From 3f4a0d5370ae6c34afe180df96add3b8522f4af1 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: mattkae Date: Wed, 11 May 2022 09:23:58 -0400 Subject: initial commit --- elpa/org-9.5.2/doc/org-manual.org | 22234 ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ 1 file changed, 22234 insertions(+) create mode 100644 elpa/org-9.5.2/doc/org-manual.org (limited to 'elpa/org-9.5.2/doc/org-manual.org') diff --git a/elpa/org-9.5.2/doc/org-manual.org b/elpa/org-9.5.2/doc/org-manual.org new file mode 100644 index 0000000..5c9bf43 --- /dev/null +++ b/elpa/org-9.5.2/doc/org-manual.org @@ -0,0 +1,22234 @@ +#+title: The Org Manual +#+subtitle: Release {{{version}}} +#+author: The Org Mode Developers +#+language: en + + +#+texinfo: @insertcopying + +* Introduction +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: Getting started. +:END: +#+cindex: introduction + +** Summary +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: Brief summary of what Org does. +:END: +#+cindex: summary + +Org is a mode for keeping notes, maintaining TODO lists, and project +planning with a fast and effective plain-text markup language. It +also is an authoring system with unique support for literate +programming and reproducible research. + +Org is implemented on top of Outline mode, which makes it possible to +keep the content of large files well structured. Visibility cycling +and structure editing help to work with the tree. Tables are easily +created with a built-in table editor. Plain text URL-like links +connect to websites, emails, Usenet messages, BBDB entries, and any +files related to the projects. + +Org develops organizational tasks around notes files that contain +lists or information about projects as plain text. Project planning +and task management make use of metadata which is part of an outline +node. Based on this data, specific entries can be extracted in +queries and create dynamic /agenda views/ that also integrate the +Emacs calendar and diary. Org can be used to implement many different +project planning schemes, such as David Allen's GTD system. + +Org files can serve as a single source authoring system with export to +many different formats such as HTML, LaTeX, Open Document, and +Markdown. New export backends can be derived from existing ones, or +defined from scratch. + +Org files can include source code blocks, which makes Org uniquely +suited for authoring technical documents with code examples. Org +source code blocks are fully functional; they can be evaluated in +place and their results can be captured in the file. This makes it +possible to create a single file reproducible research compendium. + +Org keeps simple things simple. When first fired up, it should feel +like a straightforward, easy to use outliner. Complexity is not +imposed, but a large amount of functionality is available when needed. +Org is a toolbox. Many users actually run only a---very +personal---fraction of Org's capabilities, and know that there is more +whenever they need it. + +All of this is achieved with strictly plain text files, the most +portable and future-proof file format. Org runs in Emacs. Emacs is +one of the most widely ported programs, so that Org mode is available +on every major platform. + +#+cindex: FAQ +There is a website for Org which provides links to the newest version +of Org, as well as additional information, frequently asked questions +(FAQ), links to tutorials, etc. This page is located at +[[https://orgmode.org]]. + +#+cindex: print edition +An earlier version (7.3) of this manual is available as a [[http://www.network-theory.co.uk/org/manual/][paperback +book from Network Theory Ltd.]]. + +** Installation +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: Installing Org. +:END: +#+cindex: installation + +Org is included in all recent distributions of GNU Emacs, so you +probably do not need to install it. Most users will simply activate +Org and begin exploring its many features. + +If, for one reason or another, you want to install Org on top of this +pre-packaged version, you can use the Emacs package system or clone +Org's git repository. + +We *strongly recommend* sticking to a single installation method. + +*** Using Emacs packaging system +:PROPERTIES: +:UNNUMBERED: notoc +:END: + +Recent Emacs distributions include a packaging system which lets you +install Elisp libraries. You can install Org from the "package menu", +with {{{kbd(M-x list-packages)}}}. See [[info:emacs::Package Menu][Package Menu]]. + +#+attr_texinfo: :tag Important +#+begin_quote +You need to do this in a session where no =.org= file has been +visited, i.e., where no Org built-in function have been loaded. +Otherwise autoload Org functions will mess up the installation. +#+end_quote + +*** Using Org's git repository +:PROPERTIES: +:UNNUMBERED: notoc +:END: + +You can clone Org's repository and install Org like this: + +#+begin_example +$ cd ~/src/ +$ git clone https://git.savannah.gnu.org/git/emacs/org-mode.git +$ cd org-mode/ +$ make autoloads +#+end_example + +Note that in this case, =make autoloads= is mandatory: it defines +Org's version in =org-version.el= and Org's autoloads in +=org-loaddefs.el=. + +Remember to add the correct load path as described in the method +above. + +You can also compile with =make=, generate the documentation with +=make doc=, create a local configuration with =make config= and +install Org with =make install=. Please run =make help= to get the +list of compilation/installation options. + +For more detailed explanations on Org's build system, please check the +Org Build System page on [[https://orgmode.org/worg/dev/org-build-system.html][Worg]]. + +*** Installing Org's contributed packages +:PROPERTIES: +:UNNUMBERED: notoc +:END: + +Org's repository used to contain =contrib/= directory for add-ons +contributed by others. As of Org 9.5, the directory has bee moved to +this new dedicated [[https://git.sr.ht/~bzg/org-contrib][org-contrib]] repository, which you can install +separately. + +** Activation +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: How to activate Org for certain buffers. +:END: +#+cindex: activation +#+cindex: autoload +#+cindex: ELPA +#+cindex: global key bindings +#+cindex: key bindings, global + +Org mode buffers need Font Lock to be turned on: this is the default +in Emacs[fn:1]. + +There are compatibility issues between Org mode and some other Elisp +packages (see [[*Packages that conflict with Org mode]]). Please take the +time to check the list. + +#+findex: org-agenda +#+findex: org-capture +#+findex: org-store-link +For a better experience, the three Org commands ~org-store-link~, +~org-capture~ and ~org-agenda~ ought to be accessible anywhere in +Emacs, not just in Org buffers. To that effect, you need to bind them +to globally available keys, like the ones reserved for users (see +[[info:elisp::Key Binding Conventions]]). Here are suggested bindings, +please modify the keys to your own liking. + +#+begin_src emacs-lisp +(global-set-key (kbd "C-c l") #'org-store-link) +(global-set-key (kbd "C-c a") #'org-agenda) +(global-set-key (kbd "C-c c") #'org-capture) +#+end_src + +#+cindex: Org mode, turning on +Files with the =.org= extension use Org mode by default. To turn on +Org mode in a file that does not have the extension =.org=, make the +first line of a file look like this: + +: MY PROJECTS -*- mode: org; -*- + +#+vindex: org-insert-mode-line-in-empty-file +#+texinfo: @noindent +which selects Org mode for this buffer no matter what the file's name +is. See also the variable ~org-insert-mode-line-in-empty-file~. + +Many commands in Org work on the region if the region is /active/. To +make use of this, you need to have Transient Mark mode turned on, +which is the default. If you do not like it, you can create an active +region by using the mouse to select a region, or pressing +{{{kbd(C-SPC)}}} twice before moving point. + +** Feedback +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: Bug reports, ideas, patches, etc. +:END: +#+cindex: feedback +#+cindex: bug reports +#+cindex: reporting a bug +#+cindex: maintainer +#+cindex: author + +If you find problems with Org, or if you have questions, remarks, or +ideas about it, please send an email to the Org mailing list +[[mailto:emacs-orgmode@gnu.org]]. You can subscribe to the list [[https://lists.gnu.org/mailman/listinfo/emacs-orgmode][from this +web page]]. If you are not a member of the mailing list, your mail will +be passed to the list after a moderator has approved it[fn:2]. We ask +you to read and respect the [[https://www.gnu.org/philosophy/kind-communication.html][GNU Kind Communications Guidelines]] when +sending messages on this mailing list. + +#+findex: org-version +#+findex: org-submit-bug-report +For bug reports, please first try to reproduce the bug with the latest +version of Org available---if you are running an outdated version, it +is quite possible that the bug has been fixed already. If the bug +persists, prepare a report and provide as much information as +possible, including the version information of Emacs ({{{kbd(M-x +emacs-version)}}}) and Org ({{{kbd(M-x org-version)}}}), as well as +the Org related setup in the Emacs init file. The easiest way to do +this is to use the command + +: M-x org-submit-bug-report + +#+texinfo: @noindent +which puts all this information into an Emacs mail buffer so that you +only need to add your description. If you are not sending the Email +from within Emacs, please copy and paste the content into your Email +program. + +Sometimes you might face a problem due to an error in your Emacs or +Org mode setup. Before reporting a bug, it is very helpful to start +Emacs with minimal customizations and reproduce the problem. Doing so +often helps you determine if the problem is with your customization or +with Org mode itself. You can start a typical minimal session with +a command like the example below. + +: $ emacs -Q -l /path/to/minimal-org.el + +However if you are using Org mode as distributed with Emacs, a minimal +setup is not necessary. In that case it is sufficient to start Emacs +as =emacs -Q=. The =minimal-org.el= setup file can have contents as +shown below. + +#+begin_src emacs-lisp +;;; Minimal setup to load latest `org-mode'. + +;; Activate debugging. +(setq debug-on-error t + debug-on-signal nil + debug-on-quit nil) + +;; Add latest Org mode to load path. +(add-to-list 'load-path (expand-file-name "/path/to/org-mode/lisp")) +#+end_src + +If an error occurs, a "backtrace" can be very useful---see below on +how to create one. Often a small example file helps, along with clear +information about: + +1. What exactly did you do? +2. What did you expect to happen? +3. What happened instead? + +Thank you for helping to improve this program. + +*** How to create a useful backtrace +:PROPERTIES: +:UNNUMBERED: notoc +:END: + +#+cindex: backtrace of an error +If working with Org produces an error with a message you do not +understand, you may have hit a bug. The best way to report this is by +providing, in addition to what was mentioned above, a backtrace. This +is information from the built-in debugger about where and how the +error occurred. Here is how to produce a useful backtrace: + +1. Reload uncompiled versions of all Org mode Lisp files. The + backtrace contains much more information if it is produced with + uncompiled code. To do this, use + + : C-u M-x org-reload + + #+texinfo: @noindent + or, from the menu: Org \rarr Refresh/Reload \rarr Reload Org uncompiled. + +2. Then, activate the debugger: + + : M-x toggle-debug-on-error + + #+texinfo: @noindent + or, from the menu: Options \rarr Enter Debugger on Error. + +3. Do whatever you have to do to hit the error. Do not forget to + document the steps you take. + +4. When you hit the error, a =*Backtrace*= buffer appears on the + screen. Save this buffer to a file---for example using {{{kbd(C-x + C-w)}}}---and attach it to your bug report. + +** Typesetting Conventions Used in this Manual +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: Typesetting conventions used in this manual. +:ALT_TITLE: Conventions +:END: + +*** TODO keywords, tags, properties, etc. +:PROPERTIES: +:UNNUMBERED: notoc +:END: + +Org uses various syntactical elements: TODO keywords, tags, property +names, keywords, blocks, etc. In this manual we use the following +conventions: + +#+attr_texinfo: :sep , +- =TODO=, =WAITING= :: + + TODO keywords are written with all capitals, even if they are + user-defined. + +- =boss=, =ARCHIVE= :: + + Tags are case-sensitive. User-defined tags are usually written in + lowercase; built-in tags with special meaning are written as they + should appear in the document, usually with all capitals. + +- =Release=, =PRIORITY= :: + + User-defined properties are capitalized; built-in properties with + special meaning are written with all capitals. + +- =TITLE=, =BEGIN= ... =END= :: + + Keywords and blocks are written in uppercase to enhance their + readability, but you can use lowercase in your Org files. + +*** Key bindings and commands +:PROPERTIES: +:UNNUMBERED: notoc +:END: + +The manual lists both the keys and the corresponding commands for +accessing a functionality. Org mode often uses the same key for +different functions, depending on context. The command that is bound +to such keys has a generic name, like ~org-metaright~. In the manual +we will, wherever possible, give the function that is internally +called by the generic command. For example, in the chapter on +document structure, {{{kbd(M-RIGHT)}}} will be listed to call +~org-do-demote~, while in the chapter on tables, it will be listed to +call ~org-table-move-column-right~. + +* Document Structure +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: A tree works like your brain. +:END: + +#+cindex: document structure +#+cindex: structure of document +Org is an outliner. Outlines allow a document to be organized in +a hierarchical structure, which, least for me, is the best +representation of notes and thoughts. An overview of this structure +is achieved by folding, i.e., hiding large parts of the document to +show only the general document structure and the parts currently being +worked on. Org greatly simplifies the use of outlines by compressing +the entire show and hide functionalities into a single command, +~org-cycle~, which is bound to the {{{kbd(TAB)}}} key. + +** Headlines +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: How to typeset Org tree headlines. +:END: +#+cindex: headlines +#+cindex: outline tree +#+vindex: org-special-ctrl-a/e +#+vindex: org-special-ctrl-k +#+vindex: org-ctrl-k-protect-subtree + +Headlines define the structure of an outline tree. Org headlines +start on the left margin[fn:3] with one or more stars followed by +a space. For example: + +#+begin_example +,* Top level headline +,** Second level +,*** Third level + some text +,*** Third level + more text +,* Another top level headline +#+end_example + +#+vindex: org-footnote-section +The name defined in ~org-footnote-section~ is reserved. Do not use it +as a title for your own headings. + +Some people find the many stars too noisy and would prefer an outline +that has whitespace followed by a single star as headline starters. +This can be achieved using a Org Indent minor mode. See [[*A Cleaner +Outline View]] for more information. + +Headlines are not numbered. However, you may want to dynamically +number some, or all, of them. See [[*Dynamic Headline Numbering]]. + +#+vindex: org-cycle-separator-lines +An empty line after the end of a subtree is considered part of it and +is hidden when the subtree is folded. However, if you leave at least +two empty lines, one empty line remains visible after folding the +subtree, in order to structure the collapsed view. See the variable +~org-cycle-separator-lines~ to modify this behavior. + +** Visibility Cycling +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: Show and hide, much simplified. +:END: +#+cindex: cycling, visibility +#+cindex: visibility cycling +#+cindex: trees, visibility +#+cindex: show hidden text +#+cindex: hide text + +*** Global and local cycling +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: Cycling through various visibility states. +:END: +#+cindex: subtree visibility states +#+cindex: subtree cycling +#+cindex: folded, subtree visibility state +#+cindex: children, subtree visibility state +#+cindex: subtree, subtree visibility state + +Outlines make it possible to hide parts of the text in the buffer. +Org uses just two commands, bound to {{{kbd(TAB)}}} and +{{{kbd(S-TAB)}}} to change the visibility in the buffer. + +#+attr_texinfo: :sep , +- {{{kbd(TAB)}}} (~org-cycle~) :: + + #+kindex: TAB + #+findex: org-cycle + /Subtree cycling/: Rotate current subtree among the states + + #+begin_example + ,-> FOLDED -> CHILDREN -> SUBTREE --. + '-----------------------------------' + #+end_example + + #+vindex: org-cycle-emulate-tab + Point must be on a headline for this to work[fn:4]. + +- {{{kbd(S-TAB)}}} (~org-global-cycle~), {{{kbd(C-u TAB)}}} :: + + #+cindex: global visibility states + #+cindex: global cycling + #+cindex: overview, global visibility state + #+cindex: contents, global visibility state + #+cindex: show all, global visibility state + #+kindex: C-u TAB + #+kindex: S-TAB + #+findex: org-global-cycle + /Global cycling/: Rotate the entire buffer among the states + + #+begin_example + ,-> OVERVIEW -> CONTENTS -> SHOW ALL --. + '--------------------------------------' + #+end_example + + When {{{kbd(S-TAB)}}} is called with a numeric prefix argument + {{{var(N)}}}, view contents only up to headlines of level + {{{var(N)}}}. + + Note that inside tables (see [[*Tables]]), {{{kbd(S-TAB)}}} jumps to the + previous field instead. + + #+vindex: org-cycle-global-at-bob + You can run global cycling using {{{kbd(TAB)}}} only if point is at + the very beginning of the buffer, but not on a headline, and + ~org-cycle-global-at-bob~ is set to a non-~nil~ value. + +- {{{kbd(C-u C-u TAB)}}} (~org-set-startup-visibility~) :: + + #+cindex: startup visibility + #+kindex: C-u C-u TAB + #+findex: org-set-startup-visibility + Switch back to the startup visibility of the buffer (see [[*Initial + visibility]]). + +- {{{kbd(C-u C-u C-u TAB)}}} (~outline-show-all~) :: + + #+cindex: show all, command + #+kindex: C-u C-u C-u TAB + #+findex: outline-show-all + Show all, including drawers. + +- {{{kbd(C-c C-r)}}} (~org-reveal~) :: + + #+cindex: revealing context + #+kindex: C-c C-r + #+findex: org-reveal + Reveal context around point, showing the current entry, the + following heading and the hierarchy above. It is useful for working + near a location that has been exposed by a sparse tree command (see + [[*Sparse Trees]]) or an agenda command (see [[*Commands in the Agenda + Buffer]]). With a prefix argument, show, on each level, all sibling + headings. With a double prefix argument, also show the entire + subtree of the parent. + +- {{{kbd(C-c C-k)}}} (~outline-show-branches~) :: + + #+cindex: show branches, command + #+kindex: C-c C-k + #+findex: outline-show-branches + Expose all the headings of the subtree, but not their bodies. + +- {{{kbd(C-c TAB)}}} (~outline-show-children~) :: + + #+cindex: show children, command + #+kindex: C-c TAB + #+findex: outline-show-children + Expose all direct children of the subtree. With a numeric prefix + argument {{{var(N)}}}, expose all children down to level + {{{var(N)}}}. + +- {{{kbd(C-c C-x b)}}} (~org-tree-to-indirect-buffer~) :: + + #+kindex: C-c C-x b + #+findex: org-tree-to-indirect-buffer + Show the current subtree in an indirect buffer[fn:5]. With + a numeric prefix argument {{{var(N)}}}, go up to level {{{var(N)}}} + and then take that tree. If {{{var(N)}}} is negative then go up + that many levels. With a {{{kbd(C-u)}}} prefix, do not remove the + previously used indirect buffer. + +- {{{kbd(C-c C-x v)}}} (~org-copy-visible~) :: + + #+kindex: C-c C-x v + #+findex: org-copy-visible + Copy the /visible/ text in the region into the kill ring. + +*** Initial visibility +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: Setting the initial visibility state. +:END: + +#+vindex: org-startup-folded +When Emacs first visits an Org file, the global state is set to +~showeverything~, i.e., all file content is visible[fn:6]. This can +be configured through the variable ~org-startup-folded~, or on +a per-file basis by adding one of the following lines anywhere in the +buffer: + +#+cindex: @samp{STARTUP}, keyword +#+begin_example +,#+STARTUP: overview +,#+STARTUP: content +,#+STARTUP: showall +,#+STARTUP: show2levels +,#+STARTUP: show3levels +,#+STARTUP: show4levels +,#+STARTUP: show5levels +,#+STARTUP: showeverything +#+end_example + +#+cindex: @samp{VISIBILITY}, property +Furthermore, any entries with a =VISIBILITY= property (see [[*Properties +and Columns]]) get their visibility adapted accordingly. Allowed values +for this property are =folded=, =children=, =content=, and =all=. + +- {{{kbd(C-u C-u TAB)}}} (~org-set-startup-visibility~) :: + + #+kindex: C-u C-u TAB + #+findex: org-set-startup-visibility + Switch back to the startup visibility of the buffer, i.e., whatever + is requested by startup options and =VISIBILITY= properties in + individual entries. + +*** Catching invisible edits +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: Preventing mistakes when editing invisible parts. +:END: +#+cindex: edits, catching invisible + +#+vindex: org-catch-invisible-edits +Sometimes you may inadvertently edit an invisible part of the buffer +and be confused on what has been edited and how to undo the mistake. +Setting ~org-catch-invisible-edits~ to non-~nil~ helps preventing +this. See the docstring of this option on how Org should catch +invisible edits and process them. + +** Motion +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: Jumping to other headlines. +:END: +#+cindex: motion, between headlines +#+cindex: jumping, to headlines +#+cindex: headline navigation + +The following commands jump to other headlines in the buffer. + +- {{{kbd(C-c C-n)}}} (~org-next-visible-heading~) :: + + #+kindex: C-c C-n + #+findex: org-next-visible-heading + Next heading. + +- {{{kbd(C-c C-p)}}} (~org-previous-visible-heading~) :: + + #+kindex: C-c C-p + #+findex: org-previous-visible-heading + Previous heading. + +- {{{kbd(C-c C-f)}}} (~org-forward-heading-same-level~) :: + + #+kindex: C-c C-f + #+findex: org-forward-heading-same-level + Next heading same level. + +- {{{kbd(C-c C-b)}}} (~org-backward-heading-same-level~) :: + + #+kindex: C-c C-b + #+findex: org-backward-heading-same-level + Previous heading same level. + +- {{{kbd(C-c C-u)}}} (~outline-up-heading~) :: + + #+kindex: C-c C-u + #+findex: outline-up-heading + Backward to higher level heading. + +- {{{kbd(C-c C-j)}}} (~org-goto~) :: + + #+kindex: C-c C-j + #+findex: org-goto + #+vindex: org-goto-auto-isearch + Jump to a different place without changing the current outline + visibility. Shows the document structure in a temporary buffer, + where you can use the following keys to find your destination: + + #+attr_texinfo: :columns 0.3 0.7 + | {{{kbd(TAB)}}} | Cycle