* Possibly new function to view your notes in chronological order
@ 2011-07-17 9:03 Marc-Oliver Ihm
2011-07-18 8:20 ` Bastien
2011-07-22 18:43 ` New version which is compatible with emacs 24: New " Marc-Oliver Ihm
0 siblings, 2 replies; 17+ messages in thread
From: Marc-Oliver Ihm @ 2011-07-17 9:03 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: emacs-orgmode
Hello All !
I would like to submit the new function org-find-timestamps for disussion.
Citing its documentation:
> Find inactive timestamps within a date-range and maybe sort them.
>
> This function can help to bring the notes, that you take within
> org-mode, into a chronological order, even if they are scattered
> among many different nodes. The result is somewhat like a diary,
> listing your notes for each successive day. Please be aware
> however: This intended usage requires, that you routinely
> insert inactive timestamps into the notes that you write.
>
> org-find-timstamps works by creating a regular expression to
> match a given range of dates, doing a search for it and
> displaying the results either as a sparse tree or with the help
> of occur. The original buffer is not modified.
I would be grateful to for any comments; please find the defun below.
regards, Marc
(defun org-find-timestamps ()
"Find inactive timestamps within a date-range and maybe sort them.
This function can help to bring the notes, that you take within
org-mode, into a chronological order, even if they are scattered
among many different nodes. The result is somewhat like a diary,
listing your notes for each successive day. Please be aware
however: This intended usage requires, that you routinely
insert inactive timestamps into the notes that you write.
org-find-timstamps works by creating a regular expression to
match a given range of dates, doing a search for it and
displaying the results either as a sparse tree or with the help
of occur. The original buffer is not modified.
"
(interactive)
(let ((working-buffer (get-buffer-create "*org-find-timestamps working buffer*"))
(occur-buffer-name "*Occur*")
(occur-header-regex "^[0-9]+ match\\(es\\)?") ;; regexp to match for header-lines in *Occur* buffer
first-date
last-date
pretty-dates
swap-dates
(days 0)
date-regex
position-before-year
collect-method
buff
org-buffers)
(save-window-excursion
;; temporary buffer for date-manipulations
(set-buffer working-buffer)
(erase-buffer)
;; ask user for date-range
(setq first-date (org-read-date nil nil nil "Starting date: " nil nil))
(setq last-date (org-read-date nil nil nil "End date: " nil nil))
;; swap dates, if required
(when (string< last-date first-date)
(setq swap-dates last-date)
(setq last-date first-date)
(setq first-date swap-dates))
(setq pretty-dates (concat "from " first-date " to " last-date))
;; construct list of dates in working buffer
;; loop as long we did not reach end-date
(while (not (looking-at-p last-date))
(end-of-buffer)
;; only look for inactive timestamps
(insert "[")
(setq position-before-year (point))
;; Monday is probably wrong, will be corrected below
(insert first-date " Mo]\n")
(goto-char position-before-year)
;; advance number of days and correct day of week
(org-timestamp-change days 'day)
(setq days (1+ days))
)
(end-of-buffer)
;; transform constructed list of dates into a single, optimized regex
(setq date-regex (regexp-opt (split-string (buffer-string) "\n" t)))
;; done with temporary buffer
(kill-buffer working-buffer)
)
;; ask user, which buffers to search and how to present results
(setq collect-method
(car (split-string (org-icompleting-read "Please choose, which buffers to search and how to present the matches: " '("multi-occur -- all org-buffers, list" "org-occur -- this-buffer, sparse tree") nil t nil nil "occur -- this buffer, list")))
)
;; Perform the actual search
(save-window-excursion
(cond ((string= collect-method "occur")
(occur date-regex)
)
((string= collect-method "org-occur")
(if (string= major-mode "org-mode")
(org-occur date-regex)
(error "Buffer not in org-mode"))
)
((string= collect-method "multi-occur")
;; construct list of all org-buffers
(dolist (buff (buffer-list))
(set-buffer buff)
(if (string= major-mode "org-mode")
(setq org-buffers (cons buff org-buffers))))
(multi-occur org-buffers date-regex)))
)
;; Postprocessing: Optionally sort buffer with results
;; org-occur operates on the current buffer, so we cannot modify its results afterwards
(if (string= collect-method "org-occur")
(message (concat "Sparse tree with matches " pretty-dates))
;; switch to occur-buffer and modify it
(if (not (get-buffer occur-buffer-name))
(message (concat "Did not find any matches " pretty-dates))
(set-buffer occur-buffer-name)
(toggle-read-only)
(goto-char (point-min))
;; beautify the occur-buffer by replacing the potentially long original regexp
(while (search-forward (concat " for \"" date-regex "\"") nil t)
(replace-match "" nil t))
(goto-char (point-min))
;; Sort results by matching date ?
