Not sure what's going on here. I can use org-show-block-all to show all of an Org file, but using org-hide-block-all to reverse it seems to do nothing. What is the proper way to open the outline completely and then close it completely up? -- David Masterson Programmer At Large
Hi David, David Masterson <dsmasterson@gmail.com> writes: > Not sure what's going on here. I can use org-show-block-all to show all > of an Org file, but using org-hide-block-all to reverse it seems to do > nothing. `org-show-block-all' and `org-hide-block-all' apply to blocks and it works fine here. > What is the proper way to open the outline completely and then > close it completely up? Show all: M-x show-all RET Show overview: M-x org-overview RET C-u S-TAB will switch back to the startup display status. If you want blocks to be displayed when unfolding everything in the buffer, either you create a custom command that combines `show-all' and `org-show-block-all', or you simply rely on `org-cycle' (using TAB) and add `org-show-block-all' to `org-cycle-hook'. HTH, -- Bastien
Bastien <bzg@gnu.org> writes:
> Hi David,
>
> David Masterson <dsmasterson@gmail.com> writes:
>
>> Not sure what's going on here. I can use org-show-block-all to show all
>> of an Org file, but using org-hide-block-all to reverse it seems to do
>> nothing.
>
> `org-show-block-all' and `org-hide-block-all' apply to blocks and it
> works fine here.
>
>> What is the proper way to open the outline completely and then
>> close it completely up?
>
> Show all: M-x show-all RET
> Show overview: M-x org-overview RET
>
> C-u S-TAB will switch back to the startup display status.
>
> If you want blocks to be displayed when unfolding everything in the
> buffer, either you create a custom command that combines `show-all'
> and `org-show-block-all', or you simply rely on `org-cycle' (using
> TAB) and add `org-show-block-all' to `org-cycle-hook'.
Ah, I think I see now. Thanks.
--
David Masterson
Programmer At Large