On Wed, Apr 28, 2010 at 2:11 PM, Matt Lundin wrote: > David Frascone writes: > > > **** Copying and Pasting > > This could just be me fighting with Aquamacs (Cmd-C, Cmd-V, Cmd-etc > > mac keys). But, the cutting, copying, and pasting do not seem very > > intuitive. I am used to (from old emacs days) using C-w and C-y, but, > > i usually did that over regions. Shift-Arrows to select, etc. When I > > shift arrow over a subtree it mucks with priority. I know that's by > > design, but I find it annoying. Doing the alternative (cutting a > > subtree) does NOT seem intuitive to me. (Well, the C-w at the end of > > the command (C-c C-x C-w) does). But, I'm not trying to report a bug > > -- I'm actually asking a question: How do you guys typically select a > > region and move it, assuming that you can't just move the subtree with > > M-S- > > 1. I use C-[SPACE] together with transient-mark-mode to select a region > and then type C-w to kill it and C-y to yank it. > > 2. I often kill folded subtrees with a simple C-k (org-kill-line). > > 3. I make frequent use of org-refile. > > > I didn't like org-refile. It didn't seem to want to refile under anything but a top level (or maybe I was refiling a level 2) . . . I'll try to play with it some more, but it didn't make my cheat sheet of cool tricks :) I need to get used to using the transient mark. I use C-@ instead of C-Space, though . . . works better across a ssh session :)