(when (y-or-n-p "Sort results by date ? ")
(when (string= collect-method "multi-occur")
;; bring all header lines ('xx matches for ..') to top of buffer, all lines with matches to bottom
(sort-subr t
'forward-line
'end-of-line
;; search-key for this sort only differentiates between header-lines and matche-lines
(lambda () (if (looking-at-p occur-header-regex) 2 1))
nil)
)
;; goto first line of matches
(goto-char (point-max))
(search-backward-regexp occur-header-regex)
(forward-line)
;; sort all matches according to date, that matched the regex
(sort-subr t
'forward-line
'end-of-line
;; search-key for this sort is date
(lambda () (search-forward-regexp date-regex) (match-string 0))
nil
'string<)
;; pretend, that we did not modify the occur-buffer
)
(set-buffer-modified-p nil)
(toggle-read-only)
(message (concat "occur-buffer with matches " pretty-dates " (`C-h m' for help)"))
)
;; switch to occur-buffer
(if (get-buffer occur-buffer-name)
(switch-to-buffer occur-buffer-name))
)
)
)
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 17+ messages in thread
* Re: Possibly new function to view your notes in chronological order
2011-07-17 9:03 Possibly new function to view your notes in chronological order Marc-Oliver Ihm
@ 2011-07-18 8:20 ` Bastien
2011-07-18 19:06 ` Marc-Oliver Ihm
2011-07-18 19:11 ` Marc-Oliver Ihm
2011-07-22 18:43 ` New version which is compatible with emacs 24: New " Marc-Oliver Ihm
1 sibling, 2 replies; 17+ messages in thread
From: Bastien @ 2011-07-18 8:20 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: Marc-Oliver Ihm; +Cc: emacs-orgmode
Hi Marc-Oliver,
Marc-Oliver Ihm <ihm@online.de> writes:
> I would like to submit the new function org-find-timestamps for
> disussion.
Thanks for this piece of code and for this idea!
I've tested it a bit and I encourage others to test it.
I was able to create a sparse tree with inactive timestamps,
but I was not able to display a buffer with ordered items.
I will test more carefully and give feedback/debugging.
My main reaction is: your idea/code could partially sneak into
`org-sparse-tree' by adding a new ran[g]e option, asking the
starting and ending dates, and creating the sparse tree.
What do you think?
--
Bastien
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 17+ messages in thread
* Re: Possibly new function to view your notes in chronological order
2011-07-18 8:20 ` Bastien
@ 2011-07-18 19:06 ` Marc-Oliver Ihm
2011-07-18 19:11 ` Marc-Oliver Ihm
1 sibling, 0 replies; 17+ messages in thread
From: Marc-Oliver Ihm @ 2011-07-18 19:06 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: emacs-orgmode
Hello Bastien !
Thanx for testing !
Currently I think, that this function is most useful, if applied to all org-buffers.
So I personally prefer the mulit-occur option, which gives me a list for all of my org-buffers.
Therefore I feel a bit ashamed, that this does not work for you :-/
Did you get any errors ? Anything within the *Messages* Buffer ?
Is at least an *Occur*-Buffer created ?
A guess about a possible cause:
I assume that you alread use emacs 24, whereas I still cling to emacs 23.
Maybe some details of the contents of the created *Occur*-buffer has changed,
which might have broken my code (I found that I need to rely on the contents of the *Occur*-buffer).
If you find that such an *Occur*-Buffer is created, when you run my function, would it be possible to
send it to me ?
Thanx a lot !
with kind regards, Marc-Oliver Ihm
Am 18.07.2011 10:20, schrieb Bastien:
> Hi Marc-Oliver,
>
> Marc-Oliver Ihm<ihm@online.de> writes:
>
>> I would like to submit the new function org-find-timestamps for
>> disussion.
>
> Thanks for this piece of code and for this idea!
>
> I've tested it a bit and I encourage others to test it.
>
> I was able to create a sparse tree with inactive timestamps,
> but I was not able to display a buffer with ordered items.
> I will test more carefully and give feedback/debugging.
>
> My main reaction is: your idea/code could partially sneak into
> `org-sparse-tree' by adding a new ran[g]e option, asking the
> starting and ending dates, and creating the sparse tree.
>
> What do you think?
>
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 17+ messages in thread
* Re: Possibly new function to view your notes in chronological order
2011-07-18 8:20 ` Bastien
2011-07-18 19:06 ` Marc-Oliver Ihm
@ 2011-07-18 19:11 ` Marc-Oliver Ihm
1 sibling, 0 replies; 17+ messages in thread
From: Marc-Oliver Ihm @ 2011-07-18 19:11 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: emacs-orgmode; +Cc: Marc-Oliver Ihm
Hello Bastien !
Thanx for testing !
Currently I think, that this function is most useful, if applied to all org-buffers.
So I personally prefer the mulit-occur option, which gives me a list for all of my org-buffers.
