This allows to display the output of duration computations
as a fraction of days, hours, minutes or seconds.
Thanks to Daniel E. Doherty for bringing up this need.
* org-table.el (org-table-duration-custom-format): New
defcustom to select output format of durations computations.
(org-table-time-seconds-to-string): Use the new variable.
(org-table-eval-formula): Allow `t' as a flag, on top of `T'.
`t' will use the custom output format defined in
`org-table-duration-custom-format.
* org-capture.el (org-capture-templates): docstring fix.
* org.texi (Template expansion): order template sequences in
the proper order.
Thanks to Philipp Möller for this fix.
* lisp/ob.el (org-babel-view-src-block-info): New function to inspect code blocks.
* lisp/ob-keys.el (org-babel-key-bindings): Key bindings for org-babel-view-src-block-info.
* doc/orgcard.tex: Documentation of new Babel function.
* org-table.el (org-table-eval-formula): Fix bug when a
formula "range" is just one cell.
(org-table-time-string-to-seconds): don't check whether
we manipulate a string.
(org-deadline, org-schedule): Improve docstrings.
(org-add-planning-info): Allow relative time like "-2d" or
"++2w" for the TIME argument.
The user can now call `org-schedule' and `org-deadline'
and use "+1d" to say that the task must be scheduled one
day later than today, or "++1d" to say that the task must
be scheduled one day later than the current SCHEDULED date,
if any.
This also works in agenda: you can select several entries
and reschedule them to +2d.
Thanks to Memnon Anon for insisting an finding a solution
for this!
* Makefile: remove target install-info-debian and modify target
install-info so that it is compatible with the older dpkg version
of install-info that resides in /usr/sbin and may be picked up
when root is installing info files
Initial reporting by Jude DaShiell, suggestions for changing Makefile
by Nick Dokos. The solution implemented re-arranges the arguments to
install-info to be compatible with both the dpkg and GNU version of
the program. On Debian, /usr/bin/install-info is actually a wrapper
that calls /usr/bin/ginstall-info and issues the following warning
when called as root:
This is not dpkg install-info anymore, but GNU install-info
See the man page for ginstall-info for command line arguments
This warning can be safely ignored since we actually prefer that GNU
install-info is called even though we've arranged the arguments to
be compatible with dpkg install-info.
Tested on openSuSE Tumbleweed, Win7/Pro (both MSys and Cygwin) and by
Jude DaShiell on Debian Squeeze and Slackware.
TINYCHANGE
The org-export-* prefix is confusing here, as these functions
seem to be part of org-exp.el. Let's name them by the library
they are in (and rely on) for now -- maybe this will change
when we move the ODT exporter to the core.
* Mention use of keywords like multicolumn and float
* Remove previous mention of hack with placement option
as per comments on the mailing list. The hack is
better suited for Worg.
Complete org-crypt config example with a hackish workaround
to disabling auto-save locally in a buffer:
# -*- buffer-auto-save-file-name: nil; -*-
Thanks to Bill Day for suggesting this.
* lisp/org.el (defcustom org-log-into-drawer): correct typo
* lisp/org-clock.el: new function org-clock-into-drawer to change
the location of clock events based on properties CLOCK_INTO_DRAWER
or, as fallback, LOG_INTO_DRAWER, like it is already possible for
state change logs.
* lisp/org-clock.el (org-clock-jump-to-current-clock): add statement
to let clause to bind org-clock-into-drawer to result of function
eval
* lisp/org-clock.el (org-clock-find-position): add statement
to let clause to bind org-clock-into-drawer to result of function
eval, change let to let* since the binding is used later in the
same clause
* doc/org.texi: document that both CLOCK_INTO_DRAWER and
LOG_INTO_DRAWER can be used to override the contents of variable
org-clock-into-drawer (or if unset, org-log-into-drawer)
* doc/org.texi: @xref->@pxref
Thanks to Herbert Sitz for stressing the importance of this point.
