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author | Carsten Dominik <carsten.dominik@gmail.com> | 2008-03-10 22:53:59 +0100 |
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committer | Carsten Dominik <carsten.dominik@gmail.com> | 2008-03-10 22:53:59 +0100 |
commit | d357e9d3ac7fee0708e42e0502d174d2161f8b38 (patch) | |
tree | 888b3d86a376c743e177ad11eb9f505b6b307ff2 | |
parent | 1e1cc09504136afe239c4a7a90a0f4004ec886c9 (diff) | |
download | org-mode-c2c7837aed7315cc90a08dff3aa3b7d91191ba54.tar.gz |
Update version numbers.release_5.23a5.23a
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-rw-r--r-- | ORGWEBPAGE/tutorials.html | 21 | ||||
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9 files changed, 6 insertions, 4251 deletions
diff --git a/ORGWEBPAGE/faq.html b/ORGWEBPAGE/faq.html deleted file mode 100644 index eb293c8..0000000 --- a/ORGWEBPAGE/faq.html +++ /dev/null @@ -1,555 +0,0 @@ -<!DOCTYPE html PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD XHTML 1.0 Strict//EN" - "http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml1/DTD/xhtml1-strict.dtd"> -<html xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml" -lang="en" xml:lang="en"> -<head> -<title>Org-mode Frequently Asked Questions</title> -<meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html;charset=iso-8859-1"/> -<meta name="generator" content="Org-mode"/> -<meta name="generated" content="2007/09/10 07:06:01"/> -<meta name="author" content="Carsten Dominik"/> -<link rel=stylesheet href="freeshell2.css" type="text/css"> <style type="text/css"> .tag { color: red; font-weight:bold}</style> -</head><body> -<h1 class="title">Org-mode Frequently Asked Questions</h1> -<h2>Table of Contents</h2> -<ul> -<li><a href="#sec-1">1 General</a> -<ul> -<li><a href="#sec-2">1.1 Use features in other modes</a></li> -<li><a href="#sec-3">1.2 Visibility cycling in Outline-mode and Outline-minor-mode</a></li> -</ul> -</li> -<li><a href="#sec-4">2 Errors</a> -<ul> -<li><a href="#sec-5">2.1 <code>(wrong-type-argument keymapp nil)</code></a></li> -<li><a href="#sec-6">2.2 CUA mode does not work with Org-mode</a></li> -<li><a href="#sec-7">2.3 <code>winddmove.el</code> does not work with Org-mode.</a></li> -</ul> -</li> -<li><a href="#sec-8">3 Setup and Structure</a> -<ul> -<li><a href="#sec-9">3.1 Org-mode as default mode</a></li> -<li><a href="#sec-10">3.2 Get rid of extra stars in outline</a></li> -<li><a href="#sec-11">3.3 Two windows on same Org-mode file</a></li> -<li><a href="#sec-12">3.4 Insert empty lines before new headings and plain list items</a></li> -<li><a href="#sec-13">3.5 Amount of context in sparse trees</a></li> -<li><a href="#sec-14">3.6 Stacking calls to org-occur</a></li> -</ul> -</li> -<li><a href="#sec-15">4 Hyperlinks</a> -<ul> -<li><a href="#sec-16">4.1 Confirmation for shell and elisp links</a></li> -<li><a href="#sec-17">4.2 Use RET or TAB to follow a link</a></li> -<li><a href="#sec-18">4.3 Clicking on a link without activating it</a></li> -</ul> -</li> -<li><a href="#sec-19">5 Export</a> -<ul> -<li><a href="#sec-20">5.1 Make TODO entries items, not headlines in HTML export</a></li> -<li><a href="#sec-21">5.2 Export only a subtree</a></li> -<li><a href="#sec-22">5.3 How to import org-mode calendar data into Mac OSX ical</a></li> -</ul> -</li> -<li><a href="#sec-23">6 Tables</a> -<ul> -<li><a href="#sec-24">6.1 #ERROR fields in tables</a></li> -<li><a href="#sec-25">6.2 Unwanted new lines in table</a></li> -<li><a href="#sec-26">6.3 Automatic detection of formulas</a></li> -<li><a href="#sec-27">6.4 Change indentation of a table</a></li> -<li><a href="#sec-28">6.5 Performance issues with table alignment</a></li> -<li><a href="#sec-29">6.6 Performance issues with table calculation</a></li> -<li><a href="#sec-30">6.7 Incrementing numbers</a></li> -</ul> -</li> -<li><a href="#sec-31">7 Agenda</a> -<ul> -<li><a href="#sec-32">7.1 Include Org-mode agenda into Emacs diary</a></li> -</ul> -</li> -</ul> - -<h2 id="sec-1">1 General</h2> - - -<h3 id="sec-2">1.1 Use features in other modes</h3> - -<p><b>I would like to use editing features of org-mode in other modes, is this possible?</b> -</p> -<p> -Not really. For tables there is <code>orgtbl-mode</code> which implements the -table editor as a minor mode. For other features you need to switch to -Org-mode temporarily, or prepare text in a different buffer. -</p> - - -<h3 id="sec-3">1.2 Visibility cycling in Outline-mode and Outline-minor-mode</h3> - - -<p> -<b>Can I get the visibility-cycling features in outline-mode and outline-minor-mode?</b> -</p> -<p> -Yes, these functions are written in a way that they are independent of -the outline setup. The following setup provides standard Org-mode -functionality in outline-mode on <code>TAB</code> and <code>S-TAB</code>. For -outline-minor-mode, we use <code>C-TAB</code> instead of <code>TAB</code>, -because <code>TAB</code> usually has mode-specific tasks. -</p> -<p> -<pre> -(add-hook 'outline-minor-mode-hook - (lambda () - (define-key outline-minor-mode-map [(control tab)] 'org-cycle) - (define-key outline-minor-mode-map [(shift tab)] 'org-global-cycle))) -(add-hook 'outline-mode-hook - (lambda () - (define-key outline-mode-map [(tab)] 'org-cycle) - (define-key outline-mode-map [(shift tab)] 'org-global-cycle))) -</pre> -</p> -<p> -Or check out <i>outline-magic.el</i>, which does this and also provides -promotion and demotion functionality. <i>outline-magic.el</i> is -available at <a href="http://www.astro.uva.nl/~dominik/Tools/OutlineMagic">Outline Magic</a>. -</p> - -<h2 id="sec-4">2 Errors</h2> - - -<h3 id="sec-5">2.1 <code>(wrong-type-argument keymapp nil)</code></h3> - -<p><b>When I try to use Org-mode, I always get the error message @code{(wrong-type-argument keymapp nil)}</b> -</p> -<p> -This is a conflict with an outdated version of the <i>allout.el</i>, see -the <a href="http://staff.science.uva.nl/~dominik/Tools/org/org.html#Conflicts">Conflicts</a> section in the manual -</p> - -<h3 id="sec-6">2.2 CUA mode does not work with Org-mode</h3> - - -<p> -<b>Org-mode takes over the S-cursor keys. I also want to use CUA-mode, is there a way to fix this conflict?</b> -</p> -<p> -Yes, see the <a href="http://staff.science.uva.nl/~dominik/Tools/org/org.html#Conflicts">Conflicts</a> section of the manual. -</p> - -<h3 id="sec-7">2.3 <code>winddmove.el</code> does not work with Org-mode.</h3> - - -<p> -<b>Org-mode takes over the S-cursor keys. I also want to use windmove.el, is there a way to fix this conflict?</b> -</p> -<p> -Yes, see the <a href="http://staff.science.uva.nl/~dominik/Tools/org/org.html#Conflicts">Conflicts</a> section of the manual. -</p> - -<h2 id="sec-8">3 Setup and Structure</h2> - - -<h3 id="sec-9">3.1 Org-mode as default mode</h3> - - -<p> -<b>Org-mode seems to be a useful default mode for the various README files I have scattered through my directories</b>. <b>How do I turn it on for all README files?</b> -</p> -<p> -Add the following to your .emacs file: -</p> -<p> -<pre> - (add-to-list 'auto-mode-alist '("README$" . org-mode)) -</pre> -</p> -<p> -You can even make it the default mode for any files with unspecified -mode using -</p> -<p> -<pre> - (setq default-major-mode 'org-mode) -</pre> -</p> - -<h3 id="sec-10">3.2 Get rid of extra stars in outline</h3> - - -<p> -<b>All these stars are driving me mad, I just find the Emacs outlines unreadable. Can't you just put white space and a single star as a starter for headlines?</b> -</p> -<p> -See the section <a href="http://staff.science.uva.nl/~dominik/Tools/org/org.html#Clean%20outline%20view">Clean outline view</a> in the manual. -</p> - -<h3 id="sec-11">3.3 Two windows on same Org-mode file</h3> - -<p><b>I would like to have two windows on the same Org-mode file, but with different outline visibility. Is that possible?</b> -</p> -<p> -You may use <i>indirect buffers</i> which do exactly this. See the -documentation on the command <code>make-indirect-buffer</code>. -</p> - -<h3 id="sec-12">3.4 Insert empty lines before new headings and plain list items</h3> - - -<p> -<b>I would like to have an empty line before each newly inserted headline, but not before each newly inserted plain-list item</b>. -</p> -<p> -<pre> - (setq org-blank-before-new-entry - '((heading . t) (plain-list-item . nil)) -</pre> -</p> - - -<h3 id="sec-13">3.5 Amount of context in sparse trees</h3> - - -<p> -*Sparse tree show the headline hierarchy above each match, and also -the headline following a match. I'd like to construct more compact -trees, with less context.* -</p> -<p> -Take a look at the variables <code>org-show-hierarchy-above</code> and -<code>org-show-following-headline</code>. -</p> - -<h3 id="sec-14">3.6 Stacking calls to org-occur</h3> - - -<p> -<b>Each call to org-occur starts again from OVERVIEW and exposes only the matches of the current call. I'd like to combine the effect of several calls</b>. -</p> -<p> -You can construct a regular expression that matches all targets you -want. Alternatively, use a <code>C-u</code> prefix with the second and any -further calls to <code>org-occur</code> to keep the current visibility and -highlighting in addition to the new ones. -</p> - -<h2 id="sec-15">4 Hyperlinks</h2> - - - -<h3 id="sec-16">4.1 Confirmation for shell and elisp links</h3> - - -<p> -<b>When I am executing shell/elisp links I always get a confirmation prompt and need to type "yes RET", that's 4 key presses! Can I get rid of this?</b> -</p> -<p> -The confirmation is there to protect you from unwantingly execute -potentially dangerous commands. For example, imagine a link -<pre> -[[shell:rm -rf ~/*][ Google Search]] -</pre> -</p> -<p> -In an Org-mode buffer, this command would look like <i>Google Search</i>, -but really it would remove your home directory. If you wish, you can -make it easier to respond to the query by setting -</p> -<p> -<pre> - (setq org-confirm-shell-link-function 'y-or-n-p - org-confirm-elisp-link-function 'y-or-n-p). -</pre> -</p> -<p> -Then a single keypress will be enough to confirm those links. It is -also possible to turn off this check entirely, but I strongly recommend -against this. Be warned. -</p> - -<h3 id="sec-17">4.2 Use RET or TAB to follow a link</h3> - - -<p> -<b>From other packages like Emacs-wiki, I am used to follow links with <code>RET</code> when the cursor is on the link. Is this also possible in org-mode?</b> -</p> -<p> -Yes, and you may also use TAB. -</p> -<p> -<pre> - (setq org-return-follows-link t) - (setq org-tab-follows-link t) -</pre> -</p> - -<h3 id="sec-18">4.3 Clicking on a link without activating it</h3> - - -<p> -<b>Each time I click inside a link in order to set point to this location, Org-mode actually follows the link</b> -</p> -<p> -Activating links with <code>mouse-1</code> is a new feature in Emacs 22, to make -link behavior similar to other applications like web browsers. If you -hold the mouse button down a bit longer, the cursor will be set -without following the link. If you cannot get used to this behavior, -you can (as in Emacs 21) use <code>mouse-2</code> to follow links and turn off -link activation for <code>mouse-1</code> with -</p> -<p> -<pre> - (setq org-mouse-1-follows-link nil) -</pre> -</p> - - -<h2 id="sec-19">5 Export</h2> - - -<h3 id="sec-20">5.1 Make TODO entries items, not headlines in HTML export</h3> - - -<p> -<b>When I export my TODO list, every TODO item becomes a separate section. How do I enforce these items to be exported as an itemized list?</b> -</p> -<p> -If you plan to use ASCII or HTML export, make sure things you want to -be exported as item lists are level 4 at least, even if that does mean -there is a level jump. For example: -</p> -<p> -<pre> - * Todays top priorities - **** TODO write a letter to xyz - **** TODO Finish the paper - **** Pick up kids at the school -</pre> -</p> -<p> -Alternatively, if you need a specific value for the heading/item -transition in a particular file, use the <code>#+OPTIONS</code> line to -configure the H switch. -</p> -<p> -<pre> - #+OPTIONS: H:2; ... -</pre> -</p> - -<h3 id="sec-21">5.2 Export only a subtree</h3> - - -<p> -<b>I would like to export only a subtree of my file to HTML. How?</b> -</p> -<p> -If you want to export a subtree, mark the subtree as region and then -export. Marking can be done with <code>C-c @ C-x C-x</code>, for example. -</p> - -<h3 id="sec-22">5.3 How to import org-mode calendar data into Mac OSX ical</h3> - - -<p> -<b>I would like my iCal program on Mac OSX to import the iCalendar file produced by Org-mode. How?</b> -</p> -<p> -<i>This is for OSX 10.3, see below for 10.4:</i> When using iCal under -Apple MacOS X, you can create a new calendar <i>OrgMode</i> (the default -name for the calendar created by <code>C-c C-e c</code>, see the variables -<code>org-icalendar-combined-name</code> and -<code>org-combined-agenda-icalendar-file</code>). Then set Org-mode to overwrite -the corresponding file <i>~/Library/Calendars/OrgMode.ics</i>. You may -even use AppleScript to make iCal re-read the calendar files each time -a new version of <i>OrgMode.ics</i> is produced. Here is the setup needed -for this: -</p> -<p> -<pre> - (setq org-combined-agenda-icalendar-file - "~/Library/Calendars/OrgMode.ics") - (add-hook 'org-after-save-iCalendar-file-hook - (lambda () - (shell-command - "osascript -e 'tell application \"iCal\" to reload calendars'"))) -</pre> -</p> - -<p> -For Mac OS X 10.4, you need to write the ics file to -<code>/Library/WebServer/Documents/</code> and then subscribe iCalendar to -<code>http: //localhost/orgmode.ics</code> -</p> - -<h2 id="sec-23">6 Tables</h2> - - -<h3 id="sec-24">6.1 #ERROR fields in tables</h3> - - -<p> -<b>One of my table columns has started to fill up with <code>#ERROR</code>. What is going on?</b> -</p> -<p> -Org-mode tried to compute the column from other fields using a -formula stored in the <code>#+TBLFM:</code> line just below the table, and -the evaluation of the formula fails. Fix the fields used in the -formula, or fix the formula, or remove it! -</p> - -<h3 id="sec-25">6.2 Unwanted new lines in table</h3> - - -<p> -<b>When I am in the last column of a table and just above a horizontal line in the table, pressing TAB creates a new table line before the horizontal line</b>. <b>How can I quickly move to the line below the horizontal line instead?</b> -</p> -<p> -Press <code>down</code> (to get on the separator line) and then <code>TAB</code>. -Or configure the variable -</p> -<p> -<pre> - (setq org-table-tab-jumps-over-hlines t) -</pre> -</p> - -<h3 id="sec-26">6.3 Automatic detection of formulas</h3> - -<p><b>I need to use fields in my table that start with "=", and each time I enter such a field, Org-mode thinks this is a formula</b>. -</p> -<p> -With the setting -</p> -<p> -<pre> - (setq org-table-formula-evaluate-inline nil) -</pre> -</p> -<p> -this will no longer happen. You can still use formulas using the -commands <tt>C-c =</tt> and <tt>C-u C-c =</tt> -</p> - - -<h3 id="sec-27">6.4 Change indentation of a table</h3> - -<p><b>How can I change the indentation of an entire table without fixing every line by hand?</b> -</p> -<p> -The indentation of a table is set by the first line. So just fix the -indentation of the first line and realign with <code>TAB</code>. -</p> - -<h3 id="sec-28">6.5 Performance issues with table alignment</h3> - -<p><b>I have a huge table in a file, and the automatic realign of tables is just taking too long. What can I do?</b> -</p> -<p> -Either split the table into several by inserting an empty line every -100 lines or so. Or turn off the automatic re-align with -</p> -<p> -<pre> - (setq org-table-automatic-realign nil) -</pre> -</p> -<p> -After this the only way to realign a table is to press <code>C-c C-c</code>. It -will no longer happen automatically, removing the corresponding delays -during editing. -</p> - -<h3 id="sec-29">6.6 Performance issues with table calculation</h3> - -<p><b>I have a complex table with lots of formulas, and recomputing the table takes rather long. What can I do?</b> -</p> -<p> -Nothing, really. The spreadsheet in org is mostly done to make -calculations possible, not so much to make them fast. Since Org-mode -is firmly committed to the ASCII format, nothing is stopping you from -editing the table by hand. Therefore, there is no internal -representation of the data. Each time Org-mode starts a computation, -it must scan the table for special lines, find the fields etc. This -is slow. Furthermore, Calc is slow compared to hardware computations. -To make this work with normal editing, recalculation is not happening -automatically, or only for the current line, so that the long wait for -a full table iteration only happens when you ask for it. -</p> -<p> -So for really complex tables, moving to a "real" spreadsheet may still -be the best option. -</p> -<p> -That said, there are some ways to optimize things in Org-mode, and I -have been thinking about moving a bit further down this line. -However, for my applications this has so far not been an issue at all. -If you have a good case,you could try to convince me. -</p> - -<h3 id="sec-30">6.7 Incrementing numbers</h3> - -<p><b>When I press <code>S-RET</code> in a table field to copy its value down, the content is not copied as is, but it is increased by one. Is that a bug or a feature</b> -</p> -<p> -Well, it is <i>supposed</i> to be a feature, to make it easy to create a -column with increasing numbers. If this gets into your way, turn it -off with -</p> -<p> -<pre> - (setq org-org-table-copy-increment nil) -</pre> -</p> - -<h2 id="sec-31">7 Agenda</h2> - - -<h3 id="sec-32">7.1 Include Org-mode agenda into Emacs diary</h3> - -<p><b>Is it possible to include entries from org-mode files into my emacs diary?