thanks to Christopher Allan Webber for catching this
* lisp/babel/langs/ob-python.el (org-babel-python-table-or-string):
now more careful not to replace "None"s which are not isolated
portions of lists
Thanks to Christopher Witte for raising these issues
* lisp/babel/langs/ob-haskell.el (org-babel-expand-body:haskell):
replaced missing () wrapping, and now using correct variable
expansion
(org-babel-execute:haskell): now using
org-babel-haskell-initiate-session to start sessions
(org-babel-haskell-initiate-session): only starting sessions if none
exists, also added a .25 second wait on brand new sessions to allow
the Haskell interpreter to fire up
(org-babel-load-session:haskell): now optionally accepts processed
params to avoid over-execution of variable resolution
(org-babel-prep-session:haskell): now optionally accepts processed
params to avoid over-execution of variable resolution, also placing
the variable definitions directly in the session instead of loading
them from a separate file
* lisp/org-entities.el (org-entities): Restructure the list.
(org-entities-help): Turn the help output into a buffer
in Org-mode, so that it becomes easier to find a symbol
in the structure.
(org-entities-create-table): Deal with new structure.
Thanks to Daniel Mahler for finding this problem and proposing the fix
* lisp/babel/ob.el (unless): ensure `declare-function' is available in
all Emacsen
* lisp/org-macs.el (org-not-nil): Return the value if not interpreted
as nil.
* lisp/org.el (org-entry-get):
(org-entry-get-with-inheritance): Interpret the value "nil"
as nil for properties.
Bernt Hansen writes:
> Carsten Dominik <carsten.dominik@gmail.com> writes:
>
> > On Jun 25, 2010, at 3:23 PM, Robert Goldman wrote:
> >
> > > Question: what is the proper way to get a NIL into a property? Are
> > > we
> > > to use () instead of "nil"? Or are property values always interpreted
> > > as strings?
> > >
> > > Apologies in advance if this is a stupid question!
> >
> > Not a stupid question at all.
> >
> > There is no way, currently. Property values are string - the only
> > way to make
> > org-entry-get return nil is to not have the property defined at all.
>
> I've wanted a similar thing in the past for the LOGGING property where
> the parent task has special logging set via the LOGGING property but I
> want to undo that for some of the child tasks so they use the default
> logging setup.
>
> Having a way to undefine a property would be good in general I think.
-Bernt
* lisp/org-macs.el (org-not-nil): New function.
* lisp/org.el (org-block-todo-from-children-or-siblings-or-parent):
Use `org-not-nil' to interpret a property value of nil.
Robert Goldman writes:
> I have found what I believe to be a bug in handling ordered subtasks.
> Here is the behavior:
>
> I have a top level set of tasks that is ordered.
>
> One of the outline items below the top level set is a grab bag of tasks
> that will be performed in parallel. So this task is NOT ordered
> (ORDERED: nil).
>
> The problem is that the blocking behavior from ordered tasks seems to be
> inherited from the top level task list into the second level of the
> outline, even though the ORDERED property at the second level is
> explicitly overridden.
>
> I am attaching an org file that displays this issue. To see the
> problem, put your cursor on the "Bar" task and attempt to change its
> status to DONE.
The problem was here that the value of the property is the string
"nil", which is of course not nil.
This patches introduces a special case to interpret "nil" as nil.
* lisp/babel/langs/ob-emacs-lisp.el
(org-babel-expand-body:emacs-lisp): removed extra call to
`org-babel-process-params' which was causing referenced code blocks
to be run multiple times
(org-babel-execute:emacs-lisp): now passing processed-params through
to `org-babel-expand-body:emacs-lisp' which keeps references from
being evaluated multiple times
* lisp/org-agenda.el (org-agenda-get-timestamps): No errors
while getting TODO state.
(org-agenda-highlight-todo): No error when no keyword has
been matched.
Eric Arneson writes:
> I've discovered a bug in `org-agenda-get-timestamps' wherein an active
> timestamp before the first headline causes it to fail. I realize that
> this is probably an error in my use of active timestamps, but there was
> no really handy error message and this bugged me for weeks.
>
> I'm not familiar enough with org-mode to know what the correct behavior
> should be here (it'd be nice to get an error message saying "Don't use
> active timestamps that way!"), but here's an example .org file that will
> trigger the bug:
>
> --8<---------------cut here---------------start------------->8---
> #+BEGIN: clocktable :maxlevel 3 :scope today
> Clock summary at [2010-06-20 Sun 13:09]
>
> | L | Headline | Time |
> |---+---------------------------------------+--------|
> | | *Total time* | *0:13* |
> |---+---------------------------------------+--------|
> | 1 | Track down funky bug <2010-06-20 Sun> | 0:13 |
> #+END:
>
> * Track down funky bug <2010-06-20 Sun>
> :LOGBOOK:
> CLOCK: [2010-06-20 Sun 12:43]
> CLOCK: [2010-06-20 Sun 12:30]--[2010-06-20 Sun 12:43] => 0:13
> :END:
> --8<---------------cut here---------------end--------------->8---
>
> I hope this can help somebody else track down the right place to fix
> this bug.
* lisp/babel/ob-exp.el (org-babel-exp-results): now checking to see if
return value of `org-babel-ref-literal' is equal to the null
indicator flag -- meaning it's now possible to accept a value of
null
* lisp/babel/ob-ref.el (org-babel-ref-parse): now checking to see if
return value of `org-babel-ref-literal' is equal to the null
indicator flag -- meaning it's now possible to accept a value of
null
(org-babel-ref-literal): now returning a null indicator flag when
the value is *not* a literal value, meaning it is possible to pass
in a literal value of null
Carsten Dominik <carsten.dominik@gmail.com> writes:
> 3 Why a new name?
> ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
>
> I have - at least for now - chosen a new name for the new setup:
> ` org-capture'. There are two reasons for this:
In the manual it is "Capture - Refile - Archive". I remember searching
for "Remember" and never found it :)
> 5 Setup
> ~~~~~~~~
>
> To use the new setup, do the following:
>
> 1. Run
>
> M-x org-capture-import-remember-templates RET
Worked perfectly here :)
I tested all my important templates and they work.
Abandoning org-remember seems painless.
> '(("t" "templates adding table lines")
> ("ta" "add to table a" table-line (file+headline "~/notes.org" "Table A))
> ("tb" "add to table b" table-line (file+headline "~/notes.org" "Table B))
> ("tc" "add to table c" table-line (file+headline "~/notes.org" "Table C)))
>
> When starting capture, you can then first press "t" and then see
> the individual options.
This is great. Number of templates is constantly growing and the new
features will increase the speed of this process.
> 7 Request for comments
> ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
>
> None of what I describe is set in stone yet - let me know if you have
> comments, change requests or other ideas.
>
> My feeling right now is that this should become the default capture
> system, and that we will keep the current org-remember in the
> distribution for quite some time, for compatibility.
Good track I guess.
Here's the tested and working patch for org-protocol.el.
To use `org-remember' and/or `org-capture' alike, copy your org-remember
link and change
javascript:location.href='org-protocol://remember://'+...
to
javascript:location.href='org-protocol://capture://'+...
The template char used is the same for both --- which is OK for me, but
could be changed.
* lisp/org.el (org-timestamp-change): New optional argument UPDOWN.
Use this to identify calls from org-timestamp-up/down, so that we can
skip by rounding minutes in this case.
(org-timestamp-up):
(org-timestamp-down):
(org-timestamp-up-day):
(org-timestamp-down-day): Call org-timestamp-change with the
updown argument.
This function used to look only if there was a prefix argument in the
current interactive call. Now we have an explicit marker indicating
that the function is called from the updown commands.
Bernt Hansen writes:
> I was talking to Jeff Stern about tags todo matching offlist and we
> think the documentation for tags-todo matching can probably be improved.
>
> The description of C-c a M at
> http://orgmode.org/manual/Matching-tags-and-properties.html
> states
>
> C-c a M
>
> Like C-c a m, but only select headlines that are also TODO items and
> force checking subitems (see variable
> org-tags-match-list-sublevels). To exclude scheduled/deadline items,
> see the variable org-agenda-tags-todo-honor-ignore-options. Matching
> specific TODO keywords together with a tags match is also possible,
> see Tag searches.