* doc/org.texi (Results of evaluation): More explicit about the
mechanism through which interactive evaluation of code is performed.
* lisp/org-taskjuggler.el (org-taskjuggler-clean-effort): handle any
effort that is accepted by `org-duration-string-to-minutes´.
* doc/org.texi (TaskJuggler export): Modified the example to reflect
the new effort durations.
The Effort property previously had no unit attached. With release 7.5
of orgmode you can now attach units to it such as 4h, 2d or 2m. This
patch enhances the exporter to accept the same effort specifications.
Note: This change is NOT BACKWARDS COMPATIBLE. Where the exporter
previously assumed a plain number was meant to be days, it now assumes
it to mean minutes. You will have to change existing effort
specifications from e.g. '2' to '2d'. A simple M-x
query-replace-regexp should do.
* doc/org.texi (The clock table): Document the :properties and :inherit-props
arguments for the clocktable.
* lisp/org-clock.el (org-clocktable-write-default): Implement adding property
columns to the clock table.
Patch by Niels Giesen.
* doc/orgcard.tex: Adding line for org-babel-check-src-block.
* lisp/ob-keys.el (org-babel-key-bindings): Adding key sequence for
org-babel-check-src-block.
* lisp/ob.el (org-babel-expand-src-block): Fit within 80 cols.
(org-babel-edit-distance): Returns the edit distance of two strings.
(org-babel-check-src-block): Check a code block for errors.
* doc/org.texi (Built-in table editor): Document the table field follow mode.
* lisp/org-table.el (org-table-exit-follow-field-mode-when-leaving-table):
New option.
(org-table-check-inside-data-field): New optional argument `noerror'.
When set, the function will only return nil instead of throwing an
error.
(org-table-edit-field): Interpret double prefix argument, and improve
the properties of the editing window.
(org-table-follow-field-mode): New minor mode.
(org-table-follow-fields-with-editor): New function.
The main purpose of this functionality is to make working with table
with long fields simpler, by always showing the full content of the
current field. This functionality is based on the following
mailing list thread
http://thread.gmane.org/gmane.emacs.orgmode/41584
and contains ideas by Jonny, Juan Pechiar, and Michael Brand.
Aloha all,
The attached patch initializes the existing variable shortn, adds it to
two caption situations in addition to the one already coded, and adds
some description to the manual.
With this patch, #+CAPTION: [Short caption]{Long caption.} in the
Org-mode source exports to \caption[Short caption]{Long caption.} in the
LaTeX export, which is, I think, as it should be.
Many thanks to Nick Dokos who made me understand why earlier patches
hadn't shown up on the patchwork server (wrong mime type, evil mail
client). This one sent with gnus and fingers crossed.
All the best,
Tom
>From 9dc65f7e598dd171ebce9448cd39c4062f7cafff Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001
From: Tom Dye <tsd@tsdye.com>
Date: Sun, 8 May 2011 06:56:25 -1000
Subject: [PATCH] optional caption arguments in LaTeX export
* lisp/org.el (org-structure-template-alist): Add an easy template
for index (i), and move include file to I from i.
* doc/org.texi (Easy Templates): Document new template.
Notes about this patch:
1. It breaks some old user-visible behavior, since <i changes meaning.
Per Nick's posting, we expect that if index is used, it will be used
more commonly than include file. However, since this is a custom,
behavior could be changed. Indeed, we could put index on capital
I with a suggestion that users who are indexing should swap in their
customizations.
2. I modified the docstring for org-structure-template-alist, which did
not explain the function of the "?" in the string. Someone should
check and verify I didn't get this wrong.
3. There doesn't seem to be a Muse tag equivalent for #+index, so I
just made the Muse equivalent of #+index be #+index. I don't know
org-mtags enough to know if this is appropriate.
* doc/org.texi (Literal examples): Add a cross-reference
from "Literal Examples" to "Easy Templates."