Therefore I feel a bit ashamed, that this does not work for you :-/
Did you get any errors ? Anything within the *Messages* Buffer ?
Is at least an *Occur*-Buffer created ?
A guess about a possible cause:
I assume that you alread use emacs 24, whereas I still cling to emacs 23.
Maybe some details of the contents of the created *Occur*-buffer has changed,
which might have broken my code (I found that I need to rely on the contents of the *Occur*-buffer).
If you find that such an *Occur*-Buffer is created, when you run my function, would it be possible to
send it to me ?
Thanx a lot !
with kind regards, Marc-Oliver Ihm
Am 18.07.2011 10:20, schrieb Bastien:
> Hi Marc-Oliver,
>
> Marc-Oliver Ihm<ihm@online.de> writes:
>
>> I would like to submit the new function org-find-timestamps for
>> disussion.
>
> Thanks for this piece of code and for this idea!
>
> I've tested it a bit and I encourage others to test it.
>
> I was able to create a sparse tree with inactive timestamps,
> but I was not able to display a buffer with ordered items.
> I will test more carefully and give feedback/debugging.
>
> My main reaction is: your idea/code could partially sneak into
> `org-sparse-tree' by adding a new ran[g]e option, asking the
> starting and ending dates, and creating the sparse tree.
>
> What do you think?
>
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 17+ messages in thread
* New version which is compatible with emacs 24: New function to view your notes in chronological order
2011-07-17 9:03 Possibly new function to view your notes in chronological order Marc-Oliver Ihm
2011-07-18 8:20 ` Bastien
@ 2011-07-22 18:43 ` Marc-Oliver Ihm
2011-07-26 11:55 ` Bastien
1 sibling, 1 reply; 17+ messages in thread
From: Marc-Oliver Ihm @ 2011-07-22 18:43 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: emacs-orgmode, Bastien; +Cc: Marc-Oliver Ihm
Hello !
Unfortunately, org-find-timestamps as posted before was not compatible with emacs 24.
(More precise, it hat problems with the read-only property, that emacs 24 applies to text within the occur-buffer)
The version below is now compatible with both emacs 23 and 24.
Have fun !
with kind regards, Marc-Oliver Ihm
(defun org-find-timestamps ()
"Find inactive timestamps within a date-range and maybe sort them.
This function can help to bring the notes, that you take within
org-mode, into a chronological order, even if they are scattered
among many different nodes. The result is somewhat like a diary,
listing your notes for each successive day. Please be aware
however: This intended usage requires, that you routinely
insert inactive timestamps into the notes that you write.
org-find-timstamps works by creating a regular expression to
match a given range of dates, doing a search for it and
displaying the results either as a sparse tree or with the help
of occur. The original buffer is not modified.
"
(interactive)
(let ((occur-buffer-name "*Occur*")
(occur-header-regex "^[0-9]+ match\\(es\\)?") ;; regexp to match for header-lines in *Occur* buffer
first-date
last-date
pretty-dates
swap-dates
(days 0)
date-regex
position-before-year
collect-method
buff
org-buffers)
(save-window-excursion
;; temporary buffer for date-manipulations
(with-temp-buffer
;; ask user for date-range
(setq last-date (org-read-date nil nil nil "End date (or start): " nil nil))
(setq first-date (org-read-date nil nil nil "Start date (or end): " nil nil))
;; swap dates, if required
(when (string< last-date first-date)
(setq swap-dates last-date)
(setq last-date first-date)
(setq first-date swap-dates))
(setq pretty-dates (concat "from " first-date " to " last-date))
;; construct list of dates in working buffer
;; loop as long we did not reach end-date
(while (not (looking-at-p last-date))
(end-of-buffer)
;; only look for inactive timestamps
(insert "[")
(setq position-before-year (point))
;; Monday is probably wrong, will be corrected below
(insert first-date " Mo]\n")
(goto-char position-before-year)
;; advance number of days and correct day of week
(org-timestamp-change days 'day)
(setq days (1+ days))
)
(end-of-buffer)
;; transform constructed list of dates into a single, optimized regex
(setq date-regex (regexp-opt (split-string (buffer-string) "\n" t)))
)
)
;; ask user, which buffers to search and how to present results
(setq collect-method
(car (split-string (org-icompleting-read "Please choose, which buffers to search and how to present the matches: " '("multi-occur -- all org-buffers, list" "org-occur -- this-buffer, sparse tree") nil t nil nil "occur -- this buffer, list")))
)
;; Perform the actual search
(save-window-excursion
(cond ((string= collect-method "occur")
(occur date-regex)
)
((string= collect-method "org-occur")
(if (string= major-mode "org-mode")
(org-occur date-regex)
(error "Buffer not in org-mode"))
)
((string= collect-method "multi-occur")
;; construct list of all org-buffers
(dolist (buff (buffer-list))
(set-buffer buff)
(if (string= major-mode "org-mode")
(setq org-buffers (cons buff org-buffers))))
(multi-occur org-buffers date-regex)))
)
;; Postprocessing: Optionally sort buffer with results
;; org-occur operates on the current buffer, so we cannot modify its results afterwards
(if (string= collect-method "org-occur")
(message (concat "Sparse tree with matches " pretty-dates))
;; switch to occur-buffer and modify it
(if (not (get-buffer occur-buffer-name))
(message (concat "Did not find any matches " pretty-dates))
(let ((original-inhibit-read-only inhibit-read-only))
(unwind-protect
(progn
;; next line might be risky, so we unwind-protect it
(setq inhibit-read-only t)
(set-buffer occur-buffer-name)
(goto-char (point-min))
;; beautify the occur-buffer by replacing the potentially long original regexp
(while (search-forward (concat " for \"" date-regex "\"") nil t)
(replace-match "" nil t))
(goto-char (point-min))
;; Sort results by matching date ?