>
> When I read this I think TODO items is any todo keyword but this isn't
> the case. It is only non-done TODO state keywords. This makes
> tags-todo matching not work for finding tasks to archive (normally
> DONE | CANCELLED keywords in my setup)
>
> Should we explicitly state that 'headlines that are also TODO items'
> does not match DONE state keywords? Or alternatively should TODO items
> and DONE items be separate (and explicitly defined) in the documentation
> -- like org-todo-keywords and org-done-keywords?
>
> I still think 'TODO keyword' matches any todo keyword defined in
> org-todo-keywords and maybe I need to be re-educated :)
Bernt is right, and this patch tries to clarify the issue.
* lisp/org-agenda.el (org-agenda-action): Make `c' key call org-capture.
* lisp/org-capture.el: New file.
* lisp/org-compat.el (org-get-x-clipboard): Function moved here from
remember.el.
* lisp/org-mks.el: New file
* lisp/org.el (org-set-regexps-and-options): Allow statistic cookies as
part of complex headlines.
(org-find-olp): New argument THIS-BUFFER. When set, assume that the
OLP does not contain a file name.
* lisp/org.el (org-mode): Set `comment-start' instead of changing the
syntax of the `#' character.
Leo writes:
> Setting a comment starter without a corresponding comment ender is
> problematic and the # creeps in mysteriously under auto-fill. For
> example, in my current running emacs, this happens almost certainly in
> all org files that has # in their header. The only (temporary) solution
> seems to reboot emacs (which is painful and disruptive).
>
> If you try eval (forward-comment 1) at the beginning of an org file that
> has some "#+..." it will move to the end of file (the whole file is
> regarded as one single comment). So when auto-fill a long text, it will
> find the common prefix to be #.
>
> In addition, I don't think org mode has clear comment syntax or ideas on
> what to do with it.
>
> I can't see any gain from (modify-syntax-entry ?# "<") so I am proposing
> removing it entirely and get rid of this mysterious and annoying bug
> once and for all.
>
> The attached patch may (though I think it is quite safe) cause some bugs
> but those will be fixable unlike the one mentioned above.
>
> Best wishes,
>
> Leo
* lisp/org-exp.el (org-export-format-source-code-or-example): Mark examples
by a property. o
* lisp/org-html.el (org-export-html-close-lists-maybe): Check if raw
HTML stuff was actually made from an example
Daniel Mahler writes:
> 2. I would like to embed source blocks in numbered lists, without
> breaking the numbering ie:
>
> 1) get ready
> #+BEGIN_SRC sh
> get_ready
> #+END_SRC
> 2) go
> #+BEGIN_SRC sh
> go
> #+END_SRC
>
> currently the src blocks cause the numbering to reset, so all
> items in a sequence like this are numbered 1
This patch fixes this issue - but I cannot say anymore why the code in
org-export-html-close-lists-maybe does in fact work. The code looks
wrong, but it seems to work. What looks wrong is that i does not
check for the true indentation in the case when the line is not
protected. It must be that this case is covered by some other code
further down in the exporter.
* lisp/babel/ob.el (org-babel-src-block-regexp):
ensure no whitespace in language names
(org-babel-inline-src-block-regexp):
ensure no whitespace in language names
- Removed the org-babel-tangle-langs variable.
- Added the org-babel-tangle-lang-exts alist for associating
languages with file extensions
- Comments now only added when the :comments header argument is set
to yes
* lisp/babel/ob-tangle.el (org-babel-tangle-w-comments):
this is now a defcustom
(org-babel-tangle-lang-exts): alist associating languages with file
extension, this is also a defcustom
(org-babel-spec-to-string): no longer using the complex tangle-lang
variables
* lisp/babel/ob.el (org-babel-interpreters): define this before it is
first used
* lisp/babel/ob.el (org-babel-call-process-region-original): define
this before it is first used
* lisp/babel/ob.el (org-babel-execute-src-block):
call-process-region-original is no longer free
(org-babel-org-babel-call-process-region-original):
call-process-region-original is no longer free and is now renamed
org-babel-call-process-region-original
(org-babel-tramp-handle-call-process-region):
call-process-region-original is no longer free
* lisp/babel/ob.el (org-babel-execute-src-block): now passing
additional optional argument to `org-babel-inert-results'
(org-babel-insert-result): now accepting additional language
variable
* lisp/babel/ob-comint.el (org-babel-comint-with-output):
Fixed egregious oversight in which we were assuming that the
`full-body' variable would be in scope at the time of macro
execution. Thanks to the compiler for finding this bug.
* lisp/babel/langs/ob-R.el (org-babel-R-evaluate): now using the fixed
`org-babel-comint-with-output' macro
* lisp/babel/langs/ob-haskell.el (org-babel-execute:haskell): now
using the fixed `org-babel-comint-with-output' macro
* lisp/babel/langs/ob-ocaml.el (org-babel-execute:ocaml): now using
the fixed `org-babel-comint-with-output' macro
* lisp/babel/langs/ob-octave.el (org-babel-octave-evaluate-session):
now using the fixed `org-babel-comint-with-output' macro
* lisp/babel/langs/ob-python.el (org-babel-python-evaluate): now using
the fixed `org-babel-comint-with-output' macro
* lisp/babel/langs/ob-ruby.el (org-babel-ruby-evaluate): now using the
fixed `org-babel-comint-with-output' macro
* lisp/babel/langs/ob-sh.el (org-babel-sh-evaluate): now using the
fixed `org-babel-comint-with-output' macro
we are keeping two things in the contrib directory
1) the library-of-babel.org file, this is with the goal of lowering
the barrier of entry for contribution of functions to the library
of babel
2) we are also keeping a langs directory in the contrib directory
because some language files do not have FSF copyright assignment
-- current org-babel-oz.el is the only such file
* 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.
* lisp/org-exp.el: comment regexp now matches documentation. No more
protection check when deleting comments before export.
Thanks to Nicolas Goaziou <n.goaziou@gmail.com> for this patch.
* lisp/org-exp.el (org-export-preprocess-string):
now using `org-export-handle-include-files-recurse' to resolve
included files
(org-export-handle-include-files): now returns a list of the
included files
(org-export-handle-include-files-recurse): recursively calls
`org-export-handle-include-files' while checking to see if the
process has entered an infinite loop.
Thanks to Eric Schulte for this patch.
(org-agenda-get-scheduled):
* lisp/org.el (org-time-string-to-seconds):
For deadline and scheduled agenda display ignore the cyclic repeater
when calculating how many days late the task is. If you have a weekly
task and miss the date the agenda view will show more than a week late
now instead of resetting on the cyclic repeating date. This makes it
much more obvious when you missed a repeating task after the repeater.
Thanks to Bernt Hansen for this patch.
* org.el (org-raise-scripts): Do not fontify sub/superscripts of text
with face `org-special-keyword'. Makes property keys as :LAST_REPEAT:
display correctly.
This patch adds a modification hook to remove inline-image overlays if
the underlying text is modified. This prevents blind editing of text
behind images.
* lisp/org-exp-blocks.el (org-export-blocks-postblock-hook): adding
documentation to and turning into a defcustom
(org-export-blocks-preprocess): actually running the
`org-export-blocks-postblock-hook' hook after preprocessing
Environments coming from latex backend specific instructions (#+LaTeX)
are already protected and won't be treated as normal environments.
* lisp/org-latex.el (org-export-latex-preprocess): Environments coming
from latex backend specific instructions (#+LaTeX) are already
protected and won't be treated as normal environments.
use a property named "task_id" instead as we do not search for task
ids across files. For resources use a property named "resource_id" or
only as a fall back the ID property.
Also issue a warning if a dependency cannot be resolved.
- Attributes are now insetred generically based on an item (resource
or task) a list of attrbutes
- project end is now solely calculated and no longer inserted in the
node
* lisp/org.el (org-raise-scripts): Do not act in links.
Matt Lundin writes:
> Git commit 70d24c5d03 causes underscores
> in hyperlinks to display parts of link and description as subscripts.
> E.g., this link...
>
> [[http://www.samplepage.com/an_underscore][Some description words]]
>
> ...displays the word "Some" in the description as a subscript. With M-x
> visible-mode, the substring "underscore][Some" is displayed as a
> subscript.
* lisp/org-exp.el (org-export-remove-special-table-lines): Only fix table
lines that are not protected text.