</b> -</p> -<p> -Since the org-mode agenda is much more powerful and can contain the -diary, you should think twice before deciding to do this. If you -insist, however, integrating Org-mode information into the diary is -possible. You need to turn on <i>fancy diary display</i> by setting in -.emacs: -</p> -<p> -<pre> - (add-hook 'diary-display-hook 'fancy-diary-display) -</pre> -</p> -<p> -Then include the following line into your ~/diary file, in -order to get the entries from all files listed in the variable -<code>org-agenda-files</code> -</p> -<p> -<pre> - &%%(org-diary) -</pre> -You may also select specific files with -</p> -<p> -<pre> - &%%(org-diary) ~/path/to/some/org-file.org - &%%(org-diary) ~/path/to/another/org-file.org -</pre> -</p> -<p> -If you now launch the calendar and press <tt>d</tt> to display a diary, the -headlines of entries containing a timestamp, date range, schedule, or -deadline referring to the selected date will be listed. Just like -Org-mode's agenda view, the diary for <i>today</i> contains additional -entries for overdue deadlines and scheduled items. See also the -documentation of the <code>org-diary</code> function. Under XEmacs, it is -not possible to jump back from the diary to the org, this works only in -the agenda buffer. -</p> - -<p class="author"> Author: Carsten Dominik -<a href="mailto:carsten.dominik@gmail.com"><carsten.dominik@gmail.com></a> -</p> -<p class="date"> Date: 2007/09/10 07:06:01</p> -</body> -</html> diff --git a/ORGWEBPAGE/index.html b/ORGWEBPAGE/index.html deleted file mode 100644 index ea618eb..0000000 --- a/ORGWEBPAGE/index.html +++ /dev/null @@ -1,403 +0,0 @@ -<!DOCTYPE html PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD XHTML 1.0 Strict//EN" - "http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml1/DTD/xhtml1-strict.dtd"> -<html xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml" -lang="en" xml:lang="en"> -<head> -<title>Org-Mode Homepage</title> -<meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html;charset=iso-8859-1"/> -<meta name="generator" content="Org-mode"/> -<meta name="generated" content="2008/01/18 12:46:32"/> -<meta name="author" content="Carsten Dominik"/> -<style type="text/css"> - html { - font-family: Times, serif; - font-size: 12pt; - } - .title { text-align: center; } - .todo { color: red; } - .done { color: green; } - .timestamp { color: grey } - .timestamp-kwd { color: CadetBlue } - .tag { background-color:lightblue; font-weight:normal } - .target { background-color: lavender; } - pre { - border: 1pt solid #AEBDCC; - background-color: #F3F5F7; - padding: 5pt; - font-family: courier, monospace; - } - table { border-collapse: collapse; } - td, th { - vertical-align: top; - <!--border: 1pt solid #ADB9CC;--> - } -</style> -</head><body> -<h1 class="title">Org-Mode Homepage</h1> -<div id="table-of-contents"> -<h2>Table of Contents</h2> -<ul> -<li><a href="#sec-1">Org - an Emacs Mode for Notes and Project Planning</a></li> -<li><a href="#sec-2">Current Version (5.19) and Compatibility</a></li> -<li><a href="#sec-3">Downloads</a></li> -<li><a href="#sec-4">Documentation</a> -<ul> -<li><a href="#sec-5">Manual and Reference card</a></li> -</ul> -</li> -<li><a href="#sec-6">Links</a> -<ul> -<li><a href="#sec-7">Mailing list</a></li> -<li><a href="#sec-8">Tutorials</a></li> -<li><a href="#sec-9">Org-mode, GTD and other task management systems </a></li> -<li><a href="#sec-10">Add-Ons</a></li> -<li><a href="#sec-11">Translators</a></li> -<li><a href="#sec-15">Alternative distributions</a></li> -<li><a href="#sec-16">Contributing to Org-mode</a></li> -<li><a href="#sec-17">Future Development</a></li> -</ul> -</li> -</ul> -</div> - -<div class="outline-2"> -<h2 id="sec-1">Org - an Emacs Mode for Notes and Project Planning</h2> - - - - -<BASE href="http://orgmode.org/index.html"> - -<p> -Org-mode is a mode for keeping notes, maintaining ToDo lists, and doing -project planning with a fast and effective plain-text system. -</p> -<p> -Org-mode develops organizational tasks around NOTES files that contain -information about projects as plain text. Org-mode is implemented on -top of outline-mode, which makes it possible to keep the content of -large files well structured. Visibility cycling and structure editing -help to work with the tree. Tables are easily created with a built-in -table editor. Org-mode supports ToDo items, deadlines, time stamps, -and scheduling. It dynamically compiles entries into an agenda. -Plain text URL-like links connect to websites, emails, Usenet -messages, BBDB entries, and any files related to the projects. For -printing and sharing of notes, an Org-mode file can be exported as a -structured ASCII file, HTML, and LaTeX. -</p> -</div> - -<div class="outline-2"> -<h2 id="sec-2">Current Version (5.19) and Compatibility</h2> - - -<p> -The current version is 5.19. To see what has changed in recent -releases, check this <a href="Changes.html">list of user-visible changes</a>. These descriptions -are extensive, to avoid that people will be printing the manual after -each incremental release. If you have an older version of the manual, -just check the release notes and you will be up-to-date. -</p> -<p> -This package works on Emacs 22, and (with minor restrictions) on Emacs -21 and XEmacs 21 (where you must also use <i>noutline.el</i> shipped with -Org-mode). The Emacs 22.1 release ships with Org-mode version 4.67c. -The latest CVS emacs trunk usually contains a fairly recent version, -but may lag a bit behind the website release. -</p> -</div> - -<div class="outline-2"> -<h2 id="sec-3">Downloads</h2> - - -<ul> -<li>Distribution<br/> -Download as <a href="org-5.19.zip">zip file</a> or <a href="org-5.19.tar.gz">gzipped tar archive</a>. These archives contain -both the Lisp file org.el and the documentation in PDF and (TeX)Info -formats. A shell script to simplify upgrading to the newest release -has been posted <a href="http://www.philfam.co.uk/pete/GTD/org-mode/update-org.sh">here</a>. - -</li> -</ul> -</div> - -<div class="outline-2"> -<h2 id="sec-4">Documentation</h2> - - -<div class="outline-3"> -<h3 id="sec-5">Manual and Reference card</h3> - -<ul> -<li> -Read the documentation <a href="manual/index.html">online</a>. This is a version consisting of many -small files, to save bandwidth. If you really need it, you can also -have the entire manual in a <a href="org.html">single monolithic file</a>. -</li> -<li> -Download the documentation in other formats: <a href="org.pdf">PDF</a>, <a href="org">Info</a>, or <a href="org.texi">TeXInfo</a>. -</li> -<li> -Download the <a href="orgcard.pdf">Refcard</a> for org-mode, and Kyle Sherman hast created a -<a href="orgcard.txt">text version</a> of the reference card -</li> -<li> -There is also a <a href="http://hpcgi1.nifty.com/spen/index.cgi?OrgMode%2fManual">Japanese translation</a> of the manual (version 4.60), -produced by Takeshi Okano. -</li> -<li> -The <a href="faq.html">FAQ</a> is not very up-to-date, but may still answer some of your -questions. Please have a look before posting to emacs-orgmode@gnu.org. - -</li> -</ul></div> -</div> - -<div class="outline-2"> -<h2 id="sec-6">Links</h2> - - - -<div class="outline-3"> -<h3 id="sec-7">Mailing list</h3> - - -<p> -There is a mailing list for discussion about org-mode. -</p> -<ul> -<li> -Subscribe to it at <a href="http://lists.gnu.org/mailman/listinfo/emacs-orgmode">this webpage</a>. -</li> -<li> -Directly <a href="mailto:emacs-orgmode@gnu.org">send mail to it</a>. If you are not subscribed, a moderator -will look at the message before passing it through to the -list. If that has happened once, future messages from your email -address will get through immediately, even if you remain -unsubscribed. -</li> -<li> -Read the list on <a href="http://www.gmane.org">Gmane</a> through a <a href="http://news.gmane.org/gmane.emacs.orgmode">web interface</a> or with a -<a href="news://news.gmane.org/gmane.emacs.orgmode">newsreader</a>. -<li><form method="get" action="http://search.gmane.org/"> -<input type="text" name="query"> -<input type="hidden" name="group" value="gmane.emacs.orgmode"> -<input type="submit" value="Search gmane.emacs.orgmode"> -</form> - -</li> -</ul></div> - -<div class="outline-3"> -<h3 id="sec-8">Tutorials</h3> - - -<p> -<a href="tutorials.html">Tutorials and screencasts</a> are listed on a separate page. -</p> -</div> - -<div class="outline-3"> -<h3 id="sec-9">Org-mode, GTD and other task management systems </h3> - -<p>Org-mode is flexible enough to implement many different ways of -organizing your projects. A frequently discusses scheme is <a href="http://www.davidco.com/">David Allen's</a> strategy for <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/GTD">Getting Things Done</a>. But it is clearly not -the only way to us Org-mode for planning. Here are a couple of -links related to this topic. -</p> -<ul> -<li> -<a href="http://johnwiegley.com">John Wiegley</a> has written an excellent document describing his -way of using Org-mode as a <a href="http://johnwiegley.com/org.mode.day.planner.html">day planner</a>. See also some later -messages for enhancements of his setup: -<a href="http://article.gmane.org/gmane.emacs.orgmode/2963">emacs-orgmode-2962</a>, <a href="http://article.gmane.org/gmane.emacs.orgmode/3629">emacs-orgmode-3629</a> - -</li> -<li> -<a href="http://members.optusnet.com.au/charles57/Creative/">Charles Cave</a> has written an <a href="http://members.optusnet.com.au/~charles57/GTD/orgmode.html">article/tutorial</a> about the basic -elements of GTD and how he implements them in Org-mode. - -</li> -<li> -There have been several threads on emacs-orgmode@gnu.org related -to GTD, the most important ones are: -<ul> -<li> -<a href="http://thread.gmane.org/gmane.emacs.orgmode/683">Another GTD question</a>, which contains a discussion about basic -GTD aspects. It also contains this -</li> -<li> -<a href="http://article.gmane.org/gmane.emacs.orgmode/715">Post by Carsten</a> summarizing several options for implementing -GTD in org-mode. -</li> -<li> -<a href="http://thread.gmane.org/gmane.emacs.orgmode/523">GTD, Projects and Next Actions in org-mode</a> is a thread where -several people describe their personal setup is -</li> -<li> -The <a href="http://thread.gmane.org/gmane.emacs.orgmode/4915">SOMEDAY/MAYBE vs. low priorities</a> thread contains a -discussion about priorities that is quite instructive. -</li> -<li> -Here is a <a href="http://thread.gmane.org/gmane.emacs.orgmode/4832/focus%3D4854">very instructive post</a> by Pete Phillips explaining -why David Allens book is where you should start to learn GTD, -and that the Internet and Org-mode only come into the game -later, when thinking about the implementation. And since -doing GTD the right way will give you lots of free time, don't -forget to listen to <a href="http://www.detox-jazz.co.uk/">Pete's music</a>! -</li> -</ul></li> -<li> -Also on the web you can find information about how people are -setting up Org-mode to fit their habits. A few examples: - -<ul> -<li> -This <a href="http://www.brool.com/?p=82">blog post</a> shows a very simple and clear GTD setup. - -</li> -</ul></li> -</ul></div> - -<div class="outline-3"> -<h3 id="sec-10">Add-Ons</h3> - - -<ul> -<li> -<a href="http://www.cl.cam.ac.uk/~pz215/">Piotr Zielinski</a> wrote <a href="http://www.cl.cam.ac.uk/~pz215/files/org-mouse.el">org-mouse.el</a> which is now distributed with -Org-mode. It implements great mouse support for many functions in -org-mode. - -</li> -<li> -<a href="http://dto.freeshell.org/notebook/">David O'Toole</a> is the author of <a href="http://dto.freeshell.org/e/org-publish.el">org-publish.el</a>. While this is -now part of the Org-mode distribution, you might find the newest -bug fixes and developments at his <a href="http://dto.freeshell.org/notebook/OrgMode.html">Org-mode page</a>, along with -several other projects like <i>org-blog.el</i> and -<i>org-publish-escript.el</i>. - -</li> -<li> -<a href="http://www.cognition.ens.fr/~guerry/">Bastien Guerry</a> has been really prolific in writing interesting -add-ons, all available at his <a href="http://www.cognition.ens.fr/~guerry/bastien-org-mode.html">org-mode page</a>: -<ul> -<li> -a package for using Org-mode as the basis for blogging -</li> -<li> -a LaTeX exporter that is now distributed together with -org-mode -</li> -<li> -a special table-of-contents buffer that simplifies navigation -</li> -<li> -a registry to find locations that link a specific document. - -</li> -</ul></li> -<li> -George C.F. Greve wrote <a href="http://www.emacswiki.org/emacs/org-mairix.el">org-mairix.el</a> to add links that trigger a -mairix search. - -</li> -</ul></div> - -<div class="outline-3"> -<h3 id="sec-11">Translators</h3> - - -<p> -I know about the following attempts to translate from and to -Org-mode files: -</p> - -<div class="outline-4"> -<h4 id="sec-12">Org-mode to XXX</h4> - - -<ul> -<li> -<a href="http://www.cognition.ens.fr/~guerry/u/org2rem.el">From Org-mode to remind</a> by <a href="http://www.cognition.ens.fr/~guerry/">Bastien Guerry</a>. - -</li> -<li> -<a href="org-export-freemind-0.1.0.tar.gz">From Org-mode to Freemind</a> by Marco Vezzoli. - -</li> -</ul></div> - -<div class="outline-4"> -<h4 id="sec-13">XXX to Org-mode</h4> - - -<ul> -<li> -<a href="http://www.olafdietsche.de/palm/palm2orgmode.pl">From Palm TODO database to Orgmode</a>. This Translator was -written by <a href="http://www.olafdietsche.de/">Olaf Dietsche</a>. - -</li> -</ul></div> - -<div class="outline-4"> -<h4 id="sec-14">Bi-directional</h4> - - -<p> -Unfortunately nothing so far. -</p> -</div> -</div> - -<div class="outline-3"> -<h3 id="sec-15">Alternative distributions</h3> - - -<ul> -<li> -Mark A. Hershberger has made some <a href="https://launchpad.net/~hexmode/+archive">Ubuntu packages</a> for org-mode. - -</li> -</ul></div> - -<div class="outline-3"> -<h3 id="sec-16">Contributing to Org-mode</h3> - - -<p> -You can always contribute with ideas and bug reports on the mailing -list. If you want to contribute a patch, code snippets, or a full -add-on, this is very welcome too! However, I can only make it an -official part of Org-mode if you have signed the papers with the -Free Software Foundation. Org-mode is distributed as part of Emacs -and must therefore adhere to strict rules about the copyright of -all included material. If this is what you want to do, <a href="request-assign-future.txt">here</a> is the -form that you have to fill in and send to the FSF. After you -received the final copy with signatures, please scan it and send -the scan to the maintainer. -</p> -</div> - -<div class="outline-3"> -<h3 id="sec-17">Future Development</h3> - - -<p> -Org-mode is still developing fast. The best way to stay up-to-date -is to join the mailing list where the changes are developed and -discusssed. -</p> -<p> -Here is a loose <a href="todo.html">list of ideas</a> that are still to be processed -somehow, when I get to it… -</p> -</div> -</div> -<div id="postamble"><p class="author"> Author: Carsten Dominik -<a href="mailto:carsten at orgmode dot org"><carsten at orgmode dot org></a> -</p> -<p class="date"> Date: 2008/01/18 12:46:32</p> -</div></body> -</html> diff --git a/ORGWEBPAGE/index.org b/ORGWEBPAGE/index.org index a2d283e..bb3d272 100644 --- a/ORGWEBPAGE/index.org +++ b/ORGWEBPAGE/index.org @@ -22,9 +22,9 @@ messages, BBDB entries, and any files related to the projects. For printing and sharing of notes, an Org-mode file can be exported as a structured ASCII file, HTML, and LaTeX. -* Current Version (5.22a) and Compatibility +* Current Version (5.23a) and Compatibility -The current version is 5.22a. To see what has changed in recent +The current version is 5.23a. To see what has changed in recent releases, check this [[file:Changes.html][list of user-visible changes]]. These descriptions are extensive, to avoid that people will be printing the manual after each incremental release. If you have an older version of the manual, @@ -39,7 +39,7 @@ but may lag a bit behind the website release. * Downloads **** Distribution -Download as [[file:org-5.22a.zip][zip file]] or [[file:org-5.22a.tar.gz][gzipped tar archive]]. These archives contain +Download as [[file:org-5.23a.zip][zip file]] or [[file:org-5.23a.tar.gz][gzipped tar archive]]. These archives contain both the Lisp file org.el and the documentation in PDF and (TeX)Info formats. A shell script to simplify upgrading to the newest release has been posted [[http://www.philfam.co.uk/pete/GTD/org-mode/update-org.sh][here]]. diff --git a/ORGWEBPAGE/index.txt b/ORGWEBPAGE/index.txt deleted file mode 100644 index f9366d3..0000000 --- a/ORGWEBPAGE/index.txt +++ /dev/null @@ -1,151 +0,0 @@ - Org-Mode Homepage - ================= - -Author: Carsten Dominik <dominik at science dot uva dot nl> -Date: 2007/05/13 09:31:34 - - -Table of Contents -================= -Org - an Emacs Mode for Notes and Project Planning - Current Version - Compatibility - Downloads - Frequently Asked Questions - Mailing list - Links - Tutorials - Org-mode and GTD - Add-Ons - Future Development - - -Org - an Emacs Mode for Notes and Project Planning -~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ - -Org-mode is a mode for keeping notes, maintaining ToDo lists, and doing -project planning with a fast and effective plain-text system. - -Org-mode develops organizational tasks around NOTES files that contain -information about projects as plain text. Org-mode is implemented on -top of outline-mode, which makes it possible to keep the content of -large files well structured. Visibility cycling and structure editing -help to work with the tree. Tables are easily created with a built-in -table editor. Org-mode supports ToDo items, deadlines, time stamps, -and scheduling. It dynamically compiles entries into an agenda. -Plain text URL-like links connect to websites, emails, Usenet -messages, BBDB entries, and any files related to the projects. For -printing and sharing of notes, an Org-mode file can be exported as a -structured ASCII file, or as HTML. - -Current Version -=============== - -The current version is 4.74. To see what has changed in recent -releases, check this [list of user-visible changes]. - -Compatibility -============= - -This package works on Emacs 21 and (with minor restrictions) on -XEmacs 21. Version 4.67c will be part of the Emacs 22.1 release. - - *Attention XEmacs users*: Starting with Org-mode 4.38, Org-mode will -only work correctly with XEmacs if you use [noutline.el], a new -implementation of outline-mode. Until this package becomes part of -XEmacs, you can find it in the xemacs subdirectory of the Org-mode -distribution. Just compile it and place it onto you load path, -Org-mode will