(when (y-or-n-p "Sort results by date ? ")
(when (string= collect-method "multi-occur")
;; bring all header lines ('xx matches for ..') to top of buffer, all lines with matches to bottom
(sort-subr t
'forward-line
'end-of-line
;; search-key for this sort only differentiates between header-lines and matche-lines
(lambda () (if (looking-at-p occur-header-regex) 2 1))
nil)
)
;; goto first line of matches
(goto-char (point-max))
(search-backward-regexp occur-header-regex)
(forward-line)
;; sort all matches according to date, that matched the regex
(sort-subr t
'forward-line
'end-of-line
;; search-key for this sort is date
(lambda () (search-forward-regexp date-regex) (match-string 0))
nil
'string<)
;; pretend, that we did not modify the occur-buffer
)
(insert "Searched " pretty-dates "\n")
(goto-char (point-min))
(set-buffer-modified-p nil)
(message (concat "occur-buffer with matches " pretty-dates " (`C-h m' for help)"))
)
(setq inhibit-read-only original-inhibit-read-only)
)
)
)
;; switch to occur-buffer
(if (get-buffer occur-buffer-name)
(switch-to-buffer occur-buffer-name))
)
)
)
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 17+ messages in thread
* Re: New version which is compatible with emacs 24: New function to view your notes in chronological order
2011-07-22 18:43 ` New version which is compatible with emacs 24: New " Marc-Oliver Ihm
@ 2011-07-26 11:55 ` Bastien
2011-07-26 19:17 ` Marc-Oliver Ihm
0 siblings, 1 reply; 17+ messages in thread
From: Bastien @ 2011-07-26 11:55 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: Marc-Oliver Ihm; +Cc: emacs-orgmode, Marc-Oliver Ihm
Hi Marc-Oliver,
Marc-Oliver Ihm <marc-oliver.ihm@online.de> writes:
> Unfortunately, org-find-timestamps as posted before was not compatible
> with emacs 24. (More precise, it hat problems with the read-only
> property, that emacs 24 applies to text within the occur-buffer)
>
> The version below is now compatible with both emacs 23 and 24.
Thanks for updating this function, it works okay here (Emacs 24).
One possible improvement: consider other timestamps than just
inactive timestamps?
As I said, part of this function can be integrated into
`org-sparse-tree' by allowing the user to be prompted for
a range of dates, but the display of ordered timestamps
in the occur is still useful.
Thanks,
--
Bastien
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 17+ messages in thread
* Re: New version which is compatible with emacs 24: New function to view your notes in chronological order
2011-07-26 11:55 ` Bastien
@ 2011-07-26 19:17 ` Marc-Oliver Ihm
2011-07-28 7:54 ` Bastien
0 siblings, 1 reply; 17+ messages in thread
From: Marc-Oliver Ihm @ 2011-07-26 19:17 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: Bastien; +Cc: emacs-orgmode, Marc-Oliver Ihm
Am 26.07.2011 13:55, schrieb Bastien:
> Hi Marc-Oliver,
>
> Marc-Oliver Ihm<marc-oliver.ihm@online.de> writes:
>
>> Unfortunately, org-find-timestamps as posted before was not compatible
>> with emacs 24. (More precise, it hat problems with the read-only
>> property, that emacs 24 applies to text within the occur-buffer)
>>
>> The version below is now compatible with both emacs 23 and 24.
>
> Thanks for updating this function, it works okay here (Emacs 24).
>
> One possible improvement: consider other timestamps than just
> inactive timestamps?
>
> As I said, part of this function can be integrated into
> `org-sparse-tree' by allowing the user to be prompted for
> a range of dates, but the display of ordered timestamps
> in the occur is still useful.
>
> Thanks,
>
Hello Bastien,
Thanx for testing again !
I will try to figure out, how to patch `org-sparse-tree'.