visibility. | + | {{{kbd(DOWN)}}} / {{{kbd(UP)}}} | Next/previous visible headline. | + | {{{kbd(RET)}}} | Select this location. | + | {{{kbd(/)}}} | Do a Sparse-tree search | + + #+texinfo: @noindent + The following keys work if you turn off ~org-goto-auto-isearch~ + + #+attr_texinfo: :columns 0.3 0.7 + | {{{kbd(n)}}} / {{{kbd(p)}}} | Next/previous visible headline. | + | {{{kbd(f)}}} / {{{kbd(b)}}} | Next/previous headline same level. | + | {{{kbd(u)}}} | One level up. | + | {{{kbd(0)}}} ... {{{kbd(9)}}} | Digit argument. | + | {{{kbd(q)}}} | Quit. | + + #+vindex: org-goto-interface + #+texinfo: @noindent + See also the variable ~org-goto-interface~. + +** Structure Editing +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: Changing sequence and level of headlines. +:END: +#+cindex: structure editing +#+cindex: headline, promotion and demotion +#+cindex: promotion, of subtrees +#+cindex: demotion, of subtrees +#+cindex: subtree, cut and paste +#+cindex: pasting, of subtrees +#+cindex: cutting, of subtrees +#+cindex: copying, of subtrees +#+cindex: sorting, of subtrees +#+cindex: subtrees, cut and paste + +#+attr_texinfo: :sep , +- {{{kbd(M-RET)}}} (~org-meta-return~) :: + + #+kindex: M-RET + #+findex: org-meta-return + #+vindex: org-M-RET-may-split-line + Insert a new heading, item or row. + + If the command is used at the /beginning/ of a line, and if there is + a heading or a plain list item (see [[*Plain Lists]]) at point, the new + heading/item is created /before/ the current line. When used at the + beginning of a regular line of text, turn that line into a heading. + + When this command is used in the middle of a line, the line is split + and the rest of the line becomes the new item or headline. If you + do not want the line to be split, customize + ~org-M-RET-may-split-line~. + + Calling the command with a {{{kbd(C-u)}}} prefix unconditionally + inserts a new heading at the end of the current subtree, thus + preserving its contents. With a double {{{kbd(C-u C-u)}}} prefix, + the new heading is created at the end of the parent subtree instead. + +- {{{kbd(C-RET)}}} (~org-insert-heading-respect-content~) :: + + #+kindex: C-RET + #+findex: org-insert-heading-respect-content + Insert a new heading at the end of the current subtree. + +- {{{kbd(M-S-RET)}}} (~org-insert-todo-heading~) :: + + #+kindex: M-S-RET + #+findex: org-insert-todo-heading + #+vindex: org-treat-insert-todo-heading-as-state-change + Insert new TODO entry with same level as current heading. See also + the variable ~org-treat-insert-todo-heading-as-state-change~. + +- {{{kbd(C-S-RET)}}} (~org-insert-todo-heading-respect-content~) :: + + #+kindex: C-S-RET + #+findex: org-insert-todo-heading-respect-content + Insert new TODO entry with same level as current heading. Like + {{{kbd(C-RET)}}}, the new headline is inserted after the current + subtree. + +- {{{kbd(TAB)}}} (~org-cycle~) :: + + #+kindex: TAB + #+findex: org-cycle + In a new entry with no text yet, the first {{{kbd(TAB)}}} demotes + the entry to become a child of the previous one. The next + {{{kbd(TAB)}}} makes it a parent, and so on, all the way to top + level. Yet another {{{kbd(TAB)}}}, and you are back to the initial + level. + +- {{{kbd(M-LEFT)}}} (~org-do-promote~), {{{kbd(M-RIGHT)}}} (~org-do-demote~) :: + + #+kindex: M-LEFT + #+findex: org-do-promote + #+kindex: M-RIGHT + #+findex: org-do-demote + Promote or demote current heading by one level. + + #+cindex: region, active + #+cindex: active region + #+cindex: transient mark mode + When there is an active region---i.e., when Transient Mark mode is + active---promotion and demotion work on all headlines in the region. + To select a region of headlines, it is best to place both point and + mark at the beginning of a line, mark at the beginning of the first + headline, and point at the line just after the last headline to + change. + +- {{{kbd(M-S-LEFT)}}} (~org-promote-subtree~) :: + + #+kindex: M-S-LEFT + #+findex: org-promote-subtree + Promote the current subtree by one level. + +- {{{kbd(M-S-RIGHT)}}} (~org-demote-subtree~) :: + + #+kindex: M-S-RIGHT + #+findex: org-demote-subtree + Demote the current subtree by one level. + +- {{{kbd(M-UP)}}} (~org-move-subtree-up~) :: + + #+kindex: M-UP + #+findex: org-move-subtree-up + Move subtree up, i.e., swap with previous subtree of same level. + +- {{{kbd(M-DOWN)}}} (~org-move-subtree-down~) :: + + #+kindex: M-DOWN + #+findex: org-move-subtree-down + Move subtree down, i.e., swap with next subtree of same level. + +- {{{kbd(C-c @)}}} (~org-mark-subtree~) :: + + #+kindex: C-c @@ + #+findex: org-mark-subtree + Mark the subtree at point. Hitting repeatedly marks subsequent + subtrees of the same level as the marked subtree. + +- {{{kbd(C-c C-x C-w)}}} (~org-cut-subtree~) :: + + #+kindex: C-c C-x C-w + #+findex: org-cut-subtree + Kill subtree, i.e., remove it from buffer but save in kill ring. + With a numeric prefix argument N, kill N sequential subtrees. + +- {{{kbd(C-c C-x M-w)}}} (~org-copy-subtree~) :: + + #+kindex: C-c C-x M-w + #+findex: org-copy-subtree + Copy subtree to kill ring. With a numeric prefix argument N, copy + the N sequential subtrees. + +- {{{kbd(C-c C-x C-y)}}} (~org-paste-subtree~) :: + + #+kindex: C-c C-x C-y + #+findex: org-paste-subtree + Yank subtree from kill ring. This does modify the level of the + subtree to make sure the tree fits in nicely at the yank position. + The yank level can also be specified with a numeric prefix argument, + or by yanking after a headline marker like =****=. + +- {{{kbd(C-y)}}} (~org-yank~) :: + + #+kindex: C-y + #+findex: org-yank + #+vindex: org-yank-adjusted-subtrees + #+vindex: org-yank-folded-subtrees + Depending on the variables ~org-yank-adjusted-subtrees~ and + ~org-yank-folded-subtrees~, Org's internal ~yank~ command pastes + subtrees folded and in a clever way, using the same command as + {{{kbd(C-c C-x C-y)}}}. With the default settings, no level + adjustment takes place, but the yanked tree is folded unless doing + so would swallow text previously visible. Any prefix argument to + this command forces a normal ~yank~ to be executed, with the prefix + passed along. A good way to force a normal yank is {{{kbd(C-u + C-y)}}}. If you use ~yank-pop~ after a yank, it yanks previous kill + items plainly, without adjustment and folding. + +- {{{kbd(C-c C-x c)}}} (~org-clone-subtree-with-time-shift~) :: + + #+kindex: C-c C-x c + #+findex: org-clone-subtree-with-time-shift + Clone a subtree by making a number of sibling copies of it. You are + prompted for the number of copies to make, and you can also specify + if any timestamps in the entry should be shifted. This can be + useful, for example, to create a number of tasks related to a series + of lectures to prepare. For more details, see the docstring of the + command ~org-clone-subtree-with-time-shift~. + +- {{{kbd(C-c C-w)}}} (~org-refile~) :: + + #+kindex: C-c C-w + #+findex: org-refile + Refile entry or region to a different location. See [[*Refile and + Copy]]. + +- {{{kbd(C-c ^)}}} (~org-sort~) :: + + #+kindex: C-c ^ + #+findex: org-sort + Sort same-level entries. When there is an active region, all + entries in the region are sorted. Otherwise the children of the + current headline are sorted. The command prompts for the sorting + method, which can be alphabetically, numerically, by time---first + timestamp with active preferred, creation time, scheduled time, + deadline time---by priority, by TODO keyword---in the sequence the + keywords have been defined in the setup---or by the value of + a property. Reverse sorting is possible as well. You can also + supply your own function to extract the sorting key. With + a {{{kbd(C-u)}}} prefix, sorting is case-sensitive. + +- {{{kbd(C-x n s)}}} (~org-narrow-to-subtree~) :: + + #+kindex: C-x n s + #+findex: org-narrow-to-subtree + Narrow buffer to current subtree. + +- {{{kbd(C-x n b)}}} (~org-narrow-to-block~) :: + + #+kindex: C-x n b + #+findex: org-narrow-to-block + Narrow buffer to current block. + +- {{{kbd(C-x n w)}}} (~widen~) :: + + #+kindex: C-x n w + #+findex: widen + Widen buffer to remove narrowing. + +- {{{kbd(C-c *)}}} (~org-toggle-heading~) :: + + #+kindex: C-c * + #+findex: org-toggle-heading + Turn a normal line or plain list item into a headline---so that it + becomes a subheading at its location. Also turn a headline into + a normal line by removing the stars. If there is an active region, + turn all lines in the region into headlines. If the first line in + the region was an item, turn only the item lines into headlines. + Finally, if the first line is a headline, remove the stars from all + headlines in the region. + +Note that when point is inside a table (see [[*Tables]]), the Meta-Cursor +keys have different functionality. + +** Sparse Trees +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: Matches embedded in context. +:END: +#+cindex: sparse trees +#+cindex: trees, sparse +#+cindex: folding, sparse trees +#+cindex: occur, command + +#+vindex: org-show-context-detail +An important feature of Org mode is the ability to construct /sparse +trees/ for selected information in an outline tree, so that the entire +document is folded as much as possible, but the selected information +is made visible along with the headline structure above it[fn:7]. +Just try it out and you will see immediately how it works. + +Org mode contains several commands creating such trees, all these +commands can be accessed through a dispatcher: + +- {{{kbd(C-c /)}}} (~org-sparse-tree~) :: + + #+kindex: C-c / + #+findex: org-sparse-tree + This prompts for an extra key to select a sparse-tree creating + command. + +- {{{kbd(C-c / r)}}} or {{{kbd(C-c / /)}}} (~org-occur~) :: + + #+kindex: C-c / r + #+kindex: C-c / / + #+findex: org-occur + #+vindex: org-remove-highlights-with-change + Prompts for a regexp (see [[*Regular Expressions]]) and shows a sparse + tree with all matches. If the match is in a headline, the headline + is made visible. If the match is in the body of an entry, headline + and body are made visible. In order to provide minimal context, + also the full hierarchy of headlines above the match is shown, as + well as the headline following the match. Each match is also + highlighted; the highlights disappear when the buffer is changed by + an editing command, or by pressing {{{kbd(C-c C-c)}}}[fn:8]. When + called with a {{{kbd(C-u)}}} prefix argument, previous highlights + are kept, so several calls to this command can be stacked. + +- {{{kbd(M-g n)}}} or {{{kbd(M-g M-n)}}} (~next-error~) :: + + #+kindex: M-g n + #+kindex: M-g M-n + #+findex: next-error + Jump to the next sparse tree match in this buffer. + +- {{{kbd(M-g p)}}} or {{{kbd(M-g M-p)}}} (~previous-error~) :: + + #+kindex: M-g p + #+kindex: M-g M-p + #+findex: previous-error + Jump to the previous sparse tree match in this buffer. + +#+vindex: org-agenda-custom-commands +For frequently used sparse trees of specific search strings, you can +use the variable ~org-agenda-custom-commands~ to define fast keyboard +access to specific sparse trees. These commands will then be +accessible through the agenda dispatcher (see [[*The Agenda Dispatcher]]). +For example: + +#+begin_src emacs-lisp +(setq org-agenda-custom-commands + '(("f" occur-tree "FIXME"))) +#+end_src + +#+texinfo: @noindent +defines the key {{{kbd(f)}}} as a shortcut for creating a sparse tree +matching the string =FIXME=. + +The other sparse tree commands select headings based on TODO keywords, +tags, or properties and are discussed later in this manual. + +#+kindex: C-c C-e C-v +#+cindex: printing sparse trees +#+cindex: visible text, printing +To print a sparse tree, you can use the Emacs command +~ps-print-buffer-with-faces~ which does not print invisible parts of +the document. Or you can use the command {{{kbd(C-c C-e C-v)}}} to +export only the visible part of the document and print the resulting +file. + +** Plain Lists +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: Additional structure within an entry. +:END: +#+cindex: plain lists +#+cindex: lists, plain +#+cindex: lists, ordered +#+cindex: ordered lists + +Within an entry of the outline tree, hand-formatted lists can provide +additional structure. They also provide a way to create lists of +checkboxes (see [[*Checkboxes]]). Org supports editing such lists, and +every exporter (see [[*Exporting]]) can parse and format them. + +Org knows ordered lists, unordered lists, and description lists. + +#+attr_texinfo: :indic @bullet +- /Unordered/ list items start with =-=, =+=, or =*=[fn:9] as bullets. + +- + #+vindex: org-plain-list-ordered-item-terminator + #+vindex: org-alphabetical-lists + /Ordered/ list items start with a numeral followed by either + a period or a right parenthesis[fn:10], such as =1.= or =1)=[fn:11] + If you want a list to start with a different value---e.g., + 20---start the text of the item with =[@20]=[fn:12]. Those + constructs can be used in any item of the list in order to enforce + a particular numbering. + +- /Description/ list items are unordered list items, and contain the + separator =::= to distinguish the description /term/ from the + description. + +Items belonging to the same list must have the same indentation on the +first line. In particular, if an ordered list reaches number =10.=, +then the 2-digit numbers must be written left-aligned with the other +numbers in the list. An item ends before the next line that is less +or equally indented than its bullet/number. + +A list ends whenever every item has ended, which means before any line +less or equally indented than items at top level. It also ends before +two blank lines. In that case, all items are closed. Here is an +example: + +#+begin_example +,* Lord of the Rings +My favorite scenes are (in this order) +1. The attack of the Rohirrim +2. Eowyn's fight with the witch king + + this was already my favorite scene in the book + + I really like Miranda Otto. +3. Peter Jackson being shot by Legolas + - on DVD only + He makes a really funny face when it happens. +But in the end, no individual scenes matter but the film as a whole. +Important actors in this film are: +- Elijah Wood :: He plays Frodo +- Sean Astin :: He plays Sam, Frodo's friend. I still remember him + very well from his role as Mikey Walsh in /The Goonies/. +#+end_example + +Org supports these lists by tuning filling and wrapping commands to +deal with them correctly, and by exporting them properly (see +[[*Exporting]]). Since indentation is what governs the structure of these +lists, many structural constructs like =#+BEGIN_= blocks can be +indented to signal that they belong to a particular item. + +#+vindex: org-list-demote-modify-bullet +#+vindex: org-list-indent-offset +If you find that using a different bullet for a sub-list---than that +used for the current list-level---improves readability, customize the +variable ~org-list-demote-modify-bullet~. To get a greater difference +of indentation between items and theirs sub-items, customize +~org-list-indent-offset~. + +#+vindex: org-list-automatic-rules +The following commands act on items when point is in the first line of +an item---the line with the bullet or number. Some of them imply the +application of automatic rules to keep list structure intact. If some +of these actions get in your way, configure ~org-list-automatic-rules~ +to disable them individually. + +#+attr_texinfo: :sep , +- {{{kbd(TAB)}}} (~org-cycle~) :: + + #+cindex: cycling, in plain lists + #+kindex: TAB + #+findex: org-cycle + #+vindex: org-cycle-include-plain-lists + Items can be folded just like headline levels. Normally this works + only if point is on a plain list item. For more details, see the + variable ~org-cycle-include-plain-lists~. If this variable is set + to ~integrate~, plain list items are treated like low-level + headlines. The level of an item is then given by the indentation of + the bullet/number. Items are always subordinate to real headlines, + however; the hierarchies remain completely separated. In a new item + with no text yet, the first {{{kbd(TAB)}}} demotes the item to + become a child of the previous one. Subsequent {{{kbd(TAB)}}}s move + the item to meaningful levels in the list and eventually get it back + to its initial position. + +- {{{kbd(M-RET)}}} (~org-insert-heading~) :: + + #+kindex: M-RET + #+findex: org-insert-heading + #+vindex: org-M-RET-may-split-line + Insert new item at current level. With a prefix argument, force + a new heading (see [[*Structure Editing]]). If this command is used in + the middle of an item, that item is /split/ in two, and the second + part becomes the new item[fn:13]. If this command is executed + /before item's body/, the new item is created /before/ the current + one. + +- {{{kbd(M-S-RET)}}} :: + + #+kindex: M-S-RET + Insert a new item with a checkbox (see [[*Checkboxes]]). + +- {{{kbd(S-UP)}}}, {{{kbd(S-DOWN)}}} :: + + #+kindex: S-UP + #+kindex: S-DOWN + #+cindex: shift-selection-mode + #+vindex: org-support-shift-select + #+vindex: org-list-use-circular-motion + Jump to the previous/next item in the current list, but only if + ~org-support-shift-select~ is off[fn:14]. If not, you can still use + paragraph jumping commands like {{{kbd(C-UP)}}} and + {{{kbd(C-DOWN)}}} to quite similar effect. + +- {{{kbd(M-UP)}}}, {{{kbd(M-DOWN)}}} :: + + #+kindex: M-UP + #+kindex: M-DOWN + Move the item including subitems up/down[fn:15], i.e., swap with + previous/next item of same indentation. If the list is ordered, + renumbering is automatic. + +- {{{kbd(M-LEFT)}}}, {{{kbd(M-RIGHT)}}} :: + + #+kindex: M-LEFT + #+kindex: M-RIGHT + Decrease/increase the indentation of an item, leaving children + alone. + +- {{{kbd(M-S-LEFT)}}}, {{{kbd(M-S-RIGHT)}}} :: + + #+kindex: M-S-LEFT + #+kindex: M-S-RIGHT + Decrease/increase the indentation of the item, including subitems. + Initially, the item tree is selected based on current indentation. + When these commands are executed several times in direct succession, + the initially selected region is used, even if the new indentation + would imply a different hierarchy. To use the new hierarchy, break + the command chain by moving point. + + As a special case, using this command on the very first item of + a list moves the whole list. This behavior can be disabled by + configuring ~org-list-automatic-rules~. The global indentation of + a list has no influence on the text /after/ the list. + +- {{{kbd(C-c C-c)}}} :: + + #+kindex: C-c C-c + If there is a checkbox (see [[*Checkboxes]]) in the item line, toggle + the state of the checkbox. In any case, verify bullets and + indentation consistency in the whole list. + +- {{{kbd(C-c -)}}} :: + + #+kindex: C-c - + #+vindex: org-plain-list-ordered-item-terminator + Cycle the entire list level through the different itemize/enumerate + bullets (=-=, =+=, =*=, =1.=, =1)=) or a subset of them, depending + on ~org-plain-list-ordered-item-terminator~, the type of list, and + its indentation. With a numeric prefix argument N, select the Nth + bullet from this list. If there is an active region when calling + this, all lines are converted to list items. With a prefix + argument, the selected text is changed into a single item. If the + first line already was a list item, any item marker is removed from + the list. Finally, even without an active region, a normal line is + converted into a list item. + +- {{{kbd(C-c *)}}} :: + + #+kindex: C-c * + Turn a plain list item into a headline---so that it becomes + a subheading at its location. See [[*Structure Editing]], for + a detailed explanation. + +- {{{kbd(C-c C-*)}}} :: + + #+kindex: C-c C-* + Turn the whole plain list into a subtree of the current heading. + Checkboxes (see [[*Checkboxes]]) become =TODO=, respectively =DONE=, + keywords when unchecked, respectively checked. + +- {{{kbd(S-LEFT)}}}, {{{kbd(S-RIGHT)}}} :: + + #+vindex: org-support-shift-select + #+kindex: S-LEFT + #+kindex: S-RIGHT + This command also cycles bullet styles when point is in on the + bullet or anywhere in an item line, details depending on + ~org-support-shift-select~. + +- {{{kbd(C-c ^)}}} :: + + #+kindex: C-c ^ + #+cindex: sorting, of plain list + Sort the plain list. Prompt for the sorting method: numerically, + alphabetically, by time, or by custom function. + +** Drawers +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: Tucking stuff away. +:END: +#+cindex: drawers +#+cindex: visibility cycling, drawers + +Sometimes you want to keep information associated with an entry, but +you normally do not want to see it. For this, Org mode has /drawers/. +They can contain anything but a headline and another drawer. Drawers +look like this: + +#+begin_example +,** This is a headline +Still outside the drawer +:DRAWERNAME: +This is inside the drawer. +:END: +After the drawer. +#+end_example + +#+kindex: C-c C-x d +#+findex: org-insert-drawer +You can interactively insert a drawer at point by calling +~org-insert-drawer~, which is bound to {{{kbd(C-c C-x d)}}}. With an +active region, this command puts the region inside the drawer. With +a prefix argument, this command calls ~org-insert-property-drawer~, +which creates a =PROPERTIES= drawer right below the current headline. +Org mode uses this special drawer for storing properties (see +[[*Properties and Columns]]). You cannot use it for anything else. + +Completion over drawer keywords is also possible using +{{{kbd(M-TAB)}}}[fn:16]. + +Visibility cycling (see [[*Visibility Cycling]]) on the headline hides and +shows the entry, but keep the drawer collapsed to a single line. In +order to look inside the drawer, you need to move point to the drawer +line and press {{{kbd(TAB)}}} there. + +You can also arrange for state change notes (see [[Tracking TODO state +changes]]) and clock times (see [[*Clocking Work Time]]) to be stored in +a =LOGBOOK= drawer. If you want to store a quick note there, in +a similar way to state changes, use + +- {{{kbd(C-c C-z)}}} :: + + #+kindex: C-c C-z + Add a time-stamped note to the =LOGBOOK= drawer. + +** Blocks +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: Folding blocks. +:END: +#+vindex: org-hide-block-startup +#+cindex: blocks, folding + +Org mode uses =#+BEGIN= ... =#+END= blocks for various purposes from +including source code examples (see [[*Literal Examples]]) to capturing +time logging information (see [[*Clocking Work Time]]). These blocks can +be folded and unfolded by pressing {{{kbd(TAB)}}} in the =#+BEGIN= +line. You can also get all blocks folded at startup by configuring +the variable ~org-hide-block-startup~ or on a per-file basis by using + +#+cindex: STARTUP, keyword +#+begin_example +,#+STARTUP: hideblocks +,#+STARTUP: nohideblocks +#+end_example + +* Tables +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: Pure magic for quick formatting. +:END: +#+cindex: tables +#+cindex: editing tables + +Org comes with a fast and intuitive table editor. Spreadsheet-like +calculations are supported using the Emacs Calc package (see [[info:calc][GNU Emacs +Calculator Manual]]). + +** Built-in Table Editor +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: Simple tables. +:END: +#+cindex: table editor, built-in + +#+cindex: header lines, in tables +#+cindex: horizontal rule, in tables +#+cindex: row separator, in tables +#+cindex: table syntax +Org makes it easy to format tables in plain ASCII. Any line with =|= +as the first non-whitespace character is considered part of a table. +=|= is also the column separator[fn:17]. Moreover, a line starting +with =|-= is a horizontal rule. It separates rows explicitly. Rows +before the first horizontal rule are header lines. A table might look +like this: + +#+begin_example +| Name | Phone | Age | +|-------+-------+-----| +| Peter | 1234 | 17 | +| Anna | 4321 | 25 | +#+end_example + +A table is re-aligned automatically each time you press +{{{kbd(TAB)}}}, {{{kbd(RET)}}} or {{{kbd(C-c C-c)}}} inside the table. +{{{kbd(TAB)}}} also moves to the next field---{{{kbd(RET)}}} to the +next row---and creates new table rows at the end of the table or +before horizontal lines. The indentation of the table is set by the +first line. Horizontal rules are automatically expanded on every +re-align to span the whole table width. So, to create the above +table, you would only type + +#+begin_example +|Name|Phone|Age| +|- +#+end_example + +#+texinfo: @noindent +and then press {{{kbd(TAB)}}} to align the table and start filling in +fields. Even faster would be to type =|Name|Phone|Age= followed by +{{{kbd(C-c RET)}}}. + +When typing text into a field, Org treats {{{kbd(DEL)}}}, +{{{kbd(Backspace)}}}, and all character keys in a special way, so that +inserting and deleting avoids shifting other fields. Also, when +typing /immediately/ after point was moved into a new field with +{{{kbd(TAB)}}}, {{{kbd(S-TAB)}}} or {{{kbd(RET)}}}, the field is +automatically made blank. If this behavior is too unpredictable for +you, configure the option ~org-table-auto-blank-field~. + +*** Creation and conversion +:PROPERTIES: +:UNNUMBERED: notoc +:END: + +- {{{kbd(C-c |)}}} (~org-table-create-or-convert-from-region~) :: + + #+kindex: C-c | + #+findex: org-table-create-or-convert-from-region + Convert the active region to table. If every line contains at least + one {{{kbd(TAB)}}} character, the function assumes that the material + is tab separated. If every line contains a comma, comma-separated + values (CSV) are assumed. If not, lines are split at whitespace + into fields. You can use a prefix argument to force a specific + separator: {{{kbd(C-u)}}} forces CSV, {{{kbd(C-u C-u)}}} forces + {{{kbd(TAB)}}}, {{{kbd(C-u C-u C-u)}}} prompts for a regular + expression to match the separator, and a numeric argument + N indicates that at least N consecutive spaces, or alternatively + a {{{kbd(TAB)}}} will be the separator. + + If there is no active region, this command creates an empty Org + table. But it is easier just to start typing, like {{{kbd(| + N a m e | P h o n e | A g e RET | - TAB)}}}. + +*** Re-aligning and field motion +:PROPERTIES: +:UNNUMBERED: notoc +:END: + +- {{{kbd(C-c C-c)}}} (~org-table-align~) :: + + #+kindex: C-c C-c + #+findex: org-table-align + Re-align the table without moving point. + +- {{{kbd(TAB)}}} (~org-table-next-field~) :: + + #+kindex: TAB + #+findex: org-table-next-field + Re-align the table, move to the next field. Creates a new row if + necessary. + +- {{{kbd(M-x org-table-blank-field)}}} :: + + #+findex: org-table-blank-field + Blank the field at point. + +- {{{kbd(S-TAB)}}} (~org-table-previous-field~) :: + + #+kindex: S-TAB + #+findex: org-table-previous-field + Re-align, move to previous field. + +- {{{kbd(RET)}}} (~org-table-next-row~) :: + + #+kindex: RET + #+findex: org-table-next-row + Re-align the table and move down to next row. Creates a new row if + necessary. At the beginning or end of a line, {{{kbd(RET)}}} still + inserts a new line, so it can be used to split a table. + +- {{{kbd(M-a)}}} (~org-table-beginning-of-field~) :: + + #+kindex: M-a + #+findex: org-table-beginning-of-field + Move to beginning of the current table field, or on to the previous + field. + +- {{{kbd(M-e)}}} (~org-table-end-of-field~) :: + + #+kindex: M-e + #+findex: org-table-end-of-field + Move to end of the current table field, or on to the next field. + +*** Column and row editing +:PROPERTIES: +:UNNUMBERED: notoc +:END: + +- {{{kbd(M-LEFT)}}} (~org-table-move-column-left~) :: + + #+kindex: M-LEFT + #+findex: org-table-move-column-left + Move the current column left. + +- {{{kbd(M-RIGHT)}}} (~org-table-move-column-right~) :: + + #+kindex: M-RIGHT + #+findex: org-table-move-column-right + Move the current column right. + +- {{{kbd(M-S-LEFT)}}} (~org-table-delete-column~) :: + + #+kindex: M-S-LEFT + #+findex: org-table-delete-column + Kill the current column. + +- {{{kbd(M-S-RIGHT)}}} (~org-table-insert-column~) :: + + #+kindex: M-S-RIGHT + #+findex: org-table-insert-column + Insert a new column at point position. Move the recent column and + all cells to the right of this column to the right. + +- {{{kbd(M-UP)}}} (~org-table-move-row-up~) :: + + #+kindex: M-UP + #+findex: org-table-move-row-up + Move the current row up. + +- {{{kbd(M-DOWN)}}} (~org-table-move-row-down~) :: + + #+kindex: M-DOWN + #+findex: org-table-move-row-down + Move the current row down. + +- {{{kbd(M-S-UP)}}} (~org-table-kill-row~) :: + + #+kindex: M-S-UP + #+findex: org-table-kill-row + Kill the current row or horizontal line. + +- {{{kbd(S-UP)}}} (~org-table-move-cell-up~) :: + + #+kindex: S-UP + #+findex: org-table-move-cell-up + Move cell up by swapping with adjacent cell. + +- {{{kbd(S-DOWN)}}} (~org-table-move-cell-down~) :: + + #+kindex: S-DOWN + #+findex: org-table-move-cell-down + Move cell down by swapping with adjacent cell. + +- {{{kbd(S-LEFT)}}} (~org-table-move-cell-left~) :: + + #+kindex: S-LEFT + #+findex: org-table-move-cell-left + Move cell left by swapping with adjacent cell. + +- {{{kbd(S-RIGHT)}}} (~org-table-move-cell-right~) :: + + #+kindex: S-RIGHT + #+findex: org-table-move-cell-right + Move cell right by swapping with adjacent cell. + +- {{{kbd(M-S-DOWN)}}} (~org-table-insert-row~) :: + + #+kindex: M-S-DOWN + #+findex: org-table-insert-row + Insert a new row above the current row. With a prefix argument, the + line is created below the current one. + +- {{{kbd(C-c -)}}} (~org-table-insert-hline~) :: + + #+kindex: C-c - + #+findex: org-table-insert-hline + Insert a horizontal line below current row. With a prefix argument, + the line is created above the current line. + +- {{{kbd(C-c RET)}}} (~org-table-hline-and-move~) :: + + #+kindex: C-c RET + #+findex: org-table-hline-and-move + Insert a horizontal line below current row, and move point into the + row below that line. + +- {{{kbd(C-c ^)}}} (~org-table-sort-lines~) :: + + #+kindex: C-c ^ + #+findex: org-table-sort-lines + Sort the table lines in the region. The position of point indicates + the column to be used for sorting, and the range of lines is the + range between the nearest horizontal separator lines, or the entire + table. If point is before the first column, you are prompted for + the sorting column. If there is an active region, the mark + specifies the first line and the sorting column, while point should + be in the last line to be included into the sorting. The command + prompts for the sorting type, alphabetically, numerically, or by + time. You can sort in normal or reverse order. You can also supply + your own key extraction and comparison functions. When called with + a prefix argument, alphabetic sorting is case-sensitive. + +*** Regions +:PROPERTIES: +:UNNUMBERED: notoc +:END: + +- {{{kbd(C-c C-x M-w)}}} (~org-table-copy-region~) :: + + #+kindex: C-c C-x M-w + #+findex: org-table-copy-region + Copy a rectangular region from a table to a special clipboard. + Point and mark determine edge fields of the rectangle. If there is + no active region, copy just the current field. The process ignores + horizontal separator lines. + +- {{{kbd(C-c C-x C-w)}}} (~org-table-cut-region~) :: + + #+kindex: C-c C-x C-w + #+findex: org-table-cut-region + Copy a rectangular region from a table to a special clipboard, and + blank all fields in the rectangle. So this is the "cut" operation. + +- {{{kbd(C-c C-x C-y)}}} (~org-table-paste-rectangle~) :: + + #+kindex: C-c C-x C-y + #+findex: org-table-paste-rectangle + Paste a rectangular region into a table. The upper left corner ends + up in the current field. All involved fields are overwritten. If + the rectangle does not fit into the present table, the table is + enlarged as needed. The process ignores horizontal separator lines. + +- {{{kbd(M-RET)}}} (~org-table-wrap-region~) :: + + #+kindex: M-RET + #+findex: org-table-wrap-region + Split the current field at point position and move the rest to the + line below. If there is an active region, and both point and mark + are in the same column, the text in the column is wrapped to minimum + width for the given number of lines. A numeric prefix argument may + be used to change the number of desired lines. If there is no + region, but you specify a prefix argument, the current field is made + blank, and the content is appended to the field above. + +*** Calculations +:PROPERTIES: +:UNNUMBERED: notoc +:END: + +#+cindex: formula, in tables +#+cindex: calculations, in tables + +- {{{kbd(C-c +)}}} (~org-table-sum~) :: + + #+kindex: C-c + + #+findex: org-table-sum + Sum the numbers in the current column, or in the rectangle defined + by the active region. The result is shown in the echo area and can + be inserted with {{{kbd(C-y)}}}. + +- {{{kbd(S-RET)}}} (~org-table-copy-down~) :: + + #+kindex: S-RET + #+findex: org-table-copy-down + #+vindex: org-table-copy-increment + When current field is empty, copy from first non-empty field above. + When not empty, copy current field down to next row and move point + along with it. + + Depending on the variable ~org-table-copy-increment~, integer and + time stamp field values, and fields prefixed or suffixed with + a whole number, can be incremented during copy. Also, a ~0~ prefix + argument temporarily disables the increment. + + This key is also used by shift-selection and related modes (see + [[*Packages that conflict with Org mode]]). + +*** Miscellaneous +:PROPERTIES: +:UNNUMBERED: notoc +:END: + +- {{{kbd(C-c `)}}} (~org-table-edit-field~) :: + + #+kindex: C-c ` + #+findex: org-table-edit-field + Edit the current field in a separate window. This is useful for + fields that are not fully visible (see [[*Column Width and Alignment]]). + When called with a {{{kbd(C-u)}}} prefix, just make the full field + visible, so that it can be edited in place. When called with two + {{{kbd(C-u)}}} prefixes, make the editor window follow point through + the table and always show the current field. The follow mode exits + automatically when point leaves the table, or when you repeat this + command with {{{kbd(C-u C-u C-c `)}}}. + +- {{{kbd(M-x org-table-import)}}} :: + + #+findex: org-table-import + Import a file as a table. The table should be TAB or whitespace + separated. Use, for example, to import a spreadsheet table or data + from a database, because these programs generally can write + TAB-separated text files. This command works by inserting the file + into the buffer and then converting the region to a table. Any + prefix argument is passed on to the converter, which uses it to + determine the separator. + +- {{{kbd(C-c |)}}} (~org-table-create-or-convert-from-region~) :: + + #+kindex: C-c | + #+findex: org-table-create-or-convert-from-region + Tables can also be imported by pasting tabular text into the Org + buffer, selecting the pasted text with {{{kbd(C-x C-x)}}} and then + using the {{{kbd(C-c |)}}} command (see [[*Creation and conversion]]). + +- {{{kbd(M-x org-table-export)}}} :: + + #+findex: org-table-export + #+vindex: org-table-export-default-format + Export the table, by default as a TAB-separated file. Use for data + exchange with, for example, spreadsheet or database programs. The + format used to export the file can be configured in the variable + ~org-table-export-default-format~. You may also use properties + =TABLE_EXPORT_FILE= and =TABLE_EXPORT_FORMAT= to specify the file + name and the format for table export in a subtree. Org supports + quite general formats for exported tables. The exporter format is + the same as the format used by Orgtbl radio tables, see [[*Translator + functions]], for a detailed description. + +- {{{kbd(M-x org-table-header-line-mode)}}} :: + + #+findex: org-table-header-line-mode + #+vindex: org-table-header-line-p + Turn on the display of the first data row of the table at point in + the window header line when this first row is not visible anymore in + the buffer. You can activate this minor mode by default by setting + the option ~org-table-header-line-p~ to ~t~. + +- {{{kbd(M-x org-table-transpose-table-at-point)}}} :: + + #+findex: org-table-transpose-table-at-point + Transpose the table at point and eliminate hlines. + +** Column Width and Alignment +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: Overrule the automatic settings. +:END: +#+cindex: narrow columns in tables +#+cindex: alignment in tables + +The width of columns is automatically determined by the table editor. +The alignment of a column is determined automatically from the +fraction of number-like versus non-number fields in the column. + +#+vindex: org-table-automatic-realign +Editing a field may modify alignment of the table. Moving +a contiguous row or column---i.e., using {{{kbd(TAB)}}} or +{{{kbd(RET)}}}---automatically re-aligns it. If you want to disable +this behavior, set ~org-table-automatic-realign~ to ~nil~. In any +case, you can always align manually a table: + +- {{{kbd(C-c C-c)}}} (~org-table-align~) :: + + #+kindex: C-c C-c + #+findex: org-table-align + Align the current table. + +#+vindex: org-startup-align-all-tables +Setting the option ~org-startup-align-all-tables~ re-aligns all tables +in a file upon visiting it. You can also set this option on +a per-file basis with: + +#+begin_example +,#+STARTUP: align +,#+STARTUP: noalign +#+end_example + +Sometimes a single field or a few fields need to carry more text, +leading to inconveniently wide columns. Maybe you want to hide away +several columns or display them with a fixed width, regardless of +content, as shown in the following example. + +#+begin_example +|---+---------------------+--------| |---+-------…+…| +| | <6> | | | | <6> …|…| +| 1 | one | some | ----\ | 1 | one …|…| +| 2 | two | boring | ----/ | 2 | two …|…| +| 3 | This is a long text | column | | 3 | This i…|…| +|---+---------------------+--------| |---+-------…+…| +#+end_example + +To set the width of a column, one field anywhere in the column may +contain just the string == where {{{var(N)}}} specifies the width +as a number of characters. You control displayed width of columns +with the following tools: + +- {{{kbd(C-c TAB)}}} (~org-table-toggle-column-width~) :: + + #+kindex: C-c TAB + #+findex: org-table-toggle-column-width + Shrink or expand current column. + + If a width cookie specifies a width W for the column, shrinking it + displays the first W visible characters only. Otherwise, the column + is shrunk to a single character. + + When called before the first column or after the last one, ask for + a list of column ranges to operate on. + +- {{{kbd(C-u C-c TAB)}}} (~org-table-shrink~) :: + + #+kindex: C-u C-c TAB + #+findex: org-table-shrink + Shrink all columns with a column width. Expand the others. + +- {{{kbd(C-u C-u C-c TAB)}}} (~org-table-expand~) :: + + #+kindex: C-u C-u C-c TAB + #+findex: org-table-expand + Expand all columns. + +To see the full text of a shrunk field, hold the mouse over it: +a tool-tip window then shows the full contents of the field. +Alternatively, {{{kbd(C-h .)}}} (~display-local-help~) reveals them, +too. For convenience, any change near the shrunk part of a column +expands it. + +#+vindex: org-startup-shrink-all-tables +Setting the option ~org-startup-shrink-all-tables~ shrinks all columns +containing a width cookie in a file the moment it is visited. You can +also set this option on a per-file basis with: + +: #+STARTUP: shrink + +If you would like to overrule the automatic alignment of number-rich +columns to the right and of string-rich columns to the left, you can +use ==, == or == in a similar fashion. You may also combine +alignment and field width like this: ==. + +Lines which only contain these formatting cookies are removed +automatically upon exporting the document. + +** Column Groups +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: Grouping to trigger vertical lines. +:END: +#+cindex: grouping columns in tables + +When Org exports tables, it does so by default without vertical lines +because that is visually more satisfying in general. Occasionally +however, vertical lines can be useful to structure a table into groups +of columns, much like horizontal lines can do for groups of rows. In +order to specify column groups, you can use a special row where the +first field contains only =/=. The further fields can either contain +=<= to indicate that this column should start a group, =>= to indicate +the end of a column, or =<>= (no space between =<= and =>=) to make +a column a group of its own. Upon export, boundaries between column +groups are marked with vertical lines. Here is an example: + +#+begin_example +| N | N^2 | N^3 | N^4 | sqrt(n) | sqrt[4](N) | +|---+-----+-----+-----+---------+------------| +| / | < | | > | < | > | +| 1 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 1 | +| 2 | 4 | 8 | 16 | 1.4142 | 1.1892 | +| 3 | 9 | 27 | 81 | 1.7321 | 1.3161 | +|---+-----+-----+-----+---------+------------| +,#+TBLFM: $2=$1^2::$3=$1^3::$4=$1^4::$5=sqrt($1)::$6=sqrt(sqrt(($1))) +#+end_example + +It is also sufficient to just insert the column group starters after +every vertical line you would like to have: + +#+begin_example +| N | N^2 | N^3 | N^4 | sqrt(n) | sqrt[4](N) | +|---+-----+-----+-----+---------+------------| +| / | < | | | < | | +#+end_example + +** The Orgtbl Minor Mode +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: The table editor as minor mode. +:ALT_TITLE: Orgtbl Mode +:END: +#+cindex: Orgtbl mode +#+cindex: minor mode for tables + +#+findex: orgtbl-mode +If you like the intuitive way the Org table editor works, you might +also want to use it in other modes like Text mode or Mail mode. The +minor mode Orgtbl mode makes this possible. You can always toggle the +mode with {{{kbd(M-x orgtbl-mode)}}}. To turn it on by default, for +example in Message mode, use + +#+begin_src emacs-lisp +(add-hook 'message-mode-hook #'turn-on-orgtbl) +#+end_src + +Furthermore, with some special setup, it is possible to maintain +tables in arbitrary syntax with Orgtbl mode. For example, it is +possible to construct LaTeX tables with the underlying ease and power +of Orgtbl mode, including spreadsheet capabilities. For details, see +[[*Tables in Arbitrary Syntax]]. + +** The Spreadsheet +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: The table editor has spreadsheet capabilities. +:END: +#+cindex: calculations, in tables +#+cindex: spreadsheet capabilities +#+cindex: Calc package + +The table editor makes use of the Emacs Calc package to implement +spreadsheet-like capabilities. It can also evaluate Emacs Lisp forms +to derive fields from other fields. While fully featured, Org's +implementation is not identical to other spreadsheets. For example, +Org knows the concept of a /column formula/ that will be applied to +all non-header fields in a column without having to copy the formula +to each relevant field. There is also a formula debugger, and a +formula editor with features for highlighting fields in the table +corresponding to the references at point in the formula, moving these +references by arrow keys. + +*** References +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: How to refer to another field or range. +:END: +#+cindex: references + +To compute fields in the table from other fields, formulas must +reference other fields or ranges. In Org, fields can be referenced by +name, by absolute coordinates, and by relative coordinates. To find +out what the coordinates of a field are, press {{{kbd(C-c ?)}}} in +that field, or press {{{kbd(C-c })}}} to toggle the display of a grid. + +**** Field references +:PROPERTIES: +:UNNUMBERED: notoc +:END: + +#+cindex: field references +#+cindex: references, to fields +Formulas can reference the value of another field in two ways. Like +in any other spreadsheet, you may reference fields with +a letter/number combination like =B3=, meaning the second field in the +third row. However, Org prefers to use another, more general +representation that looks like this:[fn:18] + +: @ROW$COLUMN + +Column specifications can be absolute like =$1=, =$2=, ..., =$N=, or +relative to the current column, i.e., the column of the field which is +being computed, like =$+1= or =$-2=. =$<= and =$>= are immutable +references to the first and last column, respectively, and you can use +=$>>>= to indicate the third column from the right. + +The row specification only counts data lines and ignores horizontal +separator lines, or "hlines". Like with columns, you can use absolute +row numbers =@1=, =@2=, ..., =@N=, and row numbers relative to the +current row like =@+3= or =@-1=. =@<= and =@>= are immutable +references the first and last row in the table, respectively. You may +also specify the row relative to one of the hlines: =@I= refers to the +first hline, =@II= to the second, etc. =@-I= refers to the first such +line above the current line, =@+I= to the first such line below the +current line. You can also write =@III+2= which is the second data +line after the third hline in the table. + +=@0= and =$0= refer to the current row and column, respectively, i.e., +to the row/column for the field being computed. Also, if you omit +either the column or the row part of the reference, the current +row/column is implied. + +Org's references with /unsigned/ numbers are fixed references in the +sense that if you use the same reference in the formula for two +different fields, the same field is referenced each time. Org's +references with /signed/ numbers are floating references because the +same reference operator can reference different fields depending on +the field being calculated by the formula. + +Here are a few examples: + +#+attr_texinfo: :columns 0.2 0.8 +| =@2$3= | 2nd row, 3rd column (same as =C2=) | +| =$5= | column 5 in the current row (same as =E&=) | +| =@2= | current column, row 2 | +| =@-1$-3= | field one row up, three columns to the left | +| =@-I$2= | field just under hline above current row, column 2 | +| =@>$5= | field in the last row, in column 5 | + +**** Range references +:PROPERTIES: +:UNNUMBERED: notoc +:END: + +#+cindex: range references +#+cindex: references, to ranges +You may reference a rectangular range of fields by specifying two +field references connected by two dots =..=. The ends are included in +the range. If both fields are in the current row, you may simply use +=$2..