load it automatically. - -Downloads -========= - -* Distribution - Download as [zip file] or [gzipped tar archive]. These archives - contain both the Lisp file org.el and the documentation in PDF - and (TeX)Info formats. - -* Documentation - - Read the documentation [online]. - - Download the documentation in [PDF], [Info], or [TeXInfo] format. - - Download the [Refcard] for org-mode. - - There is also a [Japanese translation] of the manual (version 4.60), produced by Takeshi Okano. - - -Frequently Asked Questions -========================== - -The [FAQ] used to be part of the manual but this is no longer the case. - -Mailing list -============ - -There is a mailing list for discussion about org-mode. You can -subscribe to it at [this webpage] or directly [send mail to it] (which -will make it to the list after the moderator has accepted it. -Furthermore you can access the mailing list on [Gmane] through a -[web interface] or with a -[newsreader]. - -Links -===== - -Tutorials ---------- - - There is a very nice introductory [OrgMode tutorial] by [David O'Toole] covering the basics of TODO lists and the agenda. It - has been translated into [French], [Japanese], [Chinese], and [Korean]. - -Org-mode and GTD ----------------- - Org-mode is flexible enough to implement many different ways of - organizing your projects. A frequently discusses scheme is [David Allen's] strategy for [Getting Things Done]. Here are a couple of - links related to this topic. - - - [Charles Cave] has written an [article/tutorial] about the basic - elements of GTD and how he implements them in Org-mode. - - - There have been several threads on emacs-orgmode@gnu.org related - to GTD, the most important ones are: - - [Another GTD question], which contains a discussion about basic - GTD aspects. It also contains this - - [Post by Carsten] summarising several options for implementing - GTD in org-mode. - - [GTD, Projects and Next Actions in org-mode] is a thread where - several people describe their personal setup is - - - Also on the web you can find information about how people are - setting up Org-mode to fit their habits. A few examples: - - - This [blog post] shows a very simple and clear GTD setup. - -Add-Ons -------- - - - [Piotr Zielinski] wrote [org-mouse.el] which is now distributed with - Org-mode. It implements very interesting mouse support for many - functions in org-mode. - - - [David O'Toole] is the author of [org-publish.el]. While this is - now part of the Org-mode distribution, you might find the newest - bug fixes and developments at his [Org-mode page], along with - several other projects like /org-blog.el/ and - /org-publish-escript.el/. - - - [Bastien Guerry] has a package for using Org-mode as the basis for - blogging, it is available at [this page]. - - + Translators - - I know about the following attempts to translate from and to - Org-mode files: - - - [From Palm TODO database to Orgmode]. This Translator was - written by [Olaf Dietsche]. - - - [From Org-mode to remind] by [Bastien Guerry]. - - -Future Development ------------------- - - Here is a [list of ideas] that are still to be processed somehow, - when I get to it. diff --git a/ORGWEBPAGE/survey.html b/ORGWEBPAGE/survey.html deleted file mode 100644 index fab186d..0000000 --- a/ORGWEBPAGE/survey.html +++ /dev/null @@ -1,2195 +0,0 @@ -<!DOCTYPE html PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD XHTML 1.0 Strict//EN" - "http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml1/DTD/xhtml1-strict.dtd"> -<html xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml" -lang="en" xml:lang="en"> -<head> -<title>Org-Mode Survey Results</title> -<meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html;charset=iso-8859-1"/> -<meta name="generator" content="Org-mode"/> -<meta name="generated" content="2008/01/27 22:10:13"/> -<meta name="author" content="Charles Cave"/> -<style type="text/css"> - html { - font-family: Times, serif; - font-size: 12pt; - } - .title { text-align: center; } - .todo { color: red; } - .done { color: green; } - .timestamp { color: grey } - .timestamp-kwd { color: CadetBlue } - .tag { background-color:lightblue; font-weight:normal } - .target { background-color: lavender; } - pre { - border: 1pt solid #AEBDCC; - background-color: #F3F5F7; - padding: 5pt; - font-family: courier, monospace; - } - table { border-collapse: collapse; } - td, th { - vertical-align: top; - <!--border: 1pt solid #ADB9CC;--> - } -</style> -</head><body> -<h1 class="title">Org-Mode Survey Results</h1> -Some descriptive text to be emitted. Several lines OK. - - -<div id="table-of-contents"> -<h2>Table of Contents</h2> -<ul> -<li><a href="#sec-1">Survey introduction</a></li> -<li><a href="#sec-2">1. Which operating system, version and Linux distribution?</a></li> -<li><a href="#sec-3">2. Which Emacs are you using (GNU/Xemacs, etc) and which version? Paste the result of M-x version.</a></li> -<li><a href="#sec-4">3. When did you first start using org-mode and how did you find out about it?</a></li> -<li><a href="#sec-5">4. What are your main uses of org-mode?</a></li> -<li><a href="#sec-6">5. New features and product maturity?</a></li> -<li><a href="#sec-7">6. Additional tutorials, documentation and screencasts would you like?</a></li> -<li><a href="#sec-8">7. Which features of org-mode do you use? (Spreadsheet, LaTeX, HTML, Remember, etc)</a></li> -<li><a href="#sec-9">8. Your age</a></li> -<li><a href="#sec-10">9. Which country do you live in?</a></li> -<li><a href="#sec-11">10. Are there any other comments you would like to make about org-mode?</a></li> -<li><a href="#sec-12">Appendix: Raw data for some questions:</a></li> -</ul> -</div> - -<div class="outline-2"> -<h2 id="sec-1">Survey introduction</h2> - - -<p> -A survey was conducted of org-mode users duing November 2007. An -invitation was sent to the org-mode users list as well as announced on -the <a href="http://orgmode.org">http://orgmode.org</a> web site. About 80 people resonded. This file -contains a complete list of the answers, as the base of further -discussion. -</p> -<p> -Survey created and summarised by Charles Cave -<a href="mailto:charlesweb@optusnet.com.au">mailto:charlesweb@optusnet.com.au</a> -</p> -</div> - -<div class="outline-2"> -<h2 id="sec-2">1. Which operating system, version and Linux distribution?</h2> - -<table border="2" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="6" rules="groups" frame="hsides"> -<col align="left"></col><col align="right"></col><col align="left"></col> -<thead> -<tr><th>OS</th><th>N</th><th>bar</th></tr> -</thead> -<tbody> -<tr><td>Windows</td><td>31</td><td>*******************************</td></tr> -<tr><td>Linux</td><td>55</td><td>*******************************************************</td></tr> -<tr><td>Mac OS X</td><td>12</td><td>************</td></tr> -</tbody> -</table> - - -<p> -The different Linux distributions: -</p> -<table border="2" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="6" rules="groups" frame="hsides"> -<col align="left"></col><col align="right"></col><col align="left"></col> -<thead> -<tr><th>Distribution</th><th>N</th><th>bar</th></tr> -</thead> -<tbody> -<tr><td>Arch Linux</td><td>1</td><td>*</td></tr> -<tr><td>Centos</td><td>1</td><td>*</td></tr> -<tr><td>Debian</td><td>14</td><td>**************</td></tr> -<tr><td>Fedora</td><td>7</td><td>*******</td></tr> -<tr><td>FreeBSD</td><td>1</td><td>*</td></tr> -<tr><td>Gentoo</td><td>7</td><td>*******</td></tr> -<tr><td>Kununtu</td><td>1</td><td>*</td></tr> -<tr><td>MagicLinux</td><td>1</td><td>*</td></tr> -<tr><td>OpenBSD</td><td>1</td><td>*</td></tr> -<tr><td>RedHat</td><td>2</td><td>**</td></tr> -<tr><td>Solarus</td><td>2</td><td>**</td></tr> -<tr><td>Suse</td><td>7</td><td>*******</td></tr> -<tr><td>Ubuntu</td><td>9</td><td>*********</td></tr> -<tr><td>Unspecified</td><td>2</td><td>**</td></tr> -</tbody> -</table> - - -</div> - -<div class="outline-2"> -<h2 id="sec-3">2. Which Emacs are you using (GNU/Xemacs, etc) and which version? Paste the result of M-x version.</h2> - - -<p> -Summary: -</p><table border="2" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="6" rules="groups" frame="hsides"> -<col align="left"></col><col align="right"></col> -<thead> -<tr><th>Emacs/XEmacs</th><th>Number of answers</th></tr> -</thead> -<tbody> -<tr><td>XEmacs</td><td>7</td></tr> -<tr><td>Emacs total</td><td>73</td></tr> -<tr><td>Emacs 21</td><td>4</td></tr> -<tr><td>Emacs 22</td><td>47</td></tr> -<tr><td>Emacs 23</td><td>18</td></tr> -</tbody> -</table> - - -<p> -The raw replies can be found <a href="#Raw--Emacs--versions">here</a>. -</p> -</div> - -<div class="outline-2"> -<h2 id="sec-4">3. When did you first start using org-mode and how did you find out about it?</h2> - - -<ul> -<li> -Org 5.04, Aug 2007 - Searching around the Web -</li> -<li> -2007, December found about in in emacs wiki -</li> -<li> -November 2006, found it while googling GTD tools -</li> -<li> -moved from planner about 6 months ago -</li> -<li> -2005, probably read about it on Sacha Chua's blog. -</li> -<li> -August 2007? Heard of it a long time ago, maybe by following links -from johnh's notebook mode. Finally switched from planner after a -friend did the same. -</li> -<li> -October 2007 -</li> -<li> -about the begining of 2007. Heard about it on the internet I guess. -</li> -<li> -I found it by way of emacswiki.org. I was an avid user of outline -mode, and found somebody's screencast (Scott Jaderholm's, I think) -showing off org mode. I've been using it for probably about six -months. -</li> -<li> -Oct. 2007. I think I was looking for an alternative to planner.el. -</li> -<li> -august 27, 2006. I found it while looking for an alternative to -planner. -</li> -<li> -Roughly 2005/6, through a friend. -</li> -<li> -2007-Nov. Google. -</li> -<li> -July 2007 after I saw the entry in Emacswiki -</li> -<li> -april 2007 -</li> -<li> -2007-06 thrrough Sacha Chua's blog -</li> -<li> -Oldest entry in my archive file is June 2005, but I think I was -using org for a while before that. I don't remember when I heard -about it. -</li> -<li> -Around version 4.76, don't remember when. Found about it on the -Emacs Wiki. -</li> -<li> -10/2006 by chance looking for pim tools for Emacs -</li> -<li> -One month ago, found a link on a web site -</li> -<li> -11/2005 -</li> -<li> -02/2007 After getting annoyed with Muse-mode interaction with -outline-mode, I googled and found org-mode and never went back. -</li> -<li> -Using for about 2 years. Found org-mode after searching for a better -version of outline-mode -</li> -<li> -Sometime around Jan. 2005. Someone mentioned it on the 43folders.com -message board (probably Jason F. McBrayer) and I decided I'd check -it out. -</li> -<li> -August 2007. I heard it about it on the planner mode mailing list. -</li> -<li> -6-12 months ago! -</li> -<li> -I read about org-mail from an email of a maillist … dnon't know -which one -</li> -<li> -A year ago because someone mentioned it in #emacs on freenode as a -better planner-el solution -</li> -<li> -2 months ago when I started using Emacs. I was also looking for a -way to organize and found org-mode via blogs etc. -</li> -<li> -3 month ago. I was looking forward some emacs "PIM". -</li> -<li> -2007 September -</li> -<li> -Can't remember; at least two years ago? I think I would have first -heard about it from the Emacs Wiki. -</li> -<li> -Around May 2007. I don't recall. -</li> -<li> -No idea 6 months back probably; on the wiki site I think -</li> -<li> -2007-08 First heard mention in a GTD mailing list, but realised it -was going to be great after seeing screencast at -<a href="http://jaderholm.com/screencasts.html">http://jaderholm.com/screencasts.html</a> -</li> -<li> -2007 -</li> -<li> -almost 2 years emacs newsgroups -</li> -<li> -2006-08 (version 4.50) -</li> -<li> -approx. March 2006. I don't recall how I found out about it. -</li> -<li> -I think I began using it in 2005. I found out about it on the -planner list. -</li> -<li> -it's been about a year, I can't remember how I found out about it, -maybe on the #emacs channel IRC. -</li> -<li> -2007-03 www.emacswiki.org -</li> -<li> -1/2007 emacs NEWS -</li> -<li> -In 2005, I found out about org-mode while googling for some kind of -outliner software. My search must have hit upon a listserv post. My -first try at using it was in June 2005, but I didn't like -it. Carsten made many improvements and in December 2005, he emailed -me to ask me what I thought. It thought it was pretty good, and I've -been using it almost every day since. -</li> -<li> -October 2006. Saw orgmode mentioned in comments on 43folders.com -</li> -<li> -2007 july, emacs wiki -</li> -<li> -Around September 2007. I first knew it from planner-mode mailing -list. I used to use planner-mode. -</li> -<li> -Oct 2007 -</li> -<li> -2007-09 NEWS in Gnu Emacs 22 -</li> -<li> -21 april 2006 (was the oldest .org file I could find on my -system). Found out through… #emacs I think. dto was talking about -it. -</li> -<li> -I have a "org version 3.05" in my .emacs So it should be from spring -2005 (March? May?) I read an article in the web, a blog I think. so -I began using Emacs to use org (uh! :-) -</li> -<li> -August 2007 Slashdot article on GTD Wired article on GTD Google -search for GTD found org-mode tutorial. -</li> -<li> -Sep 2005 -</li> -<li> -June 2007. At may I started learning Emacs for the first time, and -together all its related modes. At #emacs at irc.freenode.org and at -EmacsWiki it was mentioned org-mode. -</li> -<li> -2007-04 I was into emacs learning and stumbled upon org-mode I don't -remember where. -</li> -<li> -2007 February, emacswiki.org and discussions on the planner.el -mailing list -</li> -<li> -Sometime before April 2006 -</li> -<li> -About 1 year ago. -</li> -<li> -April 2006 (ca org-mode 4.25) Switching from Planner after numerous -mentions of org on the planner mailing list. -</li> -<li> -October 2006 -</li> -<li> -In june 2006. By reading the tutorial here: -<a href="http://dto.freeshell.org/notebook/OrgTutorial.html">http://dto.freeshell.org/notebook/OrgTutorial.html</a> -</li> -<li> -Aug 2005 After trying out Sacha's planning mode i knew it was close, -but not quite right for me. Googling around I found org mode. -</li> -<li> -Probably 2004, before it had texinfo documentation or even before -the agenda view -</li> -<li> -2007/10 -</li> -<li> -2007-01 I think I've read a blog about it or I've stumbled across it -at emacswiki.org. -</li> -<li> -I started to use org-mode a year ago. I found org-mode on the emacs -wiki -</li> -<li> -2007, September, read about it on the pages explaining how it was -part of emacs-22 -</li> -<li> -November-December 2006, after googling for "emacs pim". Or, -probably, there was an article (linux.com?). -</li> -<li> -5/2006, after emacswiki or web tutorial -</li> -<li> -at least as long as the newsgroup has been gmane, as I submitted it -there. I must have found out on emacs wiki? -</li> -<li> -~March 2007. I was using planner and I think I saw references to it -there and checked it out. -</li> -<li> -I subscribed to the list in 8/06. Maybe a month or two before that. -</li> -<li> -2007-01-01 -</li> -<li> -2007/01, by a org-mode tutorial. -</li> -<li> -I can't remember that. I used to use planner-mode. When someone -mentioned org-mode on that mailing list, I decided to have a try. -</li> -<li> -2006-03 – via your (Charles Cave) posting of 2006-03-10 to Getting Things Done -yahoogroup. -</li> -<li> -Around march 2006? -</li> -<li> -Dunno. A while ago. -</li> -<li> -2006 found out indirectly from the Planner mode or maybe Emacs Wiki -</li> -<li> -2006/06 Emacs Wiki - -</li> -</ul></div> - -<div class="outline-2"> -<h2 id="sec-5">4. What are your main uses of org-mode?</h2> - - -<ul> -<li> -daily task planing, private and at work documenting know-hows, -collecting informations (web searches etc.), contacts -</li> -<li> -i plan to use it for GTD and (maybe) as replacement for LyX as -general writing tool (via LaTeX export) -</li> -<li> -Project planning, task management -</li> -<li> -todo list / scheduler -</li> -<li> -TODO list management -</li> -<li> -Task list and note taking -</li> -<li> -Todo-list administration - Time tracking - Creating outlines -</li> -<li> -write lists to keep track of projects and infomation -</li> -<li> -I mostly use it as an extended version of outline mode, as well as -the agenda mode. Managing TODO lists and the like. I also really -like the integration with remember mode. -</li> -<li> -TODO list, calendar/appointment app, note-taking, "digital junk -drawer" a la Yojimbo, minor mode for drafting documents, -org-publish.el, org-blog.el -</li> -<li> -Planning and taking notes (with remember mode.) -</li> -<li> -TODO lists (GTD methodology) and diary -</li> -<li> -Planning, project, time and task tracking. -</li> -<li> -GTD system at home -</li> -<li> -planning -</li> -<li> -todo-lists -</li> -<li> -Maintaining a GTD system for personal organization, tracking time -for work reporting and billing. -</li> -<li> -Organizing my tasks and plans at work. Trying to implement GTD with -it. -</li> -<li> -Reporting (org-outline/exporter!), GTD -</li> -<li> -GTD, weekly planner -</li> -<li> -Managing software development todo lists -</li> -<li> -Agenda, todo tracking, lecture notes, blogging -</li> -<li> -TODO list -</li> -<li> -1) Maintaining my personal lists of projects and tasks 2) -Maintaining a "wiki" of reference material (org-mode doc that links -to external files and URLs) 3) Maintaining an archive of completed -projects 4) Keeping track of my agenda 5) Outlining and -brainstorming 6) Organizing journal entries -</li> -<li> -Personal task lists. -</li> -<li> -daily planning -</li> -<li> -Organizing and managing projects -</li> -<li> -gtd - project management - generating htmls - minutes, documentation -</li> -<li> -notes, todo-lists, planner -</li> -<li> -Agenda (GTD) Notes keeping Publishing tool -</li> -<li> -Slowly it is becoming my desktop. I write, use it for email -composition, technical documentation. Slowly getting into planning, -agenda etc. -</li> -<li> -Project planning and task tracking. -</li> -<li> -keeping track of things to do. -</li> -<li> -TODO and org-table -</li> -<li> -Running my work and home todo lists and notes, but progressively -more and more using it for everything. -</li> -<li> -TODO list and meeting minutes -</li> -<li> -Task/Todo List information list some local hacks for finance -</li> -<li> -todo lists and knowledge base -</li> -<li> -Task management (TODO lists) * Note taking * Export/Publish (e.g., -publish notes to website) * Personal web pages (via org-publish) -</li> -<li> -I use orgtbl-mode most of the time in muse files, that's how I came -into contact with org-mode. I use it for writing (software) -documentation, (work related) project planning, and measuring the -time I work on projects. -</li> -<li> -planning my TODO list and more recently my agenda GTD style -</li> -<li> -Timeplanning, Timekeeping, Todo/Reminder -</li> -<li> -replacement for time management system (todos, project organisation, -schedules) replacement for spreadsheet helper in LaTeX modes -(orgtbl-mode) - -</li> -<li> -1.) Note taking: web links, links to lines of code I'm working on, -bibtex entries. 