And I will add active timestamps. Which was a think, that I have thought of before, but postponed until
someone would suggest/request this feature :-)
Cheers !
with kind regards, Marc-Oliver Ihm
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 17+ messages in thread
* Re: New version which is compatible with emacs 24: New function to view your notes in chronological order
2011-07-26 19:17 ` Marc-Oliver Ihm
@ 2011-07-28 7:54 ` Bastien
2011-08-14 15:00 ` Progress of org-find-timestamps Marc-Oliver Ihm
0 siblings, 1 reply; 17+ messages in thread
From: Bastien @ 2011-07-28 7:54 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: Marc-Oliver Ihm; +Cc: emacs-orgmode, Marc-Oliver Ihm
Hi Marc-Oliver,
Marc-Oliver Ihm <marc-oliver.ihm@online.de> writes:
> Thanx for testing again !
You're welcome.
> I will try to figure out, how to patch `org-sparse-tree'.
Thanks -- let us know how it goes, and take the time to grasp
Org's internals...
> And I will add active timestamps. Which was a think, that I have
> thought of before, but postponed until someone would suggest/request
> this feature :-)
Yep. It will make your `org-find-timestamps' function quite useful.
Please be aware that I will spend some time and trying to create a cache
for timestamps (see recent discussions about calfw), and that such a
cache could help a lot in making your solution easier to implement.
Best,
--
Bastien
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 17+ messages in thread
* Progress of org-find-timestamps
2011-07-28 7:54 ` Bastien
@ 2011-08-14 15:00 ` Marc-Oliver Ihm
2011-08-14 15:17 ` exporting to HTML: <strong> instead of <b> for *bold text* iminet
2011-08-14 15:22 ` *bold*text iminet
0 siblings, 2 replies; 17+ messages in thread
From: Marc-Oliver Ihm @ 2011-08-14 15:00 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: emacs-orgmode; +Cc: Marc-Oliver Ihm
Am 28.07.2011 09:54, schrieb Bastien:
> Hi Marc-Oliver,
>
> Marc-Oliver Ihm<marc-oliver.ihm@online.de> writes:
>
>> Thanx for testing again !
>
> You're welcome.
>
>> I will try to figure out, how to patch `org-sparse-tree'.
>
> Thanks -- let us know how it goes, and take the time to grasp
> Org's internals...
>
>> And I will add active timestamps. Which was a think, that I have
>> thought of before, but postponed until someone would suggest/request
>> this feature :-)
>
> Yep. It will make your `org-find-timestamps' function quite useful.
> Please be aware that I will spend some time and trying to create a cache
> for timestamps (see recent discussions about calfw), and that such a
> cache could help a lot in making your solution easier to implement.
>
> Best,
>
Hello Bastien,
Just to keep you and the newsgroup updated :-)
Down below you will find the current version of org-find-timestamps.
It is, as you did suggest, now capable of finding active timestamps as well as inactive ones.
However, studying the code of org-sparse-tree, I realized, that it would be beneficial, to be able to
find CLOSED, SCHEDULED and DEADLINE timestamps as well. Therefore I have started to implement these features as well.
Moreover I would like to make available some of the functionality of org-find-timestamps within org-sparse-tree.
As soon as I am done with this, I will post a patch to org.el.
with kind regards, Marc-Oliver Ihm
P.s.: I realized the the features of org-sparse-tree and org-find-timestamps overlap to a considerable degree,
although the do not share any code. This is probably a sign, that both functions should be reworked to use some
common helper functions. This might be a secound step, once org-find-timestamps has found its way into the code ...
(defun org-find-timestamps (&optional first-date last-date buffer-name which collect-method sort)
"Find inactive timestamps within a date-range and maybe sort them.
This function can help to bring the notes, that you take within
org-mode, into a chronological order, even if they are scattered
among many different nodes. The result is somewhat like a diary,
listing your notes for each successive day. Please be aware
however: This intended usage requires, that you routinely
insert inactive timestamps into the notes that you write.
org-find-timstamps works by creating a regular expression to
match a given range of dates, doing a search for it and
displaying the results either as a sparse tree or with the help
of occur. The original buffer is not modified.
Argument FIRST-DATE and LAST-DATE (yyyy-mm-dd) define the range
of timestamps to search for.
BUFFER-NAME specifies the name of the buffer to search. If nil, use
current buffer.
WHICH (`active', `inactive' or `both'), tells which timestamps to use.
COLLECT-METHOD can be one of `org-occur', `occur' and
`multi-occur', thus telling: Which buffers to search (current or
all org-mode buffers) and how to present matches.
Results will be sorted according to SORT (either the symbol `y'
or `n'); this is only possible, if results are presented with
`occur' or `multi-occur'.
All Arguments can be `nil' (or ommitted), in which case their values are
queried interactively.
