LOGBOOK:...
> | ...
> | ** TODO Nine
> | *** TODO Refile Me
> | ** TODO Ten
> | * Refile Tasks
> `----
>
> 15. Repeat steps 10-13 with refiling to 'Two' each time
>
> This moves Refile Me up one task at a time until it gets to Two
> ie. it refiles to Eight, then Seven, then Six, then Five, then
> Four then Three, then Two.
>
> If you show contents view with S-TAB and then refile it goes to the
> right place immediately. So this definitely has something to do with
> the folded view of the org file.
>
Henry Atting writes:
> If org agenda is displayed in an other frame then windows aren*t
> restored when quitting, I have to kill the frame manually. I
> really would like it to behave like e.g. gnus-other-frame which
> automatically kills his frame on quitting.
The new keys are b and f. This used to be on the cursor keys, but
they do now again do cursor motion.
This is a significant change in the UI, I hope this will not cause too
many problems.
Fix bulk refiling in the agenda due to commit
9ec5529 (Fix jumping to last refile location in agenda, 2009-08-20)
This restores the original behaviour.
Longmin Wang writes:
> Hi,
>
> I am using org-mode integrated in emacs 23.1.1. When I export
> the org file to html file, the enumerations will be interrupted
> by some displayed math formulae. For example, the codes
>
> 1. The first.
>
> 2. A displayed formula: \[ \int_0^{+\infty} \frac{c}{1+x^2}dx=1. \]
>
> 3. The third.
>
> will generate
>
> 1. The first.
> 2. A displayed formula:
> <the formula>
> 1. The third.
>
> Is it a bug? Or I made some mistakes in the source file.
`org-cycle-separator-lines' can now get a negative value, to indicate
that, if the number of empty lines before a visible entry is greater
than the specified number, then *all* empty lines should be shown.
Use `gnus-summary-article-header' function when in gnus-summary-mode.
This way the article doesn't get displayed unnecessarily. We don't use
this function in the gnus-article-mode because it is not reliable.
Thanks to Leo for this suggestion.
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?
Nick Dokos writes:
> I define a LaTeX macro at the top of my document, like so:
>
> ,----
> | ...
> | #+LATEX_HEADER: \newcommand{\rowstyle}[1]{\gdef\currentrowstyle{#1}%
> | #+LATEX_HEADER: #1\ignorespaces
> | #+LATEX_HEADER: }
> | ...
> `----
>
> and export - I get the following inserted:
>
> ,----
> | ...
> | \begin{document}
> |
> |
> |
> |
> |
> | \$\^{}{1}\$ FOOTNOTE DEFINITION NOT FOUND: 1
> | ...
> `----
>
> Obviously, the macro argument spec is mistaken for a footnote.
Adds the output of 'git describe' to the org-version string if we are running
from a git repository. This identifies exactly what commit is checked out in
the org-mode git repository when reporting the org-mode version number.
org-version returns something like:
Org-mode version 6.29trans (release_6.29c.42.g5996)
which shows 6.29trans (somewhere after the last release tag) which
is 42 commits after release_6.29c at git commit 5996.
The git describe information is not included if org mode is not
running from a git repository.
This bug was caused by commit
8c177dc832, and reported by Matt
Lundin. The problem was that this commit tried to remove the text
propertes of the MATCH part of an agenda command. However, in block
commands, the MATCH part is not a string.
An entry `#+TODO:' without content make `M-x org-mode' fail.
While it may cause problems to have no TODO keywords defined, this
should not make entering the mode fail.
It is possible that the regular expressions for LaTeX snippets match
at nested locations. For example, Nick Dokos submitted this:
,----
| #+LaTeX_HEADER: \usepackage{amsmath}
|
| * foo
|
| \[
| \begin{matrix}
| 1&d\\
| d&d\\
| \end{matrix}
| \]
|
`----
where the snippet regexps match at \[ ... \] and also at
\\begin{matrix}.
This would lead to two nested overlays being placed. With this
commit, only the outer one will remain.
A `save-excursion' around a call to org-table-align make point end up
*before* the table. The reason is that a table align replaces the
entire table, including the newline before it. When the table is
removed in order to be replaced, the marker created by
`save-excursion' slips. `org-table-align' has it's own, built-in
`save-excursion' by remembering the line and column where the cursor
was before the align.
However, if you are using arguments, it is required that the opening
parenthesis is attached to the macro name, and that the closing
parenthesis is attached to the three closing braces.
With the following org file:
------
Foo
In which foos are described.
#+OPTIONS: num:nil author:nil creator:nil timestamp:nil d:nil toc:nil skip:t
#+TITLE:
* The construction of a foo
** Armaments
------
I found exporting to ASCII gave five leading blank lines. The
following patch reduces that to one. (I'd love some help in tracking
down that final one.)
New variable `org-agenda-skip-scheduled-if-deadline-is-shown' to avoid
that a entry shows up in the agenda for today for both a scheduling
and a deadline entry. See the docstring of the variables for more
details.
Leo writes:
> Hi there,
>
> ,----[ (info "(org)Structure editing") ]
> | `C-<RET>'
> | Just like `M-<RET>', except when adding a new heading below the
> | current heading, the new heading is placed after the body instead
> | of before it. This command works from anywhere in the entry.
> `----
>
> Inside a substree and with the point at the beginning of a line, C-RET
> turns the current line into a heading. In the following example, ><
> indicates where the point is.
>
> ----------------
> * Sample
> < This is not a heading
> ----------------
>
> After C-RET, it changes to
> ----------------
> * Sample
> * This is not a heading
> ----------------
>
> I can reproduce this with org 6.29c as included in Emacs. Can someone
> else reproduce this bug?
