[-- Attachment #1: Type: text/plain, Size: 539 bytes --] Hya all just finished listening to Carsten's Interview fantastic interview (hes a great speaker :)). one thing that i really found needing in my (very) short time using orgmode is an easy way to insert images into orgmode (i use that alot in academia). are there any long term plans to implement this? Also relates, how do you guys recommend currently to store the images/attachment used in org files as link? pile them all in one big folder, separate folder per org file, other method? any ideas would be greatly appreciated :) best Z [-- Attachment #2: Type: text/html, Size: 685 bytes --]
zeltak <zeltak <at> gmail.com> writes: [snip] > one thing that i really found needing in my (very) short time using orgmode is > an easy way to insert images into orgmode [snip] > Also relates, how do you guys recommend currently to store the > images/attachment used in org files as link? pile them all in one big folder, > separate folder per org file, other method? any ideas would be greatly > appreciated :) Here is what I have done when needing to cut-and-paste a lot of images: ,---- | #+BEGIN_SRC emacs-lisp | (defun paste-clipboard-to-file (&optional filename temp-dir) | "Take a screenshot using the crosshairs and saveit to FILENAME, | if it is given or to a temp file in the TEMP-DIR | directory. Then add an orgmode style link at point." | (interactive) | (let* ((temporary-file-directory (or temp-dir "images")) | (fname (or filename (make-temp-file "img" nil ".jpg")))) | (call-process-shell-command (concat | "/usr/sbin/screencapture -s " fname)) | (insert "\n[[file:" fname "]]") | (org-display-inline-images))) | ;; | (global-set-key (kbd "C-c p") 'paste-clipboard-to-file) | | #+END_SRC `---- After running that block, I move to my *.org buffer, make sure there is an 'images' directory in M-x pwd RET, make sure I have an image somewhere on my desktop, then move my cursor to where I want a link to an image. C-c p launches the screenshot utility on my Mac ("/usr/sbin/screencapture -s " --- other OS'es will have something similar) and I make a selection. It displays in my org buffer, but I can toggle that off with M-x org-toggle-inline-images. It really helps in reviewing an article with lots of equations to just clip them out as I read and add a few notes. === You might try C-h i org RET C-s image C-s C-s ... to look thru the manual and see what it says about images. And/Or google 'worg image orgmode' HTH,
On 27.3.2013, at 04:52, Charles Berry <ccberry@ucsd.edu> wrote: > zeltak <zeltak <at> gmail.com> writes: > > [snip] >> one thing that i really found needing in my (very) short time using orgmode is >> an easy way to insert images into orgmode > [snip] > >> Also relates, how do you guys recommend currently to store the >> images/attachment used in org files as link? pile them all in one big folder, >> separate folder per org file, other method? any ideas would be greatly >> appreciated :) > > > Here is what I have done when needing to cut-and-paste a lot of images: > > ,---- > | #+BEGIN_SRC emacs-lisp > | (defun paste-clipboard-to-file (&optional filename temp-dir) > | "Take a screenshot using the crosshairs and saveit to FILENAME, > | if it is given or to a temp file in the TEMP-DIR > | directory. Then add an orgmode style link at point." > | (interactive) > | (let* ((temporary-file-directory (or temp-dir "images")) > | (fname (or filename (make-temp-file "img" nil ".jpg")))) > | (call-process-shell-command (concat > | "/usr/sbin/screencapture -s " fname)) > | (insert "\n[[file:" fname "]]") > | (org-display-inline-images))) > | ;; > | (global-set-key (kbd "C-c p") 'paste-clipboard-to-file) > | > | #+END_SRC > `---- > > After running that block, I move to my *.org buffer, make sure there is an > 'images' directory in M-x pwd RET, make sure I have an image somewhere on my > desktop, then move my cursor to where I want a link to an image. C-c p launches > the screenshot utility on my Mac ("/usr/sbin/screencapture -s " --- other OS'es > will have something similar) and I make a selection. It displays in my org > buffer, but I can toggle that off with M-x org-toggle-inline-images. > > It really helps in reviewing an article with lots of equations to just clip > them out as I read and add a few notes. This looks pretty nice, gives me a lot to think about. Thank you! - Carsten > > === > > You might try > > C-h i org RET C-s image C-s C-s ... > > to look thru the manual and see what it says about images. > > And/Or google 'worg image orgmode' > > > HTH, > > > > > > >
zeltak <zeltak@gmail.com> writes:
> one thing that i really found needing in my
> (very) short time using orgmode is an easy way to insert images into
> orgmode (i use that alot in academia). are there any long term plans
> to implement this?
It would help to clarify the usecase you are thinking of.
I am happy with dired and org-store-link so far.