Easy templates are especially useful for entering the begin and end pairs
that arise in supplying literal examples.
* lisp/org-agenda.el (org-agenda-clock-consistency-checks): New option.
(org-agenda-list): Handle display change to clock check.
(org-agenda-get-progress): Show only clock entries if we are doing the
consistency check.
(org-agenda-show-clocking-issues): New function.
(org-agenda-check-clock-gap): New function.
(org-agenda-view-mode-dispatch): Offer consistency check.
(org-agenda-log-mode): Handle switch to clock only display.
(org-agenda-set-mode-name): Show lighter for Clockcheck.
* lisp/org.el (org-hh:mm-string-to-minutes): Accept an integer argument
and return it unchanged.
* doc/org.texi (Agenda commands): Document clock consistency checks.
* doc/orgcard.tex: Document key for clock consistency check.
* lisp/org-agenda.el (org-agenda-bulk-action): Allow bulk scatter
in all possible agenda views. Use `org-agenda-schedule' instead of
`org-agenda-date-later'.
The bulk scatter command so far shifted the date that was causing an
entry to appear in the agenda. However, the true intend was to
reschedule onto dates in the near future. This patch fixes this
issue. A side effect is that you can now bulk scatter tasks that to
not yet have a date, for example also tasks picked from the TODO
list.
* doc/org.texi (Selective export): Document exclusion of any tasks from
export.
* lisp/org-exp.el (org-export-with-tasks): New option.
(org-export-plist-vars): Add :tasks property.
* doc/org.texi (Selective export): Document how to exclude DONE tasks
from export.
(Publishing options): Document the properties to be used to turn off
export of DONE tasks.
* lisp/org-ascii.el (org-export-as-ascii):
* lisp/org-docbook.el (org-export-as-docbook):
* lisp/org-html.el (org-export-as-html):
* lisp/org-latex.el (org-export-as-latex): Pass the :done-tasks property
to the export preprocessor.
* lisp/org-exp.el (org-export-with-done-tasks): New option.
(org-export-plist-vars): Add entry for :done-tasks.
(org-export-preprocess-string): Call `org-export-remove-done-tasks'.
(org-export-remove-done-tasks): New function.
* lisp/org.el (org-read-date-force-compatible-dates): New option.
(org-read-date, org-read-date-analyze): Check representable date range.
* doc/org.texi (The date/time prompt): Document date range protection.
New variable `org-read-date-force-compatible-dates' to control
handling of dates.
* lisp/ob-tangle.el (org-babel-spec-to-string): Check value of padline
on tangling, no longer use the now-removed variable
`org-babel-tangle-pad-newline'.
* lisp/ob.el (org-babel-header-arg-names): Add padline to the list of
header argument names.
(org-babel-default-header-args): Set the default value of padline to
"yes".
(org-babel-merge-params): Cleaned up the merge logic, added padline.
* doc/org.texi (padline): Documentation of the new padline header
argument.
(org-capture-templates): Rename :no-clock-out to :clock-keep.
(org-capture): Use :clock-keep instead of :no-clock-out.
Thanks to Bernt Hansen for the suggestion.
* org-capture.el (org-capture-templates): New option
:no-clock-out.
(org-capture): Use the new option.
* org.texi (Template elements): document the new template
option :no-clock-out.
* org-html.el (org-export-html-preamble)
(org-export-html-postamble): now default to `nil'.
(org-export-as-html): when :html-pre/postamble is nil, fall
back on the default pre/postamble, which depends on the
:author-info, :email-info, :creator-info options.
* org-exp.el (org-export-plist-vars): reorder the alist.
* org.texi (Export options): better document :html-preamble
and :html-postamble: setting these options will override any
:author-info, :email-info and :creator-info options for the
HTML export.
Org puts this information on the line right after the headline.
If the user adds information between this line and the headline,
especially timestamps, then Org might be confused. Ask the user
not to put information there.