Giovanni Moretti writes:
> I'm working up a presentation on orgmode for a local club and needed
> to prefix it with a brief emacs overview, and so included this:
>
> #+BEGIN_EXAMPLE
> ctrl-P (previous line)
> |
> |
> Ctrl-A <<< Ctrl-B <---- o ----> Ctrl-F >>> Ctrl-E
> Col 1 back char ! fwd char EOL
> !
> ctrl-N (next line)
> #+END_EXAMPLE
>
> : ctrl-P (previous line)
> : |
> : |
> : Ctrl-A <<< Ctrl-B <---- o ----> Ctrl-F >>> Ctrl-E
> : Col 1 back char | fwd char EOL
> : |
> : ctrl-N (next line)
>
> I'm using Orgmode v6.36c and when exporting to HTML (and LaTex
> Beamer), the two lines containing the single vertical bar immediately
> below the "ctrl-P" line in the #+EXAMPLE block vanish, whereas using
> the alternate colon at the beginning of the line notation, the
> rendering is as expected.
>
> Interestingly, enabling the +n option (#+BEGIN_EXAMPLE +n) causes the
> missing lines (lines 2 & 3) to reappear.
* lisp/org.el (org-edit-special): Make sure source code editing goes
before table formula editing.
* lisp/org-table.el (org-table-fedit-map): "C-c '" will now also exit
the formula editor.
Carsten Dominik <dominik@uva.nl> writes:
> Hi Dan,
>
> after a long time, I tried to edit a fixed width region today.
> So I entered
>
> : a
> : b
> : c
>
> and pressed "C-c '" in there. The edit buffer came up in
> read-only mode, which should not be so.
>
> Also, when I do "C-c '" in an empty line, it used to be the case
> that I get an empty artist buffer which I can then edit. Also this
> buffer comes up as read-only.
>
> I suspect that this has to do with the changes you made for read-only
> view buffers. Before I dive into this issue myself, maybe it will be
> much
> easier if you do this?
Hi Carsten,
You're right that it dates from then. Here's the fix I suggest. I've
tested that this results in writable fixed-width edit buffers, writable
src edit buffers, and non-writable babel preview buffers.
Dan
--8<---------------cut here---------------start------------->8---
commit ed4eb9d150
Author: Dan Davison <davison@stats.ox.ac.uk>
Date: Sat Jun 5 12:35:19 2010 +0100
* lisp/org-src.el: Prevent fixed-width region edit buffers
being created as read-only.
Modified lisp/org-src.el
* contrib/lisp/org-special-blocks.el (org-special-blocks-make-special-cookies):
Emacs 22 doesn't have string-match-p
* lisp/org-freemind.el (org-freemind-write-mm-buffer):
(org-freemind-get-node-style):
Emacs 22 doesn't have string-match-p
* lisp/org-html.el (org-html-make-link):
Use new org-string-match-p for compatibility
* lisp/org.el (org-read-date-analyze): Fix regular expression for
matching american dates
Daniel E. Doherty writes:
> In playing around with the date prompt (C-.), I ran across the following
> puzzling behavior from rather simple inputs.
>
> I entered the following on June 1, 2010. Here is a date entered as
> "3/15": <2011-03-15 Tue>. It interpreted it as the upcoming March 15 as
> expected.
>
> But here is a date entered as "5/21": <2021-06-05 Sat>. Note how it
> interpreted the "21" as the year 2021, not at all what I expected from
> the documentation or the analogous "3/15" example.
>
> Maybe there is some underlying logic here that I'm not getting. Perhaps
> it has to do with how 2-digit years are interpreted?
>
> What's going on here? I am using org-version 6.36trans on emacs 23.1.
What was going on here is that the regular expression for matching
american-style dates was wrong. It was looking for month numbers in
the second field and day numbers in the first field - wrong, of
course.
* lisp/org-macs.el (org-rm-props): Add org-emphasis to the properties
that must be removed.
* lisp/org.el (org-do-emphasis-faces): Add org-emphasis property to
items that have emphasis done wit font-lock.
(org-fontify-entities): Do not do anything in commented lines.
(org-unfontify-region): Decompose the region as well, because we do
composition during font-lock.
(org-raise-scripts): Do nothing inside an emphasis string.
Reported by Eric Fraga in http://article.gmane.org/gmane.emacs.orgmode/25940
* lisp/org-compat.el (org-string-match-p):
(org-looking-at-p): New functions.
* lisp/org-table.el (org-table-align): Handle raised text with
invisible characters.
* lisp/org.el (org-script-display): Add raise properties for tables.
(org-raise-scripts): Handle raising differently inside tables.
Pretty display of subscripts and superscripts no longer messes up
table alignment. This is achieved by two things:
1. Inside tables, the raised characters are not made smaller, they
remains at the same size. Instead they are raise/lowered more, by
a full half character height to still be clearly readable as
subscript or superscript.
2. The invisible characters are taken into account when computing the
field width.
* lisp/org.el (org-ctrl-k-protect-subtree): New option.
(org-kill-line): Protect hidden subtrees if the user wants it.
* doc/org.texi (Headlines): Mention the special behavior of C-k
in headlines.
Scott Otterson writes:
> For what must be the dozenth time, I've just accidentally deleted a
> large tree by typing C-k while in a headline.
>
> This is really easy to do because emacs users have "C-k deletes to the
> end of the line" worn deeply into their neural pathways -- it's so
> automatic for me that the keystroke is close to subconscious. A
> mistaken C-k is especially hard to detect because org-mode displays
> the result exactly like what your subconscious expects, that is, a
> collapsed headline is deleted to the end -- and the tree underneath is
> wiped out with no noticeable warning.
>
> Feature request: add an option preventing tree deletion with C-k
> without user confirmation. Actually, I'd like an option to prevent it
> period.
>
> If this option is already in there, then you're encouraged to tell me
> to RTFM. But then also please tell me where it is, because I can't
> find it.
Carsten replies
> This is now possible due to the variable
> `org-ctrl-k-protect-subtree'. But I predict that you are going to set
> it to nil again soon :D
* doc/org.texi (Subscripts and superscripts): Document that `C-c C-x \'
will also format sub and superscripts.
* doc/orgcard.tex: Document that `C-c C-x \'
will also format sub and superscripts.
* lisp/org.el (org-use-sub-superscripts):
(org-pretty-entities-include-sub-superscripts): Move here from
org-exp.el.
(org-set-regexps-and-options): Parse subscript option and set
`org-use-sub-superscripts' as a local variable.
(org-match-sexp-depth):
(org-create-multibrace-regexp):
(org-match-substring-regexp):
(org-match-substring-with-braces-regexp): Moved here from org-exp.el
(org-set-font-lock-defaults): Call `org-raise-scripts'.
(org-remove-font-lock-display-properties): New function.
(org-unfontify-region): Call
`org-remove-font-lock-display-properties'.
(org-script-display): New constant.
(org-raise-scripts): New function.
When turning on entity display with `C-c C-x \', sub- and superscripts
will also be displayed in a smaller font, and raised/lowered.
* lisp/org-latex.el (org-export-latex-fontify): Avoid fontifying
several stars in a row.
* lisp/org.el (org-emphasis-alist): Mention
`org-export-docbook-emphasis-alist' in the docstring.
Called with a numeric prefix argument, `org-timer-set-timer' uses
this numeric value as the duration of the timer.
Called with a `C-u' prefix argument, use `org-timer-default-timer'
without prompting the user for a duration.
With two `C-u' prefix arguments, use `org-timer-default-timer'
without prompting the user for a duration and automatically
replace any running timer."
* lisp/org.el (org-store-link): Don't call org-store-link
interactively when called through remember from the agenda
Samuel Wales writes:
> For months, I found ID properties where they didn't belong.
> Finally I found that they are added when I do M-x
> org-remember in an agenda buffer, to the headline under
> point. Feels like a bug. [...]
The new function `org-agenda-file-p' checks if a given file is an org
agenda file. Such a function is very useful in hooks, for example if
you want to export agenda files automatically when saving:
(defun th-org-mode-init ()
;; Update appointments and export to iCalendar when saving.
(when (org-agenda-file-p)
(add-hook 'after-save-hook 'th-org-agenda-to-appt t t)
(add-hook 'after-save-hook 'org-export-icalendar-this-file t t)))
(add-hook 'org-agenda-mode-hook 'th-org-agenda-mode-init)
I'd appreciate if this one could be applied. I'll fix XEmacs to accept
#B<binary> in the future, but I'd appreciate this one anyway. Doesn't
really add complexity ...