"
(interactive)
(let ((occur-buffer-name "*Occur*")
(occur-header-regex "^[0-9]+ match\\(es\\)?") ;; regexp to match for header-lines in *Occur* buffer
description
swap-dates
(days 0)
date-regex
buff
org-buffers
)
(if buffer-name (switch-to-buffer buffer-name))
(save-window-excursion
;; ask for type of timestamp to search, if not supplied as an argument
(cond ((null which)
(setq which (intern-soft (car (split-string (org-icompleting-read "Please choose, which type of timestamp to search: " '("active" "inactive" "both") nil t nil nil "inactive"))))))
((not (member which '(active inactive both)))
(error "Argument `WHICH' can not be `%s'" which)))
;; ask for date-range, if not supplied as argument
(or last-date (setq last-date (org-read-date nil nil nil "End date (or start): " nil nil)))
(or first-date (setq first-date (org-read-date nil nil nil "Start date (or end): " nil nil)))
;; swap dates, if required
(when (string< last-date first-date)
(setq swap-dates last-date)
(setq last-date first-date)
(setq first-date swap-dates))
;; readable description of what we searched for
(setq description (format "%s timestamps from %s to %s in %s, %s"
(if (eq which 'both) "active and inactive" (symbol-name which))
first-date last-date
(if (eq collect-method 'multi-occur) "all org-buffers" (concat "buffer " (buffer-name)))
(if (and (eq sort 'yes) (not (eq collect-method 'org-occur))) "sorted" "not sorted")))
;; temporary buffer for date-manipulations
(with-temp-buffer
;; construct list of dates in working buffer, loop as long we did not reach end-date
(while (not (looking-at-p last-date))
(goto-char (point-max))
;; Type of timstamp (inactive) might be wrong, will be corrected below
(insert "[")
;; Day of week (Mo) might be wrong, will be corrected below
(insert first-date " Mo]\n")
(forward-line -1)
;; advance number of days and correct day of week
(org-timestamp-change days 'day)
(setq days (1+ days))
(when (eq which 'both)
;; double last timestamp
(let (start content)
(move-to-column 0)
(setq start (point))
(forward-line)
(setq content (delete-and-extract-region start (point)))
(insert content)
(insert content)
(forward-line -1)
)
)
(unless (eq which 'inactive)
;; inserted inactive timestamp above, now we correct this
(org-toggle-timestamp-type)
)
(move-to-column 1)
)
(goto-char (point-max))
;; transform constructed list of dates into a single, optimized regex
(setq date-regex (regexp-opt (split-string (buffer-string) "\n" t)))
)
)
;; If no argument supplied, ask user, which buffers to search and how to present results
(or collect-method (setq collect-method (intern (car (split-string (org-icompleting-read "Please choose, which buffers to search and how to present the matches: " '("occur -- this buffer, list" "multi-occur -- all org-buffers, list" "org-occur -- this-buffer, sparse tree") nil t nil nil "occur -- this buffer, list"))))))
;; Perform the actual search
(save-window-excursion
(cond ((eq collect-method 'occur)
(occur date-regex)
)
((eq collect-method 'org-occur)
(if (string= major-mode "org-mode")
(org-occur date-regex)
(error "Buffer not in org-mode"))
)
((eq collect-method 'multi-occur)
;; construct list of all org-buffers
(dolist (buff (buffer-list))
(set-buffer buff)
(if (string= major-mode "org-mode")
(setq org-buffers (cons buff org-buffers))))
(multi-occur org-buffers date-regex))
(t (error (format "Argument `COLLECT-METHOD' can not be `%s'" collect-method)))
)
)
;; Postprocessing: Optionally sort buffer with results
;; org-occur operates on the current buffer, so we cannot modify its results afterwards
(if (eq collect-method 'org-occur)
(message (concat "Sparse tree with " description))
;; switch to occur-buffer and modify it
(if (not (get-buffer occur-buffer-name))
(message (concat "Did not find any matches for " description))
(let ((original-inhibit-read-only inhibit-read-only))
(unwind-protect
(progn
;; next line might be risky, so we unwind-protect it
(setq inhibit-read-only t)
(set-buffer occur-buffer-name)
(goto-char (point-min))
;; beautify the occur-buffer by replacing the potentially long original regexp
(while (search-forward (concat " for \"" date-regex "\"") nil t)
(replace-match "" nil t))
(goto-char (point-min))
;; Sort results by matching date ?
