* lisp/org-list.el (org-list-to-subtree): if the list is before first
heading and `org-odd-levels-only' is non-nil, the first item gets
two stars instead of one.
* lisp/org.el (org-reduced-level): a level of 0 was reduced to 1 with
`org-odd-levels-only' non-nil.
* lisp/org.el (org-toggle-item): converting an heading to an item
would sometimes insert unnecessary spaces before it, and unwanted
space with `org-indent-mode' on. Changing some text into an item
wouldn't always preserve indentation.
* lisp/org-agenda.el (org-agenda-get-todos): Call `org-agenda-skip' first,
then check if timestamps cause exclusion.
* lisp/org.el (org-scan-tags): Call `org-agenda-skip' first,
then check if timestamps cause exclusion.
For more information, see the following mailing list thread:
http://thread.gmane.org/gmane.emacs.orgmode/41052/focus=41052
* lisp/org.el (org-structure-template-alist): Add an easy template
for index (i), and move include file to I from i.
* doc/org.texi (Easy Templates): Document new template.
Notes about this patch:
1. It breaks some old user-visible behavior, since <i changes meaning.
Per Nick's posting, we expect that if index is used, it will be used
more commonly than include file. However, since this is a custom,
behavior could be changed. Indeed, we could put index on capital
I with a suggestion that users who are indexing should swap in their
customizations.
2. I modified the docstring for org-structure-template-alist, which did
not explain the function of the "?" in the string. Someone should
check and verify I didn't get this wrong.
3. There doesn't seem to be a Muse tag equivalent for #+index, so I
just made the Muse equivalent of #+index be #+index. I don't know
org-mtags enough to know if this is appropriate.
* lisp/org.el (org-remove-uninherited-tags): Renamed from
org-remove-iniherited-tags.
(org-scan-tags): Fix typo in function call.
(org-get-tags-at): Fix typo in function call.
* lisp/org.el (org-get-tags-at): Don't include filetags if local is t.
The function org-get-tags-at and the functions that called it were
including inherited file tags even if the user requested only local
tags. This patch fixes the behavior.
* lisp/org-agenda.el (org-agenda-clock-consistency-checks): New option.
(org-agenda-list): Handle display change to clock check.
(org-agenda-get-progress): Show only clock entries if we are doing the
consistency check.
(org-agenda-show-clocking-issues): New function.
(org-agenda-check-clock-gap): New function.
(org-agenda-view-mode-dispatch): Offer consistency check.
(org-agenda-log-mode): Handle switch to clock only display.
(org-agenda-set-mode-name): Show lighter for Clockcheck.
* lisp/org.el (org-hh:mm-string-to-minutes): Accept an integer argument
and return it unchanged.
* doc/org.texi (Agenda commands): Document clock consistency checks.
* doc/orgcard.tex: Document key for clock consistency check.
* lisp/org.el (org-promote):
(org-demote): Soften the previous change, by only removing the
flyspell function from after-change functions, because that was the
one causing the slowdown - at least much of it.
* lisp/org.el (org-promote):
(org-demote): Turn off after-change-functions to speed up the
reindentation of text.
This is mainly toob-oz: brought up to date with the rest of Babel
* lisp/org.el (org-entry-get):
(org-entry-delete):
(org-entry-put):
(org-property-values):
(org-delete-property-globally): Use org-re-property.
(org-re-property): New function allowing to build a regexp to match a
property.
Signed-off-by: Julien Danjou <julien@danjou.info>
* lisp/org-list.el (org-list-in-valid-context-p): renamed from
org-list-in-valid-block-p.
(org-at-item-p,org-list-search-generic): use renamed function.
* lisp/org.el (org-fill-item-nobreak-p): new function.
(org-set-autofill-regexps): modify `fill-nobreak-predicate' to
prevent auto-fill from breaking line just before an item regexp.
* lisp/org.el (org-set-font-lock-defaults): Be more strict when
recognizing description items, and do not fontify wrong cases like:
"- term ::description" or "1. term :: description"
* lisp/org.el (org-indent-line-function): footnote definition must
stay at column 0 to be recognized as such. Body below can have
normal indentation, so it should ignore its definition when
computing indentation.