$7=, but if at least one field is in a different row, you need to +use the general =@ROW$COLUMN= format at least for the first field, +i.e., the reference must start with =@= in order to be interpreted +correctly. Examples: + +#+attr_texinfo: :columns 0.2 0.8 +| =$1..$3= | first three fields in the current row | +| =$P..$Q= | range, using column names (see [[*Advanced features]]) | +| =$<<<..$>>= | start in third column, continue to the last but one | +| =@2$1..@4$3= | nine fields between these two fields (same as =A2..C4=) | +| =@-1$-2..@-1= | 3 fields in the row above, starting from 2 columns on the left | +| =@I..II= | between first and second hline, short for =@I..@II= | + +#+texinfo: @noindent +Range references return a vector of values that can be fed into Calc +vector functions. Empty fields in ranges are normally suppressed, so +that the vector contains only the non-empty fields. For other options +with the mode switches =E=, =N= and examples, see [[*Formula syntax for +Calc]]. + +**** Field coordinates in formulas +:PROPERTIES: +:UNNUMBERED: notoc +:END: + +#+cindex: field coordinates +#+cindex: coordinates, of field +#+cindex: row, of field coordinates +#+cindex: column, of field coordinates +#+vindex: org-table-current-column +#+vindex: org-table-current-dline +One of the very first actions during evaluation of Calc formulas and +Lisp formulas is to substitute =@#= and =$#= in the formula with the +row or column number of the field where the current result will go to. +The traditional Lisp formula equivalents are ~org-table-current-dline~ +and ~org-table-current-column~. Examples: + +- =if(@# % 2, $#, string(""))= :: + + Insert column number on odd rows, set field to empty on even rows. + +- =$2 = '(identity remote(FOO, @@#$1))= :: + + Copy text or values of each row of column 1 of the table named + {{{var(FOO)}}} into column 2 of the current table. + +- =@3 = 2 * remote(FOO, @1$$#)= :: + + Insert the doubled value of each column of row 1 of the table + named {{{var(FOO)}}} into row 3 of the current table. + +#+texinfo: @noindent +For the second and third examples, table {{{var(FOO)}}} must have at +least as many rows or columns as the current table. Note that this is +inefficient[fn:19] for large number of rows. + +**** Named references +:PROPERTIES: +:UNNUMBERED: notoc +:END: +#+cindex: named references +#+cindex: references, named +#+cindex: name, of column or field +#+cindex: constants, in calculations +#+cindex: @samp{CONSTANTS}, keyword +#+vindex: org-table-formula-constants + +=$name= is interpreted as the name of a column, parameter or constant. +Constants are defined globally through the variable +~org-table-formula-constants~, and locally---for the file---through +a line like this example: + +: #+CONSTANTS: c=299792458. pi=3.14 eps=2.4e-6 + +#+vindex: constants-unit-system +#+pindex: constants.el +Also, properties (see [[*Properties and Columns]]) can be used as +constants in table formulas: for a property =Xyz= use the name +=$PROP_Xyz=, and the property will be searched in the current outline +entry and in the hierarchy above it. If you have the =constants.el= +package, it will also be used to resolve constants, including natural +constants like =$h= for Planck's constant, and units like =$km= for +kilometers[fn:20]. Column names and parameters can be specified in +special table lines. These are described below, see [[*Advanced +features]]. All names must start with a letter, and further consist +of letters and numbers. + +**** Remote references +:PROPERTIES: +:UNNUMBERED: notoc +:END: + +#+cindex: remote references +#+cindex: references, remote +#+cindex: references, to a different table +#+cindex: name, of column or field +#+cindex: @samp{NAME}, keyword +You may also reference constants, fields and ranges from a different +table, either in the current file or even in a different file. The +syntax is + +: remote(NAME,REF) + +#+texinfo: @noindent +where {{{var(NAME)}}} can be the name of a table in the current file +as set by a =#+NAME:= line before the table. It can also be the ID of +an entry, even in a different file, and the reference then refers to +the first table in that entry. {{{var(REF)}}} is an absolute field or +range reference as described above for example =@3$3= or =$somename=, +valid in the referenced table. + +#+cindex: table indirection +When {{{var(NAME)}}} has the format =@ROW$COLUMN=, it is substituted +with the name or ID found in this field of the current table. For +example =remote($1, @@>$2)= \Rightarrow =remote(year_2013, @@>$1)=. The format +=B3= is not supported because it can not be distinguished from a plain +table name or ID. + +*** Formula syntax for Calc +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: Using Calc to compute stuff. +:END: +#+cindex: formula syntax, Calc +#+cindex: syntax, of formulas + +A formula can be any algebraic expression understood by the Emacs Calc +package. Note that Calc has the non-standard convention that =/= has +lower precedence than =*=, so that =a/b*c= is interpreted as +=(a/(b*c))=. Before evaluation by ~calc-eval~ (see [[info:calc#Calling Calc from Your Programs][Calling Calc from +Your Lisp Programs]]), variable substitution takes place according to +the rules described above. + +#+cindex: vectors, in table calculations +The range vectors can be directly fed into the Calc vector functions +like ~vmean~ and ~vsum~. + +#+cindex: format specifier, in spreadsheet +#+cindex: mode, for Calc +#+vindex: org-calc-default-modes +A formula can contain an optional mode string after a semicolon. This +string consists of flags to influence Calc and other modes during +execution. By default, Org uses the standard Calc modes (precision +12, angular units degrees, fraction and symbolic modes off). The +display format, however, has been changed to =(float 8)= to keep +tables compact. The default settings can be configured using the +variable ~org-calc-default-modes~. + +- =p20= :: + + Set the internal Calc calculation precision to 20 digits. + +- =n3=, =s3=, =e2=, =f4= :: + + Normal, scientific, engineering or fixed format of the result of + Calc passed back to Org. Calc formatting is unlimited in precision + as long as the Calc calculation precision is greater. + +- =D=, =R= :: + + Degree and radian angle modes of Calc. + +- =F=, =S= :: + + Fraction and symbolic modes of Calc. + +- =u= :: + + Units simplification mode of Calc. Calc is also a symbolic + calculator and is capable of working with values having a unit, + represented with numerals followed by a unit string in Org table + cells. This mode instructs Calc to simplify the units in the + computed expression before returning the result. + +- =T=, =t=, =U= :: + + Duration computations in Calc or Lisp, [[*Durations and time values]]. + +- =E= :: + + If and how to consider empty fields. Without =E= empty fields in + range references are suppressed so that the Calc vector or Lisp list + contains only the non-empty fields. With =E= the empty fields are + kept. For empty fields in ranges or empty field references the + value =nan= (not a number) is used in Calc formulas and the empty + string is used for Lisp formulas. Add =N= to use 0 instead for both + formula types. For the value of a field the mode =N= has higher + precedence than =E=. + +- =N= :: + + Interpret all fields as numbers, use 0 for non-numbers. See the + next section to see how this is essential for computations with Lisp + formulas. In Calc formulas it is used only occasionally because + there number strings are already interpreted as numbers without =N=. + +- =L= :: + + Literal, for Lisp formulas only. See the next section. + +Unless you use large integer numbers or high-precision calculation and +display for floating point numbers you may alternatively provide +a ~printf~ format specifier to reformat the Calc result after it has +been passed back to Org instead of letting Calc already do the +formatting[fn:21]. A few examples: + +| =$1+$2= | Sum of first and second field | +| =$1+$2;%.2f= | Same, format result to two decimals | +| =exp($2)+exp($1)= | Math functions can be used | +| =$0;%.1f= | Reformat current cell to 1 decimal | +| =($3-32)*5/9= | Degrees F \to C conversion | +| =$c/$1/$cm= | Hz \to cm conversion, using =constants.el= | +| =tan($1);Dp3s1= | Compute in degrees, precision 3, display SCI 1 | +| =sin($1);Dp3%.1e= | Same, but use ~printf~ specifier for display | +| =vmean($2..$7)= | Compute column range mean, using vector function | +| =vmean($2..$7);EN= | Same, but treat empty fields as 0 | +| =taylor($3,x=7,2)= | Taylor series of $3, at x=7, second degree | + +Calc also contains a complete set of logical operations (see [[info:calc#Logical Operations][Logical +Operations]]). For example + +- =if($1 < 20, teen, string(""))= :: + + ="teen"= if age =$1= is less than 20, else the Org table result + field is set to empty with the empty string. + +- =if("$1" =​= "nan" || "$2" =​= "nan", string(""), $1 + $2); E f-1= :: + + Sum of the first two columns. When at least one of the input fields + is empty the Org table result field is set to empty. =E= is + required to not convert empty fields to 0. =f-1= is an optional + Calc format string similar to =%.1f= but leaves empty results empty. + +- =if(typeof(vmean($1..$7)) =​= 12, string(""), vmean($1..$7); E= :: + + Mean value of a range unless there is any empty field. Every field + in the range that is empty is replaced by =nan= which lets =vmean= + result in =nan=. Then =typeof == 12= detects the =nan= from ~vmean~ + and the Org table result field is set to empty. Use this when the + sample set is expected to never have missing values. + +- =if("$1..$7" =​= "[]", string(""), vmean($1..$7))= :: + + Mean value of a range with empty fields skipped. Every field in the + range that is empty is skipped. When all fields in the range are + empty the mean value is not defined and the Org table result field + is set to empty. Use this when the sample set can have a variable + size. + +- =vmean($1..$7); EN= :: + + To complete the example before: Mean value of a range with empty + fields counting as samples with value 0. Use this only when + incomplete sample sets should be padded with 0 to the full size. + +You can add your own Calc functions defined in Emacs Lisp with +~defmath~ and use them in formula syntax for Calc. + +*** Emacs Lisp forms as formulas +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: Writing formulas in Emacs Lisp. +:ALT_TITLE: Formula syntax for Lisp +:END: +#+cindex: Lisp forms, as table formulas + +It is also possible to write a formula in Emacs Lisp. This can be +useful for string manipulation and control structures, if Calc's +functionality is not enough. + +A formula is evaluated as a Lisp form when it starts with a +single-quote followed by an opening parenthesis. Cell table +references are interpolated into the Lisp form before execution. The +evaluation should return either a string or a number. Evaluation +modes and a ~printf~ format used to render the returned values can be +specified after a semicolon. + +By default, references are interpolated as literal Lisp strings: the +field content is replaced in the Lisp form stripped of leading and +trailing white space and surrounded in double-quotes. For example: + +: '(concat $1 $2) + +#+texinfo: @noindent +concatenates the content of columns 1 and column 2. + +When the =N= flag is used, all referenced elements are parsed as +numbers and interpolated as Lisp numbers, without quotes. Fields that +cannot be parsed as numbers are interpolated as zeros. For example: + +: '(+ $1 $2);N + +#+texinfo: @noindent +adds columns 1 and 2, equivalent to Calc's =$1+$2=. Ranges are +inserted as space-separated fields, so they can be embedded in list or +vector syntax. For example: + +: '(apply '+ '($1..$4));N + +#+texinfo: @noindent +computes the sum of columns 1 to 4, like Calc's =vsum($1..$4)=. + +When the =L= flag is used, all fields are interpolated literally: the +cell content is replaced in the Lisp form stripped of leading and +trailing white space and without quotes. If a reference is intended +to be interpreted as a string by the Lisp form, the reference operator +itself should be enclosed in double-quotes, like ="$3"=. The =L= flag +is useful when strings and numbers are used in the same Lisp form. For +example: + +: '(substring "$1" $2 $3);L + +#+texinfo: @noindent +extracts the part of the string in column 1 between the character +positions specified in the integers in column 2 and 3 and it is easier +to read than the equivalent: + +: '(substring $1 (string-to-number $2) (string-to-number $3)) + +*** Durations and time values +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: How to compute durations and time values. +:END: +#+cindex: duration, computing +#+cindex: time, computing +#+vindex: org-table-duration-custom-format + +If you want to compute time values use the =T=, =t=, or =U= flag, +either in Calc formulas or Elisp formulas: + +#+begin_example +| Task 1 | Task 2 | Total | +|---------+----------+----------| +| 2:12 | 1:47 | 03:59:00 | +| 2:12 | 1:47 | 03:59 | +| 3:02:20 | -2:07:00 | 0.92 | +,#+TBLFM: @2$3=$1+$2;T::@3$3=$1+$2;U::@4$3=$1+$2;t +#+end_example + +Input duration values must be of the form =HH:MM[:SS]=, where seconds +are optional. With the =T= flag, computed durations are displayed as +=HH:MM:SS= (see the first formula above). With the =U= flag, seconds +are omitted so that the result is only =HH:MM= (see second formula +above). Zero-padding of the hours field depends upon the value of the +variable ~org-table-duration-hour-zero-padding~. + +With the =t= flag, computed durations are displayed according to the +value of the option ~org-table-duration-custom-format~, which defaults +to ~hours~ and displays the result as a fraction of hours (see the +third formula in the example above). + +Negative duration values can be manipulated as well, and integers are +considered as seconds in addition and subtraction. + +*** Field and range formulas +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: Formula for specific (ranges of) fields. +:END: +#+cindex: field formula +#+cindex: range formula +#+cindex: formula, for individual table field +#+cindex: formula, for range of fields + +To assign a formula to a particular field, type it directly into the +field, preceded by =:==, for example =vsum(@II..III)=. When you press +{{{kbd(TAB)}}} or {{{kbd(RET)}}} or {{{kbd(C-c C-c)}}} with point +still in the field, the formula is stored as the formula for this +field, evaluated, and the current field is replaced with the result. + +#+cindex: @samp{TBLFM}, keyword +Formulas are stored in a special =TBLFM= keyword located directly +below the table. If you type the equation in the fourth field of the +third data line in the table, the formula looks like =@3$4=$1+$2=. +When inserting/deleting/swapping column and rows with the appropriate +commands, /absolute references/ (but not relative ones) in stored +formulas are modified in order to still reference the same field. To +avoid this from happening, in particular in range references, anchor +ranges at the table borders (using =@<=, =@>=, =$<=, =$>=), or at +hlines using the =@I= notation. Automatic adaptation of field +references does not happen if you edit the table structure with normal +editing commands---you must fix the formulas yourself. + +Instead of typing an equation into the field, you may also use the +following command + +- {{{kbd(C-u C-c =)}}} (~org-table-eval-formula~) :: + + #+kindex: C-u C-c = + #+findex: org-table-eval-formula + Install a new formula for the current field. The command prompts + for a formula with default taken from the =TBLFM= keyword, + applies it to the current field, and stores it. + +The left-hand side of a formula can also be a special expression in +order to assign the formula to a number of different fields. There is +no keyboard shortcut to enter such range formulas. To add them, use +the formula editor (see [[*Editing and debugging formulas]]) or edit +the =TBLFM= keyword directly. + +- =$2== :: + + Column formula, valid for the entire column. This is so common that + Org treats these formulas in a special way, see [[*Column formulas]]. + +- =@3== :: + + Row formula, applies to all fields in the specified row. =@>== + means the last row. + +- =@1$2..@4$3== :: + + Range formula, applies to all fields in the given rectangular range. + This can also be used to assign a formula to some but not all fields + in a row. + +- =$NAME== :: + + Named field, see [[*Advanced features]]. + +*** Column formulas +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: Formulas valid for an entire column. +:END: +#+cindex: column formula +#+cindex: formula, for table column + +When you assign a formula to a simple column reference like =$3==, the +same formula is used in all fields of that column, with the following +very convenient exceptions: (i) If the table contains horizontal +separator hlines with rows above and below, everything before the +first such hline is considered part of the table /header/ and is not +modified by column formulas. Therefore a header is mandatory when you +use column formulas and want to add hlines to group rows, like for +example to separate a total row at the bottom from the summand rows +above. (ii) Fields that already get a value from a field/range +formula are left alone by column formulas. These conditions make +column formulas very easy to use. + +To assign a formula to a column, type it directly into any field in +the column, preceded by an equal sign, like ==$1+$2=. When you press +{{{kbd(TAB)}}} or {{{kbd(RET)}}} or {{{kbd(C-c C-c)}}} with point +still in the field, the formula is stored as the formula for the +current column, evaluated and the current field replaced with the +result. If the field contains only ===, the previously stored formula +for this column is used. For each column, Org only remembers the most +recently used formula. In the =TBLFM= keyword, column formulas look +like =$4=$1+$2=. The left-hand side of a column formula can not be +the name of column, it must be the numeric column reference or =$>=. + +Instead of typing an equation into the field, you may also use the +following command: + +- {{{kbd(C-c =)}}} (~org-table-eval-formula~) :: + + #+kindex: C-c = + #+findex: org-table-eval-formula + Install a new formula for the current column and replace current + field with the result of the formula. The command prompts for + a formula, with default taken from the =TBLFM= keyword, applies it + to the current field and stores it. With a numeric prefix argument, + e.g., {{{kbd(C-5 C-c =)}}}, the command applies it to that many + consecutive fields in the current column. + +*** Lookup functions +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: Lookup functions for searching tables. +:END: +#+cindex: lookup functions in tables +#+cindex: table lookup functions + +Org has three predefined Emacs Lisp functions for lookups in tables. + +- =(org-lookup-first VAL S-LIST R-LIST &optional PREDICATE)= :: + + #+findex: org-lookup-first + Searches for the first element {{{var(S)}}} in list + {{{var(S-LIST)}}} for which + #+begin_src emacs-lisp + (PREDICATE VAL S) + #+end_src + is non-~nil~; returns the value from the corresponding position in + list {{{var(R-LIST)}}}. The default {{{var(PREDICATE)}}} is + ~equal~. Note that the parameters {{{var(VAL)}}} and {{{var(S)}}} + are passed to {{{var(PREDICATE)}}} in the same order as the + corresponding parameters are in the call to ~org-lookup-first~, + where {{{var(VAL)}}} precedes {{{var(S-LIST)}}}. If + {{{var(R-LIST)}}} is ~nil~, the matching element {{{var(S)}}} of + {{{var(S-LIST)}}} is returned. + +- =(org-lookup-last VAL S-LIST R-LIST &optional PREDICATE)= :: + + #+findex: org-lookup-last + Similar to ~org-lookup-first~ above, but searches for the /last/ + element for which {{{var(PREDICATE)}}} is non-~nil~. + +- =(org-lookup-all VAL S-LIST R-LIST &optional PREDICATE)= :: + + #+findex: org-lookup-all + Similar to ~org-lookup-first~, but searches for /all/ elements for + which {{{var(PREDICATE)}}} is non-~nil~, and returns /all/ + corresponding values. This function can not be used by itself in + a formula, because it returns a list of values. However, powerful + lookups can be built when this function is combined with other Emacs + Lisp functions. + +If the ranges used in these functions contain empty fields, the =E= +mode for the formula should usually be specified: otherwise empty +fields are not included in {{{var(S-LIST)}}} and/or {{{var(R-LIST)}}} +which can, for example, result in an incorrect mapping from an element +of {{{var(S-LIST)}}} to the corresponding element of +{{{var(R-LIST)}}}. + +These three functions can be used to implement associative arrays, +count matching cells, rank results, group data, etc. For practical +examples see [[https://orgmode.org/worg/org-tutorials/org-lookups.html][this tutorial on Worg]]. + +*** Editing and debugging formulas +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: Fixing formulas. +:END: +#+cindex: formula editing +#+cindex: editing, of table formulas + +#+vindex: org-table-use-standard-references +You can edit individual formulas in the minibuffer or directly in the +field. Org can also prepare a special buffer with all active formulas +of a table. When offering a formula for editing, Org converts +references to the standard format (like =B3= or =D&=) if possible. If +you prefer to only work with the internal format (like =@3$2= or +=$4=), configure the variable ~org-table-use-standard-references~. + +- {{{kbd(C-c =)}}} or {{{kbd(C-u C-c =)}}} (~org-table-eval-formula~) :: + + #+kindex: C-c = + #+kindex: C-u C-c = + #+findex: org-table-eval-formula + Edit the formula associated with the current column/field in the + minibuffer. See [[*Column formulas]], and [[*Field and range formulas]]. + +- {{{kbd(C-u C-u C-c =)}}} (~org-table-eval-formula~) :: + + #+kindex: C-u C-u C-c = + #+findex: org-table-eval-formula + Re-insert the active formula (either a field formula, or a column + formula) into the current field, so that you can edit it directly in + the field. The advantage over editing in the minibuffer is that you + can use the command {{{kbd(C-c ?)}}}. + +- {{{kbd(C-c ?)