On Wed, Feb 9, 2011 at 1:40 AM, Eric S Fraga wrote: > John Hendy writes: > > [...] > > > Yeah.. most of my todos aren't medium-sized projects, though. Many of > them > > are more along the lines of one-liner action items I need to jot to > myself > > so I don't forget as well as keeping them as a sort of rolling "next > > actions" queue. For that reason, I'd much rather keep them in their > original > > context. > > On possible suggestion: if you use inline tasks for these one liner > TODOs, > > Perhaps that's the way to go. I just find them ugly :( > ,---- > | C-c C-x t runs the command org-inlinetask-insert-task, which is an > | interactive compiled Lisp function in `org-inlinetask.el'. > | > | It is bound to C-c C-x t. > | > | (org-inlinetask-insert-task &optional NO-STATE) > | > | Insert an inline task. > | If prefix arg NO-STATE is set, ignore `org-inlinetask-default-state'. > `---- > > This isn't working for me and it's been quite difficult to find mention of inline tasks in documentation. My searching only pulls a mention from the 6.29v list of visible changes: http://orgmode.org/Changes_old.html#sec-1_1_6 Is there something I need to set up to get this working? Thanks, John > You can then customise =org-inlinetask-export-templates= to > generate latex code that basically ignores the inline task. > > -- > : Eric S Fraga (GnuPG: 0xC89193D8FFFCF67D) in Emacs 24.0.50.1 > : using Org-mode version 7.4 (release_7.4.324.gca7a) >