(when (cond ((eq sort 'yes) t)
((eq sort 'no) nil)
((null sort) (y-or-n-p "Sort results by date ? "))
(t (error "Argument `SORT' can not be `%s'" sort)))
(when (eq collect-method 'multi-occur)
;; bring all header lines ('xx matches for ..') to top of buffer, all lines with matches to bottom
(sort-subr t
'forward-line
'end-of-line
;; search-key for this sort only differentiates between header-lines and matche-lines
(lambda () (if (looking-at-p occur-header-regex) 2 1))
nil)
)
;; goto first line of matches
(goto-char (point-max))
(search-backward-regexp occur-header-regex)
(forward-line)
;; sort all matches according to date, that matched the regex
(sort-subr t
'forward-line
'end-of-line
;; search-key for this sort is date
(lambda () (search-forward-regexp date-regex) (substring (match-string 0) 1 -1))
nil
'string<)
;; pretend, that we did not modify the occur-buffer
)
(insert (format "Searched for %s.\n" description))
(goto-char (point-min))
(set-buffer-modified-p nil)
)
(setq inhibit-read-only original-inhibit-read-only)
)
)
;; show result
(switch-to-buffer occur-buffer-name)
)
)
)
)
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 17+ messages in thread
* exporting to HTML: <strong> instead of <b> for *bold text*
2011-08-14 15:00 ` Progress of org-find-timestamps Marc-Oliver Ihm
@ 2011-08-14 15:17 ` iminet
2011-08-14 16:06 ` Nicolas Goaziou
2011-08-14 16:19 ` Bastien
2011-08-14 15:22 ` *bold*text iminet
1 sibling, 2 replies; 17+ messages in thread
From: iminet @ 2011-08-14 15:17 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: emacs-orgmode
Hi.
Exporting org to HTML, is there a way to use the <strong>-tag instead of
<b> for *bold text* and <em> instead of <i> for /italic text/?
Thanks in advance.
Bye.
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 17+ messages in thread
* *bold*text
2011-08-14 15:00 ` Progress of org-find-timestamps Marc-Oliver Ihm
2011-08-14 15:17 ` exporting to HTML: <strong> instead of <b> for *bold text* iminet
@ 2011-08-14 15:22 ` iminet
2011-08-14 16:20 ` *bold*text Bastien
1 sibling, 1 reply; 17+ messages in thread
From: iminet @ 2011-08-14 15:22 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: emacs-orgmode
Hi.
*bold*text or /italic/text doesn't work unless you seperate those words.
You can work it around with @<b>foo@</b>bar but that'd neither be
generic nor work on multiple export-backends.
It'd be great if that'd work =)
(Thanks to Thumper_ from #orgmode for the work-around.)
Bye.
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 17+ messages in thread
* Re: exporting to HTML: <strong> instead of <b> for *bold text*
2011-08-14 15:17 ` exporting to HTML: <strong> instead of <b> for *bold text* iminet
@ 2011-08-14 16:06 ` Nicolas Goaziou
2011-08-14 17:18 ` iminet
2011-08-14 16:19 ` Bastien
1 sibling, 1 reply; 17+ messages in thread
From: Nicolas Goaziou @ 2011-08-14 16:06 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: iminet@ymail.com; +Cc: emacs-orgmode
Hello,
"iminet@ymail.com" <iminet@ymail.com> writes:
> Exporting org to HTML, is there a way to use the <strong>-tag instead
> of <b> for *bold text* and <em> instead of <i> for /italic text/?
See `org-emphasis-alist'.
Regards,
--
Nicolas Goaziou
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 17+ messages in thread
* Re: exporting to HTML: <strong> instead of <b> for *bold text*
2011-08-14 15:17 ` exporting to HTML: <strong> instead of <b> for *bold text* iminet
2011-08-14 16:06 ` Nicolas Goaziou
@ 2011-08-14 16:19 ` Bastien
2011-08-14 17:18 ` iminet
1 sibling, 1 reply; 17+ messages in thread
From: Bastien @ 2011-08-14 16:19 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: iminet@ymail.com; +Cc: emacs-orgmode
"iminet@ymail.com" <iminet@ymail.com> writes:
> Exporting org to HTML, is there a way to use the <strong>-tag instead of
> <b> for *bold text* and <em> instead of <i> for /italic text/?
You want to customize `org-emphasis-alist'.
HTH,
--
Bastien
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 17+ messages in thread
* Re: *bold*text
2011-08-14 15:22 ` *bold*text iminet
@ 2011-08-14 16:20 ` Bastien
2011-08-14 17:17 ` *bold*text iminet
0 siblings, 1 reply; 17+ messages in thread
From: Bastien @ 2011-08-14 16:20 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: iminet@ymail.com; +Cc: emacs-orgmode
Hi,
"iminet@ymail.com" <iminet@ymail.com> writes:
> *bold*text or /italic/text doesn't work unless you seperate those words.
> You can work it around with @<b>foo@</b>bar but that'd neither be generic
> nor work on multiple export-backends.