Org-refile-cache fails when org-refile-use-outline-path is set to file.
Specifically, org-refile-cache-check-set throws a markerp error when it
encounters file targets, since they have nil instead a marker object.
This patch applies the test only to targets with markers (i.e.,
headings).
The function org-get-refile-targets was building org-refile-cache even
if org-refile-use-cache was set to nil. This caused every refile
attempt to call org-refile-cache-clear and to produce the message
"Refile cache has been cleared."
* lisp/org-publish.el (org-publish-write-cache-file):
Write a serialized version of the cache hash.
(org-publish-initialize-cache): Reset the cache hash before creating a
new one.Serialize publishing project cache with `puthash' expressions.
* 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.
* org-clock.el (org-dblock-write:clocktable): Return total time.
(org-clocktable-steps): Skip step when time is zero and the
:stepskip0 property is set.
Rainer Stengele writes:
> Creating clocktables for each day of a month is an excellent feature
> in org! Problem for me is that many resulting tables have a total
> time of 0:00. The problem is not really the zero time I spent but the
> appearance of the tables with zero total time.
>
> Is there a possibility to skip getting such tables? Rational: I do
> not need to show my boss or customer days where I spent 0:00 time on
> the project.
Now you can set :stepskip0 to achieve this.
This variable defaults to nil. When non-nil, this is the default
value when the user is prompted for a timer.
This patch also improves org-timer-set-timer so that the user can
replace the current timer by a new one.
Hello, Org mode hackers,
This patch defines a variable `org-agenda-persistent-filters'.
When it is set, filters persist from one agenda view to the next.
I've found this convenient when using tags for contexts like @home,
@net, etc., some of which commonly remain applicable for a while.
Thanks,
Thomas
From 052ef9205845c78cb24d6fea8f89484bbe12a528 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001
From: Thomas Morgan <tlm@ziiuu.com>
Date: Fri, 23 Apr 2010 11:48:03 +0200
Subject: [PATCH] New option `org-agenda-persistent-filters'.
When set, keep filters from one agenda view to the next.
Tom writes:
> if I have a heading like this:
>
>
> ** TODO test task
> stuff
> SCHEDULED: <2010-05-15 Sat 07:35 +1d>
>
>
> Then an empty line is inserted below the heading (before "stuff") if
> org-indent-mode is on and logging is set like this:
>
>
> (setq org-log-repeat nil)
> (setq org-log-done 'time)
>
>
>
> I tested it with a clean config using only the settings above.
This patch fixes the problem first reported by Tassilo Horn in
[mid:87y6fhxc47.fsf@thinkpad.tsdh.de]. Problem was that
`org-refile-cache-get' returned an invalid refile target table after
the refile cache was cleared.
Tassilo Horn writes:
> Hi all,
>
> I've just discovered the iCalendar export and use that to have a
> visually appealing read-only agenda in KOrganizer. Basically, the
> export seems perfect except for one thing.
>
> When I have an org entry like
>
> * Test :some:tags:here:
>
> the corresponding VEVENT will have the whole org heading including the
> spaces and the tag string as SUMMARY (unless the entry has a SUMMARY
> property). Having the tags there might be ok (although by default they
> are also set as CATEGORY), but the spaces between the heading title and
> the tags should be compacted.
Patch by Bernt Hansen:
> When org-clock-report-include-clocking-task is set we always add the
> current clocking task to the clock report. This is incorrect if you
> are looking at an agenda clock report for a time range that does not
> include the current clocking task (e.g. yesterday or last week).
>
> Now we only include the current clocking task if the clock report
> date range includes the current clocking task start time.
i/q/C-g Ignore this question; the same as keeping all the idle time.
k/K Keep X minutes of the idle time (default is all). If this
amount is less than the default, you will be clocked out
that many minutes after the time that idling began, and then
clocked back in at the present time.
g/G Indicate that you \"got back\" X minutes ago. This is quite
different from 'k': it clocks you out from the beginning of
the idle period and clock you back in X minutes ago.
s/S Subtract the idle time from the current clock. This is the
same as keeping 0 minutes.
C Cancel the open timer altogether. It will be as though you
never clocked in.
j/J Jump to the current clock, to make manual adjustments.
For all these options, using uppercase makes your final state
to be CLOCKED OUT.
Carsten Dominik <carsten.dominik@gmail.com> writes:
> Hi Sebastian,
>
> sorry for being slow. Could you do me a favor and send me the cache patch one
> more time - if possible updated to the current master.
>
> I am just not sure I have the right patch in my hands.
Hi Carsten,
no problem. The patch is attached.
Here is a list of my ChangeLog entries, redated to today:
2010-05-13 Sebastian Rose <sebastian_rose@gmx.de>
* org-publish.el (org-publish-cache): Use one big hashmap for
each project defined in `org-publish-project-alist'. The
hashmap will hold pairs of our timestamp-filenames and
timestamps, as well as pairs of source-paths and associated
plists for arbitrary values. Currently only the files title is
stored there.
The caching feature writes the information gathered during
publishing to disk and re-loads it from there the next time we
publish the same project. All those informations will hence
survive a restart of emacs.
One cache file per publishing project is used. The contents of
that file is the elisp that fills the new variable
`org-publish-cache'. The cache file is named according to the
project with `.cache' added and lives in
`org-timestamp-directory'.
* org-publish.el (initialize-files-alist): This function and
the variable `org-publish-files-alist' are not used anymore in
favour of the reloadable cache and the functions for handling
it. Removed therefor.
* org-publish.el (org-publish-validate-link) was not used
anywhere. Removed.
* org-publish.el (org-publish-get-base-files): Added the
variable `sitemap-requested' to avoid sorting where possible.
See also end of `org-publish-get-base-files-1'.
* org-publish.el (org-publish-get-files): This function is
not called anymore. Removed.
* org-publish.el (org-publish-get-project-from-filename) does
not depend on a list of files anymore. Instead of laoding all
files of all, we walk `org-publish-project-alist' until we
find a project, where the properties :base-directory, :recursive,
:base-extension, :include and :exclude match.
* org-publish.el (org-publish-file) takes an additional
parameter to avoid superfloues loading and writing of the
cache file when used to publish a part of a project.
Patch by Christian Moe, who writes:
> It looks like support for formatting custom link types in LaTeX export
> is broken?
>
> I was trying to implement a custom link type with its own formatting
> function for HTML and LaTeX export, following the steps in
> org-bbdb.el.
>
> I've found that org-bbdb-export does not italicize bbdb links in
> LaTeX, nor does my own org-cite-export turn my custom =cite:= links
> into LaTeX =\cite{}= citations. Everything works fine in HTML export,
> but in LaTeX all custom link types get formatted as =\texttt{descr}=.
>
> I see that org-export-as-html and org-export-as-docbook look up
> org-link-protocols to get the function for formatting the link, but it
> seems that org-export-as-latex doesn't.
>
>
Karl Eichwalder writes:
> Consider the following two files:
>
> * 2009
> #+TBLNAME: 2009
> :PROPERTIES:
> :ID: ea32e5b5-31ba-468e-8e31-3e0d09696bb0
> :END:
> |-----+-------|
> | mm | km |
> |-----+-------|
> | all | 946.8 |
> |-----+-------|
>
> * 2010
> #+TBLNAME: 2010
> :PROPERTIES:
> :ID: e0df84c4-8abc-458f-a1ee-eb53eb71b4f0
> :END:
> |-----+-------+-------+-------|
> | mm | km | B km | G km |
> |-----+-------+-------+-------|
> | all | 249.4 | 429.2 | 678.6 |
> |-----+-------+-------+-------|
>
> * all
> :PROPERTIES:
> :ID: 44751a7f-73a4-4c07-b3c2-e3edb9042acd
> :END:
> #+TBLNAME: all
> |------+--------|
> | yyyy | km |
> |------+--------|
> | 2009 | |
> | 2010 | 678.6 |
> |------+--------|
> | all | 1625.4 |
> |------+--------|
> #+TBLFM: @2$2=remote(ea32e5b5-31ba-468e-8e31-3e0d09696bb0,$LR2);%.1f::@3$2=remote(2010,$LR4);%.1f::$LR2=vsum(@2$2..@-1);%.1f
>
> Then, in the 2010 file, eval the formula of the "all" table by pressing
> C-c C-c.