* lisp/org-table.el (org-table-fedit-finish): Read more general LHS of formulas.
(org-table-formula-handle-@L): New function to hanle @L references.
(org-table-current-ncol): New variable.
(org-table-line-to-dline): New function.
(org-table-get-stored-formulas): Accept range formulas as matches.
(org-table-get-specials): Compute and store the number of columns.
(org-table-get-range): New optional argument CORNERS-ONLY, to retrieve
only the region marked by the range, not the content.
(org-table-recalculate): Call `org-table-expand-lhs-ranges' to expand
range targets. Also check for duplicate access to fields.
(org-table-expand-lhs-ranges): New funktion.
(org-table-get-remote-range): Bind `org-table-current-ncol' to protect
the caller's value.
(org-table-edit-formulas): Support highlighting of range targets.
(org-table-field-info): Handle renge formulas.
* doc/org.texi (Field and range formulas): Renamed from "Field formulas".
Document the use of range operators as targets.
(References): Document the new @L reference.
* doc/org.texi (colnames): Reference indexing into variables, and note
that colnames are *not* removed before indexing occurs.
(rownames): Reference indexing into variables, and note that
rownames are *not* removed before indexing occurs.
* lisp/org-capture.el (org-capture-expand-file): New function.
(org-capture-target-buffer):
(org-capture-set-target-location): Use `org-capture-expand-file'.
* doc/org.texi (Template elements): Document that files can be given
as function, form, or variable.
* org-clock.el (org-clock-clocktable-language-setup): New
custom variable.
(org-clocktable-defaults): Set the default language.
(org-clocktable-write-default): Use the new variable.
* org-capture.el (org-capture-templates): document currentfile
for capture template.
(org-capture-templates): Allow to use currentfile for capture
templates.
(org-capture-set-target-location): Handle currentfile as a way
to setting the capture buffer.
* org.texi (Template elements): document currentfile for
capture templates.
* org-html.el (org-export-html-auto-preamble)
(org-export-html-auto-postamble): Remove.
(org-export-html-preamble, org-export-html-postamble): Turn
into custom variables. Update the docstrings.
(org-export-html-preamble-format)
(org-export-html-postamble-format): New custom variables.
(org-export-as-html): Use org-export-html-postamble-format and
org-export-html-preamble-format.
(org-export-html-title-format): delete.
* org-exp.el (org-export-plist-vars): Remove
:auto-preamble and :auto-postamble. Rename :preamble and
:postamble to :html-preamble and :html-postamble.
* org-publish.el (org-publish-project-alist): Remove
:auto-preamble and :auto-postamble. Rename :preamble and
:postamble to :html-preamble and :html-postamble.
* org.texi (Publishing options): replace :preamble and
:auto-preamble by :html-preamble (same for postamble.)
This patch adds sort options to the sitemap. In addition to
alphabetical order, one can choose chronological or anti-chronological
ordering of sitemap entries. To retrieve file date, it tries to parse
the "#+date" keyword and if not present defaults to file modification
time.
* org.el (org-narrow-to-block): New function to narrow to block.
Bound this function to `C-x n b'.
* org.texi (Dynamic blocks, Structure editing): Mention
the function `org-narrow-to-block'.
This is inspired by a request by Leonidas Tsampros.
On Jan 26, 2011, at 10:34 AM, Eli Zaretskii wrote:
> The file org-complete.el, added about a month ago, causes a file-name
> clash with org-compat.el after 8+3 truncation. This causes trouble
> when unpacking Emacs tarballs on DOS filesystems.
Also rename org-complete-* functions in org-pcomplete.el and remove a
wrong reference to org-complete in doc/org.texi.
We still use org-complete-* namespace for the custom group and the
custom variables.
Hi Carsten,
On Sat, Jan 8, 2011 at 11:35 PM, Carsten Dominik
<carsten.dominik@gmail.com> wrote:
> Hi Puneeth,
>
> can cou please augment the patch with a propert ChangeLog-like entry, and
> with documentation for the manual, and then resubmit?
