Hsiu-Khuern writes:
> In contrib/lisp/org-export-bibtex.el, the BiBTeX file has to
> match the Emacs regexp "\w+". So a line like
>
> #+BIBLIOGRAPHY: mybib_new
>
> will not work because of the underscore character in the
> filename. (I suppose the actual behavior depends on the local
> Emacs settings that affect the "syntax table".) May I propose
> changing the regexp to "[[:alnum:]_]+"?
>
> Initially, I was stumped by this because I thought \w was a
> "regular" regexp :), such as defined in sed, and would match
> underscores as well.
An entry `#+TODO:' without content make `M-x org-mode' fail.
While it may cause problems to have no TODO keywords defined, this
should not make entering the mode fail.
It is possible that the regular expressions for LaTeX snippets match
at nested locations. For example, Nick Dokos submitted this:
,----
| #+LaTeX_HEADER: \usepackage{amsmath}
|
| * foo
|
| \[
| \begin{matrix}
| 1&d\\
| d&d\\
| \end{matrix}
| \]
|
`----
where the snippet regexps match at \[ ... \] and also at
\\begin{matrix}.
This would lead to two nested overlays being placed. With this
commit, only the outer one will remain.
A `save-excursion' around a call to org-table-align make point end up
*before* the table. The reason is that a table align replaces the
entire table, including the newline before it. When the table is
removed in order to be replaced, the marker created by
`save-excursion' slips. `org-table-align' has it's own, built-in
`save-excursion' by remembering the line and column where the cursor
was before the align.
However, if you are using arguments, it is required that the opening
parenthesis is attached to the macro name, and that the closing
parenthesis is attached to the three closing braces.
With the following org file:
------
Foo
In which foos are described.
#+OPTIONS: num:nil author:nil creator:nil timestamp:nil d:nil toc:nil skip:t
#+TITLE:
* The construction of a foo
** Armaments
------
I found exporting to ASCII gave five leading blank lines. The
following patch reduces that to one. (I'd love some help in tracking
down that final one.)