I agree too, because the OrgStruct mode functions is so limited for basic Org-mode viewing/editing/navigating etc.

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On Mon, Aug 21, 2017 at 6:06 AM, Tim Cross <theophilusx@gmail.com> wrote:

One of the reasons I moved to using mu4e for email was because I was
told I could use orgStruct mode and write my email using org structured
editing.

The reality has been somewhat disappointing. One of the main things I
wanted was better handling of lists and this is one area of orgstruct
mode which certainly doesn't work correctly.

So, given what you say and the fact the mode isn't working as
advertised, I tend to agree. Just adding a note to my org task list to
look at outshine.el, which I wasn't aware of. If I really need org
structural editing for writing an email, I'll write it in an org-mode
file and then transfer it to a message buffer - as you point out, there
is lots in org mode which makes no sense in an email buffer anyway!

Tim

Nicolas Goaziou writes:

> Hello,
>
> I would like to remove Org Struct minor mode from Org code base. Here is
> the rationale:
>
> 1. It is broken. It might look like using Org in another buffer, but it
>    is not. In particular, it just cannot cope with lists, indentation,
>    filling in, e.g., Message mode, as soon as we try something
>    non-trivial. Really, that's a poor-man's Org mode.
>
> 2. Its implementation is very hackish. In particular, it is not modular
>    at all. It rewrites some core functions according to the major mode
>    in use. For example `org-fill-function' tries to handle specially
>    text in a Message mode buffer, basically short-circuiting regular
>    behaviour. There no support for other major modes. If we want some,
>    we need to hard-code it.
>
> 3. Due to previous point, some basic Org functions are sub-optimal
>    because they preserve compatibility with Org Struct mode. For example
>    `org-forward-heading-same-level' must process every headline past the
>    current one and check their level until an appropriate one is found.
>    It would be faster to go looking for the next headline according to
>    the number of stars we want.
>
> 4. It is somewhat outside Org mode's scope to provide such a feature. It
>    is tempting to provide everything we can think of, but we should
>    focus on the main task: handle Org files, i.e., files written in Org
>    compatible syntax.
>
> 5. There are alternatives. E.g., outshine.el, outline-minor-mode, ...
>
> I _do_ use `orgstruct++-mode'. But it is broken beyond repair.
> Alternatives, which do not need to pay a technical debt, are certainly
> better, or, at least, a saner ground for improvement.
>
> I'm not opposed to an Org struct mode living in ELPA. But, as pointed
> out, it is difficult to extract from code base without rewriting it
> completely. If alternatives are serious enough, that would be
> re-inventing the wheel, too.
>
> The only thing that would be missing, AFAIK, is plain list handling.
> However, I'm quite certain it is possible to re-use most code from
> "org-list.el", using a dumbed down `org-list-struct' function. Indeed,
> currently, `org-list-struct' requires to know about inlinetasks,
> drawers, blocks... i.e., most of the Org syntax. This is not an option
> in foreign buffers. Once `org-list-struct' (and maybe `org-in-item-p')
> are simplified, other functions in "org-list.el" can be used as is.
>
> I'm not talking about OrgTbl mode (yet). OrgTbl mode is different: it
> doesn't suffer from points 1, 3 end 5. It is easier to extract it as an
> external library, which someone should ultimately do.
>
> To sum it up, I offer to remove `orgstruct-mode' (and
> `orgstruct++-mode') from the code base. I can also offer my help to
> anyone willing to extract some `list-minor-mode' and `table-minor-mode'
> from Org.
>
> WDYT?
>
>
> Regards,


--
Tim Cross