Here is a patch with a ChangeLog entry and documentation for the
manual. Please tell me if it looks OK. Also, I hope using
git-format-patch is the right way to send this page. If not, what is
the right way?
Thanks,
Puneeth
>From 4a9be5b1a7a19c5d092ed14a86d29ad83122e9a8 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001
From: Puneeth Chaganti <punchagan@gmail.com>
Date: Sun, 9 Jan 2011 00:48:51 +0530
Subject: [PATCH] Include only specified range of line numbers of a file
* doc/org.texi (Include files): Document :lines.
* lisp/org-exp.el (org-export-handle-include-files): Support :lines
property.
(org-get-file-contents): New argument lines to include specify a range
of lines to include.
On Fri, Jan 7, 2011 at 1:29 PM, Puneeth <punchagan@gmail.com> wrote:
> On Fri, Jan 7, 2011 at 10:03 AM, Venkatesh Choppella
> <venkatesh.choppella@iiit.ac.in> wrote:
>> I would like to include a part of a file (between a given range of
>> line numbers) instead of the whole file. Is there a way to do that
>> in org-mode?
>
> It isn't possible to include files using line numbers, as of now.
> Here's a quick patch that would add this feature. I have tested it
> with small files and works fine. Can somebody tell me if it looks
> good?
>
> :lines "5-10" will include the lines from 5 to 10, 10 excluded.
> :lines "-10" will include the lines from 1 to 10, 10 excluded.
> :lines "5-" will include the lines from 1 to the end of the file.
>
> HTH,
> Puneeth
> Date: Fri, 14 Jan 2011 23:18:21 +0100
> From: mail@christianmoe.com
> To: emacs-orgmode@gnu.org
> Subject: Re: [Orgmode] Doors links
>
> Hi,
>
> Try these:
>
> [[info:org:Link abbreviations]]
>
> [[info:org:Adding%20hyperlink%20types][info:org:Adding hyperlink types]]
>
> Yours,
> Christian
>
[...]
Thanks, I will try that ! I think that the trick deserves a forward link
in the documentation. I made a patch to the doc, attached.
Vincent.
* doc/org.texi (Conflicts): Changed "yasnippets" to "yasnippet" and
added extra whitespace around functions to be consistent with the
rest of the section.
* lisp/org-agenda.el (org-agenda-skip-function-global): New option.
(org-agenda-skip-eval): New function.
(org-agenda-skip): Use `org-agenda-skip-eval' and also check for the
global skipping condition.
This was a request by John Wiegley
* doc/org.texi (Evaluating code blocks): Expanded discussion of
#+call: line syntax.
(Header arguments in function calls): Expanded discussion of #+call:
line syntax.
* lisp/org-capture.el (org-capture-templates): Add %f and %F escapes
(org-capture): Add more information to capture property list
(org-capture-fill-template): Handle %f and %F escapes
* lisp/org.el (org-occur-next-match): New function.
(org-mode): Set the variable `next-error-function'.
(org-highlight-new-match): Add an `org-type' property to the overlays.
* doc/org.texi (Sparse trees): Document the next-error / previous-error
functionality.
After a sparse tree construction, `M-g n' and `M-g p' will now jump to
the location of matches.
Message-mode is the default mode for composing emails in Emacs
since 2009-07-14. See Stefan's message in Emacs lisp/ChangeLog:
2009-07-14 Stefan Monnier <monnier@iro.umontreal.ca>
* simple.el (mail-user-agent): Default to the upwardly-UI-compatible
and more featureful message-mode.
Thanks to Vladimir Alexiev for submitting this patch
* lisp/ob.el (org-babel-confirm-evaluate): Fix for the case when
org-confirm-babel-evaluate is a function (used to always ask no matter
what the function returns).
* doc/org.texi (Code evaluation security): Add example for using a
function.