}}} (~org-table-field-info~) :: + + #+kindex: C-c ? + #+findex: org-table-field-info + While editing a formula in a table field, highlight the field(s) + referenced by the reference at point position in the formula. + +- {{{kbd(C-c })}}} (~org-table-toggle-coordinate-overlays~) :: + + #+kindex: C-c @} + #+findex: org-table-toggle-coordinate-overlays + Toggle the display of row and column numbers for a table, using + overlays. These are updated each time the table is aligned; you can + force it with {{{kbd(C-c C-c)}}}. + +- {{{kbd(C-c {)}}} (~org-table-toggle-formula-debugger~) :: + + #+kindex: C-c @{ + #+findex: org-table-toggle-formula-debugger + Toggle the formula debugger on and off. See below. + +- {{{kbd(C-c ')}}} (~org-table-edit-formulas~) :: + + #+kindex: C-c ' + #+findex: org-table-edit-formulas + Edit all formulas for the current table in a special buffer, where + the formulas are displayed one per line. If the current field has + an active formula, point in the formula editor marks it. While + inside the special buffer, Org automatically highlights any field or + range reference at point position. You may edit, remove and add + formulas, and use the following commands: + + - {{{kbd(C-c C-c)}}} or {{{kbd(C-x C-s)}}} (~org-table-fedit-finish~) :: + + #+kindex: C-x C-s + #+kindex: C-c C-c + #+findex: org-table-fedit-finish + Exit the formula editor and store the modified formulas. With + {{{kbd(C-u)}}} prefix, also apply the new formulas to the + entire table. + + - {{{kbd(C-c C-q)}}} (~org-table-fedit-abort~) :: + + #+kindex: C-c C-q + #+findex: org-table-fedit-abort + Exit the formula editor without installing changes. + + - {{{kbd(C-c C-r)}}} (~org-table-fedit-toggle-ref-type~) :: + + #+kindex: C-c C-r + #+findex: org-table-fedit-toggle-ref-type + Toggle all references in the formula editor between standard (like + =B3=) and internal (like =@3$2=). + + - {{{kbd(TAB)}}} (~org-table-fedit-lisp-indent~) :: + + #+kindex: TAB + #+findex: org-table-fedit-lisp-indent + Pretty-print or indent Lisp formula at point. When in a line + containing a Lisp formula, format the formula according to Emacs + Lisp rules. Another {{{kbd(TAB)}}} collapses the formula back + again. In the open formula, {{{kbd(TAB)}}} re-indents just like + in Emacs Lisp mode. + + - {{{kbd(M-TAB)}}} (~lisp-complete-symbol~) :: + + #+kindex: M-TAB + #+findex: lisp-complete-symbol + Complete Lisp symbols, just like in Emacs Lisp mode. + + - {{{kbd(S-UP)}}}, {{{kbd(S-DOWN)}}}, {{{kbd(S-LEFT)}}}, {{{kbd(S-RIGHT)}}} :: + + #+kindex: S-UP + #+kindex: S-DOWN + #+kindex: S-LEFT + #+kindex: S-RIGHT + #+findex: org-table-fedit-ref-up + #+findex: org-table-fedit-ref-down + #+findex: org-table-fedit-ref-left + #+findex: org-table-fedit-ref-right + Shift the reference at point. For example, if the reference is + =B3= and you press {{{kbd(S-RIGHT)}}}, it becomes =C3=. This also + works for relative references and for hline references. + + - {{{kbd(M-S-UP)}}} (~org-table-fedit-line-up~) :: + + #+kindex: M-S-UP + #+findex: org-table-fedit-line-up + Move the test line for column formulas up in the Org buffer. + + - {{{kbd(M-S-DOWN)}}} (~org-table-fedit-line-down~) :: + + #+kindex: M-S-DOWN + #+findex: org-table-fedit-line-down + Move the test line for column formulas down in the Org buffer. + + - {{{kbd(M-UP)}}} (~org-table-fedit-scroll-up~) :: + + #+kindex: M-UP + #+findex: org-table-fedit-scroll-up + Scroll up the window displaying the table. + + - {{{kbd(M-DOWN)}}} (~org-table-fedit-scroll-down~) :: + + #+kindex: M-DOWN + #+findex: org-table-fedit-scroll-down + Scroll down the window displaying the table. + + - {{{kbd(C-c })}}} :: + + #+kindex: C-c @} + #+findex: org-table-toggle-coordinate-overlays + Turn the coordinate grid in the table on and off. + +Making a table field blank does not remove the formula associated with +the field, because that is stored in a different line---the =TBLFM= +keyword line. During the next recalculation, the field will be filled +again. To remove a formula from a field, you have to give an empty +reply when prompted for the formula, or to edit the =TBLFM= keyword. + +#+kindex: C-c C-c +You may edit the =TBLFM= keyword directly and re-apply the changed +equations with {{{kbd(C-c C-c)}}} in that line or with the normal +recalculation commands in the table. + +**** Using multiple =TBLFM= lines +:PROPERTIES: +:UNNUMBERED: notoc +:END: +#+cindex: multiple formula lines +#+cindex: @samp{TBLFM} keywords, multiple +#+cindex: @samp{TBLFM}, switching + +#+kindex: C-c C-c +You may apply the formula temporarily. This is useful when you want +to switch the formula applied to the table. Place multiple =TBLFM= +keywords right after the table, and then press {{{kbd(C-c C-c)}}} on +the formula to apply. Here is an example: + +#+begin_example +| x | y | +|---+---| +| 1 | | +| 2 | | +,#+TBLFM: $2=$1*1 +,#+TBLFM: $2=$1*2 +#+end_example + +#+texinfo: @noindent +Pressing {{{kbd(C-c C-c)}}} in the line of =#+TBLFM: $2=$1*2= yields: + +#+begin_example +| x | y | +|---+---| +| 1 | 2 | +| 2 | 4 | +,#+TBLFM: $2=$1*1 +,#+TBLFM: $2=$1*2 +#+end_example + +#+texinfo: @noindent +If you recalculate this table, with {{{kbd(C-u C-c *)}}}, for example, +you get the following result from applying only the first =TBLFM= +keyword. + +#+begin_example +| x | y | +|---+---| +| 1 | 1 | +| 2 | 2 | +,#+TBLFM: $2=$1*1 +,#+TBLFM: $2=$1*2 +#+end_example + +**** Debugging formulas +:PROPERTIES: +:UNNUMBERED: notoc +:END: +#+cindex: formula debugging +#+cindex: debugging, of table formulas + +When the evaluation of a formula leads to an error, the field content +becomes the string =#ERROR=. If you would like to see what is going +on during variable substitution and calculation in order to find +a bug, turn on formula debugging in the Tbl menu and repeat the +calculation, for example by pressing {{{kbd(C-u C-u C-c = RET)}}} in +a field. Detailed information are displayed. + +*** Updating the table +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: Recomputing all dependent fields. +:END: +#+cindex: recomputing table fields +#+cindex: updating, table + +Recalculation of a table is normally not automatic, but needs to be +triggered by a command. To make recalculation at least +semi-automatic, see [[*Advanced features]]. + +In order to recalculate a line of a table or the entire table, use the +following commands: + +- {{{kbd(C-c *)}}} (~org-table-recalculate~) :: + + #+kindex: C-c * + #+findex: org-table-recalculate + Recalculate the current row by first applying the stored column + formulas from left to right, and all field/range formulas in the + current row. + +- {{{kbd(C-u C-c *)}}} or {{{kbd(C-u C-c C-c)}}} :: + + #+kindex: C-u C-c * + #+kindex: C-u C-c C-c + Recompute the entire table, line by line. Any lines before the + first hline are left alone, assuming that these are part of the + table header. + +- {{{kbd(C-u C-u C-c *)}}} or {{{kbd(C-u C-u C-c C-c)}}} (~org-table-iterate~) :: + + #+kindex: C-u C-u C-c * + #+kindex: C-u C-u C-c C-c + #+findex: org-table-iterate + Iterate the table by recomputing it until no further changes occur. + This may be necessary if some computed fields use the value of other + fields that are computed /later/ in the calculation sequence. + +- {{{kbd(M-x org-table-recalculate-buffer-tables)}}} :: + + #+findex: org-table-recalculate-buffer-tables + Recompute all tables in the current buffer. + +- {{{kbd(M-x org-table-iterate-buffer-tables)}}} :: + + #+findex: org-table-iterate-buffer-tables + Iterate all tables in the current buffer, in order to converge + table-to-table dependencies. + +*** Advanced features +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: Field and column names, automatic recalculation... +:END: + +If you want the recalculation of fields to happen automatically, or if +you want to be able to assign /names/[fn:22] to fields and columns, +you need to reserve the first column of the table for special marking +characters. + +- {{{kbd(C-#)}}} (~org-table-rotate-recalc-marks~) :: + + #+kindex: C-# + #+findex: org-table-rotate-recalc-marks + Rotate the calculation mark in first column through the states =#=, + =*=, =!=, =$=. When there is an active region, change all marks in + the region. + +Here is an example of a table that collects exam results of students +and makes use of these features: + +#+begin_example +|---+---------+--------+--------+--------+-------+------| +| | Student | Prob 1 | Prob 2 | Prob 3 | Total | Note | +|---+---------+--------+--------+--------+-------+------| +| ! | | P1 | P2 | P3 | Tot | | +| # | Maximum | 10 | 15 | 25 | 50 | 10.0 | +| ^ | | m1 | m2 | m3 | mt | | +|---+---------+--------+--------+--------+-------+------| +| # | Peter | 10 | 8 | 23 | 41 | 8.2 | +| # | Sam | 2 | 4 | 3 | 9 | 1.8 | +|---+---------+--------+--------+--------+-------+------| +| | Average | | | | 25.0 | | +| ^ | | | | | at | | +| $ | max=50 | | | | | | +|---+---------+--------+--------+--------+-------+------| +,#+TBLFM: $6=vsum($P1..$P3)::$7=10*$Tot/$max;%.1f::$at=vmean(@-II..@-I);%.1f +#+end_example + +#+attr_texinfo: :tag Important +#+begin_quote +Please note that for these special tables, recalculating the table +with {{{kbd(C-u C-c *)}}} only affects rows that are marked =#= or +=*=, and fields that have a formula assigned to the field itself. The +column formulas are not applied in rows with empty first field. +#+end_quote + +#+cindex: marking characters, tables +The marking characters have the following meaning: + +- =!= :: + + The fields in this line define names for the columns, so that you + may refer to a column as =$Tot= instead of =$6=. + +- =^= :: + + This row defines names for the fields /above/ the row. With such + a definition, any formula in the table may use =$m1= to refer to the + value =10=. Also, if you assign a formula to a names field, it is + stored as =$name = ...=. + +- =_= :: + + Similar to =^=, but defines names for the fields in the row /below/. + +- =$= :: + + Fields in this row can define /parameters/ for formulas. For + example, if a field in a =$= row contains =max=50=, then formulas in + this table can refer to the value 50 using =$max=. Parameters work + exactly like constants, only that they can be defined on a per-table + basis. + +- =#= :: + + Fields in this row are automatically recalculated when pressing + {{{kbd(TAB)}}} or {{{kbd(RET)}}} or {{{kbd(S-TAB)}}} in this row. + Also, this row is selected for a global recalculation with + {{{kbd(C-u C-c *)}}}. Unmarked lines are left alone by this + command. + +- =*= :: + + Selects this line for global recalculation with {{{kbd(C-u C-c + *)}}}, but not for automatic recalculation. Use this when automatic + recalculation slows down editing too much. + +- =/= :: + + Do not export this line. Useful for lines that contain the + narrowing == markers or column group markers. + +Finally, just to whet your appetite for what can be done with the +fantastic Calc package, here is a table that computes the Taylor +series of degree n at location x for a couple of functions. + +#+begin_example +|---+-------------+---+-----+--------------------------------------| +| | Func | n | x | Result | +|---+-------------+---+-----+--------------------------------------| +| # | exp(x) | 1 | x | 1 + x | +| # | exp(x) | 2 | x | 1 + x + x^2 / 2 | +| # | exp(x) | 3 | x | 1 + x + x^2 / 2 + x^3 / 6 | +| # | x^2+sqrt(x) | 2 | x=0 | x*(0.5 / 0) + x^2 (2 - 0.25 / 0) / 2 | +| # | x^2+sqrt(x) | 2 | x=1 | 2 + 2.5 x - 2.5 + 0.875 (x - 1)^2 | +| * | tan(x) | 3 | x | 0.0175 x + 1.77e-6 x^3 | +|---+-------------+---+-----+--------------------------------------| +,#+TBLFM: $5=taylor($2,$4,$3);n3 +#+end_example + +** Org Plot +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: Plotting from Org tables. +:END: +#+cindex: graph, in tables +#+cindex: plot tables using Gnuplot + +Org Plot can produce graphs of information stored in Org tables, +either graphically or in ASCII art. + +*** Graphical plots using Gnuplot +:PROPERTIES: +:UNNUMBERED: notoc +:END: + +#+cindex: @samp{PLOT}, keyword +Org Plot can produce 2D and 3D graphs of information stored in Org +tables using [[https://www.gnuplot.info/][Gnuplot]] and [[http://cars9.uchicago.edu/~ravel/software/gnuplot-mode.html][Gnuplot mode]]. To see this in action, ensure +that you have both Gnuplot and Gnuplot mode installed on your system, +then call {{{kbd(C-c \quot g)}}} or {{{kbd(M-x org-plot/gnuplot)}}} on the +following table. + +#+begin_example +,#+PLOT: title:"Citas" ind:1 deps:(3) type:2d with:histograms set:"yrange [0:]" +| Sede | Max cites | H-index | +|-----------+-----------+---------| +| Chile | 257.72 | 21.39 | +| Leeds | 165.77 | 19.68 | +| Sao Paolo | 71.00 | 11.50 | +| Stockholm | 134.19 | 14.33 | +| Morelia | 257.56 | 17.67 | +#+end_example + +Org Plot supports a range of plot types, and provides the ability to add more. +For example, a radar plot can be generated like so: +#+begin_example +,#+PLOT: title:"An evaluation of plaintext document formats" transpose:yes type:radar min:0 max:4 +| Format | Fine-grained-control | Initial Effort | Syntax simplicity | Editor Support | Integrations | Ease-of-referencing | Versatility | +|-------------------+----------------------+----------------+-------------------+----------------+--------------+---------------------+-------------| +| Word | 2 | 4 | 4 | 2 | 3 | 2 | 2 | +| LaTeX | 4 | 1 | 1 | 3 | 2 | 4 | 3 | +| Org Mode | 4 | 2 | 3.5 | 1 | 4 | 4 | 4 | +| Markdown | 1 | 3 | 3 | 4 | 3 | 3 | 1 | +| Markdown + Pandoc | 2.5 | 2.5 | 2.5 | 3 | 3 | 3 | 2 | +#+end_example + +Notice that Org Plot is smart enough to apply the table's headers as +labels. Further control over the labels, type, content, and +appearance of plots can be exercised through the =PLOT= keyword +preceding a table. See below for a complete list of Org Plot options. +For more information and examples see the [[https://orgmode.org/worg/org-tutorials/org-plot.html][Org Plot tutorial]]. + +**** Plot options +:PROPERTIES: +:UNNUMBERED: notoc +:END: + +- =set= :: + + Specify any Gnuplot option to be set when graphing. + +- =title= :: + + Specify the title of the plot. + +- =ind= :: + + Specify which column of the table to use as the =x= axis. + +- =deps= :: + + Specify the columns to graph as a Lisp style list, surrounded by + parentheses and separated by spaces for example =dep:(3 4)= to graph + the third and fourth columns. Defaults to graphing all other + columns aside from the =ind= column. + +- transpose :: + + When =y=, =yes=, or =t= attempt to transpose the table data before + plotting. Also recognises the shorthand option =trans=. + +- =type= :: + + Specify the type of the plot, by default one of =2d=, =3d=, =radar=, or =grid=. + Available types can be customised with ~org-plot/preset-plot-types~. + +- =with= :: + + Specify a =with= option to be inserted for every column being + plotted, e.g., =lines=, =points=, =boxes=, =impulses=. Defaults to + =lines=. + +- =file= :: + + If you want to plot to a file, specify + ="path/to/desired/output-file"=. + +- =labels= :: + + List of labels to be used for the =deps=. Defaults to the column + headers if they exist. + +- =line= :: + + Specify an entire line to be inserted in the Gnuplot script. + +- =map= :: + + When plotting =3d= or =grid= types, set this to =t= to graph a flat + mapping rather than a =3d= slope. + +- min :: + + Provides a minimum axis value that may be used by a plot type. + Implicitly assumes the =y= axis is being referred to. Can + explicitly provide a value for a either the =x= or =y= axis with + =xmin= and =ymin=. + +- max :: + + Provides a maximum axis value that may be used by a plot type. + Implicitly assumes the =y= axis is being referred to. Can + explicitly provide a value for a either the =x= or =y= axis with + =xmax= and =ymax=. + +- ticks :: + + Provides a desired number of axis ticks to display, that may be used + by a plot type. If none is given a plot type that requires ticks + will use ~org--plot/sensible-tick-num~ to try to determine a good + value. + +- =timefmt= :: + + Specify format of Org mode timestamps as they will be parsed by + Gnuplot. Defaults to =%Y-%m-%d-%H:%M:%S=. + +- =script= :: + + If you want total control, you can specify a script file---place the + file name between double-quotes---which will be used to plot. + Before plotting, every instance of =$datafile= in the specified + script will be replaced with the path to the generated data file. + Note: even if you set this option, you may still want to specify the + plot type, as that can impact the content of the data file. + +*** ASCII bar plots +:PROPERTIES: +:UNNUMBERED: notoc +:END: + +While point is on a column, typing {{{kbd(C-c " a)}}} or {{{kbd(M-x +orgtbl-ascii-plot)}}} create a new column containing an ASCII-art bars +plot. The plot is implemented through a regular column formula. When +the source column changes, the bar plot may be updated by refreshing +the table, for example typing {{{kbd(C-u C-c *)}}}. + +#+begin_example +| Sede | Max cites | | +|---------------+-----------+--------------| +| Chile | 257.72 | WWWWWWWWWWWW | +| Leeds | 165.77 | WWWWWWWh | +| Sao Paolo | 71.00 | WWW; | +| Stockholm | 134.19 | WWWWWW: | +| Morelia | 257.56 | WWWWWWWWWWWH | +| Rochefourchat | 0.00 | | +,#+TBLFM: $3='(orgtbl-ascii-draw $2 0.0 257.72 12) +#+end_example + +The formula is an Elisp call. + +#+attr_texinfo: :options orgtbl-ascii-draw value min max &optional width +#+begin_defun +Draw an ASCII bar in a table. + +{{{var(VALUE)}}} is the value to plot. + +{{{var(MIN)}}} is the value displayed as an empty bar. {{{var(MAX)}}} +is the value filling all the {{{var(WIDTH)}}}. Sources values outside +this range are displayed as =too small= or =too large=. + +{{{var(WIDTH)}}} is the number of characters of the bar plot. It +defaults to =12=. +#+end_defun + +* Hyperlinks +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: Notes in context. +:END: +#+cindex: hyperlinks + +Like HTML, Org provides support for links inside a file, external +links to other files, Usenet articles, emails, and much more. + +** Link Format +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: How links in Org are formatted. +:END: +#+cindex: link format +#+cindex: format, of links + +#+cindex: angle bracket links +#+cindex: plain links +Org recognizes plain URIs, possibly wrapped within angle +brackets[fn:23], and activate them as clickable links. + +#+cindex: bracket links +The general link format, however, looks like this: + +: [[LINK][DESCRIPTION]] + +#+texinfo: @noindent +or alternatively + +: [[LINK]] + +#+cindex: escape syntax, for links +#+cindex: backslashes, in links +Some =\=, =[= and =]= characters in the {{{var(LINK)}}} part need to +be "escaped", i.e., preceded by another =\= character. More +specifically, the following characters, and only them, must be +escaped: + +1. all =[= and =]= characters, +2. every =\= character preceding either =]= or =[=, +3. every =\= character at the end of the link. + +#+findex: org-link-escape +Functions inserting links (see [[*Handling Links]]) properly escape +ambiguous characters. You only need to bother about the rules above +when inserting directly, or yanking, a URI within square brackets. +When in doubt, you may use the function ~org-link-escape~, which turns +a link string into its escaped form. + +Once a link in the buffer is complete, with all brackets present, Org +changes the display so that =DESCRIPTION= is displayed instead of +=[[LINK][DESCRIPTION]]= and =LINK= is displayed instead of =[[LINK]]=. +Links are highlighted in the ~org-link~ face, which, by default, is an +underlined face. + +You can directly edit the visible part of a link. This can be either +the {{{var(LINK)}}} part, if there is no description, or the +{{{var(DESCRIPTION)}}} part otherwise. To also edit the invisible +{{{var(LINK)}}} part, use {{{kbd(C-c C-l)}}} with point on the link +(see [[*Handling Links]]). + +If you place point at the beginning or just behind the end of the +displayed text and press {{{kbd(BS)}}}, you remove +the---invisible---bracket at that location[fn:24]. This makes the link +incomplete and the internals are again displayed as plain text. +Inserting the missing bracket hides the link internals again. To show +the internal structure of all links, use the menu: Org \rarr Hyperlinks \rarr +Literal links. + +** Internal Links +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: Links to other places in the current file. +:END: +#+cindex: internal links +#+cindex: links, internal + +A link that does not look like a URL---i.e., does not start with +a known scheme or a file name---refers to the current document. You +can follow it with {{{kbd(C-c C-o)}}} when point is on the link, or +with a mouse click (see [[*Handling Links]]). + +#+cindex: @samp{CUSTOM_ID}, property +Org provides several refinements to internal navigation within +a document. Most notably, a construct like =[[#my-custom-id]]= +specifically targets the entry with the =CUSTOM_ID= property set to +=my-custom-id=. Also, an internal link looking like =[[*Some +section]]= points to a headline with the name =Some section=[fn:25]. + +#+cindex: targets, for links +When the link does not belong to any of the cases above, Org looks for +a /dedicated target/: the same string in double angular brackets, like +=<>=. + +#+cindex: @samp{NAME}, keyword +If no dedicated target exists, the link tries to match the exact name +of an element within the buffer. Naming is done, unsurprisingly, with +the =NAME= keyword, which has to be put in the line before the element +it refers to, as in the following example + +#+begin_example +,#+NAME: My Target +| a | table | +|----+------------| +| of | four cells | +#+end_example + +#+vindex: org-link-search-must-match-exact-headline +Ultimately, if none of the above succeeds, Org searches for a headline +that is exactly the link text but may also include a TODO keyword and +tags, or initiates a plain text search, according to the value of +~org-link-search-must-match-exact-headline~. + +Note that you must make sure custom IDs, dedicated targets, and names +are unique throughout the document. Org provides a linter to assist +you in the process, if needed. See [[*Org Syntax]]. + +During export, internal links are used to mark objects and assign them +a number. Marked objects are then referenced by links pointing to +them. In particular, links without a description appear as the number +assigned to the marked object[fn:26]. In the following excerpt from +an Org buffer + +#+begin_example +1. one item +2. <>another item +Here we refer to item [[target]]. +#+end_example + +#+texinfo: @noindent +The last sentence will appear as =Here we refer to item 2= when +exported. + +In non-Org files, the search looks for the words in the link text. In +the above example the search would be for =target=. + +Following a link pushes a mark onto Org's own mark ring. You can +return to the previous position with {{{kbd(C-c &)}}}. Using this +command several times in direct succession goes back to positions +recorded earlier. + +** Radio Targets +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: Make targets trigger links in plain text. +:END: +#+cindex: radio targets +#+cindex: targets, radio +#+cindex: links, radio targets + +Org can automatically turn any occurrences of certain target names in +normal text into a link. So without explicitly creating a link, the +text connects to the target radioing its position. Radio targets are +enclosed by triple angular brackets. For example, a target =<<>>= causes each occurrence of =my target= in normal text to +become activated as a link. The Org file is scanned automatically for +radio targets only when the file is first loaded into Emacs. To +update the target list during editing, press {{{kbd(C-c C-c)}}} with +point on or at a target. + +** External Links +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: URL-like links to the world. +:END: +#+cindex: links, external +#+cindex: external links +#+cindex: attachment links +#+cindex: BBDB links +#+cindex: Elisp links +#+cindex: file links +#+cindex: Gnus links +#+cindex: Help links +#+cindex: IRC links +#+cindex: Info links +#+cindex: MH-E links +#+cindex: Rmail links +#+cindex: shell links +#+cindex: URL links +#+cindex: Usenet links + +Org supports links to files, websites, Usenet and email messages, BBDB +database entries and links to both IRC conversations and their logs. +External links are URL-like locators. They start with a short +identifying string followed by a colon. There can be no space after +the colon. + +Here is the full set of built-in link types: + +- =file= :: + + File links. File name may be remote, absolute, or relative. + + Additionally, you can specify a line number, or a text search. + In Org files, you may link to a headline name, a custom ID, or a + code reference instead. + + As a special case, "file" prefix may be omitted if the file name + is complete, e.g., it starts with =./=, or =/=. + +- =attachment= :: + + Same as file links but for files and folders attached to the current + node (see [[*Attachments]]). Attachment links are intended to behave + exactly as file links but for files relative to the attachment + directory. + +- =bbdb= :: + + Link to a BBDB record, with possible regexp completion. + +- =docview= :: + + Link to a document opened with DocView mode. You may specify a page + number. + +- =doi= :: + + Link to an electronic resource, through its handle. + +- =elisp= :: + + Execute an Elisp command upon activation. + +- =gnus=, =rmail=, =mhe= :: + + Link to messages or folders from a given Emacs' MUA. + +- =help= :: + + Display documentation of a symbol in =*Help*= buffer. + +- =http=, =https= :: + + Web links. + +- =id= :: + + Link to a specific headline by its ID property, in an Org file. + +- =info= :: + + Link to an Info manual, or to a specific node. + +- =irc= :: + + Link to an IRC channel. + +- =mailto= :: + + Link to message composition. + +- =news= :: + + Usenet links. + +- =shell= :: + + Execute a shell command upon activation. + +The following table illustrates the link types above, along with their +options: + +| Link Type | Example | +|------------+----------------------------------------------------------| +| http | =http://staff.science.uva.nl/c.dominik/= | +| https | =https://orgmode.org/= | +| doi | =doi:10.1000/182= | +| file | =file:/home/dominik/images/jupiter.jpg= | +| | =/home/dominik/images/jupiter.jpg= (same as above) | +| | =file:papers/last.pdf= | +| | =./papers/last.pdf= (same as above) | +| | =file:/ssh:me@some.where:papers/last.pdf= (remote) | +| | =/ssh:me@some.where:papers/last.pdf= (same as above) | +| | =file:sometextfile::NNN= (jump to line number) | +| | =file:projects.org= | +| | =file:projects.org::some words= (text search)[fn:27] | +| | =file:projects.org::*task title= (headline search) | +| | =file:projects.org::#custom-id= (headline search) | +| attachment | =attachment:projects.org= | +| | =attachment:projects.org::some words= (text search) | +| docview | =docview:papers/last.pdf::NNN= | +| id | =id:B7423F4D-2E8A-471B-8810-C40F074717E9= | +| news | =news:comp.emacs= | +| mailto | =mailto:adent@galaxy.net= | +| mhe | =mhe:folder= (folder link) | +| | =mhe:folder#id= (message link) | +| rmail | =rmail:folder= (folder link) | +| | =rmail:folder#id= (message link) | +| gnus | =gnus:group= (group link) | +| | =gnus:group#id= (article link) | +| bbdb | =bbdb:R.