* lisp/org.el (org-end-of-meta-data-and-drawers): New function.
* lisp/org-capture.el (org-capture-place-plain-text): Implement adding
plain text templates to Org nodes.
This is something which came out of a discussion with Philip Rooke, in
the thread
Philip tried to use a capture template with template type plain, but
using a date tree as a target. Plain templates where placed at the
end of the file, not at the end of the entry. I complained first that
mixing headlined entries and plain snippets into the same capture
target is not possible, but I realized that there is a way to make
this work OK. The headlined entries become children, and the plain
text snippets become part of the text before the first child.
* lisp/org.el (org-ts-regexp-both): Add "]" to class of characters that
should not be matched.
(org-ts-regexp0):
(org-ts-regexp1): Do not start a class with "^]-+", because that tries
to (not) match characters between "]" and "+". Instead, move the "-"
to the end of the class where it causes no harm.
* lisp/org.el (org-find-olp): Use the level of the correct match to
continue search.
The problem was that a second match of an identical headline on
another level would corrupt the value of LEVEL that is used to set up
the next search stop.
Chao LU writes:
> For org capture template, if I set an template like this:
> ("i" "INBOX" entry (file+olp (concat org-private-dir "/iPrv.org")
> "INBOX" "test") "* %?" :prepend t)
>
> And for the iPrv.org, I have this structure:
> * INBOX
> ** test
>
> Then it works.
>
> But if the first level and the second level happen to have the same
> title (it does happen to me sometimes), like:
> * INBOX
> ** INBOX
>
> ("i" "INBOX" entry (file+olp (concat org-private-dir "/iPrv.org")
> "INBOX" "INBOX") "* %?" :prepend t)
> Then Org will prompt an error.
* lisp/org.el (org-read-date-force-compatible-dates): New option.
(org-read-date, org-read-date-analyze): Check representable date range.
* doc/org.texi (The date/time prompt): Document date range protection.
New variable `org-read-date-force-compatible-dates' to control
handling of dates.
* lisp/org.el (org-adaptive-fill-function): when a region is specified
first line of paragraph isn't skipped, so fill-paragraph have to be
computed even if point is at an item.
Luke Crook wrote:
> Is it possible to specify estimated effort in something other
> than hours (0.5, or 0:30)?
> For example 1w, 1m, 2d etc?
Here's a cleaned up patch that allows user-specified modifiers
for effort strings. The new variable `org-effort-durations'
lists modifiers, and their mapping to minutes (words, as well as
single-letter modifiers, are supported). The default value is:
(("h" . 60)
("d" . 480) ; 8 hours
("w" . 2400) ; five days
("m" . 9600) ; 4 weeks
("y" . 96000)) ; 40 weeks
But you can change this.
Old effort strings (HH:MM) are still interpreted correctly. See
the docstrings of `org-effort-durations' and
`org-duration-string-to-minutes' for more details.
>From a0e24b14755eb4087d9c47bb4eea11eb9151efcf Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001
From: Lawrence Mitchell <wence@gmx.li>
Date: Fri, 18 Feb 2011 11:01:46 +0000
Subject: [PATCH] Allow human-readable effort durations
To: emacs-orgmode@gnu.org
* lisp/org.el (org-effort-durations): New variable.
* lisp/org.el (org-duration-string-to-minutes): New function.
* lisp/org-agenda.el (org-agenda-filter-effort-form)
(org-format-agenda-item): Use it.
* lisp/org-clock.el (org-clock-notify-once-if-expired)
(org-clock-modify-effort-estimate, org-clock-get-clock-string): Use it.
Specifying large effort durations in hours and minutes is difficult.
Is 130:25 more than two weeks effort? More than three? This patch
allows specification of an effort duration as a friendly string. For
example 2w 5d is two weeks and five days of effort. Existing H:MM
entries will still be recognised correctly.
* lisp/org-inlinetask.el (org-inlinetask-promote,
org-inlinetask-demote): new functions.
* lisp/org.el (org-metaleft, org-metaright): when point is at an
inline task, promote or demote it.