2.) Brainstorming. When I'm trying to figure out how -to do something, I often fire up org-mode, dump a bunch of random -thoughts into it, and then organize it into something that makes -sense. 3.) Experiment logging. I use table node to store pretty much -all the results I've accumulated for my PhD thesis. 4.) TODO -lists. I thought I'd use the GTD capabilities on org-mode but can't -force myself to do it. But still, for little projects, I use the -TODO lists. -</li> -<li> -Action items Notes and lists Tables of passwords Publishing website -</li> -<li> -maintain my thoughts, experimental results and agenda -</li> -<li> -As a GTD tool to keep all aspects of my life organized. -</li> -<li> -Lists GTD -</li> -<li> -Just getting used to it. Try to organize primarily work stuff, maybe -later will get into private things. -</li> -<li> -note taking, managing todo's, keeping track of time spent on a -project and making tables. -</li> -<li> -Everything! :-) + keeping notes, + maintaining TODO lists + -exploiting the Agenda facilities (wow!) + doing project planning + -writing text and exporting in HTML + a 'database' for experiments -data (I'm "implementing" it (wow, wow!) -</li> -<li> -Task list/agenda/calendar some "filing" of data, storage of links to -file system and web -</li> -<li> -Note taking for courses -</li> -<li> -Learn more about organizing tasks - Trying to substitute little -papers with appointments - Publish works (thesis, articles, web -pages, …) - Support a bit the process of writing an article -(TODOs, deadlines, sections, …) -</li> -<li> -documentation todo list management complete daily work organisation -private and at work planing of schedules for church and sports -créate customer visit protocols (html for colleagues) I have access -to my org files via svn world-wide -</li> -<li> -all aspects of GTD except calendar -</li> -<li> -Outlining and Organising. -</li> -<li> -Day to day planning. Constantly switching between gtd and John -Wiegly's setup to find out what suits me best. -</li> -<li> -Todo List management. Task Scheduling. Note taking. Blogging -(Blorg). Simple Bug Tracking. -</li> -<li> -Organizing my work. -</li> -<li> -Managing all my projects and todo lists using GTD, and managing my -diary/calendar. Basically, I use it to manage my life - home, work, -social etc. Also use it for hierarchical editing of files etc, but -that is secondary. -</li> -<li> -day planner (in agenda view) - generation of hipsterPDA - easy -folding documentation tool (write text docu, use folding to hide -sections I'm not working on currently, and finally generate html or -LaTeX -</li> -<li> -GTD / Agenda -</li> -<li> -I organize all my projects and appointments with org. -</li> -<li> -Mainly todos/tasks planning and follow up -</li> -<li> -I use it to keep track of articles I have to write for clients (I'm -a journalist). I keep a page per client. I also use it to keep notes -on personal stuff, such as sport activities, todo things around the -house, garden and so on -</li> -<li> -advanced todo list, reading diary, simple HTML authoring. -</li> -<li> -Project management -</li> -<li> -note taking, task management, document creation, webpage publishing -</li> -<li> -task management, notes about work and home projects, regular -journaling – the list of things is expanding as I spend more and -more time in emacs/org. -</li> -<li> -Project planning, scheduling. Information -gathering. Wishlists. Outlines. Todo lists (checkboxes). Data -munging (tables) Review planning (outline w/ links) -</li> -<li> -For GTD and basic word processing -</li> -<li> -Projects, Notes, Memorial days etc. -</li> -<li> -single file for everything -</li> -<li> -Amassing and sorting to-dos and reference information. (Recovering -from mild brain injury in 2005 that affected ability to categorize -and prioritize, need mechanical aids!) -</li> -<li> -Handling notes. Displaying the calendar. Use the agenda view to -display notes. -</li> -<li> -Outlining and providing group TODO lists with explanations. -</li> -<li> -To Do List and Project Tracking Writing articles for export to HTML -</li> -<li> -Note taking, task management - -</li> -</ul></div> - -<div class="outline-2"> -<h2 id="sec-6">5. New features and product maturity?</h2> - - -<p> -Original question: -</p> -<p> -What new features (if any) would you like to see in org-mode or do you -think the product has reached maturity? -</p> -<ul> -<li> -case sensitive search in tag completition - multilingual day name -input product has reached maturity in my opinion -</li> -<li> -nothing (for now) -</li> -<li> -A way to make it more Gnome friendly would be nice. In the case that -you don't have emacs started, you lose your ideas until you can note -them down. -</li> -<li> -I still haven't learnt enough to fully customize my environment. -</li> -<li> -Nothing specific, but I love the current state of development. -</li> -<li> -Syncing todos to other devices such as cellphones and palms, I know -it would not be very easy to do but would be extremely useful -</li> -<li> -No idea, sorry. I think it has enough features at present that seems -a bit intimidating, really. (Minor quibble – I changed some of the -keybindings. I prefer M-left/right to hide/show subtrees, rather -than cycling with tab, and use # instead of * for outline -levels. This is mostly habits from a "todo-mode" used on emacs -in-house where I work.) -</li> -<li> -I'm on the lookout for a cell phone that runs Emacs, but… I haven't -found any mechanisms for remotely adding/editing timestamps, -changing the state of TODO items, etc. Neither have I found a way to -trigger reminder sounds, e-mails, phone calls, or IM messages. I'm -not sure about the best way to approach "mobile org-mode"… A -web-interface like Webjimbo? More robust import/export/sync to iCal -or GData? If we can find a way to usefully sync org-mode with mobile -devices, it'll be just about perfect. -</li> -<li> -Current features are enough for me. -</li> -<li> -It is certainly mature. However I would also like to be able to use -it as a wiki and general-purpose document authoring/publishing -tool. In an ideal (and possibly unrealistic) world I would love to -see unification with muse-mode. To what extent is this possible? -</li> -<li> -I am still too new to it to comment on this. -</li> -<li> -It's quite mature and I surely don't master it. What I'd like to see -is easier manipulation of the agenda export. -</li> -<li> -Compatibility with other wiki syntax (importer or exporter) -</li> -<li> -too soon to know -</li> -<li> -Basically mature; I'd like to see refinement within the current -feature set. -</li> -<li> -You can always add new features! I would like to see an easy way to -tell how old my entries are. I would like to be able to derive a -task order based on importance and age (for tasks that don't have a -deadline but must be completed eventually). Also I would like to see -it integrated with other tools. I think a MindMap converter (for -FreeMind) would be cool - although it probably could be an external -script. -</li> -<li> -Export to WordprocessingML would be perfect. Currently I export to -HTML and read the reports into Word, saving them as *.doc. But you -loose some features and details doing this. -</li> -<li> -Integration out-of-the-box with remote calendar systems like Google -Calendar -</li> -<li> -Close to maturity. Some new features would be nice, but not terribly -important: Keeping root to leaf tree structure when archiving part -of a subtree. Simple dependent todos (i.e. dependent todo moves into -"NEXT" state when previous todo is marked "DONE"). Exporting entries -in HTML in monospaced font by default (i.e. without specially -marking individual entries). Auto-sorting of entries within a single -parent node (e.g. when a node is marked "DONE", move it lower in the -parent's list of todos). Integration with project management -software. -</li> -<li> -Some kind of resolution to the line wrapping issue with headlines. -</li> -<li> -Simpler ways of doing things (perhaps with mouse commands) -</li> -<li> -I'd say it's pretty close to maturity. I haven't used most of the -more recently-added advanced features. -</li> -<li> -I'd like easier customization of "workflow" steps that would make it -easier to update states and record notes related to state changes -(and skip these notes when the state transitions are obvious in -nature). -</li> -<li> -No immediate demands. I do not think the project has reached -maturity. -</li> -<li> -This product has reached maturity since long! In my point of view -this is. Excellent work! -</li> -<li> -depending tasks - integrated pdf-generation (especially for -windows) - visualisation for tasks (like gantt) - a minor mode for -contacts like vcard.el -</li> -<li> -I think it reached maturity. It would be nice to have some minor -things, like a posibility to insert todo's right inside your project -source code and then have them added in agenda automatically. -</li> -<li> -Instead of new features, I'd much prefer keeping XEmacs -compatibility -</li> -<li> -Wishlist - Adding arbitrary (user specified) relations between nodes -with a specific relation name. for example, x <part of> y; where x -and y are two nodes. - Making the above functionality work between -files - making the above work between nodes published on a -distributed server In the GNU project GNOWSYS, we do this, where it -is a web application. We are now exploring how org mode can be used -as a client to manage the data published in GNOWSYS. Out team would -be more than willing to collaborate, but our team members are all -Python hackers, and use Emacs only for coding -</li> -<li> -I am having trouble keeping up with the many new features of the -last few months! -</li> -<li> -I think it is mature enough for me -</li> -<li> -automatic reminders in Emacs as pop ups? -</li> -<li> -I'm quite content as it is. I guess I could probably think of one or -two things, but I wouldn't want to spoil its power/simplicity -balance. -</li> -<li> - planing times for tasks and compare them to actuel used times (and -also give out a warning if to many hours are planed for one day) - -agenda export to latex - simple project management -</li> -<li> -a gtd framework would be a killer feature!! more visual effects with -overlays However, it's "déjà" a very good work. Thanks. -</li> -<li> -very mature -</li> -<li> -Nearing maturity, but then again, maybe I'm just out of ideas. -</li> -<li> -I would like org-mode (or other parts of it like orgtbl) to become a -minor mode so I can turn it on/off in other buffers (mainly -muse). For example I would love to use todo list editing features in -emails. -</li> -<li> -I don't understant all the features yet :) -</li> -<li> -export facilitie -</li> -<li> -New features, in order of importance to me: 1.) A way to select a -chunk of text in firefox and paste it into org-mode, along with a -nicely formatted URL link. I would use this many times a day. MS -OneNote does this well. 2.) A way to link to email in an IMAP -folder. Preferably, this link would point directly to the email on -the IMAP server. The link should look like all the other links, and -you should be able to just drag it from, say, Thunderbird, into -org-mode, although a Thunderbird keyboard shortcut would be nice. I -would use this every day. 3.) More flexible outline prefixes. You -should be able to make headlines of this type: I. asdlfk i. asdfj -ii. asdlfkj II. … Or 1. Introduction 1.1 asdfkj 1.2 -asdfkl 2. Background … Emacs hyperbole: -<a href="http://directory.fsf.org/project/hyperbole/">http://directory.fsf.org/project/hyperbole/</a> did this -beautifully. 4.) Internal links search in a way consistent with -emacs search (Ctrl-s). When you click on a link, it should go -towards the end of the buffer for the next match. When there's -nothing towards the end, it should wrap to the top. 5.) Fix the -underline/bold/italic stuff (if that is a new feature) 6.) Better -formatted html table export -</li> -<li> -Better support for working with others. -</li> -<li> -I would like to see different way to view or summarize ageda. Like -progress, next possible todo -</li> -<li> -I think org-mode is quite mature now except there may be still some -bugs in it and some features may need more polish -</li> -<li> -Too novice a user yet to comment -</li> -<li> -can't tell yet. -</li> -<li> -I like to be surprised more than wishing -</li> -<li> -I'd like better integration with calendar mode of -emacs. Specifically, when using the calendar, the command 'i d' to -insert an appointment, the diary file is used. I'd like to set a -headline in my orgmode buffer for that insert, for consistency with -the calendar entries I make by hand while processing my inbox Also, -navigation from agenda to org-file is easy. navigating back is -harder. -</li> -<li> -possibly nested numbered lists: 1. head 1 1.1 sub-head 1 1.2 -sub-head 2 Also lettered lists: a. point a b. point b but I'm -already quite satisfied -</li> -<li> - implement all features of muse-mode. Ex: list of pages, backlinks, -following links with Enter, … - consistent and clear syntax for -formatting text, which doesn't require memorizing use cases or -exceptions (ex: <b>a</b> isn't bold) -</li> -<li> -syncing with my palm would be the greatest need. (syncing with -outlook would do the job as outlook is snced with the palm) -</li> -<li> -mostly small things like an isearch mode that only matches headlines -(and doesn't auto expand), an allout-copy-exposed-to-buffer -equivalent, hipster pda publishing -</li> -<li> -I've too many ideas to write here. The only thing i can think of is -not quite org related. A published bison or antlr grammar, so people -can write org parsers/processors in other languages, and extend its -integration into other systems. -</li> -<li> -Org mode is fairly mature. Only the remaining inconsistencies should -be straightened out. -</li> -<li> -Hard to say, every so often I think of a feature that might be nice -to have. I have a feeling that alternate views (like the agenda) to -allow other ways of exploring your information would be handy, but I -have no concrete ideas yet as to what they might be. -</li> -<li> -Better exporting (for example better LaTeX export). -</li> -<li> -The only thing I need is better integration with mh-e (I suspect it -is already there - just need to find the time to sort it out). Other -than that I am very content! -</li> -<li> - I always wanted to be able to schedule a task for a specific week -(as oposed to a date) - I would like to improve the hipsterPDA -generation (export the agenda view as nice LaTeX, improve the -cal-tex output, etc) -</li> -<li> -Org grows faster than I can learn all those nice features. One -feature I'd love to see was that the HTML export created docs that -could be outlined like in an org buffer. I guess that's possible -with some CSS. -</li> -<li> -Task dependency for project planing -</li> -<li> -At the moment, I'm still on the learning curve. Org-mode has -soooooooooo many features I have not even discovered yet. I almost -daily open the manual pages to see I there is something I can use. -</li> -<li> -Probably, customization of built-in agenda view. But I'd rather see -org-mode streamlined and cleaned of unnecessary -complications. Properties should be either integrated more tightly -to replace tags/priorities/etc, or removed. -</li> -<li> -Looking forward to some of the dependency ideas. -</li> -<li> -Import tasks from .ics files, include .ics files in agenda, -eventually include remote .ics files in agenda. Would like an -updated blogging tool that takes advantage of recent developments. -</li> -<li> -I'm working on integration with my email client and web browser -- -it's a slow process because I'm not a programmer, but I'm learning -bits and pieces about bash shell scripts and grabbing what I can -from experts already using org. -</li> -<li> -I'd like a way to set project (outline item) dependencies and to -easily list those projects in dependency order. I could do it now -with properties, a dynamic block and some elisp. I'd use markup more -if it were more reliable in the emacs buffer. It might be nice to -have a mode where rigid outline style indenting is enforced while -editing outlines and lists. Perhaps as a buffer option or subtree -property. None of this is necessary or worth calling org-mode -immature. -</li> -<li> -Not new features. But perhaps splitting org.el into different -modules: one for outlining, one for doc format (Wiki engine), one -for GTD -</li> -<li> -block quote text support. like wiki {{{ This is quote text }}} -Currently only putting ':' at beginning of text or heading. -</li> -<li> -I hope a better archive mechanism using C-c C-x C-c, which could -keep the structure in my org file. -</li> -<li> -Seems mature; new features always interesting but can add a layer of -too-many-choices distraction. (See prioritizing problems above ;) ) -</li> -<li> -New summary type {%} for progress status. Real comment syntax. -</li> -<li> -I use only a fraction of its features. -</li> -<li> -Mature - -</li> -</ul></div> - -<div class="outline-2"> -<h2 id="sec-7">6. Additional tutorials, documentation and screencasts would you like?