All the colors used now relate on the color wheel. The blues have been
shifted to 15% less saturation than greens, and reds are shifted to 10%
greater saturation. The colors are very close to what was there before,
but now they harmonize much more closely.
Francesco Pizzolante writes:
> Exporting multiple references to the same footnote to LaTeX lead to a wrong
> generated code.
>
> The following example:
>
> --8<---------------cut here---------------start------------->8---
> * Title
> This is my text[fn:1:This is my footnote.]. And another one[fn:1].
> --8<---------------cut here---------------end--------------->8---
>
> Will produce the following LaTeX code:
>
> --8<---------------cut here---------------start------------->8---
> \section{Title}
> \label{sec-1}
>
> This is my text\footnote{This is my footnote. }. And another one\$$^{1}$\$.
> --8<---------------cut here---------------end--------------->8---
>
> The correct code should be:
>
> --8<---------------cut here---------------start------------->8---
> \section{Title}
> \label{sec-1}
>
> This is my text\footnote{This is my footnote. }. And another one$^{1}$.
> --8<---------------cut here---------------end--------------->8---
Bernt Hansen writes:
> When org-agenda-diary-file is set to a special org file for diary
> entries and transient mark mode is enabled 'i' in the agenda fails
> with 'mark is not active now'
>
> My workaround for this is C-SPC to set the mark anywhere legal in the
> agenda display (ie not on the first or last line) and then hit 'i'
> to insert my diary entries.
Matt Lundin writes:
> The new org-agenda-diary-entry looks quite convenient.
>
> Would it be possible to add an option to bypass the date tree so as to
> add each new appointment as a simple first level heading? I prefer to
> keep my appointments organized by project and/or category and have no
> real use for the date tree. Ideally, new appointments would appear as
> first level headlines in the org-agenda-diary-file (i.e., my inbox),
> ready to be refiled.
Bernt Hansen writes:
> The org-agenda multi-occur search command (C-c a /) does not return
> results on buffers that are currently narrowed if the search would
> normally match outside the narrowed region. This prevents possible
> matches from being displayed.
Sebastian Rose writes:
> * This is how it works:
>
> Each project in `org-protocol-project-alist' may now have a new
> element `:rewrites'. `:rewrites' is a list of cons cells, that maps
> regular expressions to relative paths.
>
>
>
> * Example:
>
> (setq org-protocol-project-alist
> '(("http://fairposter.de/"
> :base-url "http://example-web-shop.de/"
> :working-directory "/path/to/working/directory/"
> :online-suffix ".php"
> :working-suffix ".php"
> :rewrites (("example-web-shop.de/cars/" . "products.php")
> ("example-web-shop.de/$" . "index.php")
> ))
>
> ;; .... more projects here
> ))
>
>
> Today, if I visit http://www.example-web-shop.de/, the URL would
> not match a path to any of the files below my working directory.
>
> Tomorrow, /path/to/working/directory/index.php is opened, because there's
> a matching rewrite.
>
>
> Today, a rewritten URL like
> http://example-web-shop.de/cars/lamborghini/Gallardo_LP560-4_MY09
> would not match a path to any of the files below my working
> directory, because URLS like `..../cars/' would be rewritten on the
> server and served through http://example-web-shop.de/products.php.
>
> Tomorrow, that URL will be mapped to
> /path/to/working/directory/products.php, because there's a matching
> rewrite defined.