>
> It'd be great if that'd work =)
See the docstring of `org-emphasis-regexp-components':
,----
| Components used to build the regular expression for emphasis.
| This is a list with five entries. Terminology: In an emphasis string
| like " *strong word* ", we call the initial space PREMATCH, the final
| space POSTMATCH, the stars MARKERS, "s" and "d" are BORDER characters
| and "trong wor" is the body. The different components in this variable
| specify what is allowed/forbidden in each part:
|
| pre Chars allowed as prematch. Beginning of line will be allowed too.
| post Chars allowed as postmatch. End of line will be allowed too.
| border The chars *forbidden* as border characters.
| body-regexp A regexp like "." to match a body character. Don't use
| non-shy groups here, and don't allow newline here.
| newline The maximum number of newlines allowed in an emphasis exp.
`----
HTH,
--
Bastien
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 17+ messages in thread
* Re: *bold*text
2011-08-14 16:20 ` *bold*text Bastien
@ 2011-08-14 17:17 ` iminet
0 siblings, 0 replies; 17+ messages in thread
From: iminet @ 2011-08-14 17:17 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: emacs-orgmode
Am 14.08.2011 18:20, schrieb Bastien:
> Hi,
>
> "iminet@ymail.com"<iminet@ymail.com> writes:
>
>> *bold*text or /italic/text doesn't work unless you seperate those words.
>> You can work it around with @<b>foo@</b>bar but that'd neither be generic
>> nor work on multiple export-backends.
>>
>> It'd be great if that'd work =)
> See the docstring of `org-emphasis-regexp-components':
>
> ,----
> | Components used to build the regular expression for emphasis.
> | This is a list with five entries. Terminology: In an emphasis string
> | like " *strong word* ", we call the initial space PREMATCH, the final
> | space POSTMATCH, the stars MARKERS, "s" and "d" are BORDER characters
> | and "trong wor" is the body. The different components in this variable
> | specify what is allowed/forbidden in each part:
> |
> | pre Chars allowed as prematch. Beginning of line will be allowed too.
> | post Chars allowed as postmatch. End of line will be allowed too.
> | border The chars *forbidden* as border characters.
> | body-regexp A regexp like "." to match a body character. Don't use
> | non-shy groups here, and don't allow newline here.
> | newline The maximum number of newlines allowed in an emphasis exp.
> `----
>
> HTH,
>
thank you very much!
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 17+ messages in thread
* Re: exporting to HTML: <strong> instead of <b> for *bold text*
2011-08-14 16:06 ` Nicolas Goaziou
@ 2011-08-14 17:18 ` iminet
0 siblings, 0 replies; 17+ messages in thread
From: iminet @ 2011-08-14 17:18 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: emacs-orgmode
Am 14.08.2011 18:06, schrieb Nicolas Goaziou:
> Hello,
>
> "iminet@ymail.com"<iminet@ymail.com> writes:
>
>> Exporting org to HTML, is there a way to use the<strong>-tag instead
>> of<b> for *bold text* and<em> instead of<i> for /italic text/?
> See `org-emphasis-alist'.
>
>
> Regards,
>
thank you very much!
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 17+ messages in thread
* Re: exporting to HTML: <strong> instead of <b> for *bold text*
2011-08-14 16:19 ` Bastien
@ 2011-08-14 17:18 ` iminet
0 siblings, 0 replies; 17+ messages in thread
From: iminet @ 2011-08-14 17:18 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: emacs-orgmode
Am 14.08.2011 18:19, schrieb Bastien:
> "iminet@ymail.com"<iminet@ymail.com> writes:
>
>> Exporting org to HTML, is there a way to use the<strong>-tag instead of
>> <b> for *bold text* and<em> instead of<i> for /italic text/?
> You want to customize `org-emphasis-alist'.
>
> HTH,
>
thank you very much!
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 17+ messages in thread
end of thread, other threads:[~2011-08-14 17:18 UTC | newest]
Thread overview: 17+ messages (download: mbox.gz follow: Atom feed
-- links below jump to the message on this page --
2011-07-17 9:03 Possibly new function to view your notes in chronological order Marc-Oliver Ihm
2011-07-18 8:20 ` Bastien
2011-07-18 19:06 ` Marc-Oliver Ihm
2011-07-18 19:11 ` Marc-Oliver Ihm
2011-07-22 18:43 ` New version which is compatible with emacs 24: New " Marc-Oliver Ihm
2011-07-26 11:55 ` Bastien
2011-07-26 19:17 ` Marc-Oliver Ihm
2011-07-28 7:54 ` Bastien
2011-08-14 15:00 ` Progress of org-find-timestamps Marc-Oliver Ihm
2011-08-14 15:17 ` exporting to HTML: <strong> instead of <b> for *bold text* iminet
2011-08-14 16:06 ` Nicolas Goaziou
2011-08-14 17:18 ` iminet
2011-08-14 16:19 ` Bastien
2011-08-14 17:18 ` iminet
2011-08-14 15:22 ` *bold*text iminet
2011-08-14 16:20 ` *bold*text Bastien
2011-08-14 17:17 ` *bold*text iminet
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