> ==>
>
> It takes the km value from the 2009 file, but also puts the cursor
> (point) into the 2009 file in front of the ID:
>
> * 2009
> #+TBLNAME: 2009
> :PROPERTIES:
> :ID: -!-ea32e5b5-31ba-468e-8e31-3e0d09696bb0
> :END:
> |-----+-------|
> | mm | km |
> |-----+-------|
> | all | 946.8 |
> |-----+-------|
>
> -=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=- cut here -=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
>
> I'd prefer if the point would stay in the 2010 file.
Baoqui Cui writes:
> "robut@iinet.net.au" <robut@iinet.net.au> writes:
>
> I very much like the idea of native inline image display in Org-mode but can't
> seem to make it work.
>
> Given a 6.36 snapshot or 6.36 release and these org file contents
>
> * Test image
> Test image
> [[Screenshot.png]]
>
>
> I hoped org would display that image after C-c C-x C-v. Rather Org-mode returns
> "No images to display inline".
>
> I've tried different ways of linking that image, different image formats,
> relative vs complete paths, and my regular .emacs vs a near empty one and
> always the same result. If I toggle iimage-mode the image displays fine per se
> but does not affect how Org-mode works.
>
> Seems clear I am missing something simple. What?
>
> I like the idea of inline image display too, but hit the similar
> problems. After reading the code in org.el, I found that the inline
> image file link has to start with either "file:" or "./".
>
> For example, the following two links are OK:
>
> [[file:~/images/myImage.png]]
> [[./figures/org-mode-unicorn.svg]]
>
> but the following two are not:
>
> [[Screenshot.png]]
> [[~/images/myImage.png]]
>
> Here is a small patch that seems to work well for me, but I'd like
> Carsten to check whether it may break anything
Patch by David Maus:
> 1. Store and open link to Wanderlust folders.
>
> 2. Store link to Wanderlust message while visiting the message
> buffer.
>
> Up to now it was only possible to store a link to a message when
> point was in the message summary.
Patch by David Maus, who writes:
> Org enters an infinite loop when `org-replace-escapes' is called with
> a table containing a replace string that contains the escape sequence
> it should be replaced with.
>
> Example:
> ,----
> | (org-replace-escapes "%m" '(("%m" . "87zl0qq1f3.wl%maus.david@gmail.com")))
> `----
>
> I stumpled upon when I tried to store a link to a internet message
> whose message id contained the sequence "%m" (perfectly valid for a
> message id) while using "%m" as message description.
>
> Attached patch fixes this by
>
> 1. detecting such 'self reference' and replacing the offending
> sequence in the replace string by a string with a text property
> that contains the original sequence
>
> 2. replacing occurences of substrings with this text property by the
> original sequence.
Patch by Stephen Peters.
Stephen writes:
> When creating a table, I was noticing that the
> <colgroup><col>... provides useful alignment information based on
> whether or not the column has numbers in it. I think, however, that
> there is a mistake in this routine. Take, for example, the following
> table:
>
> | Id | Task | Developer | Estimate | Spent | Remaining | Comp.% | Updated |
> |-----+--------------+-----------+----------+-------+-----------+--------+-----------------|
> | 1 | Task One | SLP | 1 | 0 | 1 | 0 | SLP, 2010-04-27 |
> | 2 | Task Two | SLP | 1 | 0 | 1 | 0 | SLP, 2010-04-27 |
> | 3 | Task Three | SLP | 2 | 0 | 2 | 0 | SLP, 2010-04-27 |
> | 4 | Task Four | SLP | 2 | 0 | 2 | 0 | SLP, 2010-04-27 |
> | 5 | Task Five | SLP | .25 | 0 | 0.25 | 0 | SLP, 2010-04-27 |
> | 5.1 | Another Task | XML team | 0 | 1 | 0 | 0 | SLP, 2010-04-27 |
> | 6 | Task Six | SLP | .25 | 0 | 0.25 | 0 | SLP, 2010-04-27 |
> | 6.1 | More Tasks | DB team | 3 | 0 | 3 | 0 | SLP, 2010-04-27 |
> | 7 | Task Seven | SLP | 3 | 0 | 3 | 0 | SLP, 2010-04-27 |
>
> When the colgroup list is created for this table, it reads:
>
> <colgroup><col align="right" /><col align="left" /><col align="left" /><col align="right" /><col align="right" /><col align="left" /><col align="left" /><col align="left" />
> </colgroup>
>
> Note that the first columns are correct, but the last few are not. It
> should read right, left, left, right, right, right, right, left.
>
> I believe that this is due to the (< i nline) comparison within
> org-format-org-table-html, which is nonsensical because it's trying to
> compare a column number with a number of rows. I've attached a patch
> for the problem.
Willian Henney writes:
> The following is using today's git trunk of org-mode with emacs
> 23.1.94.1 (aquamacs 2.0preview5)
>
> Consider the following table
>
> | -8 |
> | |
> | |
> | |
> #+TBLFM: $1=@-1 - 1::@1$1=-8
>
> Evaluate formulas once (C-u C-c *):
>
> | -8 |
> | -9 |
> |----|
> | -1 |
>
> Evaluate formulas again (C-u C-c *):
>
> | -8 |
> | -9 |
> |----|
> |----|
>
> What I expected:
>
> | -8 |
> | -9 |
> | -10 |
> | -11 |
>
> The problem always seems to start at -10. When I turn on table
> debugging, it first calculates the -10 value correctly, but then fails
> to recognise the -10 cell as a number when calculating the next row,
> using 0 instead, which results in -1. This is because during the
> intermediate formatting of the cell the minus sign in -10 abuts the
> column separator: "|-10 |", and the "|-" part is then interpreted as
> the beginning of an hline.
Adam Elliott writes:
> I have attached a git patch against master that implements a new
> parameter to clock tables, "tags". This parameter is a tags-query as a
> string and is used to filter the headlines which are consulted when
> building the clock table.
>
> In my search of the archives to see if this feature already existed, I
> found a reference here:
> http://article.gmane.org/gmane.emacs.orgmode/17304
> suggesting it was difficult. The patch is not so large, though, so
> perhaps I am missing something.
>
> My rationale in implementing this feature was to keep track of the
> occasional task item that is not billable, yet still makes sense to
> include in the overall project structure. Of course I could just avoid
> clocking the task item, or manually delete clock lines before generating
> a report, but this feature reduces the chance for error; no doubt there
> are other workflows enabled with this feature as well. I don't make
> significant use of tags myself, but I know many do.
>
> In order to maintain a sensible report, headlines that don't match the
> tag filter may be included if they have descendants that do. Any time
> clocked directly on non-matching headlines, however, is excluded.
>
> Specifying even a simple filter noticeably slows down clock table
> generation for non-toy reports, particularly for clock table reports
> with :step. If there is no filter, though, there is no degradation in
> performance.
>
> Tag filter syntax is the standard one, as described at:
> http://orgmode.org/manual/Matching-tags-and-properties.html
> Only tags are considered at the moment, although I suspect querying
> against all properties would be possible (if even slower).
>
> Examples:
>
> * development
> CLOCK: => 1:00
> *** task 1
> CLOCK: => 1:00
> *** task 2 :must:
> ***** task 2a
> CLOCK: => 1:00
> ***** task 2b :mustnot:
> CLOCK: => 1:00
>
> Note I am using an unconventional but legal(ish) clock format for
> brevity. Clock tables are also pruned to only relevant lines.
>
> [1] #+BEGIN: clocktable
> | | *Total time* | *4:00* | | |
> |---+--------------+--------+------+------|
> | 1 | development | 4:00 | | |
> | 2 | task 1 | | 1:00 | |
> | 2 | task 2 | | 2:00 | |
> | 3 | task 2a | | | 1:00 |
> | 3 | task 2b | | | 1:00 |
>
> [2] #+BEGIN: clocktable :tags "must"
> | | *Total time* | *2:00* | | |
> |---+--------------+--------+------+------|
> | 1 | development | 2:00 | | |
> | 2 | task 2 | | 2:00 | |
> | 3 | task 2a | | | 1:00 |
> | 3 | task 2b | | | 1:00 |
>
> [3] #+BEGIN: clocktable :tags "-mustnot"
> | | *Total time* | *3:00* | | |
> |---+--------------+--------+------+------|
> | 1 | development | 3:00 | | |
> | 2 | task 1 | | 1:00 | |
> | 2 | task 2 | | 1:00 | |
> | 3 | task 2a | | | 1:00 |
>
> [4] #+BEGIN: clocktable :tags "must-mustnot"
> | | *Total time* | *1:00* | | |
> |---+--------------+--------+------+------|
> | 1 | development | 1:00 | | |
> | 2 | task 2 | | 1:00 | |
> | 3 | task 2a | | | 1:00 |
>
> [5] #+BEGIN: clocktable :tags "must+mustnot"
> | | *Total time* | *1:00* | | |
> |---+--------------+--------+------+------|
> | 1 | development | 1:00 | | |
> | 2 | task 2 | | 1:00 | |
> | 3 | task 2b | | | 1:00 |
>
> As you can see, in examples 2, 4, and 5, the time clocked on
> "development" itself is being removed. Example 2 illustrates the effect
> of tag inheritance.