</h2> - - -<p> -Original question: -Which topics or "how-to" guides would you like to see in the -documentation or as a tutorial or screencast? -</p> -<ul> -<li> -none. documentation is excellent -</li> -<li> -how to prepare/export/print GTD file to A7(index cards hPDA (hipster -PDA) forms -</li> -<li> -Everything should be a screencast for new users. -</li> -<li> -I'd love to see more examples (with code) of how people use org, -especially for implementing GTD. -</li> -<li> -More detailed information about blogging would be great, especially -motivation for using org. -</li> -<li> -The manual and refcard usually have me covered. An in-depth -screencast on table/calc might be nice. -</li> -<li> -More stuff about methodology to use it. -</li> -<li> -Screencasts are most helpful to me. I would like to see material on -publishing and blogging in particular -</li> -<li> -Project lifecycle. Timesheet reports. -</li> -<li> -Exporting to other formats and customizing that -</li> -<li> -lot of screencast showing new features of org (such as one already -done) -</li> -<li> -The documentation is actually rather good as it is, haven't found -anything lacking yet. -</li> -<li> -Integration with remember -</li> -<li> -Integrating org-mode with pine/alpine mailer. -</li> -<li> -Not sure who you want to target. Advanced users are your bread and -butter and probably are OK. Beginners should get some screencasts -that describe a common problem and just focuses an how org mode can -help them. A good example is something like when someone's todo list -gets too long and complex and they want to split it, but maintain -connections between items on various lists, or perhaps view a -chronological list of all items in one location. Org mode is the -only program I know of the handles this kind of complexity -gracefully. -</li> -<li> -In depth explanation of using the agenda to its fullest -</li> -<li> -I'd love to see one on setting up column views. A tutorial on -publishing files would be great. And one about creating custom -agenda views. -</li> -<li> -Changing the keybindings to make specific state transitions easier -to enter -</li> -<li> -don't know as of yet … -</li> -<li> -using the spreadsheet with merged cells, calculation for rows and -columns - showing the true meaning of the properties stuff - over -all there should be examples - i really dislike the manual form -orgmode.org because it is technical oriented not for the simple -user - more howtos for gtd -> learning from each other -</li> -<li> -Different usages of org-mode. From GTD to other ways … -</li> -<li> -I find the manual well written and sufficient. -</li> -<li> -Use of drawers and properties. -</li> -<li> -HOw to organize multiple projects; auto-archival. -</li> -<li> -org spreadsheet -</li> -<li> -Since Org-mode is (to me) a collection of "orthogonal" features, but -doesn't much impose structure, I'd be interested in seeing how -others organise their data and "bring it to life" with the Org-mode -features. -</li> -<li> -none -</li> -<li> -more documentation for org's lisp functions (in fact more examples -with org's lisp funtions!!) -</li> -<li> -remember mode integration -</li> -<li> -I prefer the documentation and experimentation. Need drives my -learning. -</li> -<li> -I don't have any preferences. -</li> -<li> -Can't think of any -</li> -<li> -I think a new user would benefit from a screencast showing basic -hierarchy creation and navigation -</li> -<li> -Remember Practical uses of properties -</li> -<li> -I would like to see more people to share their ways of using org -model -</li> -<li> -The documentation is already very good and it seems the manual is -never out of sync from the latest org-mode version. I found the -mailing list is the best source of "how-to" as people's individual -situations are so much different. -</li> -<li> -more of org for gtd -</li> -<li> -how to deal with the calendar and insert dates quickly - two-way -backends for groupware-like behavior - calender functionality for -scheduled events (receive popups or emails or sms or the like) - -probably more but it's too early to say -</li> -<li> -drawers + table calculations -</li> -<li> -Using org-mode as a calendar/planner. Perhaps a best practice around -where date- and time-stamps belong (in the headline? in a SCHEDULED: -property? DEADLINE: property?) Also, it would be helpful to be shown -the best practices around Categories (since they show up so -prominently in the agenda) I wanted them to be like David Allen's -"Contexts", but that's hard for me to manage. -</li> -<li> -All the variables that you must configure to be able to write and -export an article successfully and without unexpected results - How -to move from {muse,kwiki,reST,planner,…} to org-mode: how to adapt -the syntax, … -</li> -<li> -examples of how to columns view -</li> -<li> -real examples of different ways of using org-mode -</li> -<li> -Scope projects? integrate Org into a software development -process/project? Handle <not at computer> org interactions? -</li> -<li> -Daily use of agenda -</li> -<li> -I'm still not familiar with the more advanced features of org-mode, -so I'm keen to see these areas explored in tutorials and guides. -</li> -<li> -The spreadsheet. -</li> -<li> -None that I would be interested in, although I accept that new users -would benefit from them. -</li> -<li> -I think column-view is a great feature. Bastiens tutorial is good, -but I'm thinking a tutorial focused more on the use case as opposed -to the config option might be better. If I find time :-) -</li> -<li> -I don't know if it's just me, but currently I make no use of -tags. So any how-to or screencasts of how to use categories and tags -together in a senseful way would be nice. Most usages of tags I've -seen so far where tags like :phonecall: or :appoitment:, but when I -have a TODO "Call Jim" or "Meet Jim" those are superluous… -</li> -<li> -I would welcome such how-to's and offer to help. The drawback of -screencasts is they take a long time, and there is no way a viewer -can tell it will be usefull to sit it all out. A guide giving -examples (and using short screencasts, if necessary) gives the -reader an overview, he/she can skip sections and browse to a -chapter/paragraph deemed usefull. I would like to learn howto tweak -my custom built todo-lists so that some of the statuses show up in -the agenda, and others don't. Example WRITE should be on the agenda, -but INVOICE not really. But the intermediate VERIFY should. -</li> -<li> -More on GTD. Agenda customization. -</li> -<li> -More on column mode and new uses of properties. -</li> -<li> -I know there are books and howtos about lisp, but it would be great -to see some smaller howtos that are specific to org applications, -and code samples. -</li> -<li> -The remember mode stuff scares me. I need to take some time learn -it. I also know agenda can do a lot more than I do with it. I'd like -to see screen shots of of column mode to drool over since I'm not -running emacs 22 yet. -</li> -<li> -can't thing of any -</li> -<li> -Spreadsheet examples. -</li> -<li> -how-to setup a gtd style system is always my favorite. -</li> -<li> -Some experienced users' detailed explication of pros and cons of the -newer TMTOWTDI (There's More Than One Way To Do It) choices like -archiving methods, task states, etc. leading to – you -guessed it – prioritizing problems -</li> -<li> -Building complex agenda views. -</li> -<li> -Dunno. -</li> -<li> -Setting up a publishing/blog environment - -</li> -</ul></div> - -<div class="outline-2"> -<h2 id="sec-8">7. Which features of org-mode do you use? (Spreadsheet, LaTeX, HTML, Remember, etc)</h2> - - -<ul> -<li> -Document Structure, Tables, Spreadsheet, Hyperlinks, TODO items, -Tags, Properties and Columns, Dates and Times, (Custom) Agenda Views -</li> -<li> -LaTeX, Remember -</li> -<li> -Use the agenda/tags views heavily. Tables, but not really -spreadsheets. -</li> -<li> -Rememeber -</li> -<li> -remember, agenda views. -</li> -<li> -I'm sure I will use everything at some point. I've finally started -using remember recently, about to start using HTML for blogging I -think, and can imaging using LaTeX to print index cards even. -</li> -<li> -Todo-list, agenda - remember -</li> -<li> -Remember, agenda, I learned to use the tags / priorities, but they -don't seem to fit my style of use. -</li> -<li> -Publish to HTML and LaTeX (although I'd prefer ConTeXt), dynamic -blocks, orgstruct minor mode, and hyperlinks. I'm not sure if they -count as a "feature", but I use deadlines, scheduling, and repeated -tasks <b>a lot</b>. -</li> -<li> -remember, clock summary. -</li> -<li> -TODO keywords, tags, timestamps (inc. deadlines/scheduling), -priorities, export to HTML/ics, tables, archiving, remember, custom -agenda commands -</li> -<li> -Still exploring.. starting out with fundamentals as described in -John Weigly's excellent write-up. -</li> -<li> -HTML, Remember -</li> -<li> -Basic planning, some html export, Wannt to use more features of org -but lack of time -</li> -<li> -Remember, html -</li> -<li> -Much use of Remember, agenda, agenda todo lists. Some use of HTML -and LaTeX. A little use of spreadsheet. -</li> -<li> -Starting to use spreadsheets and tables. I use the [/] feature to -keep track of task counts a lot. I like the "radio" links too. Don't -use the others much. -</li> -<li> -Export2HTML, Remember, Agenda -</li> -<li> -Remember, LaTex, ical export, Agenda and Diary integration -</li> -<li> -HTML. My usage is pretty basic. -</li> -<li> -LaTeX, HTML, Agenda, diary integration, Todo, outlining like crazy -</li> -<li> -Spreadsheet (for tables) -</li> -<li> -I use Remember, HTML, agenda views, hyperlinks, time-tracking, -timestamps, and tags. I occasionally use tables, and plan on using -the PROPERTIES drawer in the future. I don't currently use any -advanced table formulas or column view, but I'm glad they're there. -</li> -<li> -Remember, basic task lists, and mostly the Agenda views. -</li> -<li> -LaTex, HTML, Remember, Cal, diary -</li> -<li> -all -</li> -<li> -agenda - html - spreadsheet -</li> -<li> -Spreadsheet, remember, time logger and outlines. -</li> -<li> -Document structure + hyperlinks, agenda + remember, exporting and -publishing -</li> -<li> -writing documents, LaTeX, HTML. -</li> -<li> -Remember; tables. -</li> -<li> -Remember, and the todo features. -</li> -<li> -simple to do listing -</li> -<li> -A lot: Outlines, Tables, Spreadsheets, TODOs, Links, Tags, -Timestamps, Clocking Time. A little: Agenda views, Properties and -Columns Not at all: LaTeX, HTML, Remember I plan to increase my -usage of all the above, apart from LaTeX, which I'll probably never -use. -</li> -<li> -Remember -</li> -<li> -Remember, Latex, spreadsheet (with calc) -</li> -<li> -just to basic features -</li> -<li> - * TODO's, including ** Scheduling ** Deadlines ** Archiving (both -tag and function) * Remember * LaTeX * export/HTML * Tables * -org-publish * Agendas -</li> -<li> -spreadsheet, HTML -</li> -<li> -remember, agenda, priority -</li> -<li> -Remember -</li> -<li> -all -</li> -<li> -Basic outlining with tons of links of most types allowed. * Tables * -HTML export * TODO's -</li> -<li> -Tables, HTML, Remember -</li> -<li> -table, agenda, remember -</li> -<li> -Probably the question is bettered asked with "which features of -org-mode do you not use?" :-) It seems I have almost used everything -except properties and drawers. Although I did not go into depth of -many of them, like I never used a formula in the built in org-mode -table. -</li> -<li> -tags, todos, links, timestamps -</li> -<li> -remember, agenda -</li> -<li> -tables, HTML, ToDo stuff/agenda, column mode, clock features, -categories -</li> -<li> -Agenda, time tracking, HTML, latex, spreadsheet -agenda export to ics (iCalendar) file TODO proper- ty drawers -</li> -<li> -headings, tags, links, drawers & properties, table (& occasionally -spreadsheet), remember, todo's -</li> -<li> -outlining - basic spreadsheet - org-export-as-latex - HTML - -org-publish - marking TODO/DONE (or equivalents) - agenda -</li> -<li> -Remember HTML -</li> -<li> -HTML, Remember, custom agenda views, tags matches, custom keyword -states, diary integration, recurring tasks, scheduling and -deadlines, org-nnml, hyperlinks, categories -</li> -<li> -Agenda, Remember, Tags, Ascii Export, Tables, Outlining -</li> -<li> -Spreadsheet -</li> -<li> -sometimes Spreadsheet remember extensively LaTeX/Html export -</li> -<li> -Remember, Blorg, org-publish, Tables, Lists, Checkboxes, TODO -sequences. -</li> -<li> -LaTeX, html, remember, spreadsheet -</li> -<li> -Tags, Remember, Diary integration, Logging, sometimes spreadsheet -usage. -</li> -<li> -folding, TODOs, Agenda view, HTML generation, column-view -</li> -<li> -Spreadsheet, HTML, Remember, fast selection of TODO keywords, links -to everywhere, extended timestamps and intervals -</li> -<li> -Spreadsheet, HTML -</li> -<li> -I use remember very often. I have not really touched the -spreadsheet, don't need to. I use the deadline feature all the time -and the [/] todo list type. I have experimented with export to html, -in order to transport stuff to a very smart smart phone (iphone) but -that requires more tweaking on my side. -</li> -<li> -todo and logging state changes, tags, priorities, hyperlinks, -remember, timestamps, agenda, export to HTML. -</li> -<li> -Folding, spreadsheet, column mode, properties, schedule/agenda, -org-remember, html export, todo, tags -</li> -<li> -I use everything except radio stuff and dynamic blocks, and I think -I will use those soon. Don't use XOXO export either, I guess. -</li> -<li> -remember, tables, tasks, tags, archiving, calendar, html export, and -I'm learning a bit about LaTeX. -</li> -<li> -In no particular order: tables, plain list folding, checkboxes and -checkbox counting [/], multiple todo sequences, tags, properties, -inactive dates, elisp formulas, html export, text export, in-buffer -markups (*/_), subtree in indirect buffer, links -</li> -<li> -latex, html, remember -</li> -<li> -spreadsheet, remember, agenda, outline, property, column view -</li> -<li> -remember, archive, appointment, diary, timeclock -</li> -<li> -Remember for fast to-do adds; use tables occasionally but mostly use -dedicated spreadsheet s/w for such functions. Hope to learn LaTeX at -some point. -</li> -<li> -Agenda views Table editing Properties drawers HTML export LaTeX -export -</li> -<li> -HTML. Remember. Tables. -</li> -<li> -Mainly time stamps, agendas and HTML export -</li> -<li> -LaTeX, Spreadsheet, Remember - -</li> -</ul></div> - -<div class="outline-2"> -<h2 id="sec-9">8. Your age</h2> - - -<table border="2" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="6" rules="groups" frame="hsides"> -<col align="left"></col><col align="right"></col><col align="left"></col> -<thead> -<tr><th>Age range</th><th>N</th><th>bar</th></tr> -</thead> -<tbody> -<tr><td>16 - 20</td><td>0</td><td></td></tr> -<tr><td>21 - 25</td><td>5</td><td>*****</td></tr> -<tr><td>26 - 30</td><td>15</td><td>***************</td></tr> -<tr><td>31 - 35</td><td>21</td><td>*********************</td></tr> -<tr><td>36 - 40</td><td>11</td><td>***********</td></tr> -<tr><td>41 - 45</td><td>13</td><td>*************</td></tr> -<tr><td>46 - 50</td><td>3</td><td>***</td></tr> -<tr><td>51 - 55</td><td>3</td><td>***</td></tr> -<tr><td>56 - 60</td><td>0</td><td></td></tr> -</tbody> -</table> - - -</div> - -<div class="outline-2"> -<h2 id="sec-10">9. Which country do you live in?</h2> - - -<table border="2" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="6" rules="groups" frame="hsides"> -<col align="left"></col><col align="right"></col><col align="left"></col> -<thead> -<tr><th>Country</th><th>N</th><th>bar</th></tr> -</thead> -<tbody> -<tr><td>Australia</td><td>3</td><td>***</td></tr> -<tr><td>Canada</td><td>2</td><td>**</td></tr> -<tr><td>China</td><td>2</td><td>**</td></tr> -<tr><td>Croatia</td><td>2</td><td>*</td></tr> -<tr><td>France</td><td>5</td><td>*****</td></tr> -<tr><td>Germany</td><td>17</td><td>*****************</td></tr> -<tr><td>Hungary</td><td>1</td><td>*</td></tr> -<tr><td>Iceland</td><td>1</td><td>*</td></tr> -<tr><td>India</td><td>4</td><td>****</td></tr> -<tr><td>Italy</td><td>2</td><td>**</td></tr> -<tr><td>Netherlands</td><td>3</td><td>***</td></tr> -<tr><td>New Zealand</td><td>1</td><td>*</td></tr> -<tr><td>Norway</td><td>1</td><td>*</td></tr> -<tr><td>Pakistan</td><td>1</td><td>*</td></tr> -<tr><td>Romania</td><td>1</td><td>*</td></tr> -<tr><td>Russia</td><td>1</td><td>*</td></tr> -<tr><td>Scotland</td><td>1</td><td>*</td></tr> -<tr><td>Slovenia</td><td>1</td><td>*</td></tr> -<tr><td>Spain</td><td>1</td><td>*</td></tr> -<tr><td>Sweden</td><td>1</td><td>*</td></tr> -<tr><td>Switzerland</td><td>1</td><td>*</td></tr> -<tr><td>UK</td><td>7</td><td>*******</td></tr> -<tr><td>USA</td><td>23</td><td>***********************</td></tr> -</tbody> -</table> - - -</div> - -<div class="outline-2"> -<h2 id="sec-11">10. Are there any other comments you would like to make about org-mode?