Dan Griswold writes:
> Hi there,
>
> Well, I think this a bug.
>
> Given this org input file:
>
> ,----
> | * Things
> | ** A Heading
> | - some
> | - stuff
> | - in
> | - a
> | - list
> | ** Another heading
> | - another
> | - list
> `----
>
> then if I select the level one heading (titled "Things")
> with C-c @, and export to LaTeX using C-c C-e l, I get this
> output:
>
> ,----
> | % Created 2009-07-29 Wed 20:24
> | \documentclass[12pt]{article}
> | \usepackage[utf8]{inputenc}
> | \usepackage[T1]{fontenc}
> | \usepackage{graphicx}
> | \usepackage{longtable}
> | \usepackage{hyperref}
> |
> |
> | \title{Things}
> | \author{Daniel M. Griswold}
> | \date{July 29, 2009}
> |
> | \begin{document}
> |
> | \maketitle
> |
> | ** A Heading
> | \begin{itemize}
> | \item some
> | \item stuff
> | \item in
> | \item a
> | \item list
> | \end{itemize}
> | ** Another heading
> | \begin{itemize}
> | \item another
> | \item list
> | \end{itemize}
> |
> | \end{document}
> `----
>
> Note that the top level headings ("A Heading" and "Another
> Heading") are not exported as \section, but with the
> asterisks they have in the org file:
>
> ,----
> | ** A Heading
> | \begin{itemize}
> |
> | ... snip ...
> |
> | \end{itemize}
> | ** Another heading
> `----
>
> Exporting the whole file does what it's supposed to do:
> export the headlines as \section and \subsection.
This commit fixes the issue.
Bernt Hansen writes:
> Every so often I run into a situation where bulk refiling
> doesn't work anymore.
>
> I currently have 15 items in my refile.org file that I want
> to refile to other locations. I marked a few of them and
> bulk refiled them just fine. Then I marked a few more and B
> r fails with "Cannot find entry for marker #<marker at
> 297156 in norang.org>"
>
> I think this happens when I mark multiple tasks in the same
> subtree (i.e. the parent and a sibling) and refile both to
> the same location. After that it gets confused.
>
> If I have a task like this in refile.org
>
> #+FILETAGS: REFILE
> * Test
> ** Test 2
>
> and run a tags match on REFILE I see both tasks. Mark both
> with m in the agenda and B r to some other location. It
> refiles the first (and this moves the sibling too) and then
> it's broken after that.
>
> I get the following backtrace
>
> Debugger entered--Lisp error: (error "Cannot find entry for
> marker #<marker at 297156 in norang.org>")
Indeed the happens because, when a parent gets refiled or
achieved, any entries corresponding to its children are
removed from the agenda.
We address this issue by
- sorting the markers, to make sure parents will be handled
before children
- No longer throwing an error when a bulk action entry no
longer is present in the agenda - most likely it was taken
care of together with its parent.
Gregory Grubbs writes:
> When exporting a table with ido-mode active, an error is
> raised in org-ido-completing-read. I think
> ido-completing-read is being called with incorrect
> arguments, but the fix is beyond me.
>
> Steps to reproduce the error:
> Org-mode version: 6.28trans
> Emacs version: GNU Emacs 23.0.91.1 (i486-pc-linux-gnu, GTK+ Version
> 2.16.0) of 2009-04-05 on palmer, modified by Debian
>
>
> Turn on ido-mode: M-x ido-mode RET
> visit a file using C-x C-f /tmp/test.org RET
> Create a simple table:
> |column a|column b|
> |-
> |one|two|
> |three|four|
>
> Org-magic-tabelize it by hitting TAB somewhere in a column
>
> M-x org-table-export RET /tmp/test.csv
>
> Here's the backtrace I get:
>
> Debugger entered--Lisp error: (wrong-type-argument listp "orgtbl-to-tsv")
This error is due to the fact that org-ido-completing-read does
convert alists to flat lists for completion. Now we check if the list
really is an alist before converting it.
The first cycle command on a line did not work correctly, to always
switched to FOLD. This was due to an error in new, faster code to
find the next visible line.
* contrib/lisp/org-checklist.el
- Fix some problems with the print/export feature in org-checklist.
- Add custom options for this module
- Fix some interaction with a2ps
- Only reset checkboxes if TODO state is done.
* lisp/org.el
- Add org-checklist to org-modules
Gregory Grubbs writes:
I like to make org-mode tables in arbitrary buffers, then
save them as CVS files. The export fails when done from a
buffer with no associated file.
Here's a little patch that allows exporting a table from
any buffer (org-mode version 6.28trans):
Changing the priority of a task when the point is after the heading
(anywhere inside the task) worked but aligning the tags failed with
a "not on a heading" error due to the save-excursion not including
the tag alignment. This change moves back to the heading and
includes that during tag alignment to remove the error text.
Patch by Bernt Hansen.
Hsiu-Khuern writes:
> Hi all,
>
> The footnote at the bottom of section 13.1.4 ("Publishing
> action") of the Org manual says that publishing org files to
> the same directory using org-publish-org-to-org results in
> files named like file-source.org. It actually results in
> file.org-source, which is not as nice. I believe the
> problem is in the org-export-as-org function in org-exp.el.
Write \n instead of \xa in the regexp, this is clearer.
And make the \n optional so that also lines at the end of
the buffers will still be matched as headlines.
A relative row reference like @-1 in a table may now reach across a
horizontal separator line. I hope this will not break any important
tables out there, but I think it is the right thing to do.
The original reason for not-crossing was to implement running
averages of one column in the next. This can now be done using field
formulas near the beginning and end of the column, and a column
formula for the central part.
See the variable `org-table-relative-ref-may-cross-hline' for more
details.