>
> Adam
org-edit-src-code gains extra optional arguments `code' and
`edit-buffer-name'. If `code' is supplied, then this code forms the
contents of the edit buffer, which is made read-only. In this case,
the mechanisms for writing back to the org buffer on save are
disabled.
Optional argument `edit-buffer-name' allows a name for the edit buffer
to be supplied.
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.
Sebastien Rose writes:
> there was much discussion about a terminator and I ran into a problem,
> that made me think we need one. But then I found we had one --- it's
> just not used on HTML export.
>
>
> Below is a little file I wrote. Thanks to the `- __' items, it results
> in the XHTML closely to what I wanted it to.
> But only as long as I use those _undocumented_ `- __' items. Once you
> remove them, you'll see, that the `#+html: </div...' stuff ends up
> inside the last list item and the XHTML will not validate.
>
>
> As I looked at it, I found the most natural solution would be, to
> terminate the list by regarding the indentation of `#+WHATEVER' and
> `#+BEGIN_WHATEVER' if inside lists [fn:1].
>
>
>
> The patch below (diffed against `remove-compatibility-code') makes
> XHTML-export honor the indentation of `#+SPECIALS'.
>
>
>
> Here's the Org-file I wrote (remove and add the `- __' list items to see
> the effect):
>
> #+OPTIONS: toc:nil
> #+STYLE: <style type="text/css">
> #+STYLE: body,p,div,td{font-size:13px;font-family:sans-serif;}
> #+STYLE: div { text-align:left; }
> #+STYLE: #content {width:550px;
> #+STYLE: margin-left:auto;margin-right:auto;text-align:center; }
> #+STYLE: #postamble { width:550px;clear:both;border-top:1px solid black;
> #+STYLE: margin-left:auto;margin-right:auto;text-align:center; }
> #+STYLE: </style>
>
> * List of design patterns
>
> #+HTML: <div style="width:48%;float:left;">
> *Behavioural Patterns*
> - [[file:BatchCommand][BatchCommand]]
> - [[file:ChainOfResponsibility.org][Chain Of Responsibility]]
> - [[file:Command.org][Command]], UndoableCommand and BatchCommand
> - [[file:Interpreter.org][Interpreter]]
> - [[file:Iterator.org][Iterator]]
> - [[file:Mediator.org][Mediator]]
> - [[file:Memento.org][Memento]]
> - [[file:NullObject][NullObject]]
> - [[file:Observer.org][Observer]]
> - [[file:State.org][State]]
> - [[file:Strategy.org][Strategy]]
> - [[file:TemplateMethod.org][Template Method]]
> - [[file:Visitor.org][Visitor]]
> *Creational Patterns*
> - [[file:AbstractFactory.org][Abstract Factory]]
> - [[file:Builder.org][Builder]]
> - [[file:Factory.org][Factory]]
> - [[file:FactoryMethod.org][Factory Method]]
> - [[file:Prototype.org][Prototype]]
> - [[file:Singleton.org][Singleton]]
> - __
> #+html: </div>
> #+html: <div style="width:48%;float:right;">
> *Structural Patterns*
> - [[file:Adapter.org][Adapter]]
> - [[file:Composite.org][Composite]]
> - [[file::Bridge.org][Bridge]]
> - [[file:Decorator.org][Decorator]]
> - [[file:Facade.org][Facade]]
> - [[file:Flyweight.org][Flyweight]]
> - [[file:Proxy.org][Proxy]]
> *Unsorted*
> - [[file:BusinessDelegate.org][Business Delegate]]
> - [[file:DataAccessObject.org][Data Access Object]]
> - [[file:DataTransferObject.org][Data Transfer Object]]
> - [[file:DependencyInjection.org][Dependency Injection]]
> - [[file:FluentInterface.org][Fluent Interface]]
> - [[file:InversionOfControl.org][Inversion Of Control]]
> - [[file:ModelViewControler.org][Model View Controler]]
> - [[file:ModelViewPresenter.org][Model View Presenter]]
> - [[file:Plugin.org][Plugin]]
> - __
> #+HTML: </div>
Jan Bcker writes:
> If you have a headline with an elisp code block containing the following
> line:
>
> " :ID:"
>
> the HTML code will be garbled at the beginning of the headline.
>
> I have attached a minimal test case and the resulting HTML file. The
> #+OPTIONS: line is not needed, but is included to make the HTML file
> less cluttered.
>
> There has to be whitespace between the " and :ID: and the string must be
> ended on the same line. For example, these lines trigger the bug:
>
> " :ID:"
> " :ID:"
> " :ID: garble-my-html"
>
> while these do not:
>
> ":ID:"
> ":ID: garble-my-html"
> " :ID:
>
The definition of "makes sense is here:
- either the user is logging repeats (org-log-repeat)
- or the entry contains clock data, in which case the LAST_REPEAT is
needed to display clocking time properly.
Request by Dan Griswold, with some support from Bernt Hansen
Patch by Peter Jones, following a bug report by Xiao-Jong Jin, who wrote:
> If you have the follow org file
>
> * test crypt :crypt:
> ** subheading 1
> text 1
> ** subheading 2
> text 2
>
> with setup as
>
> (require 'org-crypt)
> (setq org-tags-exclude-from-inheritance '("crypt"))
> (setq org-crypt-key "CBC0714E") ; my key
>
> On calling org-encrypt-entry on the first head line, only
> subheading 1 get encrypted, subheading 2 remains plain text.
> But, if you add an empty line or some text under the first
> heading, both subheading 1 and 2 are encrypted.
By David Maus.
The gist of the extended capabilities:
- Remove filter conditions for messages in a filter folder
If customization variable `org-wl-link-remove-filter' is non-nil,
filter conditions are stripped of the folder name.
- Create web links for messages in a Shimbun folder
If customization variable `org-wl-shimbun-prefer-web-links' is
non-nil, calling `org-store-link' on a Shimbun message creates a
web link to the messages source, indicated in the Xref: header
field.
- Create web links for messages in a nntp folder
If customization variable `org-wl-nntp-prefer-web-links' is
non-nil, calling `org-store-link' on a nntp message creates a web
link either to gmane.org if the group can be read trough gmane or
to googlegroups otherwise. In both cases the message-id is used as
reference.
- Open links in namazu search folder
If `org-wl-open' is called with one prefix, WL opens a namazu
search folder for message's message-id using
`org-wl-namazu-default-index' as search index. If this variable is
nil or `org-wl-open' is called with two prefixes Org asks for the
search index to use.
Regards,
-- David
Conflicts:
lisp/ChangeLog
The target state can now be fixed locally with the REPEAT_TO_STATE
property, or globally with the variable `org-todo-repeat-to-state'.
This was a request by John Wiegley.
This bug was introduced in commit
1b40601ebd
which sets the body-only option to true when called with a simple
prefix argument, however it does not check that the prefix argument
is non-null.
Thanks to Valentin Wüstholz for reporting this bug
Patch by Matt Lundin
Matt writes:
> The missing piece of the puzzle is integration with "diary" and
> "cal-tex" functions via the org-diary sexp. I have found org-diary to be
> excruciatingly slow when called for anything more than a couple of days.
> I have the following line in my diary file:
>
> &%%(org-diary :timestamp :sexp)
>
> If I try to view 20 or so upcoming days in the diary by typing C-u 20 d
> on a date in the calendar, it can take upwards of 30 seconds to generate
> the diary display. This is of little consequence, since I can, after
> all, simply use the custom agenda command. But I often want to print out
> a nice LaTeX calendar of my appointments with cal-tex-cursor-month. And
> that takes upwards of 50 seconds (see attached elp-results file).