</h2> - - -<ul> -<li> -Thanks for this great software, I've waited for years for such a -tool. I've wrote some tools around org in Perl, hopefully I'll find -some time to contribute. Thanx a lot -</li> -<li> -Great tool to stay even longer in emacs OS :-) -</li> -<li> -Thanks! -</li> -<li> -Great App, Great Support, Great Community -</li> -<li> -org-mode is all-the-way cool. -</li> -<li> -With the possible exception of Emacs itself, org-mode is my very -favorite bit of software. It has inspired me to learn LISP, so I'm -looking forward to contributing in the near future. -</li> -<li> -It's fantastic and the maintainership and community are both second -to none! -</li> -<li> -Later. :) -</li> -<li> -Great mode and very useful. Thanks a lot for your effort and time! -</li> -<li> -Great Work ! Felicitation to its author -</li> -<li> -It's indispensable for my current work and lifestyle. -</li> -<li> -It is a great package, thanks for making it available and keeping -it alive! -</li> -<li> -Thanks for the org-mode. I just love it! Do all my personal and job -planning with it! -</li> -<li> -Great tool, thanks thanks thanks :) -</li> -<li> -It's fantastic – thanks for the great tool. I'm getting older and -it's the only way I can "remember" everything. It's not just a great -todo list manager, but I use it to document almost everything about -my job (e.g. my original intentions about a -project/implementation). I can bury a TODO right down in the place -where I have most of the surrounding documentation. -</li> -<li> -I cannot overstate how valuable this mode is. It single handedly has -the potential to make laypeople aware of Emacs. Thanks so much for -working on it! -</li> -<li> -Love it. Love it. Love it. Carsten is awesome. -</li> -<li> -It's changing very fast, and I'm worried that my muscle memory will -start to fight against the changes. Still, it's good to see an Emacs -package with such active interest and support. -</li> -<li> -I'm a happy user. Thanks to Carten and all contributors -</li> -<li> -great guys on the mailinglist, great spirit, excellent product :-) -</li> -<li> -Carsten, many thanks for this great piece of software! Keep it -simple and usuable - not everybody follows the power user discussion -in gmane -</li> -<li> -Keep up the great work! :) -</li> -<li> -Thanks to Carsten and to people on emacs-orgmode !! -</li> -<li> -Been a user of GNU Emacs for the last 18years, never seen such a -fascinating major mode. I like this kind of apps since I work in -knowledge organization, and would like to contribute in some -way. Our lab gnowledge.org would like to develop a java applet that -provides org mode kind of editing. The buffer thus produced will be -converted into html when the page is being served in the -background. This will encourage the community to do structured -documentation. Our lab is now engaged in developing -beta.selfplatform.eu, where in we would like to provide this -feature. Do you think, orgmode developers would like to help us or -contribute in this endeavor. Orgmode can be very useful for -furthering semantic computing. -</li> -<li> -It is a great product. I does not need to grow. It might risk -feature creep. -</li> -<li> -Excellent package -</li> -<li> -Thank you, Carsten! -</li> -<li> -Has increased my productivity a lot! -</li> -<li> -Really a great thank to the author "Carsten Dominik", "chapeau" as -they say in France!!!! -</li> -<li> -Org-mode was relatively immature when I started using it, and I have -kept with it for 2 simple reasons: 1. The maintainer (Carsten) is -friendly, fast, accurate, and thorough 2. It works – it does what -it claims to do, and does it well -</li> -<li> -Org mode keeps me organized, it's outstanding! -</li> -<li> -hmmh, org-mode is the first thing I start in the morning and the -last I close in the evening, I guess this tells it all. -</li> -<li> -Org mode has been an incredibly useful tool that is fun to use. I -think a main reason for its utility is that basic use requires -little thought. When I'm using it for brainstorming, it's almost -like I'm not aware that I'm using any program – I'm just -thinking. Any changes to org-mode should preserve this -simplicity. Thanks a ton to Carsten and all the others who have -contributed to this great project! -</li> -<li> -Thank you Carsten! -</li> -<li> -Maybe we should consider a separate package or maintainer for -xemacs…. -</li> -<li> -Thanks, thanks and thanks. -</li> -<li> -Good stuff. thanks -</li> -<li> -It's Fun. ASCII is usually the only interface I can get used to, -because it's so fast. -</li> -<li> -org-mode makes me look organised (though a bit quirky). That's -enough reason to use it. -</li> -<li> -Amazing!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! :-) -</li> -<li> -Even if org-mode stands right where it is, it has been enormously -helpful. Thank you very, very much. -</li> -<li> -Well done -</li> -<li> -Yes: org-mode progresses very well and improves with each version -</li> -<li> -for me its the greatest found treasure since I "dicovered" Emacs. -</li> -<li> -Great work! Wish I had time to contribute more. -</li> -<li> -Keep up the good work :) -</li> -<li> -It's a great software project and community. Thanks again to -everyone involved! -</li> -<li> -Excellent piece of software! -</li> -<li> -I'm very very happy with it. -</li> -<li> -org-mode is fantastic :-) -</li> -<li> -The best feature of Org are its two maintainers Carsten and Bastien -and its helpful community. -</li> -<li> -Great mode for emacs. I wish I was using it more -</li> -<li> -It is great tool. Uncluttered. Thanks to Carsten et al. -</li> -<li> -Rock on! -</li> -<li> -favorite piece of software I use. -</li> -<li> -I'm continually amazed by what org can do, and also by how intuitive -it is. It's not at all unusual that I find myself thinking that it -would be great if org/emacs did "x", trying what seems to me to be -the way that it would do "x" if it could, and discovering that it -functions just as I expect. And when it doesn't, there are ways to -figure it out. (And Carsten is a great developer who shines at -hearing what his users are doing, responding to expressed needs, and -even being clear if/when he decides not to do what someone would -like him to do. Other heavy users and scripters are great as well. -</li> -<li> -I started using Org-mode as an outliner. It is the best outliner -I've used an much more. The community is valuable but Carsten's -skill and judgment has made org-mode what it is. -</li> -<li> -It's a killer tool that I could not live without. -</li> -<li> -org-mode is great, I hope it can keep clean text file when adding -functions. -</li> -<li> -I forced myself to learn emacs after 25+ years in the vi camp in -order to use org-mode. Loving it. Carsten's enthusiasm and support -are a joy, and the mailing list is always refreshing. -</li> -<li> -I plan to run a website where users could share Org files and edit -them together. I plan to write a better exporter (and more formats!) -I think the Org syntax is mature enough to get more programs -interacting with it outside Emacs. Org is <b>great</b> :) -</li> -<li> -It's wonderful. Thanks! -</li> -<li> -org-mode is a fantastic program, supported by a lively helpful email -list. Carsten is very responsive to feature requests and helping. - - -</li> -</ul> -<p>-end- -</p> -</div> - -<div class="outline-2"> -<h2 id="sec-12">Appendix: Raw data for some questions:</h2> - - - -<div class="outline-3"> -<h3 id="sec-13"><span class="target">Raw Emacs versions</span> </h3> - -<p>Here are the detailed responses, for reference. -</p> -<p> -<pre> -GNU Emacs 22.1.1 (powerpc-unknown-linux-gnu, GTK+ Version 2.10.13) of 2007-07-08 on malo, modified by Debian 2. GNU Emacs 22.1.1 (i386-mingw-nt5.1.2600) of 2007-06-02 on RELEASE -21.3.1 and 22.1.1 -22.0.96.1 on Windows CVS from the unicode2 branch on Linux -Emacs 22.1 GNU Emacs 22.1.1 (i686-pc-linux-gnu, GTK+ Version 2.10.11) of 2007-09-16 on zen -Emacs 22.1. Where I happen to be sitting, M-x version says: GNU Emacs 22.1.1 (sparc-sun-solaris2.8, X toolkit) of 2007-06-15 on sa -Emacs 23 -Emacs from CVS GNU Emacs 23.0.60.1 (i486-pc-linux-gnu, GTK+ Version 2.12.0) of 2007-10-31 on samarium -Emacs22 -GNU 22.0.98.1 -GNU Emacs 21.3.1 -GNU Emacs 22.0.50.1 (i386-mingw-nt5.1.2600) of 2006-03-21 on YAMALOK -GNU Emacs 22.0.91.1 -GNU Emacs 22.0.95.1 (i486-pc-linux-gnu, X toolkit, Xaw3d scroll bars) of 2007-03-02 on pacem, modified by Debian -GNU Emacs 22.0.96.1 (i386-mingw-nt5.1.2600) of 2007-03-24 on NEUTRINO -GNU Emacs 22.0.990.1 (i386-mingw-nt5.1.2600) of 2007-05-23 on LENNART-69DE564 (patched) -GNU Emacs 22.1 -GNU Emacs 22.1 -GNU Emacs 22.1.1 -GNU Emacs 22.1.1 -GNU Emacs 22.1.1 -GNU Emacs 22.1.1 (i386-apple-darwin9, Carbon Version 1.6.0) -GNU Emacs 22.1.1 (i386-apple-darwin9.0.0, X toolkit) of 2007-11-05 on selenium. dmg -GNU Emacs 22.1.1 (i386-mingw-nt5.1.2600) of 2007-06-02 on RELEASE -GNU Emacs 22.1.1 (i386-mingw-nt5.1.2600) of 2007-06-02 on RELEASE -GNU Emacs 22.1.1 (i386-mingw-nt5.1.2600) of 2007-06-02 on RELEASE -GNU Emacs 22.1.1 (i386-mingw-nt5.1.2600) of 2007-06-02 on RELEASE -GNU Emacs 22.1.1 (i486-pc-linux-gnu, GTK+ Version 2.8.20) of 2007-07-22 on nautilus, modified by Debian" -GNU Emacs 22.1.1 (i486-pc-linux-gnu, X toolkit, Xaw3d scroll bars) of 2007-08-22 on raven, modified by Debian -GNU Emacs 22.1.1 (i486-pc-linux-gnu, X toolkit, Xaw3d scroll bars) of 2007-11-03 on pacem, modified by Debian -GNU Emacs 22.1.1 (i486-pc-linux-gnu, X toolkit, Xaw3d scroll bars) of 2007-11-03 on pacem, modified by Debian - Gnu Emacs 22.1 windows version -GNU Emacs 22.1.1 (i586-suse-linux-gnu, GTK+ Version 2.12.0) of 2007-11-06 on balada -GNU Emacs 22.1.1 (i686-pc-linux-gnu) of 2007-09-27 -GNU Emacs 22.1.1 (i686-pc-linux-gnu, GTK+ Version 2.10.4) -GNU Emacs 22.1.1 (i686-pc-linux-gnu, GTK+ Version 2.10.6) of 2007-09-14, in an Eterm -GNU Emacs 22.1.1 (powerpc-apple-darwin7.9.0, Carbon Version 1.6.0) of 2007-07-22 on applecore.inf.ed.ac.uk - Aquamacs Distribution 1. -GNU Emacs 22.1.1 (powerpc-apple-darwin8.10.0, Carbon Version 1.6.0) of 2007-10-04 on malibu.local -GNU Emacs 22.1.1 (x86_64-pc-linux-gnu, GTK+ Version 2.12.0) of 2007-11-06 on king, modified by Ubuntu -GNU Emacs 22.1.2 (i386-unknown-openbsd4.1, X toolkit) of 2007-06-10 on lucien.my.domain -GNU Emacs 22.1.50.1 -GNU Emacs 22.1.50.1 (i386-apple-darwin8.10.1, Carbon Version 1.6.0) of 2007-10-02 on plume.sr.unh.edu - Aquamacs Distribution 1.2a -GNU Emacs 22.1.50.1 (i386-mingw-nt5.1.2600) of 2007-07-07 on NEUTRINO -GNU Emacs 22.1.50.1 (i686-pc-linux-gnu, X toolkit) of 2007-06-18 on ... -GNU Emacs 23.0.0.1 (i386-mingw-nt5.1.2600) of 2007-07-10 on BREP -GNU Emacs 23.0.0.1 (i386-mingw-nt5.1.2600) of 2007-08-18 on TPAD -GNU Emacs 23.0.0.1 (i686-pc-linux-gnu, GTK+ Version 2.8.20) of 2007-03-18 -GNU Emacs 23.0.0.1 (i686-pc-linux-gnu, X toolkit, Xaw3d scroll bars) of 2007-08-13 on cera" (emacs-unicode2), Emacs 22.1 under Windows. -GNU Emacs 23.0.50.1 (i386-mingw-nt5.1.2600) of 2007-11-13 (via CVS, compiled with GnuWin32 native tools rather than cygwin) -GNU Emacs 23.0.50.1 (i486-pc-linux-gnu, GTK+ Version 2.12.1) of 2007-11-11 on elegiac, modified by Debian -GNU Emacs 23.0.50.1 (i486-pc-linux-gnu, GTK+ Version 2.8.20) of 2007-10-14 on elegiac, modified by Debian" -GNU Emacs 23.0.50.1 (i686-pc-linux-gnu, GTK+ Version 2.12.1) of 2007-11-15 on baldur -GNU Emacs 23.0.60.1 -GNU Emacs 23.0.60.1 (i486-pc-linux-gnu, GTK+ Version 2.12.0) of 2007-10-31 on samarium -GNU Emacs 23.0.60.1 (i686-pc-linux-gnu, GTK+ Version 2.10.14) of 2007-10-29 -GNU Emacs 23.0.60.1 (i686-suse-linux-gnu, GTK+ Version 2.12.0) -GNU Emacs 23.0.60.1 (i686-suse-linux-gnu, GTK+ Version 2.12.0) -GNU Emacs 23.0.60.1 (x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu, GTK+ Version 2.12.1) -GNU Emacs CVS (~23.0.50.1) -GNU Emacs CVS 20071101 -GNU Emacs CVS 23.0.0 -GNU Emacs On Windows XP: GNU Emacs 22.0.990.1 (i386-mingw-nt5.1.2600) of 2007-05-23 on LENNART-69DE564 (patched) On Linux: GNU Emacs 22.1.50.1 (armv5tel-unknown-linux-gnu) of 2007-06-22 on homehub -GNU Emacs and Carbon Emacs, both 22.1 -GNU. On Debian: GNU Emacs 23.0.50.1 (x86_64-pc-linux-gnu, GTK+ Version 2.12.1) of 2007-11-11 on elegiac, modified by Debian The other isn't available right now. -Gnu Emacs 22.1.1 and 21.4 (patch 20) "Double Solitaire" XEmacs Lucid -Gnu Emacs v22.1.50.1 -Gnu/Emacs GNU Emacs 23.0.60.1 (x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu, GTK+ Version 2.12.0) of 2007-11-11 -Carbon Emacs, an OS X distro of GNU Emacs 22.1.50 -XEmacs 21.4 (patch 19) "Constant Variable" [Lucid] (i486-linux-gnu, Mule) of Fri Nov 3 2006 on penell -XEmacs 21.4 (patch 20) "Double Solitaire" [Lucid] (i486-linux-gnu) of Fri Oct 19 2007 on penell -XEmacs 21.4 (patch 20) "Double Solitaire" [Lucid] (i686-pc-cygwin, Mule) of Fri Dec 15 2006 on vzell-de -XEmacs 21.4 (patch 20) \"Double Solitaire\" [Lucid] (i686-pc-cygwin, Mule) of Fri Dec 15 2006 on vzell-d -XEmacs 21.4.20 (distributed with Cygwin) -XEmacs 21.5 (beta28) "fuki" [Lucid] (i686-pc-linux, Mule) of Wed Jun 13 2007 on n2 -XEmacs Lucid 21.4 (patch 19) "Constant Variable" - on Windows, Similar on linux (not at machine) -Emacs -Emacs 21.4.1 emacs 21.?.? (at work, I'm not certain) -GNU -GNU 22.1.1 -GNU emacs -GNU emacs 22.1.50.1 (snapshot) -GNU emacs GNU Emacs 22.0.97.1 (i686-pc-linux-gnu, GTK+ Version 2.4.13) -</pre> -</p> -</div> - -<div class="outline-3"> -<h3 id="sec-14"><span class="target">Raw ages</span> </h3> - - -<p> -<pre> -22 Sun, 11/25/07 6:38 PM -22 Thu, 11/15/07 11:55 PM -24 Fri, 11/16/07 4:15 AM -25 Sun, 11/18/07 10:05 PM -25 Sun, 11/25/07 12:04 PM - -26 Mon, 11/19/07 10:29 AM -26 Sat, 11/24/07 4:38 AM -26 Thu, 11/15/07 2:45 PM -26 Thu, 11/15/07 7:22 PM -27 Fri, 11/16/07 9:20 AM -27 Wed, 11/28/07 3:20 AM -28 Sun, 12/2/07 5:32 AM -28 Thu, 11/15/07 10:06 PM -28 Thu, 11/15/07 12:04 PM -28 Thu, 11/15/07 12:17 PM -29 Mon, 11/19/07 8:06 PM -29 Thu, 11/15/07 11:27 AM -30 Fri, 11/16/07 3:26 AM -30 Thu, 11/15/07 10:07 PM -30 Thu, 11/15/07 3:01 PM - -31 Fri, 11/16/07 2:30 AM -31 Sun, 11/18/07 3:14 PM -31 yrs. Fri, 11/23/07 7:04 PM -32 Fri, 11/23/07 10:11 PM -32 Thu, 11/15/07 12:02 PM -33 Fri, 11/16/07 12:54 PM -33 Sat, 11/17/07 4:41 AM -33 Sat, 11/24/07 2:28 AM -33 Thu, 11/15/07 11:23 AM -33 Thu, 11/15/07 11:34 PM -33 Thu, 11/15/07 12:27 PM -33 Wed, 11/21/07 11:57 PM -34 Fri, 11/16/07 1:24 AM -34 Mon, 11/19/07 7:31 PM -34 Thu, 11/22/07 6:59 AM -35 Fri, 11/16/07 3:23 AM -35 Fri, 11/16/07 7:53 AM -35 Mon, 11/19/07 10:03 AM -35 Sun, 12/9/07 2:40 AM -35 Thu, 11/22/07 6:47 PM -35 Tue, 11/27/07 11:04 AM - -36 Fri, 11/16/07 3:19 AM -37 Fri, 11/16/07 12:11 PM -37 Fri, 11/16/07 12:36 AM -37 Fri, 11/23/07 1:13 AM -37 Thu, 11/15/07 9:09 PM -37 Thu, 11/22/07 3:39 AM -37 Tue, 11/20/07 10:55 PM -38 Sun, 12/23/07 1:43 AM -39 Sun, 11/18/07 9:52 PM -39 Thu, 11/15/07 4:53 PM -40 Thu, 11/15/07 6:00 PM - -41 Fri, 11/16/07 7:36 AM -41 Sat, 11/17/07 9:27 AM -42 Fri, 11/23/07 7:58 AM -42 Mon, 11/19/07 9:18 AM -42 Sat, 11/17/07 2:31 AM -42 Sat, 11/17/07 4:32 AM -42 Thu, 11/15/07 11:45 PM -42 Thu, 11/15/07 8:23 PM -43 Mon, 12/10/07 12:58 AM -45 Fri, 11/16/07 3:21 AM -45 Fri, 11/16/07 4:40 AM -45 Fri, 11/16/07 4:40 AM -45 Sun, 11/18/07 7:39 PM - -46 Fri, 11/16/07 4:18 AM -47 Thu, 11/15/07 8:42 PM -49 Thu, 11/15/07 11:15 AM -</pre> -</p> -<p> -52 Mon, 11/19/07 12:40 AM -54 Thu, 11/15/07 11:38 AM -54 Thu, 11/15/07 12:27 PM -</p> -</div> -</div> -<div id="postamble"><p class="author"> Author: Charles Cave -<a href="mailto:charles.cave@gmail.com"><charles.cave@gmail.com></a> -</p> -<p class="date"> Date: 2008/01/27 22:10:13</p> -</div></body> -</html> diff --git a/ORGWEBPAGE/todo.html b/ORGWEBPAGE/todo.html deleted file mode 100644 index a939785..0000000 --- a/ORGWEBPAGE/todo.html +++ /dev/null @@ -1,920 +0,0 @@ -<!DOCTYPE html PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD XHTML 1.0 Strict//EN" - "http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml1/DTD/xhtml1-strict.dtd"> -<html xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml" -lang="en" xml:lang="en"> -<head> -<title>The Org-mode TODO list</title> -<meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html;charset=iso-8859-1"/> -<meta name="generator" content="Org-mode"/> -<meta name="generated" content="2007/07/10 10:35:08"/> -<meta name="author" content="Carsten Dominik"/> -<link rel=stylesheet href="freeshell2.css" type="text/css"> <style type="text/css"> .tag { color: red; font-weight:bold}</style> -</head><body> -<h1 class="title">The Org-mode TODO list</h1> -<h2>Table of Contents</h2> -<ul> -<li><a href="#sec-1">1 Introduction</a> -<ul> -<li><a href="#sec-2">1.1 Nomenclature</a></li> -</ul> -</li> -<li><a href="#sec-3">2 Tasks</a> -<ul> -<li><a href="#sec-4">2.1 Structure</a></li> -<li><a href="#sec-5">2.2 Agenda issues</a></li> -<li><a href="#sec-6">2.3 Links</a></li> -<li><a href="#sec-7">2.4 Fast update for external editing</a></li> -<li><a href="#sec-8">2.5 Tables</a></li> -<li><a href="#sec-9">2.6 Properties and Column View</a></li> -<li><a href="#sec-10">2.7 Compatibility issues</a></li> -<li><a href="#sec-11">2.8 Exporting</a></li> -<li><a href="#sec-12">2.9 Miscellaneous Stuff</a></li> -</ul> -</li> -<li><a href="#sec-13">3 Archive</a> -<ul> -<li><a href="#sec-14">3.1 Archived Tasks</a></li> -</ul> -</li> -</ul> - -<h2 id="sec-1">1 Introduction</h2> - - -<p> -This is a loose collection of ideas and TODO items for the future -development of Org-mode. These ideas come from various sources, -mostly from emacs-orgmode@gnu.org, from direct emails to me, or from -my own day-dreaming. I don't always mention the source of an idea, -out of laziness. However, when I implement a good idea, I try to -mention the origin of this idea in the <i>Acknowledgments</i> section of -the manual - let me know if I forgot to give <i>you</i> credit for -something. -</p> - -<h3 id="sec-2">1.1 Nomenclature</h3> - -<p>On this page, I am using TODO keywords in the following way: -</p><table border="2" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="6" rules="groups" frame="hsides"> -<COL align="left"></COL><COL align="left"></COL> -<thead> -<tr><th><b>Keyword</b></th><th>Intention</th></tr> -</thead> -<tbody> -<tr><td><b>TODO</b></td><td>A development that is going to happen, once I have time or once I figure out how to do it.</td></tr> -<tr><td><b>IDEA</b></td><td>A new idea, I have not yet decided what if anything I will do about it.</td></tr> -<tr><td><b>WISH</b></td><td>A wish, probably voiced by someone on emacs-orgmode@gnu.org. This is less than a new idea, more a change in existing behavior.</td></tr> -<tr><td><b>QUESTION</b></td><td>A question someone asked, that needs some thinking before it can be answered</td></tr> -<tr><td><b>DECLINED</b></td><td>I have decided not to implement this feature, but I am keeping it in the list so that people can see it, complain, or still try to convince me.</td></tr> -<tr><td><b>INCONSISTENCY</b></td><td>Some behavior in Org-mode that is not as clean and consistent as I would like it to be.</td></tr> -<tr><td><b>BUG</b></td><td>This needs to be fixed, as soon as possible.</td></tr> -<tr><td><b>DONE</b></td><td>Well, done is done.