*Stallman= (record with regexp) | +| irc | =irc:/irc.com/#emacs/bob= | +| help | =help:org-store-link= | +| info | =info:org#External links= | +| shell | =shell:ls *.org= | +| elisp | =elisp:(find-file "Elisp.org")= (Elisp form to evaluate) | +| | =elisp:org-agenda= (interactive Elisp command) | + +#+cindex: VM links +#+cindex: Wanderlust links +On top of these built-in link types, additional ones are available +through the =org-contrib= repository (see [[*Installation]]). For +example, these links to VM or Wanderlust messages are available when +you load the corresponding libraries from the =org-contrib= +repository: + +| =vm:folder= | VM folder link | +| =vm:folder#id= | VM message link | +| =vm://myself@some.where.org/folder#id= | VM on remote machine | +| =vm-imap:account:folder= | VM IMAP folder link | +| =vm-imap:account:folder#id= | VM IMAP message link | +| =wl:folder= | Wanderlust folder link | +| =wl:folder#id= | Wanderlust message link | + +For information on customizing Org to add new link types, see [[*Adding +Hyperlink Types]]. + +A link should be enclosed in double brackets and may contain +descriptive text to be displayed instead of the URL (see [[*Link +Format]]), for example: + +: [[https://www.gnu.org/software/emacs/][GNU Emacs]] + +If the description is a file name or URL that points to an image, HTML +export (see [[*HTML Export]]) inlines the image as a clickable button. If +there is no description at all and the link points to an image, that +image is inlined into the exported HTML file. + +#+cindex: square brackets, around links +#+cindex: angular brackets, around links +#+cindex: plain text external links +Org also recognizes external links amid normal text and activates them +as links. If spaces must be part of the link (for example in +=bbdb:R.*Stallman=), or if you need to remove ambiguities about the +end of the link, enclose the link in square or angular brackets. + +** Handling Links +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: Creating, inserting and following. +:END: +#+cindex: links, handling + +Org provides methods to create a link in the correct syntax, to insert +it into an Org file, and to follow the link. + +#+findex: org-store-link +#+cindex: storing links +The main function is ~org-store-link~, called with {{{kbd(M-x +org-store-link)}}}. Because of its importance, we suggest to bind it +to a widely available key (see [[*Activation]]). It stores a link to the +current location. The link is stored for later insertion into an Org +buffer---see below. The kind of link that is created depends on the +current buffer: + +- /Org mode buffers/ :: + + For Org files, if there is a =<>= at point, the link points + to the target. Otherwise it points to the current headline, which + is also the description[fn:28]. + + #+vindex: org-id-link-to-org-use-id + #+cindex: @samp{CUSTOM_ID}, property + #+cindex: @samp{ID}, property + If the headline has a =CUSTOM_ID= property, store a link to this + custom ID. In addition or alternatively, depending on the value of + ~org-id-link-to-org-use-id~, create and/or use a globally unique + =ID= property for the link[fn:29]. So using this command in Org + buffers potentially creates two links: a human-readable link from + the custom ID, and one that is globally unique and works even if the + entry is moved from file to file. The =ID= property can be either a + UUID (default) or a timestamp, depending on ~org-id-method~. Later, + when inserting the link, you need to decide which one to use. + +- /Email/News clients: VM, Rmail, Wanderlust, MH-E, Gnus/ :: + + #+vindex: org-link-email-description-format + Pretty much all Emacs mail clients are supported. The link points + to the current article, or, in some Gnus buffers, to the group. The + description is constructed according to the variable + ~org-link-email-description-format~. By default, it refers to the + addressee and the subject. + +- /Web browsers: W3, W3M and EWW/ :: + + Here the link is the current URL, with the page title as the + description. + +- /Contacts: BBDB/ :: + + Links created in a BBDB buffer point to the current entry. + +- /Chat: IRC/ :: + + #+vindex: org-irc-links-to-logs + For IRC links, if the variable ~org-irc-link-to-logs~ is non-~nil~, + create a =file= style link to the relevant point in the logs for the + current conversation. Otherwise store an =irc= style link to the + user/channel/server under the point. + +- /Other files/ :: + + For any other file, the link points to the file, with a search + string (see [[*Search Options in File Links]]) pointing to the contents + of the current line. If there is an active region, the selected + words form the basis of the search string. You can write custom Lisp + functions to select the search string and perform the search for + particular file types (see [[*Custom Searches]]). + + You can also define dedicated links to other files. See [[*Adding + Hyperlink Types]]. + +- /Agenda view/ :: + + When point is in an agenda view, the created link points to the + entry referenced by the current line. + +From an Org buffer, the following commands create, navigate or, more +generally, act on links. + +#+attr_texinfo: :sep , +- {{{kbd(C-c C-l)}}} (~org-insert-link~) :: + + #+kindex: C-c C-l + #+findex: org-insert-link + #+cindex: link completion + #+cindex: completion, of links + #+cindex: inserting links + #+vindex: org-link-keep-stored-after-insertion + Insert a link[fn:30]. This prompts for a link to be inserted into + the buffer. You can just type a link, using text for an internal + link, or one of the link type prefixes mentioned in the examples + above. The link is inserted into the buffer, along with + a descriptive text[fn:31]. If some text was selected at this time, + it becomes the default description. + + - /Inserting stored links/ :: + + All links stored during the current session are part of the + history for this prompt, so you can access them with {{{kbd(UP)}}} + and {{{kbd(DOWN)}}} (or {{{kbd(M-p)}}}, {{{kbd(M-n)}}}). + + - /Completion support/ :: + + Completion with {{{kbd(TAB)}}} helps you to insert valid link + prefixes like =http= or =ftp=, including the prefixes defined + through link abbreviations (see [[*Link Abbreviations]]). If you + press {{{kbd(RET)}}} after inserting only the prefix, Org offers + specific completion support for some link types[fn:32]. For + example, if you type {{{kbd(f i l e RET)}}}---alternative access: + {{{kbd(C-u C-c C-l)}}}, see below---Org offers file name + completion, and after {{{kbd(b b d b RET)}}} you can complete + contact names. + +- {{{kbd(C-u C-c C-l)}}} :: + + #+cindex: file name completion + #+cindex: completion, of file names + #+kindex: C-u C-c C-l + When {{{kbd(C-c C-l)}}} is called with a {{{kbd(C-u)}}} prefix + argument, insert a link to a file. You may use file name completion + to select the name of the file. The path to the file is inserted + relative to the directory of the current Org file, if the linked + file is in the current directory or in a sub-directory of it, or if + the path is written relative to the current directory using =../=. + Otherwise an absolute path is used, if possible with =~/= for your + home directory. You can force an absolute path with two + {{{kbd(C-u)}}} prefixes. + +- {{{kbd(C-c C-l)}}} (with point on existing link) :: + + #+cindex: following links + When point is on an existing link, {{{kbd(C-c C-l)}}} allows you to + edit the link and description parts of the link. + +- {{{kbd(C-c C-o)}}} (~org-open-at-point~) :: + + #+kindex: C-c C-o + #+findex: org-open-at-point + #+vindex: org-file-apps + Open link at point. This launches a web browser for URL (using + ~browse-url-at-point~), run VM/MH-E/Wanderlust/Rmail/Gnus/BBDB for + the corresponding links, and execute the command in a shell link. + When point is on an internal link, this command runs the + corresponding search. When point is on the tags part of a headline, + it creates the corresponding tags view (see [[*Matching tags and + properties]]). If point is on a timestamp, it compiles the agenda for + that date. Furthermore, it visits text and remote files in =file= + links with Emacs and select a suitable application for local + non-text files. Classification of files is based on file extension + only. See option ~org-file-apps~. If you want to override the + default application and visit the file with Emacs, use + a {{{kbd(C-u)}}} prefix. If you want to avoid opening in Emacs, use + a {{{kbd(C-u C-u)}}} prefix. + + #+vindex: org-link-frame-setup + If point is on a headline, but not on a link, offer all links in the + headline and entry text. If you want to setup the frame + configuration for following links, customize ~org-link-frame-setup~. + +- {{{kbd(RET)}}} :: + + #+vindex: org-return-follows-link + #+kindex: RET + When ~org-return-follows-link~ is set, {{{kbd(RET)}}} also follows + the link at point. + +- {{{kbd(mouse-2)}}} or {{{kbd(mouse-1)}}} :: + + #+kindex: mouse-2 + #+kindex: mouse-1 + On links, {{{kbd(mouse-1)}}} and {{{kbd(mouse-2)}}} opens the link + just as {{{kbd(C-c C-o)}}} does. + +- {{{kbd(mouse-3)}}} :: + + #+vindex: org-link-use-indirect-buffer-for-internals + #+kindex: mouse-3 + Like {{{kbd(mouse-2)}}}, but force file links to be opened with + Emacs, and internal links to be displayed in another window[fn:33]. + +- {{{kbd(C-c %)}}} (~org-mark-ring-push~) :: + + #+kindex: C-c % + #+findex: org-mark-ring-push + #+cindex: mark ring + Push the current position onto the Org mark ring, to be able to + return easily. Commands following an internal link do this + automatically. + +- {{{kbd(C-c &)}}} (~org-mark-ring-goto~) :: + + #+kindex: C-c & + #+findex: org-mark-ring-goto + #+cindex: links, returning to + Jump back to a recorded position. A position is recorded by the + commands following internal links, and by {{{kbd(C-c %)}}}. Using + this command several times in direct succession moves through a ring + of previously recorded positions. + +- {{{kbd(C-c C-x C-n)}}} (~org-next-link~), {{{kbd(C-c C-x C-p)}}} (~org-previous-link~) :: + + #+kindex: C-c C-x C-p + #+findex: org-previous-link + #+kindex: C-c C-x C-n + #+findex: org-next-link + #+cindex: links, finding next/previous + Move forward/backward to the next link in the buffer. At the limit + of the buffer, the search fails once, and then wraps around. The + key bindings for this are really too long; you might want to bind + this also to {{{kbd(M-n)}}} and {{{kbd(M-p)}}}. + + #+begin_src emacs-lisp + (with-eval-after-load 'org + (define-key org-mode-map (kbd "M-n") #'org-next-link) + (define-key org-mode-map (kbd "M-p") #'org-previous-link)) + #+end_src + +** Using Links Outside Org +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: Linking from my C source code? +:END: + +#+findex: org-insert-link-global +#+findex: org-open-at-point-global +You can insert and follow links that have Org syntax not only in Org, +but in any Emacs buffer. For this, Org provides two functions: +~org-insert-link-global~ and ~org-open-at-point-global~. + +You might want to bind them to globally available keys. See +[[*Activation]] for some advice. + +** Link Abbreviations +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: Shortcuts for writing complex links. +:END: +#+cindex: link abbreviations +#+cindex: abbreviation, links + +Long URL can be cumbersome to type, and often many similar links are +needed in a document. For this you can use link abbreviations. An +abbreviated link looks like this + +: [[linkword:tag][description]] + +#+texinfo: @noindent +#+vindex: org-link-abbrev-alist +where the tag is optional. The /linkword/ must be a word, starting +with a letter, followed by letters, numbers, =-=, and =_=. +Abbreviations are resolved according to the information in the +variable ~org-link-abbrev-alist~ that relates the linkwords to +replacement text. Here is an example: + +#+begin_src emacs-lisp +(setq org-link-abbrev-alist + '(("bugzilla" . "http://10.1.2.9/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=") + ("Nu Html Checker" . "https://validator.w3.org/nu/?doc=%h") + ("duckduckgo" . "https://duckduckgo.com/?q=%s") + ("omap" . "http://nominatim.openstreetmap.org/search?q=%s&polygon=1") + ("ads" . "https://ui.adsabs.harvard.edu/search/q=%20author%3A\"%s\""))) +#+end_src + +If the replacement text contains the string =%s=, it is replaced with +the tag. Using =%h= instead of =%s= percent-encodes the tag (see the +example above, where we need to encode the URL parameter). Using +=%(my-function)= passes the tag to a custom Lisp function, and replace +it by the resulting string. + +If the replacement text do not contain any specifier, it is simply +appended to the string in order to create the link. + +Instead of a string, you may also specify a Lisp function to create +the link. Such a function will be called with the tag as the only +argument. + +With the above setting, you could link to a specific bug with +=[[bugzilla:129]]=, search the web for =OrgMode= with =[[duckduckgo:OrgMode]]=, +show the map location of the Free Software Foundation =[[gmap:51 +Franklin Street, Boston]]= or of Carsten office =[[omap:Science Park 904, +Amsterdam, The Netherlands]]= and find out what the Org author is doing +besides Emacs hacking with =[[ads:Dominik,C]]=. + +If you need special abbreviations just for a single Org buffer, you +can define them in the file with + +#+cindex: @samp{LINK}, keyword +#+begin_example +,#+LINK: bugzilla http://10.1.2.9/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id= +,#+LINK: duckduckgo https://duckduckgo.com/?q=%s +#+end_example + +In-buffer completion (see [[*Completion]]) can be used after =[= to +complete link abbreviations. You may also define a Lisp function that +implements special (e.g., completion) support for inserting such a +link with {{{kbd(C-c C-l)}}}. Such a function should not accept any +arguments, and should return the full link with a prefix. You can set +the link completion function like this: + +#+begin_src emacs-lisp +(org-link-set-parameter "type" :complete #'some-completion-function) +#+end_src + +** Search Options in File Links +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: Linking to a specific location. +:ALT_TITLE: Search Options +:END: +#+cindex: search option in file links +#+cindex: file links, searching +#+cindex: attachment links, searching + +File links can contain additional information to make Emacs jump to a +particular location in the file when following a link. This can be a +line number or a search option after a double colon[fn:34]. For +example, when the command ~org-store-link~ creates a link (see +[[*Handling Links]]) to a file, it encodes the words in the current line +as a search string that can be used to find this line back later when +following the link with {{{kbd(C-c C-o)}}}. + +Note that all search options apply for Attachment links in the same +way that they apply for File links. + +Here is the syntax of the different ways to attach a search to a file +link, together with explanations for each: + +#+begin_example +[[file:~/code/main.c::255]] +[[file:~/xx.org::My Target]] +[[file:~/xx.org::*My Target]] +[[file:~/xx.org::#my-custom-id]] +[[file:~/xx.org::/regexp/]] +[[attachment:main.c::255]] +#+end_example + +- =255= :: + + Jump to line 255. + +- =My Target= :: + + Search for a link target =<>=, or do a text search for + =my target=, similar to the search in internal links, see [[*Internal + Links]]. In HTML export (see [[*HTML Export]]), such a file link becomes + a HTML reference to the corresponding named anchor in the linked + file. + +- =*My Target= :: + + In an Org file, restrict search to headlines. + +- =#my-custom-id= :: + + Link to a heading with a =CUSTOM_ID= property + +- =/REGEXP/= :: + + Do a regular expression search for {{{var(REGEXP)}}} (see [[*Regular + Expressions]]). This uses the Emacs command ~occur~ to list all + matches in a separate window. If the target file is in Org mode, + ~org-occur~ is used to create a sparse tree with the matches. + +As a degenerate case, a file link with an empty file name can be used +to search the current file. For example, =[[file:::find me]]= does +a search for =find me= in the current file, just as =[[find me]]= +would. + +** Custom Searches +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: When the default search is not enough. +:END: +#+cindex: custom search strings +#+cindex: search strings, custom + +The default mechanism for creating search strings and for doing the +actual search related to a file link may not work correctly in all +cases. For example, BibTeX database files have many entries like +~year="1993"~ which would not result in good search strings, because +the only unique identification for a BibTeX entry is the citation key. + +#+vindex: org-create-file-search-functions +#+vindex: org-execute-file-search-functions +If you come across such a problem, you can write custom functions to +set the right search string for a particular file type, and to do the +search for the string in the file. Using ~add-hook~, these functions +need to be added to the hook variables +~org-create-file-search-functions~ and +~org-execute-file-search-functions~. See the docstring for these +variables for more information. Org actually uses this mechanism for +BibTeX database files, and you can use the corresponding code as an +implementation example. See the file =ol-bibtex.el=. + +* TODO Items +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: Every tree branch can be a TODO item. +:END: +#+cindex: TODO items + +Org mode does not maintain TODO lists as separate documents[fn:35]. +Instead, TODO items are an integral part of the notes file, because +TODO items usually come up while taking notes! With Org mode, simply +mark any entry in a tree as being a TODO item. In this way, +information is not duplicated, and the entire context from which the +TODO item emerged is always present. + +Of course, this technique for managing TODO items scatters them +throughout your notes file. Org mode compensates for this by +providing methods to give you an overview of all the things that you +have to do. + +** Basic TODO Functionality +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: Marking and displaying TODO entries. +:ALT_TITLE: TODO Basics +:END: + +Any headline becomes a TODO item when it starts with the word =TODO=, +for example: + +: *** TODO Write letter to Sam Fortune + +The most important commands to work with TODO entries are: + +- {{{kbd(C-c C-t)}}} (~org-todo~) :: + + #+kindex: C-c C-t + #+cindex: cycling, of TODO states + Rotate the TODO state of the current item among + + #+begin_example + ,-> (unmarked) -> TODO -> DONE --. + '--------------------------------' + #+end_example + + If TODO keywords have fast access keys (see [[*Fast access to TODO + states]]), prompt for a TODO keyword through the fast selection + interface; this is the default behavior when + ~org-use-fast-todo-selection~ is non-~nil~. + + The same state changing can also be done "remotely" from the agenda + buffer with the {{{kbd(t)}}} command key (see [[*Commands in the + Agenda Buffer]]). + +- {{{kbd(S-RIGHT)}}} {{{kbd(S-LEFT)}}} :: + + #+kindex: S-RIGHT + #+kindex: S-LEFT + #+vindex: org-treat-S-cursor-todo-selection-as-state-change + Select the following/preceding TODO state, similar to cycling. + Useful mostly if more than two TODO states are possible (see + [[*Extended Use of TODO Keywords]]). See also [[*Packages that conflict + with Org mode]], for a discussion of the interaction with + shift-selection. See also the variable + ~org-treat-S-cursor-todo-selection-as-state-change~. + +- {{{kbd(C-c / t)}}} (~org-show-todo-tree~) :: + + #+kindex: C-c / t + #+cindex: sparse tree, for TODO + #+vindex: org-todo-keywords + #+findex: org-show-todo-tree + View TODO items in a /sparse tree/ (see [[*Sparse Trees]]). Folds the + entire buffer, but shows all TODO items---with not-DONE state---and + the headings hierarchy above them. With a prefix argument, or by + using {{{kbd(C-c / T)}}}, search for a specific TODO. You are + prompted for the keyword, and you can also give a list of keywords + like =KWD1|KWD2|...