>
> Judging from the elp-results, the culprit seems to be
> org-prepare-agenda-buffers (46 seconds), which is called 31 times (once
> for each day). It seems to me that since org-diary is being called 31
> times in quick succession by the same function (diary-sexp-entry), one
> should only need to call org-prepare-agenda-buffers once.
>
> The only solution I could see to this problem was to add a test to see
> if org-diary had been called less than 1 second ago. Thus, I added the
> variable org-diary-last-run-time and a conditional in org-diary that
> only runs org-prepare-agenda-buffers if org-diary-last-run-time is less
> than 1 second in the past.
>
> With the patch, it now takes appr. 5 seconds to generate the LaTeX
> calendar with cal-tex and org-prepare-agenda-buffers is called only
> once.
Allow C-2 C-c C-w to work in the agenda.
Update agenda after refiling
This rebuilds the agenda buffer after the refile operation completes.
It was removing the to-be-refiled task before prompting for the location
which felt a little strange. While on the prompt you can't see
the task you are refiling anymore since it was just removed from the
agenda list and if you aborted from the refile operation
with C-g then the task to be refiled has already been removed.
By default, title, author, date and email lines appear in dark blue
with the initial keywords greyed out. The title is in a larger font
than the others. This is implemented by the following new faces:
org-document-title
org-document-info
org-document-info-keyword
In addition, the variable org-hidden-keywords can be used to make the
corresponding keywords disappear.
This new code will search #+INDEX lines in the buffer. For LaTeX, it
will simple convert these into LaTeX \index{} commands. For other
backends, it will copy thee entries to a new file, with extension
orgx. These files can then later be post-processed to create the index.
Magnus Henoch writes:
> This patch has been sitting in my tree for a while... It's a fix to
> org-map-dblocks, to make it use save-excursion instead of remembering
> position values. I need this since I have a dblock function that
> asynchronously updates dblocks from HTTP responses, and some dblocks
> ended up getting updated twice or thrice.
[...]
> My dblock-write function calls url-retrieve, to asynchronously retrieve an
> HTML page. The callback function I pass to url-retrieve will then fill
> in the information I need into the dynamic block.
>
> So in the following case:
>
> * Find start of dblock 1, store as pos
> * Make HTTP request for dblock 1
> * Go back to pos
> * Find end of dblock 1
> * Find start of dblock 2, store as pos
> * Make HTTP request for dblock 2
> * Asynchronous event: HTTP response for dblock 1 arrives, insert lots of
> data in dblock 1
> * Go back to pos
> * Find end of dblock 2
>
> the last step will actually find the end of dblock 1, if the amount of
> data inserted in dblock 1 is great enough that pos suddenly points
> inside it. (Then it will of course find dblock 2 again, request its HTML
> page again, and thus insert the data twice.)
>
> An equivalent fix would be to make pos a marker instead.
Patch by David Maus, who writes:
> Attached patch for org-attach-commit in org-attach.el removes the
> dependency on the xargs command to remove files in the repository that
> were deleted in the attachment directory.
>
> Simply capture output of git ls-files --deleted -z in a temporary
> buffer, get the filenames from there via string-split and call git rm
> on each single file.
Keith writes:
> I noticed something strange and I think it's might be a bug converting
> to tex file. I've been trying to put a special symbol inside a
> bracket, e.g.
>
> air temperature (degree Celsius)
>
> and the symbol should look like ^{\circ}C in org file. It works well
> if it is standalone. However, when I put the brackets out of it, say
> (^{\circ}C), the pdf output looks bizarre. I have checked the tex
> output and the converting results from orgmode file are
>
> ^{\circ}C --> $^{\circ}$C
> (^{\circ}C) --> (^\{\circ}C)
Ryan Thompson writes:
> I have found a bug. When the point is at the end of an empty headline
> and you press M-RET (or C-RET) to make a new headline, it deletes all
> the whitespace at the end of the empty headline first, which causes
> the headline to break. I'm not sure if the correct behavior is to
> leave an empty headline, or maybe just do nothing and leave the point
> at the end of the empty headline without creating a new one, but the
> correct thing is definitely *not* to break the headline.
Patch by Jan Bker.
Jan writes:
> What is this?
> =============
>
> This patch changes the way extension regexps in `org-file-apps' are
> handled. Instead of against the file name, the regexps are now matched
> against the whole link, and you can use grouping to extract link
> parameters which you can then use in a command string to be executed.
>
> For example, to allow linking to PDF files using the syntax
> file:/doc.pdf::<page number>, you can add the following entry to
> org-file-apps:
>
> Extension: \.pdf::\([0-9]+\)\'
> Command: evince "%s" -p %1
>
> In a command string to be executed, the parameters can be referenced
> using %1, %2, etc. Lisp forms can access them using (string-match n link).
>
>
> Where to get it?
> ================
> Either apply the patch by hand or
>
> git pull git://github.com/jboecker/org-mode.git org-file-apps-parameters
>
>
> What's next? / Feedback
> =======================
>
> - Find the bugs. Since this messes with links, a central concept of Org,
> I probably have missed some edge cases; so please test this and
> report if it works for you.
>
> I also appreciate any feedback on code quality or the design decisions
> made. I am learning elisp along the way, so you may be able to write
> some changes in a more idiomatic and/or elegant way.
>
> - Add a mechanism for org-mode modules to add default values to
> org-file-apps, similar to the variables org-file-apps-defaults-*.
> This could be used by modules to define their own extensions to the
> syntax of file: links.
>
> - Modify org-docview.el to use this and deprecate the docview: link syntax.
>
>
> What does it (intentionally) break?
> ===================================
>
> This patch introduces a backwards-incompatible change. If LINE or SEARCH
> is given, the file is no longer guaranteed to open in emacs: if IN-EMACS
> is nil and an entry in org-file-apps matches, that takes precedence.
>
> A grep of the lisp/ and contrib/ directories showed that no code in the
> org-mode distribution was relying on this behaviour; whereever LINE or
> SEARCH is given, IN-EMACS is also set to t.
>
> I decided against adding an additional parameter because that would be
> redundant; the original link as seen by org-open-at-point can be
> reconstructed from PATH, LINE and SEARCH.
>
> I am not that sure if this is the right way to do this, but it seems to
> break as little as possible while hopefully avoiding to add too much
> complexity.
Dan Davison writes:
> Bug report
> ==========
> If I have this:
>
> A [[file:zz.org::#mytarget][link]] to a target with a custom ID
>
> and export it to HTML, I get
>
> A <a href="zz.html##mytarget">link</a> to a target with a custom ID
>
> which (in firefox on linux) links to the file but does not jump to the
> target. However, if I change the '##' to '#' then firefox jumps to the
> correct location. Is this an org bug?
>
> Very tentatively proposed patch
> ===============================
> I've investigated a bit (notes below), resulting in this proposed patch:
>
> --8<---------------cut here---------------start------------->8---
> diff --git a/lisp/org-html.el b/lisp/org-html.el
> index aa70408..5ee5b19 100644
> --- a/lisp/org-html.el
> +++ b/lisp/org-html.el
> @@ -1110,7 +1110,7 @@ lang=\"%s\" xml:lang=\"%s\">
> (abs-p (file-name-absolute-p filename))
> thefile file-is-image-p search)
> (save-match-data
> - (if (string-match "::\\(.*\\)" filename)
> + (if (string-match "::#?\\(.*\\)" filename)
> (setq search (match-string 1 filename)
> filename (replace-match "" t nil filename)))
> (setq valid
> --8<---------------cut here---------------end--------------->8---
>
> Doc patch
> =========
> The link above (file:zz.org::#mytarget) was created by C-c l on a
> heading with a CUSTOM_ID property. However, I couldn't see where in the
> manual links of this form are documented. Do we need to add this link
> type to section 4.7 "Search options in file links", e.g.
>
> --8<---------------cut here---------------start------------->8---
> diff --git a/doc/org.texi b/doc/org.texi
> index f49f056..c8cc1a5 100644
> --- a/doc/org.texi
> +++ b/doc/org.texi
> @@ -3116,6 +3116,7 @@ link, together with an explanation:
> [[file:~/code/main.c::255]]
> [[file:~/xx.org::My Target]]
> [[file:~/xx.org::*My Target]]
> +[[file:~/xx.org::#my-custom-id]]
> [[file:~/xx.org::/regexp/]]
> @end example
>
> @@ -3130,6 +3131,8 @@ link will become an HTML reference to the corresponding named anchor in
> the linked file.