</td></tr> -<tr><td><i>NEW</i></td><td>This is a tag, indicating recently added entries</td></tr> -</tbody> -</table> - - - - -<h2 id="sec-3">2 Tasks</h2> - - -<h3 id="sec-4">2.1 Structure</h3> - -<ul> -<li><span class="todo">TODO</span> Definition lists, like in Muse<br/> -</li> -<li><span class="todo">TODO</span> Get rid of all the \r instances, which were used only for XEmacs.<br/> -</li> -<li><span class="todo">IDEA</span> Should we allow #+TODO as an alias for #+SEQ<sub>TODO</sub>?<br/> -</li> -<li><span class="todo">TODO</span> proper visibility cycling for items<br/> -Make them not hide the text after the final list item. -This is not trivial, we cannot usenormal outline stuff, -needs a separate implementaiton. -</li> -<li><span class="todo">IDEA</span> allow different colors for different TODO keywords/tags.<br/> -</li> -<li><span class="todo">TODO</span> Use an indirect buffer for org-goto.<br/> -Is there a problem with the overriding map? - -</li> -<li><span class="todo">WISH</span> Inline TODO entries<br/> -A way to put a TODO entry without starting a new section. -</li> -</ul> - -<h3 id="sec-5">2.2 Agenda issues</h3> - -<ul> -<li><span class="todo">QUESTION</span> COLUMN View<br/> -is this safe, or could things be messed up with this? -</li> -<li><span class="todo">TODO</span> Make S-right and S-left change TODO keywords<br/> -Right now they change the time stamps. This could be -M-left/right, but this could also cause inconsistencies, because -when on a time stamp, the same keys do exactly this. -</li> -<li><span class="todo">WISH</span> Make more modes changeable from the agenda<br/> -These could be made available for toggling, just like -follow-mode. Examples: -<ul> -<li> -org-agenda-todo-list-sublevels -</li> -<li> -org-tags-match-list-sublevels -</li> -<li> -org-agenda-todo-ignore-scheduled -</li> -</ul></li> -<li><span class="todo">IDEA</span> Sort TODO entries according to type?<br/> -This would apply for the list collection, not in the day entries. -However, I could also have a TODO keyword criterion that could be -used in the day entries, as one of the minor criteria. - -</li> -<li><span class="todo">DECLINED</span> Allow separators in the Tag-sorted agenda view<br/> -This feature is not going to come, because block agendas can -achieve the same thing. -</li> -</ul> - -<h3 id="sec-6">2.3 Links</h3> - -<ul> -<li><span class="todo">WISH</span> When editing links, give access to stored links.<br/> -Not sure why this is needed. -Idea from William Henney. -</li> -<li><span class="todo">WISH</span> Variable of standard links for completion with C-c C-l<br/> -Or something like that, to make standard links fast. -</li> -<li><span class="todo">WISH</span> Make brackets in links possible<br/> -Would require a display property also for the label part of -links. -</li> -<li><span class="todo">IDEA</span> Find all links to a specific file<br/> -</li> -<li><span class="todo">IDEA</span> Make info HTML links work for links to Info files<br/> -Info links of course only work inside Emacs. However, many info -documents are on the web, so the HTML exporter could try to be -smart and convert an Info link into the corresponding link on the -web. For example, we could use the GNU software site then -Name.HTML. Here is the link to be used: -<a href="http://www.gnu.org/software/emacs/manual/html_node/">http://www.gnu.org/software/emacs/manual/html_node/</a> Another -question is, is this URL going to be stable so that it makes sense -to actually put this into org.el? - -</li> -<li><span class="todo">IDEA</span> Make news HTML links work, using Google.<br/> -I can use Google groups with a message id to find a USENET message, -even if the original link points to gnus. - -</li> -<li><span class="todo">TODO</span> Remove irretrievable links from <i>published</i> HTML output<br/> -This is on David's table, and he will hopefully integrate a -mechanism for this into org-publish.el. The discussion about this -was started by <a href="http://thread.gmane.org/gmane.emacs.orgmode/281">Austin Frank</a> - -</li> -<li><span class="todo">DECLINED</span> Agenda collections, based on #+COLLECTION lines.<br/> -<a href="http://thread.gmane.org/gmane.emacs.orgmode/139">Tim Callaghan</a> started the discussion on this one. -Declined because this would depend on local variables and the -agenda commands are global. Also, this can actually be done by -specifying the file list in a custom agenda command. - -</li> -<li><span class="todo">DECLINED</span> Make CamelCase words link to corresponding org-mode files.<br/> -Files in the same directory. Or some other way to easy do that. -Would be useful for publishing projects. This would be an -incompatible change, but I don't think anyone is using CamelCase -anyway? -This is marked declined, because link abbreviations now provide an -easy way to make links to other files. - -</li> -<li><span class="todo">TODO</span> Document the character protection in links<br/> -I don't think this is really covered anywhere. -Maybe we also should protect characters in the visible part, to -make sure thing will never be on two lines...? -</li> -<li><span class="todo">WISH</span> Radio targets across files<br/> -I guess each org file could write a .orgtargets.filename file, if -it has any radio targets. -</li> -</ul> - -<h3 id="sec-7">2.4 <span class="todo">DECLINED</span> Fast update for external editing</h3> - -<p>Could I use a dynamic block for this? -</p> - -<h3 id="sec-8">2.5 Tables</h3> - -<ul> -<li><span class="todo">WISH</span> Row formulas<br/> -@4=..... -</li> -<li><span class="todo">TODO</span> Write a tutorial<br/> -Demonstrate running averages. - -</li> -<li><span class="todo">WISH</span> Make a variable that current line should be recomputed always<br/> -in each table, skipping headers of course. - -</li> -<li><span class="todo">TODO</span> Allow a table to locally change the unit system<br/> -This is for using constants.el. -Well, it is now possible to do this for the file, is this enough??? -</li> -<li><span class="todo">QUESTION</span> Does inserting hlines change references correctly?<br/> -</li> -<li><span class="todo">WISH</span> Interactive way to get a converted table?<br/> -</li> -<li><span class="todo">BUG</span> When computing in a narrowed column, this may go wrong.<br/> -Computing changes fields and does not yet see correctly if the column -width has changed, in the case of a narrowed column. - -</li> -<li><span class="todo">DECLINED</span> Alternative for the implementation of orgtbl-minor-mode:<br/> -I could use post-command-hook to set the variable orgtbl-mode. -I will not do this now and only consider it if problems show up. - -</li> -<li><span class="todo">DECLINED</span> Table info lines are not necessarily comments in orgtbl-mode<br/> -Should I generalize this? No, because the table itself will not be -in the correct syntax for whatever mode. - -</li> -<li><span class="todo">DECLINED</span> S-cursor motion to select part of a table, with proper highlighting.<br/> -Similar to CUA - -</li> -</ul> - -<h3 id="sec-9">2.6 Properties and Column View</h3> - -<ul> -<li><span class="todo">TODO</span> Mouse support for selecting values<br/> -This could/should be part of org-mouse.el. -<ul> -<li> -<b>[<span style="visibility:hidden;">X</span>]</b> tags -</li> -<li> -<b>[<span style="visibility:hidden;">X</span>]</b> todo -</li> -<li> -<b>[<span style="visibility:hidden;">X</span>]</b> priority -</li> -<li> -<b>[<span style="visibility:hidden;">X</span>]</b> allowed values -</li> -<li> -<b>[<span style="visibility:hidden;">X</span>]</b> deadline -</li> -<li> -<b>[<span style="visibility:hidden;">X</span>]</b> scheduled. -</li> -</ul></li> -<li><span class="todo">BUG</span> We have no clear view on what to do with properties upon export.<br/> - -</li> -</ul> - -<h3 id="sec-10">2.7 Compatibility issues</h3> - -<ul> -<li>Emacs 21 compatibility<br/> -This is being phased out. Almost everything works under Emacs 21, -but in the future I wwill make little effort to support it. -<ul> -<li><span class="todo">DECLINED</span> Column view does not yet work for Emacs 21s.<br/> -Declined, because I don't know how to do this. Too many -problems. -</li> -</ul> -</li> -<li>XEmacs compatibility<br/> -<ul> -<li><span class="todo">QUESTION</span> Is there an issue with the coding system of HTML exported files?<br/> -In the code I used to have a comment saying that -<pre> - (and (fboundp 'coding-system-get) - (boundp 'buffer-file-coding-system) - buffer-file-coding-system)) -</pre> -always returns nil, implicating that setting the coding system for -the export buffer would not work correctly. however, I have never -followed up on this and never had a bug report - so I am wondering -if there is an issue at all. - -</li> -<li><span class="todo">DECLINED</span> Column view does not yet work for XEmacs.<br/> -Declined, because I don't know how to do this. Too many -problems. -</li> -<li><span class="todo">DECLINED</span> Rewrite the `format' function<br/> -To make narrowing work under XEmacs, I would need to write a -version of <i>format</i> that does transport text properties, or I -would have to rework narrowing entirely. Unlikely that this will -happen, mainly because it is working in Emacs and so does not -bother me personally so much. Anyway, I don't know if people are -actually using narrowing very much at all. - - -</li> -</ul> -</li> -</ul> - -<h3 id="sec-11">2.8 Exporting</h3> - -<ul> -<li><span class="todo">IDEA</span> Convert links to footnotes for ASCII export.<br/> -</li> -<li><span class="todo">DECLINED</span> Store LaTeX code as HTML comments<br/> -Declined because I don't really see the need for this. -</li> -<li><span class="todo">IDEA</span> Microformats<br/> -Nic Ferrier has been pushing this agenda for a long time, for -example with <a href="http://thread.gmane.org/gmane.emacs.orgmode/140/">this email</a>. I am not deep enough into the semantic -web that I could do this myself. Maybe we can do this by -modifying the html exporter step-by-step? -</li> -<li><span class="todo">INCONSISTENCY</span> Find a better place for formatting checkboxes<br/> -Right now this is being done as part of `org-html-expand', which -does not seem logically correct. -</li> -<li><span class="todo">DECLINED</span> Can I make the exporter more efficient?<br/> -The line-by-line processing may not be the fastest way to do -this. It certainly uses more resources. Right now the exporters -do work though, so it is unlikely that I am going to change this. - -</li> -<li><span class="todo">DECLINED</span> CSV import/export of tables?<br/> -I remember this coming up several times, for example in emails -from <a href="http://thread.gmane.org/gmane.emacs.orgmode/156">Niels Giesen</a> and <a href="http://thread.gmane.org/gmane.emacs.orgmode/139">Tim Callaghan</a>. Org-mode does have -Tab-separated export of tables, so right now I don't really see -the benefit of adding CSV export. Are there applications that do -not understand tab-separated files, but do understand -comma-separated ones? - -</li> -<li><span class="todo">DECLINED</span> In HTML export, make links from the time stamps<br/> -Time stamps have their own class now which allows to highlight -them etc. But I was wondering if something more useful could be -done with them, like a link to some kind of calendar... - - - -</li> -</ul> - -<h3 id="sec-12">2.9 Miscellaneous Stuff</h3> - -<ul> -<li><span class="todo">TODO</span> reinstating a repeated item: keyword for logging.<br/> -</li> -<li><span class="todo">BUG</span> Comments cannot be filled<br/> -</li> -<li><span class="todo">DECLINED</span> HAVE a TIME 3:55 line collecting CLOCK results<br/> -The CLOCK lines could be there in addition, or could even be -removed, so that only one line is kept. -</li> -<li><span class="todo">IDEA</span> New uses for C-c C-c<br/> -<ul> -<li> -Compute time interval on time range -</li> -<li> -Update CLOCK interval -</li> -</ul></li> -<li><span class="todo">QUESTION</span> Fix more beginning-of-line commands<br/> -Org-mode re-binds C-a to make this command go to the beginning of -a visible line. There are other keys which might invoke C-a. -Should these keys be changed as well? one could use -`substitute-key-definition' on the global map to find them all. -</li> -<li><span class="todo">QUESTION</span> Inlining of images in Org-mode files<br/> -</li> -<li><span class="todo">TODO</span> Fixup outline-magic.el, so that it can be used.<br/> -</li> -<li><span class="todo">TODO</span> Use the new argument of bibtex-url<br/> -Roland Winkler was kind enough to implement a new argument to the -`bibtex-url' command that allows me to retrieve the corresponding -URL, whether it is taken from a URL field or constructed in some -clever way. Currently I am not using this, because too many -people use an old Emacs version which does not have this. -however, eventually I will implement this. -</li> -<li><span class="todo">WISH</span> Get people to write articles about how to do GTD with Org-mode.<br/> -There is now one by Charles Cave, read it <a href="http://members.optusnet.com.au/~charles57/GTD/orgmode.html">here</a> - -</li> -<li><span class="todo">IDEA</span> Tree statistics<br/> -A key that can be applied to a tree, showing statistics: -<ul> -<li> -how many headlines -</li> -<li> -how many TODO -</li> -<li> -how many DONE -</li> -<li> -Checkboxes -</li> -<li> -etc.... - -</li> -</ul></li> -<li><span class="todo">QUESTION</span> Do we need a 43 folders implementation?<br/> -That could easily be done in an org-mode file. But then, maybe -this should really be a paper thing. - -</li> -<li>Priorities<br/> -Here is some information about priorities, which is not yet -documented. -<ul> -<li> Priorities<br/> -<pre> TODO entries: 1 or 1,2,... - DEADLINE is 10-ddays, i.e. it is 10 on the due day - i.e. it goes above top todo stuff 7 days - before due - SCHEDULED is 5-ddays, i.e. it is 5 on the due date - i.e. it goes above top todo on the due day - TIMESTAMP is 0 i.e. always at bottom - but as a deadline it is 100 - but if scheduled it is 99 - TIMERANGE is 0 i.e. always at bottom - DIARY is 0 i.e. always at bottom - - Priority * 1000 - -</pre> -</li> -</ul> -</li> -<li><span class="todo">INCONSISTENCY</span>: items don't grow/shrink due to promotion.<br/> -In plain lists, multiple demote/promote commands executed directly -after each other don't change the scope of the command - the -initially selected text continues to be selected. This is -inconsistent with the behavior of outline sections, were the subtree -for promotion/demotion is newly defined after each command. Which -convention is better? Should this be consistent between trees and -plain lists? - -</li> -<li><span class="todo">INCONSISTENCY</span>: M-TAB does not work on plain lists. Why???<br/> - -</li> -<li><span class="todo">QUESTION</span> grep on directory does not yet work.<br/> -I am actually not sure, I might have addressed this already, but -my memory is failing me. Needs some checking. - -</li> -<li><span class="todo">DECLINED</span> Think about Piotr's idea of treating TODO like a TAG.<br/> -The answer is probably NO because the simple part of TODO must -still be there and I like the keyword at the beginning of the line, -just like a checkbox. Of course you can make a TODO tag yourself -at any time. - -</li> -<li><span class="todo">DECLINED</span> Inlining of external files<br/> - -</li> -<li><span class="todo">DECLINED</span> Should TAB on TODO keyword rotate its state?<br/> -Problem: If the keyword disappears, it will suddenly start to fold.... -So my feeling right now is that the answer should be NO. - -<p> -No, because S-left/right does this already pretty well -</p> -</li> -<li><span class="todo">DECLINED</span> Create a DONE counter in the mode line<br/> -That counter shows what faction of entries has been marked DONE. I -am not yet sure how useful such a thing would be, because of the -huge number of entries that can be in a file, and the different -weight of such entries. -Declined because we do now have counters for checkboxes, and the -feeling is that this is not so useful for TODOs. - -</li> -</ul> - -<h2 id="sec-13">3 Archive</h2> - - -<h3 id="sec-14">3.1 Archived Tasks</h3> - - -<ul> -<li><span class="done">DONE</span>( <span class="timestamp">2006-06-01 Thu 09:15</span>) Commands to move through an item list<br/> -next item, previous item. What should happen at the boundaries of -the current list? - -</li> -<li><span class="done">DONE</span>( <span class="timestamp">2006-06-01 Thu 09:16</span>) Force relative links, would this be useful?<br/> - - -</li> -<li><span class="done">DONE</span>( <span class="timestamp">2006-06-01 Thu 09:16</span>) Fix empty search string.<br/> - -</li> -<li><span class="done">DONE</span>( <span class="timestamp">2006-06-01 Thu 09:16</span>) STARTUP options for logging<br/> - -</li> -<li><span class="done">DONE</span>( <span class="timestamp">2006-06-01 Thu 09:16</span>) Make a variable for Pete, to have SCHEDULED at point<br/> - -</li> -<li><span class="done">DONE</span>( <span class="timestamp">2006-06-01 Thu 09:16</span>) Fix ASCII export of narrowed columns<br/> - -</li> -<li><span class="done">DONE</span>( <span class="timestamp">2006-06-01 Thu 09:16</span>) org-file-apps should allow regular expressions<br/> - -</li> -<li><span class="done">DONE</span>( <span class="timestamp">2006-06-01 Thu 09:16</span>) fix problem with w32- versus mswindows-....<br/> - -</li> -<li><span class="done">DONE</span>( <span class="timestamp">2006-06-01 Thu 09:17</span>) Document that font-lock-mode is needed<br/> - -</li> -<li><span class="done">DONE</span>( <span class="timestamp">2006-06-01 Thu 09:17</span>) Add keyboard access and menu commands for org-project.el<br/> -C-c C-x C-p or something like that. -In the menu, it goes under export, or even its own group. - -</li> -<li><span class="done">DONE</span>( <span class="timestamp">2006-06-01 Thu 09:17</span>) Document those new keys in orgcard.tex<br/> -C-c C-x C-p or something like that. -In the menu, it goes under export, or even its own group. - -</li> -<li><span class="done">DONE</span>( <span class="timestamp">2006-06-01 Thu 09:17</span>) Remove SCHEDULED keyword when marking it done.