= to list entries that match any one of these + keywords. With a numeric prefix argument N, show the tree for the + Nth keyword in the variable ~org-todo-keywords~. With two prefix + arguments, find all TODO states, both un-done and done. + +- {{{kbd(M-x org-agenda t)}}} (~org-todo-list~) :: + + #+kindex: t @r{(Agenda dispatcher)} + Show the global TODO list. Collects the TODO items (with not-DONE + states) from all agenda files (see [[*Agenda Views]]) into a single + buffer. The new buffer is in Org Agenda mode, which provides + commands to examine and manipulate the TODO entries from the new + buffer (see [[*Commands in the Agenda Buffer]]). See [[*The global TODO + list]], for more information. + +- {{{kbd(S-M-RET)}}} (~org-insert-todo-heading~) :: + + #+kindex: S-M-RET + #+findex: org-insert-todo-heading + Insert a new TODO entry below the current one. + +#+vindex: org-todo-state-tags-triggers +Changing a TODO state can also trigger tag changes. See the docstring +of the option ~org-todo-state-tags-triggers~ for details. + +** Extended Use of TODO Keywords +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: Workflow and assignments. +:ALT_TITLE: TODO Extensions +:END: +#+cindex: extended TODO keywords + +#+vindex: org-todo-keywords +By default, marked TODO entries have one of only two states: TODO and +DONE. Org mode allows you to classify TODO items in more complex ways +with /TODO keywords/ (stored in ~org-todo-keywords~). With special +setup, the TODO keyword system can work differently in different +files. + +Note that /tags/ are another way to classify headlines in general and +TODO items in particular (see [[*Tags]]). + +*** TODO keywords as workflow states +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: From TODO to DONE in steps. +:ALT_TITLE: Workflow states +:END: +#+cindex: TODO workflow +#+cindex: workflow states as TODO keywords + +You can use TODO keywords to indicate different, possibly /sequential/ +states in the process of working on an item, for example[fn:36]: + +#+begin_src emacs-lisp +(setq org-todo-keywords + '((sequence "TODO" "FEEDBACK" "VERIFY" "|" "DONE" "DELEGATED"))) +#+end_src + +The vertical bar separates the TODO keywords (states that /need +action/) from the DONE states (which need /no further action/). If +you do not provide the separator bar, the last state is used as the +DONE state. + +#+cindex: completion, of TODO keywords +With this setup, the command {{{kbd(C-c C-t)}}} cycles an entry from +=TODO= to =FEEDBACK=, then to =VERIFY=, and finally to =DONE= and +=DELEGATED=. You may also use a numeric prefix argument to quickly +select a specific state. For example {{{kbd(C-3 C-c C-t)}}} changes +the state immediately to =VERIFY=. Or you can use {{{kbd(S-RIGHT)}}} +and {{{kbd(S-LEFT)}}} to go forward and backward through the states. +If you define many keywords, you can use in-buffer completion (see +[[*Completion]]) or a special one-key selection scheme (see [[*Fast +access to TODO states]]) to insert these words into the buffer. +Changing a TODO state can be logged with a timestamp, see [[*Tracking +TODO state changes]], for more information. + +*** TODO keywords as types +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: I do this, Fred does the rest. +:ALT_TITLE: TODO types +:END: +#+cindex: TODO types +#+cindex: names as TODO keywords +#+cindex: types as TODO keywords + +The second possibility is to use TODO keywords to indicate different +/types/ of action items. For example, you might want to indicate that +items are for "work" or "home". Or, when you work with several people +on a single project, you might want to assign action items directly to +persons, by using their names as TODO keywords. This type of +functionality is actually much better served by using tags (see +[[*Tags]]), so the TODO implementation is kept just for backward +compatibility. + +Using TODO types, it would be set up like this: + +#+begin_src emacs-lisp +(setq org-todo-keywords '((type "Fred" "Sara" "Lucy" "|" "DONE"))) +#+end_src + +In this case, different keywords do not indicate states, but +rather different types. So the normal work flow would be to assign +a task to a person, and later to mark it DONE. Org mode supports this +style by adapting the workings of the command {{{kbd(C-c +C-t)}}}[fn:37]. When used several times in succession, it still +cycles through all names, in order to first select the right type for +a task. But when you return to the item after some time and execute +{{{kbd(C-c C-t)}}} again, it will switch from any name directly to +=DONE=. Use prefix arguments or completion to quickly select +a specific name. You can also review the items of a specific TODO +type in a sparse tree by using a numeric prefix to {{{kbd(C-c / t)}}}. +For example, to see all things Lucy has to do, you would use +{{{kbd(C-3 C-c / t)}}}. To collect Lucy's items from all agenda files +into a single buffer, you would use the numeric prefix argument as +well when creating the global TODO list: {{{kbd(C-3 M-x org-agenda +t)}}}. + +*** Multiple keyword sets in one file +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: Mixing it all, still finding your way. +:ALT_TITLE: Multiple sets in one file +:END: +#+cindex: TODO keyword sets + +Sometimes you may want to use different sets of TODO keywords in +parallel. For example, you may want to have the basic TODO/DONE, but +also a workflow for bug fixing, and a separate state indicating that +an item has been canceled---so it is not DONE, but also does not +require action. Your setup would then look like this: + +#+begin_src emacs-lisp +(setq org-todo-keywords + '((sequence "TODO" "|" "DONE") + (sequence "REPORT" "BUG" "KNOWNCAUSE" "|" "FIXED") + (sequence "|" "CANCELED"))) +#+end_src + +The keywords should all be different, this helps Org mode keep track +of which subsequence should be used for a given entry. In this setup, +{{{kbd(C-c C-t)}}} only operates within a sub-sequence, so it switches +from =DONE= to (nothing) to =TODO=, and from =FIXED= to (nothing) to +=REPORT=. Therefore you need a mechanism to initially select the +correct sequence. In addition to typing a keyword or using completion +(see [[*Completion]]), you may also apply the following commands: + +#+attr_texinfo: :sep , +- {{{kbd(C-u C-u C-c C-t)}}}, {{{kbd(C-S-RIGHT)}}}, {{{kbd(C-S-LEFT)}}} :: + + #+kindex: C-S-RIGHT + #+kindex: C-S-LEFT + #+kindex: C-u C-u C-c C-t + These keys jump from one TODO sub-sequence to the next. In the + above example, {{{kbd(C-u C-u C-c C-t)}}} or {{{kbd(C-S-RIGHT)}}} + would jump from =TODO= or =DONE= to =REPORT=, and any of the words + in the second row to =CANCELED=. Note that the {{{kbd(C-S-)}}} key + binding conflict with shift-selection (see [[*Packages that conflict + with Org mode]]). + +- {{{kbd(S-RIGHT)}}}, {{{kbd(S-LEFT)}}} :: + + #+kindex: S-RIGHT + #+kindex: S-LEFT + {{{kbd(S-LEFT)}}} and {{{kbd(S-RIGHT)}}} walk through /all/ keywords + from all sub-sequences, so for example {{{kbd(S-RIGHT)}}} would + switch from =DONE= to =REPORT= in the example above. For + a discussion of the interaction with shift-selection, see [[*Packages + that conflict with Org mode]]. + +*** Fast access to TODO states +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: Single letter selection of state. +:END: + +If you would like to quickly change an entry to an arbitrary TODO +state instead of cycling through the states, you can set up keys for +single-letter access to the states. This is done by adding the +selection character after each keyword, in parentheses[fn:38]. For +example: + +#+begin_src emacs-lisp +(setq org-todo-keywords + '((sequence "TODO(t)" "|" "DONE(d)") + (sequence "REPORT(r)" "BUG(b)" "KNOWNCAUSE(k)" "|" "FIXED(f)") + (sequence "|" "CANCELED(c)"))) +#+end_src + +#+vindex: org-fast-tag-selection-include-todo +If you then press {{{kbd(C-c C-t)}}} followed by the selection key, +the entry is switched to this state. {{{kbd(SPC)}}} can be used to +remove any TODO keyword from an entry[fn:39]. + +*** Setting up keywords for individual files +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: Different files, different requirements. +:ALT_TITLE: Per-file keywords +:END: +#+cindex: keyword options +#+cindex: per-file keywords +#+cindex: @samp{TODO}, keyword +#+cindex: @samp{TYP_TODO}, keyword +#+cindex: @samp{SEQ_TODO}, keyword + +It can be very useful to use different aspects of the TODO mechanism +in different files. For file-local settings, you need to add special +lines to the file which set the keywords and interpretation for that +file only. For example, to set one of the two examples discussed +above, you need one of the following lines, starting in column zero +anywhere in the file: + +: #+TODO: TODO FEEDBACK VERIFY | DONE CANCELED + +You may also write =#+SEQ_TODO= to be explicit about the +interpretation, but it means the same as =#+TODO=, or + +: #+TYP_TODO: Fred Sara Lucy Mike | DONE + +A setup for using several sets in parallel would be: + +#+begin_example +,#+TODO: TODO(t) | DONE(d) +,#+TODO: REPORT(r) BUG(b) KNOWNCAUSE(k) | FIXED(f) +,#+TODO: | CANCELED(c) +#+end_example + +#+cindex: completion, of option keywords +#+kindex: M-TAB +To make sure you are using the correct keyword, type =#+= into the +buffer and then use {{{kbd(M-TAB)}}} to complete it (see [[*Completion]]). + +#+cindex: DONE, final TODO keyword +Remember that the keywords after the vertical bar---or the last +keyword if no bar is there---must always mean that the item is DONE, +although you may use a different word. After changing one of these +lines, use {{{kbd(C-c C-c)}}} with point still in the line to make the +changes known to Org mode[fn:40]. + +*** Faces for TODO keywords +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: Highlighting states. +:END: +#+cindex: faces, for TODO keywords + +#+vindex: org-todo, face +#+vindex: org-done, face +#+vindex: org-todo-keyword-faces +Org mode highlights TODO keywords with special faces: ~org-todo~ for +keywords indicating that an item still has to be acted upon, and +~org-done~ for keywords indicating that an item is finished. If you +are using more than two different states, you might want to use +special faces for some of them. This can be done using the variable +~org-todo-keyword-faces~. For example: + +#+begin_src emacs-lisp +(setq org-todo-keyword-faces + '(("TODO" . org-warning) ("STARTED" . "yellow") + ("CANCELED" . (:foreground "blue" :weight bold)))) +#+end_src + +#+vindex: org-faces-easy-properties +While using a list with face properties as shown for =CANCELED= +/should/ work, this does not always seem to be the case. If +necessary, define a special face and use that. A string is +interpreted as a color. The variable ~org-faces-easy-properties~ +determines if that color is interpreted as a foreground or +a background color. + +*** TODO dependencies +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: When one task needs to wait for others. +:END: +#+cindex: TODO dependencies +#+cindex: dependencies, of TODO states + +#+vindex: org-enforce-todo-dependencies +#+cindex: @samp{ORDERED}, property +The structure of Org files---hierarchy and lists---makes it easy to +define TODO dependencies. Usually, a parent TODO task should not be +marked as done until all TODO subtasks, or children tasks, are marked +as done. Sometimes there is a logical sequence to (sub)tasks, so that +one subtask cannot be acted upon before all siblings above it have +been marked as done. If you customize the variable +~org-enforce-todo-dependencies~, Org blocks entries from changing +state to DONE while they have TODO children that are not DONE. +Furthermore, if an entry has a property =ORDERED=, each of its TODO +children is blocked until all earlier siblings are marked as done. +Here is an example: + +#+begin_example +,* TODO Blocked until (two) is done +,** DONE one +,** TODO two + +,* Parent +:PROPERTIES: +:ORDERED: t +:END: +,** TODO a +,** TODO b, needs to wait for (a) +,** TODO c, needs to wait for (a) and (b) +#+end_example + +#+cindex: TODO dependencies, @samp{NOBLOCKING} +#+cindex: @samp{NOBLOCKING}, property +You can ensure an entry is never blocked by using the =NOBLOCKING= +property (see [[*Properties and Columns]]): + +#+begin_example +,* This entry is never blocked +:PROPERTIES: +:NOBLOCKING: t +:END: +#+end_example + +- {{{kbd(C-c C-x o)}}} (~org-toggle-ordered-property~) :: + + #+kindex: C-c C-x o + #+findex: org-toggle-ordered-property + #+vindex: org-track-ordered-property-with-tag + Toggle the =ORDERED= property of the current entry. A property is + used for this behavior because this should be local to the current + entry, not inherited from entries above like a tag (see [[*Tags]]). + However, if you would like to /track/ the value of this property + with a tag for better visibility, customize the variable + ~org-track-ordered-property-with-tag~. + +- {{{kbd(C-u C-u C-u C-c C-t)}}} :: + + #+kindex: C-u C-u C-u C-u C-c C-t + Change TODO state, regardless of any state blocking. + +#+vindex: org-agenda-dim-blocked-tasks +If you set the variable ~org-agenda-dim-blocked-tasks~, TODO entries +that cannot be marked as done because of unmarked children are shown +in a dimmed font or even made invisible in agenda views (see [[*Agenda +Views]]). + +#+cindex: checkboxes and TODO dependencies +#+vindex: org-enforce-todo-dependencies +You can also block changes of TODO states by using checkboxes (see +[[*Checkboxes]]). If you set the variable +~org-enforce-todo-checkbox-dependencies~, an entry that has unchecked +checkboxes is blocked from switching to DONE. + +If you need more complex dependency structures, for example +dependencies between entries in different trees or files, check out +the module =org-depend.el= in the =org-contrib= repository. + +** Progress Logging +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: Dates and notes for progress. +:END: +#+cindex: progress logging +#+cindex: logging, of progress + +To record a timestamp and a note when changing a TODO state, call the +command ~org-todo~ with a prefix argument. + +- {{{kbd(C-u C-c C-t)}}} (~org-todo~) :: + + #+kindex: C-u C-c C-t + Prompt for a note and record a the time of the TODO state change. + The note is inserted as a list item below the headline, but can also + be placed into a drawer, see [[*Tracking TODO state changes]]. + +If you want to be more systematic, Org mode can automatically record a +timestamp and optionally a note when you mark a TODO item as DONE, or +even each time you change the state of a TODO item. This system is +highly configurable, settings can be on a per-keyword basis and can be +localized to a file or even a subtree. For information on how to +clock working time for a task, see [[*Clocking Work Time]]. + +*** Closing items +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: When was this entry marked as done? +:END: + +The most basic automatic logging is to keep track of /when/ a certain +TODO item was marked as done. This can be achieved with[fn:41] + +#+begin_src emacs-lisp +(setq org-log-done 'time) +#+end_src + +#+vindex: org-closed-keep-when-no-todo +#+texinfo: @noindent +Then each time you turn an entry from a TODO (not-done) state into any +of the DONE states, a line =CLOSED: [timestamp]= is inserted just +after the headline. If you turn the entry back into a TODO item +through further state cycling, that line is removed again. If you +turn the entry back to a non-TODO state (by pressing {{{kbd(C-c C-t +SPC)}}} for example), that line is also removed, unless you set +~org-closed-keep-when-no-todo~ to non-~nil~. If you want to record +a note along with the timestamp, use[fn:42] + +#+begin_src emacs-lisp +(setq org-log-done 'note) +#+end_src + +#+texinfo: @noindent +You are then prompted for a note, and that note is stored below the +entry with a =Closing Note= heading. + +*** Tracking TODO state changes +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: When did the status change? +:END: +#+cindex: drawer, for state change recording + +#+vindex: org-log-states-order-reversed +#+vindex: org-log-into-drawer +#+cindex: @samp{LOG_INTO_DRAWER}, property +You might want to automatically keep track of when a state change +occurred and maybe take a note about this change. You can either +record just a timestamp, or a time-stamped note. These records are +inserted after the headline as an itemized list, newest first[fn:43]. +When taking a lot of notes, you might want to get the notes out of the +way into a drawer (see [[*Drawers]]). Customize the variable +~org-log-into-drawer~ to get this behavior---the recommended drawer +for this is called =LOGBOOK=[fn:44]. You can also overrule the +setting of this variable for a subtree by setting a =LOG_INTO_DRAWER= +property. + +Since it is normally too much to record a note for every state, Org +mode expects configuration on a per-keyword basis for this. This is +achieved by adding special markers =!= (for a timestamp) or =@= (for +a note with timestamp) in parentheses after each keyword. For +example, with the setting + +#+begin_src emacs-lisp +(setq org-todo-keywords + '((sequence "TODO(t)" "WAIT(w@/!)" "|" "DONE(d!)" "CANCELED(c@)"))) +#+end_src + +#+vindex: org-log-done +You not only define global TODO keywords and fast access keys, but +also request that a time is recorded when the entry is set to =DONE=, +and that a note is recorded when switching to =WAIT= or +=CANCELED=[fn:45]. The setting for =WAIT= is even more special: the +=!= after the slash means that in addition to the note taken when +entering the state, a timestamp should be recorded when /leaving/ the +=WAIT= state, if and only if the /target/ state does not configure +logging for entering it. So it has no effect when switching from +=WAIT= to =DONE=, because =DONE= is configured to record a timestamp +only. But when switching from =WAIT= back to =TODO=, the =/!= in the +=WAIT= setting now triggers a timestamp even though =TODO= has no +logging configured. + +You can use the exact same syntax for setting logging preferences local +to a buffer: + +: #+TODO: TODO(t) WAIT(w@/!) | DONE(d!) CANCELED(c@) + +To record a timestamp without a note for TODO keywords configured with +=@=, just type {{{kbd(C-c C-c)}}} to enter a blank note when prompted. + +#+cindex: @samp{LOGGING}, property +In order to define logging settings that are local to a subtree or +a single item, define a =LOGGING= property in this entry. Any +non-empty =LOGGING= property resets all logging settings to ~nil~. +You may then turn on logging for this specific tree using =STARTUP= +keywords like =lognotedone= or =logrepeat=, as well as adding state +specific settings like =TODO(!)=. For example: + +#+begin_example +,* TODO Log each state with only a time + :PROPERTIES: + :LOGGING: TODO(!) WAIT(!) DONE(!) CANCELED(!) + :END: +,* TODO Only log when switching to WAIT, and when repeating + :PROPERTIES: + :LOGGING: WAIT(@) logrepeat + :END: +,* TODO No logging at all + :PROPERTIES: + :LOGGING: nil + :END: +#+end_example + +*** Tracking your habits +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: How consistent have you been? +:END: +#+cindex: habits +#+cindex: @samp{STYLE}, property + +Org has the ability to track the consistency of a special category of +TODO, called "habits." To use habits, you have to enable the ~habits~ +module by customizing the variable ~org-modules~. + +A habit has the following properties: + +1. The habit is a TODO item, with a TODO keyword representing an open + state. + +2. The property =STYLE= is set to the value =habit= (see [[*Properties + and Columns]]). + +3. The TODO has a scheduled date, usually with a =.+= style repeat + interval. A =++= style may be appropriate for habits with time + constraints, e.g., must be done on weekends, or a =+= style for an + unusual habit that can have a backlog, e.g., weekly reports. + +4. The TODO may also have minimum and maximum ranges specified by + using the syntax =.+2d/3d=, which says that you want to do the task + at least every three days, but at most every two days. + +5. State logging for the DONE state is enabled (see [[*Tracking TODO + state changes]]), in order for historical data to be represented in + the consistency graph. If it is not enabled it is not an error, + but the consistency graphs are largely meaningless. + +To give you an idea of what the above rules look like in action, here's an +actual habit with some history: + +#+begin_example +,** TODO Shave + SCHEDULED: <2009-10-17 Sat .