Memnon
On Wed, Mar 27, 2013 at 6:33 AM, Carsten Dominik
<carsten.dominik@gmail.com> wrote:
>
> On 27.3.2013, at 04:52, Charles Berry <ccberry@ucsd.edu> wrote:
>
>> After running that block, I move to my *.org buffer, make sure there is an
>> 'images' directory in M-x pwd RET, make sure I have an image somewhere on my
>> desktop, then move my cursor to where I want a link to an image. C-c p launches
>> the screenshot utility on my Mac ("/usr/sbin/screencapture -s " --- other OS'es
>> will have something similar) and I make a selection. It displays in my org
>> buffer, but I can toggle that off with M-x org-toggle-inline-images.
>>
>> It really helps in reviewing an article with lots of equations to just clip
>> them out as I read and add a few notes.
>
>
> This looks pretty nice, gives me a lot to think about. Thank you!
To add diagrams while taking notes, how about making babel understand SVG?
- It's just text/xml so it can be embedded right in the org document
- The output of executing svg can be the image, which is natively
supported by emacs
- HTML also natively supports embedded svg
Of course you don't want to doodle by hand-writing xml, so the output
image could be made clickable, which would dump the xml to a tmp file,
open inkscape on it, then re-import it when inkscape exits. The export
defaults for babel svg could be that the src is not exported, but the
result output is.
[-- Attachment #1: Type: text/plain, Size: 1577 bytes --] Hi Charles and Carsten sorry for the belated repsonse but i have been tied up at work with other projects. So going back to the original question, i have used your example code Charles and modified it to work on my linux box, though i have zero lisp (or any other programming) knowledge so im not sure its correct: ;;org screenshot (defun paste-clipboard-to-file (&optional filename temp-dir) "Take a screenshot using the crosshairs and saveit to FILENAME,if it is given or to a temp file in the TEMP-DIR directory. Then add an orgmode style link at point." (interactive) (let* ((temporary-file-directory (or temp-dir "images")) (fname (or filename (make-temp-file "img" nil ".jpg")))) (call-process-shell-command (concat "/usr/bin/scrot -s -d 2 " fname)) (insert "\n[[file:" fname "]]") (org-display-inline-images))) ;; (global-set-key (kbd "C-c p") 'paste-clipboard-to-file) there are still some question i have. the little function seems to work and i do get an inline image inside org bit it seems to me it only work on the current window/workspace, is that correct? how can i modify it catch a screenshot from a web browser, PDF, other workspace etc? -also can one insert a delete mechanism for files deleted from the inline buffer (with a confirmation ofc). the reason i ask is because alot of the times the first 'take' isnt correct and that leaves alot of junk in these folders that are hard to trace manually best wishes and thank you all for your help best Z [-- Attachment #2: Type: text/html, Size: 2133 bytes --]
zeltak <zeltak <at> gmail.com> writes: > > Hi Charles and Carsten > sorry for the belated repsonse but i have been tied up at work with other projects. > > So going back to the original question, i have used your example code Charles and modified it to work on my linux box, though i have zero lisp (or any other programming) knowledge so im not sure its correct: [snip code] If it captures a screenshot in a file and puts a link in your org file, then it is correct. > there are still some question i have. the little function seems to work and i do get an inline image inside org bit it seems to me it only work on the current window/workspace, is that correct? how can i modify it catch a screenshot from a web browser, PDF, other workspace etc? > This depends on how you navigate your window system, I think. On Mac OS X Clover-Tab lets me move between open applications without touching the mouse. When I get to the image I want to capture, I use the mouse to get the screenshot. IIRC, on KDE (linux) alt-tab cycles through open applications. I use this to select text from a terminal window and paste it into emacs (under X11). If you need the mouse to get to the view you want to capture, I think you will need some help from outside emacs. You need an application that lets you navigate a bit to get to the screen you need before setting off the screenshot. Maybe you can create a shell script that will allow you to navigate first, then capture the screenshot before exiting. I do not know of a way to do this purely within emacs. If you know how to put that script together, then call the script rather than 'scrot'. > > -also can one insert a delete mechanism for files deleted from the inline buffer (with a confirmation ofc). the reason i ask is because alot of the times the first 'take' isnt correct and that leaves alot of junk in these folders that are hard to trace manually In principal, you could put a confirmation query in the function, then unlink the file if you do not confirm it. But if elisp is a hurdle, a keyboard macro could do the trick. Figure out the keystrokes to navigate to the newest image file, then delete it, then get back to org. Then capture those keystrokes in a macro, save it, and you are good to go. See http://www.gnu.org/software/emacs/manual/html_node/emacs/ Keyboard-Macros.html HTH,