> @item *My Target
> In an Org file, restrict search to headlines.
> +@item #my-custom-id
> +Link to a heading with a @code{CUSTOM_ID} property
> @item /regexp/
> Do a regular expression search for @code{regexp}. This uses the Emacs
> command @code{occur} to list all matches in a separate window. If the
> --8<---------------cut here---------------end--------------->8---
>
> Notes
> =====
> At line 1134 of org-html.el there is
>
> (setq thefile (concat thefile "#"
> (org-solidify-link-text
> (org-link-unescape search)))))
>
> during evaluation of which 'search is bound to "#mytarget", which
> suggested that the problem might be in the regexp parsing creating
> 'search.
Patch by Dan Hackney.
Dan Hackney writes:
> For paragraph text, `org-adaptive-fill-function' did not handle the
> base case of regular text which needed to be filled. This commit saves
> a buffer-local value of `adaptive-fill-regexp' and uses it if none of
> the org-specific regexps match. This allows email-style ">" comments
> to be filled correctly.
org-agenda.el (org-agenda-include-deadlines): Added new
customization variable to determine whether unscheduled tasks
should appear in the agenda solely because of their deadline.
Default to true, which was the previous behavior (it just wasn't
configurable).
(org-agenda-mode-map, org-agenda-view-mode-dispatch): Bind ! in
the agenda to show/hide deadline tasks.
(org-agenda-menu): Added menu option for show/hide deadlines.
(org-agenda-list): Make the agenda list sensitive to the value of
`org-agenda-include-deadlines'.
(org-agenda-toggle-deadlines): New function to toggle the value of
`org-agenda-include-deadlines' and repaint the modeline
indicators.
(org-agenda-set-mode-name): Show "Deadlines" in the agenda
modeline if deadline tasks are being displayed.
Jambunathan K. writes:
> I would like to add the following observation as well -
>
> ---> org input <---
> #+AUTHOR: Jambunathan K\cr\href{mailto:{{{EMAIL}}}}{{{{EMAIL}}}}
>
> ---> actual tex output <---
> \author{Jambunathan K\cr\href{mailto:kjambunathan@gmail.com}\{kjambunathan@gmail.com\}}
>
> The above tex snippet has the effect of getting the "Url Box" wrong.
>
> I was hoping to produce the following line -
> \author{Jambunathan K\cr\href{mailto:kjambunathan@gmail.com}{kjambunathan@gmail.com}}
>
> Generally speaking, macro expansion in author string behaves strangely.
Eric Fraga writes:
> What am I missing? I tried exporting the following to HTML and the
> caption and HTML attributes seem to be ignored completely. Also, the
> alignment directives are ignored as well.
>
> --8<---------------cut here---------------start------------->8---
> #+TITLE: test file for org mode
> #+DESCRIPTION: used for bug reports
> #+AUTHOR: Eric S Fraga
> #+EMAIL: Eric S Fraga <e.fraga@ucl.ac.uk>
> #+DATE: 2010-03-11 Thu
> #+KEYWORDS:
> #+LANGUAGE: en
> #+OPTIONS: H:3 num:t toc:t \n:nil @:t ::t |:t ^:t -:t f:t *:t <:t
> #+OPTIONS: TeX:t LaTeX:t skip:nil d:nil todo:t pri:nil tags:not-in-toc
> #+INFOJS_OPT: view:nil toc:nil ltoc:t mouse:underline buttons:0 path:http://orgmode.org/org-info.js
> #+EXPORT_SELECT_TAGS: export
> #+EXPORT_EXCLUDE_TAGS: noexport
> #+LINK_UP:
> #+LINK_HOME:
>
> * tables
>
> #+caption: A very interesting table
> #+attr_html: border="1" rules="all" frame="all" align="center"
> | <r> | <l> |
> | Id | Description |
> |-----+--------------------------------|
> | 1. | The first item |
> | 2. | the second |
> | 4. | we don't have a third one |
> | 10. | a longer id to check alignment |
> |-----+--------------------------------|
> --8<---------------cut here---------------end--------------->8---
>
> I'm using org current as of yesterday Org-mode version 6.34trans
> (release_6.34c.186.g1902) and with GNU Emacs 23.1.1
> (i486-pc-linux-gnu, GTK+ Version 2.18.2) of 2009-11-02 on raven,
> modified by Debian
Tom writes:
> When archiving trees I'd like to see the archived items in
> reverse chronological order at the archive location, so if I jump
> to the header under which stuff is archived I would see the most
> recent item at the top.
>
> When searching for something in the archives it is much more
> frequent that I'm looking for something recently archived than
> something archived months ago, so the reserved order would make
> more sense to me.
>
> Is there a setting which tells the archiving command to insert
> the archived tree as first child of the archive location,
> instead of the last?
Patch by Matt Lundin
Matt writes:
> Below is a patch I've been using to speed up the construction of
> agenda views limited to certain types of entries (e.g., timestamps and
> sexps). Previously, I had constructed "calendar" views consisting
> only of timestamps and sexps by using the variable
> org-agenda-skip-function to exclude scheduled items and deadlines from
> the agenda. This, however, proved somewhat slow (3-4 seconds for
> weekly calendars, 10-12 seconds for monthly calendars). The patch
> below cuts the times to 1 and 3 seconds respectively. I believe it
> provides an efficient alternative to the skip function by allowing the
> user to tweak the arguments passed to org-agenda-get-day-entries.
John Wiegley writes:
> I have the following data in my Org-mode file:
>
> #+LINK: cegbug https://portal/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=
>
> ** TODO [[cegbug:351][#351]] Bizcard: Fix Maven build setup
> - State "TODO" from "STARTED" [2010-03-01 Mon 14:42]
>
> Now, in the Agenda and in the Org-mode buffer, everything looks fine.
> I can also use C-c C-o if my cursor is within the #<NUMBER> text.
>
> However, if I'm in the Agenda and I hit C-c C-o, it says 'No match'
> after about a second. Is there any reason I can't open these links
> from the Agenda view?
William Henney writes:
> Anyone have a clue what is going on here?
>
> Cheers
>
> Will
>
> * Arctan2 bug
> Activate the formula editor for the following table with =C-c '=, then
> exit without changing anything. Note what happens to the arctan2
> formula. For me, "arctan2" changes to "@2$20173232".
> | x | y | arctan | arctan2 |
> |---+---+--------+---------|
> | 1 | 1 | 45 | 45. |
> #+TBLFM: $3=arctan($1/$2)::$4=arctan2($1,$2)
>
> ** Versions
> Org 6.34trans, Aquamacs 2.0preview4, Emacs 23.1.92.1
Daniel Clemente writesL
> Hi, I found an HTML export bug with org-mode 6.34c-140-g44c8 and
> older. I used:
>
> --------------------------------------------------------
> * only one section
> #+BEGIN_EXAMPLE:
>
> We need:
> ,* pears
> ,* lettuce
> ,* watermelons
>
> Very important!
> #+END_EXAMPLE:
> --------------------------------------------------------
>
> And the outputed table of contents had this code:
>
> --------------------------------------------------------
> <div id="text-table-of-contents">
> <ul>
> <li><a href="#sec-1">1 only one section </a></li>
> <li><a href="#sec-2">2 pears</a></li>
> <li><a href="#sec-3">3 lettuce</a></li>
> <li><a href="#sec-4">4 watermelons</a></li>
> </ul>
> </div>
> --------------------------------------------------------
>
> This is wrong because the asterisks inside the example don't
> represent headers. There should be only one header.
Lukasz Stelman writes:
I've create some presentation on programming (some more to do) and to my
surprise I've discovered that if org-mode escapes one "&" properly it
doesn't do its job in case of "&&" (and a single "^" too). I get "\&&"
in latex file which of course is wrong.
This support was totally broken. It works now again. Unfortunately
it is not possible to edit the table directly in the org-mode buffer
anymore - to edit such a table, you have to use C-c '
This patch implements reading American dates, like
2/5/3 --> 2003-02-05
2/5 --> ????-02-05
Is also fixes a bug that would force the current year when reading a
date like 2/5 (American) or 2-5 (ISO), and in this way would prevent
`org-read-date-prefer-future' to do its job. This bug was reported by
Lukasz Stelmach.
Also get rid of a bug: as timers where not properly canceled,
`org-timer-show-remaining-time' was not giving the proper result.
Thanks to Frédéric Couchet for this catch.