<br/> -in particular when adding a CLOSED timestamp. -Only problem is that when unclosing it, it should be scheduled -again - -</li> -<li><span class="done">DONE</span>( <span class="timestamp">2006-06-01 Thu 09:17</span>) Don't show tasks already scheduled for the future, only stuff which<br/> -is not yet scheduled. - -</li> -<li><span class="done">DONE</span>( <span class="timestamp">2006-06-01 Thu 09:17</span>) Put title and tags in separate classes<br/> - -</li> -<li><span class="done">DONE</span>( <span class="timestamp">2006-06-01 Thu 09:17</span>) Option to leave out TAGS from export<br/> - -</li> -<li><span class="done">DONE</span>( <span class="timestamp">2006-06-01 Thu 09:17</span>) Option to leave out Timestamps from export<br/> - -</li> -<li><span class="done">DONE</span>( <span class="timestamp">2006-06-01 Thu 09:17</span>) Checkable items like Frank Ruell's proposal<br/> - -</li> -<li><span class="done">DONE</span>( <span class="timestamp">2006-06-01 Thu 09:17</span>) Classify Keywords and time stamps<br/> -<span class="keyword">SCHEDULED: </span><span -class="timestamp">timestamp goes here</span><br> - -</li> -<li><span class="done">DONE</span>( <span class="timestamp">2006-06-01 Thu 09:17</span>) Change default for include-all-todo to nil<br/> - -</li> -<li><span class="done">DONE</span>( <span class="timestamp">2006-06-01 Thu 09:17</span>) Specify TAGS in a special line instead of collecting them dynamically<br/> -The could help to avoid typos and could be faster for very large files. - -</li> -<li><span class="done">DONE</span>( <span class="timestamp">2006-06-01 Thu 09:17</span>) Some much faster interface for setting tags.<br/> -Basically, use single keys to add/remove tags from the list. Also -for this the idea to define tags in a special line would be good, -in order to have a way to define the shortcuts. - -</li> -<li><span class="done">DONE</span>( <span class="timestamp">2006-06-01 Thu 09:17</span>) Remove date stamps from headline if they are not needed.<br/> -Bug report from Scott. - - -</li> -<li><span class="done">DONE</span>( <span class="timestamp">2006-06-01 Thu 09:17</span>) : Maybe s-up/down should change priorities only in headlines<br/> -Right now this works wherever the cursor is. If this is changed, -should S-up or S-down do something else? - -</li> -<li><span class="done">DONE</span>( <span class="timestamp">2006-06-01 Thu 09:21</span>) Need a command to remove tabulators from a line.<br/> -Use this in ASCII export, to make sure we get the indentation -right. - -</li> -<li><span class="done">DONE</span>( <span class="timestamp">2006-06-01 Thu 09:24</span>) Improve tab in org-cycle:<br/> -<ul> -<li> -there is a bug when the setting is 'white: It requires a -non-empty white line! -</li> -<li> -There should be another setting to have tab be the tabulator in -the white space at the beginning of the line. -</li> -<li> -Finally, when TAB closes an entry, maybe it should go beck to the -beginning of the entry??? On the other hand, it is good to be -able to go back to the old place with just another tab. - -</li> -</ul></li> -<li><span class="done">DONE</span>( <span class="timestamp">2006-06-01 Thu 11:48</span>) Include TAGS into sorting.<br/> -But what strategy should be used when there are several tags? - -</li> -<li><span class="done">DONE</span>( <span class="timestamp">2006-06-06 Tue 10:15</span>) Archiving an entry in current buffer goes to end of file<br/> -Should go to end of subtree. -This is done now, and I also control the amount of empty lines -created by the archiving process in general. - -</li> -<li><span class="done">DONE</span>( <span class="timestamp">2006-06-06 Tue 10:16</span>) Narrowing agenda to current files does not work as advertized.<br/> -C-c a 1 t should make the TODO list for the current file, but does -not. - -</li> -<li><span class="done">DONE</span>( <span class="timestamp">2006-06-06 Tue 10:17</span>) Radio TAGS for the fast tag interface.<br/> -Make lists of tags that are mutually exclusive. So when I turn on -@HOME, @WORK would be turned off automagically. A good syntax for -defining these groups in the #+TAGS line would be: -<pre> - #+TAGS: [@WORK(w) @HOME(h) @CLUB(c)] Laptop(l) PC(p) Car(r) -</pre> -This could indicate that @WORK, @HOME, @CLUB are mutually exclusive. - -<p> -If I do this, I will also need a syntax for the global alist to -indicate the same thing. -</p> -<p> -It seems to me that with such grouping of tags, sorting would be -useful as it would improve the overview over the current tags. I -might even be able to support mutually exclusive tags with -fontification in the interface. Or arrange things such that the -mutually exclusive ones are all in the same row or column, to -optimize the visual feedback. -</p> -<p> -For the internal format, I think best would be something like -</p> -<p> -<pre> - '( (:startgroup) ("@work") ("@home") ("@club") (:endgroup) - ("Laptop") ("PC") ("Car")) -</pre> -This setup makes sure that assoc and rassoc still do work as -expected. -</p> -</li> -<li><span class="done">DONE</span>( <span class="timestamp">2006-06-06 Tue 10:17</span>) Should tags be sorted in a certain way?<br/> -Right now, you can either set the tag sequence yourself through -the completion interface. If you use the fast tag selection -interface, the tag sequence depends on the order in which tags are -selected and deselected. maybe a specific roder would be useful -for example the same order as the one given in the configuration? - -</li> -<li><span class="done">DONE</span>( <span class="timestamp">2006-06-06 Tue 10:17</span>) Remove narrowing cookies for export<br/> -Exported tables should not show narrowing cookies. In fact, if a -table line does contain nothing but narrowing cookies, the entire -line should be removed. - -</li> -<li><span class="done">DONE</span>( <span class="timestamp">2006-06-11 Sun 07:32</span>) Track working times similar to time-clock.el<br/> -This was proposed by David O'Toole in an -<a href="http://thread.gmane.org/gmane.emacs.orgmode/387">email to emacs-orgmode@gnu.org</a>. He wants to be able to know the -times when he worked at a particular project. Some reporting -possibility would be needed to make this useful. Maybe sparse -trees with broken-down working times? - -</li> -<li><span class="done">DONE</span>( <span class="timestamp">2006-06-15 Thu 13:35</span>) Make org-store-link do better in image-mode buffers<br/> -Just link to the file. - -</li> -<li><span class="done">DONE</span>( <span class="timestamp">2006-06-15 Thu 13:35</span>) Use a ported version of noutline.el<br/> -Programming the old outline-mode is really a nightmare - the new -outline mode that uses invisibility properties instead of -selective display works really much much better. There is now -an <a href="http://thread.gmane.org/gmane.emacs.orgmode/214/focus=218">experimental port</a> by Greg Chernov, so when I find time I will -try if this works well. If yes, this port should become part of -XEmacs. Once that happens, I could remove a large amount of -ballast from org.el - -</li> -<li><span class="done">DONE</span>( <span class="timestamp">2006-06-15 Thu 13:35</span>) Verify links during export<br/> - -</li> -<li><span class="done">DONE</span>( <span class="timestamp">2006-09-25 Mon 16:11</span>) Allow counting checkboxes<br/> -Then some statistics should be displayed. One idea is for -checkboxes, to use a special box [%] which will be updated with -percent of done. I could have an alternative [/] that will be -updated with something like [19/25] to show progress, and when the -two numbers are equal, I could highlight then in DONE face, just -like [100%]. All smaller numbers could be highlighted even in -TODO face if I wanted. Hmmm, I am beginning to like this. - -<p> -Then: how to update this? Each time a checkbox is added or -toggled, go up and update all the counts, right up to something -which is not an item, or up to the previous header line. -</p> -<p> -Maybe I should also make an option for turning this on, to avoid -slowdown. I guess for long lists this could be slow. -</p> -<p> -Also would need a command for global update. -</p> -<p> -An maybe plain list and checkboxes should get their own chapter? -In Structure they seem to be a bit hidden..... -</p> -<p> -Also a menu sublist... -</p> -</li> -<li><span class="done">DONE</span>( <span class="timestamp">2006-09-25 Mon 16:11</span>) Allow stacking calls to org-occur<br/> -This was a proposal from Piotr. It is now possible, the second -and subsequent calls to org-occur need a prefix argument to keep -the previous highlights. - -</li> -<li><span class="done">DONE</span>( <span class="timestamp">2006-09-25 Mon 16:12</span>) Create a hook to be run after an agenda buffer has been finalized.<br/> - -</li> -<li><span class="done">DONE</span>( <span class="timestamp">2006-09-25 Mon 16:12</span>) Include TAGS into sorting.<br/> -But what strategy should be used when there are several tags? - -</li> -<li><span class="done">DONE</span>( <span class="timestamp">2006-09-25 Mon 16:12</span>) Fixup tag display in agenda buffer.<br/> -The tabs mess up everything. Either remove the tabs, or realign -the tags to some useful column. - -</li> -<li><span class="done">DONE</span>( <span class="timestamp">2006-09-25 Mon 16:12</span>) Blocks in agenda:<br/> -Make a single agenda buffer that contains several sets of items, -like the TODO list, a tags list, and a day view. Not a bad idea. -This was <a href="http://thread.gmane.org/gmane.emacs.orgmode/167/focus=168">Piotr's idea</a>. - -</li> -<li><span class="done">DONE</span>( <span class="timestamp">2006-09-25 Mon 16:12</span>) Make org-store-link do the right thing in dired-mode<br/> - -</li> -<li><span class="done">DONE</span>( <span class="timestamp">2006-11-02 Thu 10:24</span>) Control over windows being used for agenda and related buffers <span class="tag">NEW</span><br/> - -</li> -<li><span class="done">DONE</span>( <span class="timestamp">2007-01-24 Wed 12:59</span>) Extend access to table fields<br/> -Find a general way to get any rectangular region into a calc -vector - -</li> -<li><span class="done">DONE</span>( <span class="timestamp">2007-01-24 Wed 12:59</span>) Allow links to remote images to be inlined.<br/> - -</li> -<li><span class="done">DONE</span>( <span class="timestamp">2007-01-24 Wed 12:59</span>) M-TAB on an already complete tag should add the ":"<br/> - -</li> -<li><span class="done">DONE</span>( <span class="timestamp">2007-01-24 Wed 13:07</span>) Need a command to do show hierarchy after isearch.<br/> -Maybe automatically, using isearch-mode-end-hook. But this does -not seem to work, because to is called before the overlays are -re-installed. I can create a new hook, isearch-exit-hook, run in -`isearch-exit'. - -</li> -<li><span class="done">DONE</span>( <span class="timestamp">2007-02-18 Sun 07:16</span>) hook for users to do their own agenda lists<br/> -New function dumping headline into the agenda buffer, based on regexp -and callback, to allow general stuff. For the special tags, we can -search for one and check for the others using the callback. - -</li> -<li><span class="done">DONE</span>( <span class="timestamp">2007-02-18 Sun 07:37</span>) Make C-c C-l also work on a plain link, converting it into bracket.<br/> - -</li> -<li><span class="done">DONE</span>( <span class="timestamp">2007-02-18 Sun 07:37</span>) GNUS <i><gnus:mail.general#123></i> stuff should be "Email from:..."<br/> - -</li> -<li><span class="done">DONE</span>( <span class="timestamp">2007-02-18 Sun 07:38</span>) Email/message context: What format?<br/> -I can think of two good formats for this: -<pre> - Email from John Smith (if I an the receiver) - Email to John Smith (if I am the author) -</pre> -or -<pre> - John Smith on: Some subject (this is the current Org-mode default.) -</pre> -The first format requires better parsing of the messages (to get -both author and receiver names), and also -some way to detect if I am the author of this email or not. - -</li> -<li><span class="done">DONE</span>( <span class="timestamp">2007-02-21 Wed 12:04</span>) Allow internal links to match inside <b>other</b> link<br/> -Only the link itself that actually triggered the search. - -</li> -<li><span class="done">DONE</span>( <span class="timestamp">2007-02-21 Wed 12:07</span>) Allow fully protected HTML code that will be exported as is<br/> -Currently, <...> works only for simple tags, and I think we -should have something better. Idea: Text between <protecthtml> -and </protecthtml>, mark it with a text property and then exclude -each match in the run preparing the export. -I guess I could require these at the beginning of the line, like - - - -<p> -or something like that....... -</p> -</li> -<li><span class="done">DONE</span>( <span class="timestamp">2007-03-13 Tue 05:19</span>) Make it possible to set TOC levels independently of headline levels<br/> -The easiest way to do this would obviously be to allow a number -setting for the tco switch, not only a simple t/nil switch. This -can be nice for webpages: One could have only top-level or level -1 and 2 in the toc at the beginning of the page, and then still a -more complex structure below. - -</li> -<li><span class="done">DONE</span>( <span class="timestamp">2007-03-13 Tue 05:20</span>) Filling is not done in a compatible way.<br/> -The current setup used the Emacs variables and machine to get the -filling of plain lists and everything lese right. XEmacs uses the -filladapt package, which has different ways to do the same -things. org.el should be smart about this and setup filling under -XEmacs correctly. - -</li> -<li><span class="done">DONE</span>( <span class="timestamp">2007-06-06 Wed 17:44</span>) Repeating Schedules?<br/> -<a href="http://thread.gmane.org/gmane.emacs.orgmode/149">Dieter Grollman</a> requested this feature, but for now I have decided -not to do anything about it. I don't see a good way to implement -this, and I believe that cyclic diary entries are good enough for -such tasks. - -</li> -<li><span class="done">DONE</span>( <span class="timestamp">2007-06-14 Thu 13:16</span>) improve item indentation when promoting and demoting<br/> - -</li> -<li><span class="done">DONE</span>( <span class="timestamp">2007-06-14 Thu 13:17</span>) The TODO buffer lists possible TODO keywords<br/> -These are taken from the current buffer, so when multiple buffers -are involved, this list may not be correct..... - -</li> -<li><span class="done">DONE</span>( <span class="timestamp">2007-06-14 Thu 13:20</span>) Conflict between bold emphasis and headlines<br/> -At the beginning of a line, Org-mode does not know if <b>bold</b> is a -headline or an emphasis. This will not be easy to fix. The way -to do ii is to require a space after the star in headlines. This -requires to change outline-regexp, outline-level, the many many -times when outline regexp is used in the program, and also the -countless times when I am simply matching th stars directly. - -</li> -<li><span class="done">DONE</span> C-c - for cycling bullet types.<br/> -<span class="timestamp-kwd">ARCHIVED: </span> <span class="timestamp">2007-07-02 Mon</span><br/> - -</li> -<li><span class="done">DONE</span> improve what TAB does with new item<br/> -<span class="timestamp-kwd">ARCHIVED: </span> <span class="timestamp">2007-07-02 Mon</span><br/> -same or additional indentation???? - -</li> -<li><span class="done">DONE</span> Make it easier to do monthly agendas, and agendas for ranges<br/> -<span class="timestamp-kwd">ARCHIVED: </span> <span class="timestamp">2007-07-02 Mon</span><br/> - -</li> -<li><span class="done">DONE</span> Introduce a LOCATION keyword<br/> -<span class="timestamp-kwd">ARCHIVED: </span> <span class="timestamp">2007-07-02 Mon</span><br/> -similar to DEADLINE and SCHEDULED -Idea from Bastien -This could be done now using properties, I don't think we need a -special thing for this anymore. - -</li> -<li><span class="done">DONE</span> Times/date not always removed in agenda lines<br/> -<span class="timestamp-kwd">ARCHIVED: </span> <span class="timestamp">2007-07-02 Mon</span><br/> -Even when org-agenda-remove-times-when-in-prefix is set, there -seem to be cases where this does not work. I forgot what the -example was - does anyone remember? - -</li> -<li><span class="done">DONE</span> Links are still highlighted in fixed-width environments.<br/> -<span class="timestamp-kwd">ARCHIVED: </span> <span class="timestamp">2007-07-02 Mon</span><br/> -This ties in with the problem that there is no way to have -protected HTML code in the file. - -</li> -</ul> -<p class="author"> Author: Carsten Dominik -<a href="mailto:carsten.dominik@gmail.com"><carsten.dominik@gmail.com></a> -</p> -<p class="date"> Date: 2007/07/10 10:35:08</p> -</body> -</html> diff --git a/ORGWEBPAGE/tutorials.html b/ORGWEBPAGE/tutorials.html deleted file mode 100644 index 9f7feda..0000000 --- a/ORGWEBPAGE/tutorials.html +++ /dev/null @@ -1,21 +0,0 @@ -<!doctype html public "-//w3c//dtd html 4.0 transitional//en"> -<html> -<head> -<meta HTTP-EQUIV="REFRESH" content="10;url=http://www.legito.net/worg/org-tutorials/index.php"> - <meta name="Author" content="Carsten Dominik"> - <meta name="Description" content="Ttorials now on Worg"> - <meta name="Keywords" content="Emacs,Lisp,Org-mode,XEmacs"> - <title>Tutorials now listed on Worg</title> - -</head> -<body> - -<h1>Org-mode tutorials are now maintained by the Worg project.</h1> - -The page listing Org-mode tutorials and Screencasts is now maintained -by the Worg project, please update your book marks to -the <a href="http://www.legito.net/worg/org-tutorials/index.php">new - page</a>. - -</body> -</html> diff --git a/org-publish.el b/org-publish.el index d2628c7..aa75a60 100644 --- a/org-publish.el +++ b/org-publish.el @@ -5,7 +5,7 @@ ;; Author: David O'Toole <dto@gnu.org> ;; Maintainer: Bastien Guerry <bzg AT altern DOT org> ;; Keywords: hypermedia, outlines, wp -;; Version: 5.23 +;; Version: 5.23a ;; This file is part of GNU Emacs. ;; @@ -5,7 +5,7 @@ ;; Author: Carsten Dominik <carsten at orgmode dot org> ;; Keywords: outlines, hypermedia, calendar, wp ;; Homepage: http://orgmode.org -;; Version: 5.23 +;; Version: 5.23a ;; ;; This file is part of GNU Emacs. ;; @@ -84,7 +84,7 @@ ;;; Version -(defconst org-version "5.23" +(defconst org-version "5.23a" "The version number of the file org.el.") (defun org-version (&optional here) |