+2d/4d> + :PROPERTIES: + :STYLE: habit + :LAST_REPEAT: [2009-10-19 Mon 00:36] + :END: + - State "DONE" from "TODO" [2009-10-15 Thu] + - State "DONE" from "TODO" [2009-10-12 Mon] + - State "DONE" from "TODO" [2009-10-10 Sat] + - State "DONE" from "TODO" [2009-10-04 Sun] + - State "DONE" from "TODO" [2009-10-02 Fri] + - State "DONE" from "TODO" [2009-09-29 Tue] + - State "DONE" from "TODO" [2009-09-25 Fri] + - State "DONE" from "TODO" [2009-09-19 Sat] + - State "DONE" from "TODO" [2009-09-16 Wed] + - State "DONE" from "TODO" [2009-09-12 Sat] +#+end_example + +What this habit says is: I want to shave at most every 2 days---given +by the =SCHEDULED= date and repeat interval---and at least every +4 days. If today is the 15th, then the habit first appears in the +agenda (see [[*Agenda Views]]) on Oct 17, after the minimum of 2 days has +elapsed, and will appear overdue on Oct 19, after four days have +elapsed. + +What's really useful about habits is that they are displayed along +with a consistency graph, to show how consistent you've been at +getting that task done in the past. This graph shows every day that +the task was done over the past three weeks, with colors for each day. +The colors used are: + +- Blue :: If the task was not to be done yet on that day. +- Green :: If the task could have been done on that day. +- Yellow :: If the task was going to be overdue the next day. +- Red :: If the task was overdue on that day. + +In addition to coloring each day, the day is also marked with an +asterisk if the task was actually done that day, and an exclamation +mark to show where the current day falls in the graph. + +There are several configuration variables that can be used to change +the way habits are displayed in the agenda. + +- ~org-habit-graph-column~ :: + + #+vindex: org-habit-graph-column + The buffer column at which the consistency graph should be drawn. + This overwrites any text in that column, so it is a good idea to + keep your habits' titles brief and to the point. + +- ~org-habit-preceding-days~ :: + + #+vindex: org-habit-preceding-days + The amount of history, in days before today, to appear in + consistency graphs. + +- ~org-habit-following-days~ :: + + #+vindex: org-habit-following-days + The number of days after today that appear in consistency graphs. + +- ~org-habit-show-habits-only-for-today~ :: + + #+vindex: org-habit-show-habits-only-for-today + If non-~nil~, only show habits in today's agenda view. The default + value is ~t~. Pressing {{{kbd(C-u K)}}} in the agenda toggles this + variable. + +Lastly, pressing {{{kbd(K)}}} in the agenda buffer causes habits to +temporarily be disabled and do not appear at all. Press {{{kbd(K)}}} +again to bring them back. They are also subject to tag filtering, if +you have habits which should only be done in certain contexts, for +example. + +** Priorities +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: Some things are more important than others. +:END: +#+cindex: priorities +#+cindex: priority cookie + +If you use Org mode extensively, you may end up with enough TODO items +that it starts to make sense to prioritize them. Prioritizing can be +done by placing a /priority cookie/ into the headline of a TODO item +right after the TODO keyword, like this: + +: *** TODO [#A] Write letter to Sam Fortune + +#+vindex: org-priority-faces +By default, Org mode supports three priorities: =A=, =B=, and =C=. +=A= is the highest priority. An entry without a cookie is treated as +equivalent if it had priority =B=. Priorities make a difference only +for sorting in the agenda (see [[*Weekly/daily agenda]]). Outside the +agenda, they have no inherent meaning to Org mode. The cookies are +displayed with the face defined by the variable ~org-priority-faces~, +which can be customized. + +You can also use numeric values for priorities, such as + +: *** TODO [#1] Write letter to Sam Fortune + +When using numeric priorities, you need to set ~org-priority-highest~, +~org-priority-lowest~ and ~org-priority-default~ to integers, which +must all be strictly inferior to 65. + +Priorities can be attached to any outline node; they do not need to be +TODO items. + +#+attr_texinfo: :sep ; +- {{{kbd(C-c \,)}}} (~org-priority~) :: + + #+kindex: C-c , + #+findex: org-priority + Set the priority of the current headline. The command prompts for + a priority character =A=, =B= or =C=. When you press {{{kbd(SPC)}}} + instead, the priority cookie, if one is set, is removed from the + headline. The priorities can also be changed "remotely" from the + agenda buffer with the {{{kbd(\,)}}} command (see [[*Commands in the + Agenda Buffer]]). + +- {{{kbd(S-UP)}}} (~org-priority-up~); {{{kbd(S-DOWN)}}} (~org-priority-down~) :: + + #+kindex: S-UP + #+kindex: S-DOWN + #+findex: org-priority-up + #+findex: org-priority-down + #+vindex: org-priority-start-cycle-with-default + Increase/decrease the priority of the current headline[fn:46]. Note + that these keys are also used to modify timestamps (see [[*Creating + Timestamps]]). See also [[*Packages that conflict with Org mode]], for + a discussion of the interaction with shift-selection. + +#+vindex: org-priority-highest +#+vindex: org-priority-lowest +#+vindex: org-priority-default +You can change the range of allowed priorities by setting the +variables ~org-priority-highest~, ~org-priority-lowest~, and +~org-priority-default~. For an individual buffer, you may set these +values (highest, lowest, default) like this (please make sure that the +highest priority is earlier in the alphabet than the lowest priority): + +#+cindex: @samp{PRIORITIES}, keyword +: #+PRIORITIES: A C B + +Or, using numeric values: + +: #+PRIORITIES: 1 10 5 + +** Breaking Down Tasks into Subtasks +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: Splitting a task into manageable pieces. +:ALT_TITLE: Breaking Down Tasks +:END: +#+cindex: tasks, breaking down +#+cindex: statistics, for TODO items + +#+vindex: org-agenda-todo-list-sublevels +It is often advisable to break down large tasks into smaller, +manageable subtasks. You can do this by creating an outline tree +below a TODO item, with detailed subtasks on the tree[fn:47]. To keep +an overview of the fraction of subtasks that have already been marked +as done, insert either =[/]= or =[%]= anywhere in the headline. These +cookies are updated each time the TODO status of a child changes, or +when pressing {{{kbd(C-c C-c)}}} on the cookie. For example: + +#+begin_example +,* Organize Party [33%] +,** TODO Call people [1/2] +,*** TODO Peter +,*** DONE Sarah +,** TODO Buy food +,** DONE Talk to neighbor +#+end_example + +#+cindex: @samp{COOKIE_DATA}, property +If a heading has both checkboxes and TODO children below it, the +meaning of the statistics cookie become ambiguous. Set the property +=COOKIE_DATA= to either =checkbox= or =todo= to resolve this issue. + +#+vindex: org-hierarchical-todo-statistics +If you would like to have the statistics cookie count any TODO entries +in the subtree (not just direct children), configure the variable +~org-hierarchical-todo-statistics~. To do this for a single subtree, +include the word =recursive= into the value of the =COOKIE_DATA= +property. + +#+begin_example org +,* Parent capturing statistics [2/20] + :PROPERTIES: + :COOKIE_DATA: todo recursive + :END: +#+end_example + +If you would like a TODO entry to automatically change to DONE when +all children are done, you can use the following setup: + +#+begin_src emacs-lisp +(defun org-summary-todo (n-done n-not-done) + "Switch entry to DONE when all subentries are done, to TODO otherwise." + (let (org-log-done org-log-states) ; turn off logging + (org-todo (if (= n-not-done 0) "DONE" "TODO")))) + +(add-hook 'org-after-todo-statistics-hook #'org-summary-todo) +#+end_src + +Another possibility is the use of checkboxes to identify (a hierarchy +of) a large number of subtasks (see [[*Checkboxes]]). + +** Checkboxes +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: Tick-off lists. +:END: +#+cindex: checkboxes + +#+vindex: org-list-automatic-rules +Every item in a plain list[fn:48] (see [[*Plain Lists]]) can be made into +a checkbox by starting it with the string =[ ]=. This feature is +similar to TODO items (see [[*TODO Items]]), but is more lightweight. +Checkboxes are not included into the global TODO list, so they are +often great to split a task into a number of simple steps. Or you can +use them in a shopping list. + +Here is an example of a checkbox list. + +#+begin_example +,* TODO Organize party [2/4] + - [-] call people [1/3] + - [ ] Peter + - [X] Sarah + - [ ] Sam + - [X] order food + - [ ] think about what music to play + - [X] talk to the neighbors +#+end_example + +Checkboxes work hierarchically, so if a checkbox item has children +that are checkboxes, toggling one of the children checkboxes makes the +parent checkbox reflect if none, some, or all of the children are +checked. + +#+cindex: statistics, for checkboxes +#+cindex: checkbox statistics +#+cindex: @samp{COOKIE_DATA}, property +#+vindex: org-hierarchical-checkbox-statistics +The =[2/4]= and =[1/3]= in the first and second line are cookies +indicating how many checkboxes present in this entry have been checked +off, and the total number of checkboxes present. This can give you an +idea on how many checkboxes remain, even without opening a folded +entry. The cookies can be placed into a headline or into (the first +line of) a plain list item. Each cookie covers checkboxes of direct +children structurally below the headline/item on which the cookie +appears[fn:49]. You have to insert the cookie yourself by typing +either =[/]= or =[%]=. With =[/]= you get an =n out of m= result, as +in the examples above. With =[%]= you get information about the +percentage of checkboxes checked (in the above example, this would be +=[50%]= and =[33%]=, respectively). In a headline, a cookie can count +either checkboxes below the heading or TODO states of children, and it +displays whatever was changed last. Set the property =COOKIE_DATA= to +either =checkbox= or =todo= to resolve this issue. + +#+cindex: blocking, of checkboxes +#+cindex: checkbox blocking +#+cindex: @samp{ORDERED}, property +If the current outline node has an =ORDERED= property, checkboxes must +be checked off in sequence, and an error is thrown if you try to check +off a box while there are unchecked boxes above it. + +The following commands work with checkboxes: + +- {{{kbd(C-c C-c)}}} (~org-toggle-checkbox~) :: + + #+kindex: C-c C-c + #+findex: org-toggle-checkbox + Toggle checkbox status or---with prefix argument---checkbox presence + at point. With a single prefix argument, add an empty checkbox or + remove the current one[fn:50]. With a double prefix argument, set + it to =[-]=, which is considered to be an intermediate state. + +- {{{kbd(C-c C-x C-b)}}} (~org-toggle-checkbox~) :: + + #+kindex: C-c C-x C-b + Toggle checkbox status or---with prefix argument---checkbox presence + at point. With double prefix argument, set it to =[-]=, which is + considered to be an intermediate state. + + - If there is an active region, toggle the first checkbox in the + region and set all remaining boxes to the same status as the + first. With a prefix argument, add or remove the checkbox for all + items in the region. + + - If point is in a headline, toggle checkboxes in the region between + this headline and the next---so /not/ the entire subtree. + + - If there is no active region, just toggle the checkbox at point. + +- {{{kbd(C-c C-x C-r)}}} (~org-toggle-radio-button~) :: + + #+kindex: C-c C-x C-r + #+findex: org-toggle-radio-button + #+cindex: radio button, checkbox as + Toggle checkbox status by using the checkbox of the item at point as + a radio button: when the checkbox is turned on, all other checkboxes + on the same level will be turned off. With a universal prefix + argument, toggle the presence of the checkbox. With a double prefix + argument, set it to =[-]=. + + #+findex: org-list-checkbox-radio-mode + {{{kbd(C-c C-c)}}} can be told to consider checkboxes as radio buttons by + setting =#+ATTR_ORG: :radio t= right before the list or by calling + {{{kbd(M-x org-list-checkbox-radio-mode)}}} to activate this minor mode. + +- {{{kbd(M-S-RET)}}} (~org-insert-todo-heading~) :: + + #+kindex: M-S-RET + #+findex: org-insert-todo-heading + Insert a new item with a checkbox. This works only if point is + already in a plain list item (see [[*Plain Lists]]). + +- {{{kbd(C-c C-x o)}}} (~org-toggle-ordered-property~) :: + + #+kindex: C-c C-x o + #+findex: org-toggle-ordered-property + #+vindex: org-track-ordered-property-with-tag + Toggle the =ORDERED= property of the entry, to toggle if checkboxes + must be checked off in sequence. A property is used for this + behavior because this should be local to the current entry, not + inherited like a tag. However, if you would like to /track/ the + value of this property with a tag for better visibility, customize + ~org-track-ordered-property-with-tag~. + +- {{{kbd(C-c #)}}} (~org-update-statistics-cookies~) :: + + #+kindex: C-c # + #+findex: org-update-statistics-cookies + Update the statistics cookie in the current outline entry. When + called with a {{{kbd(C-u)}}} prefix, update the entire file. + Checkbox statistic cookies are updated automatically if you toggle + checkboxes with {{{kbd(C-c C-c)}}} and make new ones with + {{{kbd(M-S-RET)}}}. TODO statistics cookies update when changing + TODO states. If you delete boxes/entries or add/change them by + hand, use this command to get things back into sync. + +* Tags +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: Tagging headlines and matching sets of tags. +:END: +#+cindex: tags +#+cindex: headline tagging +#+cindex: matching, tags +#+cindex: sparse tree, tag based + +An excellent way to implement labels and contexts for +cross-correlating information is to assign /tags/ to headlines. Org +mode has extensive support for tags. + +#+vindex: org-tag-faces +Every headline can contain a list of tags; they occur at the end of +the headline. Tags are normal words containing letters, numbers, =_=, +and =@=. Tags must be preceded and followed by a single colon, e.g., +=:work:=. Several tags can be specified, as in =:work:urgent:=. Tags +by default are in bold face with the same color as the headline. You +may specify special faces for specific tags using the variable +~org-tag-faces~, in much the same way as you can for TODO keywords +(see [[*Faces for TODO keywords]]). + +** Tag Inheritance +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: Tags use the tree structure of an outline. +:END: +#+cindex: tag inheritance +#+cindex: inheritance, of tags +#+cindex: sublevels, inclusion into tags match + +/Tags/ make use of the hierarchical structure of outline trees. If +a heading has a certain tag, all subheadings inherit the tag as well. +For example, in the list + +#+begin_example +,* Meeting with the French group :work: +,** Summary by Frank :boss:notes: +,*** TODO Prepare slides for him :action: +#+end_example + +#+texinfo: @noindent +the final heading has the tags =work=, =boss=, =notes=, and =action= +even though the final heading is not explicitly marked with those +tags. You can also set tags that all entries in a file should inherit +just as if these tags were defined in a hypothetical level zero that +surrounds the entire file. Use a line like this[fn:51] + +#+cindex: @samp{FILETAGS}, keyword +: #+FILETAGS: :Peter:Boss:Secret: + +#+vindex: org-use-tag-inheritance +#+vindex: org-tags-exclude-from-inheritance +To limit tag inheritance to specific tags, or to turn it off entirely, +use the variables ~org-use-tag-inheritance~ and +~org-tags-exclude-from-inheritance~. + +#+vindex: org-tags-match-list-sublevels +When a headline matches during a tags search while tag inheritance is +turned on, all the sublevels in the same tree---for a simple match +form---match as well[fn:52]. The list of matches may then become +very long. If you only want to see the first tags match in a subtree, +configure the variable ~org-tags-match-list-sublevels~ (not +recommended). + +#+vindex: org-agenda-use-tag-inheritance +Tag inheritance is relevant when the agenda search tries to match +a tag, either in the ~tags~ or ~tags-todo~ agenda types. In other +agenda types, ~org-use-tag-inheritance~ has no effect. Still, you may +want to have your tags correctly set in the agenda, so that tag +filtering works fine, with inherited tags. Set +~org-agenda-use-tag-inheritance~ to control this: the default value +includes all agenda types, but setting this to ~nil~ can really speed +up agenda generation. + +** Setting Tags +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: How to assign tags to a headline. +:END: +#+cindex: setting tags +#+cindex: tags, setting + +#+kindex: M-TAB +Tags can simply be typed into the buffer at the end of a headline. +After a colon, {{{kbd(M-TAB)}}} offers completion on tags. There is +also a special command for inserting tags: + +- {{{kbd(C-c C-q)}}} (~org-set-tags-command~) :: + + #+kindex: C-c C-q + #+findex: org-set-tags-command + #+cindex: completion, of tags + #+vindex: org-tags-column + Enter new tags for the current headline. Org mode either offers + completion or a special single-key interface for setting tags, see + below. After pressing {{{kbd(RET)}}}, the tags are inserted and + aligned to ~org-tags-column~. When called with a {{{kbd(C-u)}}} + prefix, all tags in the current buffer are aligned to that column, + just to make things look nice. Tags are automatically realigned + after promotion, demotion, and TODO state changes (see [[*Basic TODO + Functionality]]). + +- {{{kbd(C-c C-c)}}} (~org-set-tags-command~) :: + + #+kindex: C-c C-c + When point is in a headline, this does the same as {{{kbd(C-c + C-q)}}}. + +#+vindex: org-complete-tags-always-offer-all-agenda-tags +#+vindex: org-tag-alist +#+cindex: @samp{TAGS}, keyword +Org supports tag insertion based on a /list of tags/. By default this +list is constructed dynamically, containing all tags currently used in +the buffer[fn:53]. You may also globally specify a hard list of tags +with the variable ~org-tag-alist~. Finally you can set the default +tags for a given file using the =TAGS= keyword, like + +#+begin_example +,#+TAGS: @work @home @tennisclub +,#+TAGS: laptop car pc sailboat +#+end_example + +If you have globally defined your preferred set of tags using the +variable ~org-tag-alist~, but would like to use a dynamic tag list in +a specific file, add an empty =TAGS= keyword to that file: + +: #+TAGS: + +#+vindex: org-tag-persistent-alist +If you have a preferred set of tags that you would like to use in +every file, in addition to those defined on a per-file basis by =TAGS= +keyword, then you may specify a list of tags with the variable +~org-tag-persistent-alist~. You may turn this off on a per-file basis +by adding a =STARTUP= keyword to that file: + +: #+STARTUP: noptag + +By default Org mode uses the standard minibuffer completion facilities +for entering tags. However, it also implements another, quicker, tag +selection method called /fast tag selection/. This allows you to +select and deselect tags with just a single key press. For this to +work well you should assign unique letters to most of your commonly +used tags. You can do this globally by configuring the variable +~org-tag-alist~ in your Emacs init file. For example, you may find +the need to tag many items in different files with =@home=. In this +case you can set something like: + +#+begin_src emacs-lisp +(setq org-tag-alist '(("@work" . ?w) ("@home" . ?h) ("laptop" . ?l))) +#+end_src + +If the tag is only relevant to the file you are working on, then you +can instead set the =TAGS= keyword as: + +: #+TAGS: @work(w) @home(h) @tennisclub(t) laptop(l) pc(p) + +The tags interface shows the available tags in a splash window. If +you want to start a new line after a specific tag, insert =\n= into +the tag list + +: #+TAGS: @work(w) @home(h) @tennisclub(t) \n laptop(l) pc(p) + +#+texinfo: @noindent +or write them in two lines: + +#+begin_example +,#+TAGS: @work(w) @home(h) @tennisclub(t) +,#+TAGS: laptop(l) pc(p) +#+end_example + +You can also group together tags that are mutually exclusive by using +braces, as in: + +: #+TAGS: { @work(w) @home(h) @tennisclub(t) } laptop(l) pc(p) + +#+texinfo: @noindent +you indicate that at most one of =@work=, =@home=, and =@tennisclub= +should be selected. Multiple such groups are allowed. + +Do not forget to press {{{kbd(C-c C-c)}}} with point in one of these +lines to activate any changes. + +To set these mutually exclusive groups in the variable +~org-tags-alist~, you must use the dummy tags ~:startgroup~ and +~:endgroup~ instead of the braces. Similarly, you can use ~:newline~ +to indicate a line break. The previous example would be set globally +by the following configuration: + +#+begin_src emacs-lisp +(setq org-tag-alist '((:startgroup . nil) + ("@work" . ?w) ("@home" . ?h) + ("@tennisclub" . ?t) + (:endgroup . nil) + ("laptop" . ?l) ("pc" . ?p))) +#+end_src + +If at least one tag has a selection key then pressing {{{kbd(C-c +C-c)}}} automatically presents you with a special interface, listing +inherited tags, the tags of the current headline, and a list of all +valid tags with corresponding keys[fn:54]. + +Pressing keys assigned to tags adds or removes them from the list of +tags in the current line. Selecting a tag in a group of mutually +exclusive tags turns off any other tag from that group. + +In this interface, you can also use the following special keys: + +- {{{kbd(TAB)}}} :: + + #+kindex: TAB + Enter a tag in the minibuffer, even if the tag is not in the + predefined list. You can complete on all tags present in the buffer + and globally pre-defined tags from ~org-tag-alist~ and + ~org-tag-persistent-alist~. You can also add several tags: just + separate them with a comma. + +- {{{kbd(SPC)}}} :: + + #+kindex: SPC + Clear all tags for this line. + +- {{{kbd(RET)}}} :: + + #+kindex: RET + Accept the modified set. + +- {{{kbd(C-g)}}} :: + + #+kindex: C-g + Abort without installing changes. + +- {{{kbd(q)}}} :: + + #+kindex: q + If {{{kbd(q)}}} is not assigned to a tag, it aborts like + {{{kbd(C-g)}}}. + +- {{{kbd(!)}}} :: + + #+kindex: ! + Turn off groups of mutually exclusive tags. Use this to (as an + exception) assign several tags from such a group. + +- {{{kbd(C-c)}}} :: + + #+kindex: C-c C-c + Toggle auto-exit after the next change (see below). If you are + using expert mode, the first {{{kbd(C-c)}}} displays the selection + window. + +This method lets you assign tags to a headline with very few keys. +With the above setup, you could clear the current tags and set +=@home=, =laptop= and =pc= tags with just the following keys: +{{{kbd(C-c C-c SPC h l p RET)}}}. Switching from =@home= to =@work= +would be done with {{{kbd(C-c C-c w RET)}}} or alternatively with +{{{kbd(C-c C-c C-c w)}}}. Adding the non-predefined tag =sarah= could +be done with {{{kbd(C-c C-c TAB s a r a h RET)}}}. + +#+vindex: org-fast-tag-selection-single-key +If you find that most of the time you need only a single key press to +modify your list of tags, set the variable +~org-fast-tag-selection-single-key~. Then you no longer have to press +{{{kbd(RET)}}} to exit fast tag selection---it exits after the first +change. If you then occasionally need more keys, press {{{kbd(C-c)}}} +to turn off auto-exit for the current tag selection process (in +effect: start selection with {{{kbd(C-c C-c C-c)}}} instead of +{{{kbd(C-c C-c)}}}). If you set the variable to the value ~expert~, +the special window is not even shown for single-key tag selection, it +comes up only when you press an extra {{{kbd(C-c)}}}. + +** Tag Hierarchy +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: Create a hierarchy of tags. +:END: +#+cindex: group tags +#+cindex: tags, groups +#+cindex: tags hierarchy + +Tags can be defined in hierarchies. A tag can be defined as a /group +tag/ for a set of other tags. The group tag can be seen as the +"broader term" for its set of tags. Defining multiple group tags and +nesting them creates a tag hierarchy. + +One use-case is to create a taxonomy of terms (tags) that can be used +to classify nodes in a document or set of documents. + +When you search for a group tag, it return matches for all members in +the group and its subgroups. In an agenda view, filtering by a group +tag displays or hide headlines tagged with at least one of the members +of the group or any of its subgroups. This makes tag searches and +filters even more flexible. + +You can set group tags by using brackets and inserting a colon between +the group tag and its related tags---beware that all whitespaces are +mandatory so that Org can parse this line correctly: + +: #+TAGS: [ GTD : Control Persp ] + +In this example, =GTD= is the group tag and it is related to two other +tags: =Control=, =Persp=. Defining =Control= and =Persp= as group +tags creates a hierarchy of tags: + +#+begin_example +,#+TAGS: [ Control : Context Task ] +,#+TAGS: [ Persp : Vision Goal AOF Project ] +#+end_example + +That can conceptually be seen as a hierarchy of tags: + +- =GTD= + - =Persp= + - =Vision= + - =Goal= + - =AOF= + - =Project= + - =Control= + - =Context= + - =Task= + +You can use the ~:startgrouptag~, ~:grouptags~ and ~:endgrouptag~ +keyword directly when setting ~org-tag-alist~ directly: + +#+begin_src emacs-lisp +(setq org-tag-alist '((:startgrouptag) + ("GTD") + (:grouptags) + ("Control") + ("Persp") + (:endgrouptag) + (:startgrouptag) + ("Control") + (:grouptags) + ("Context") + ("Task") + (:endgrouptag))) +#+end_src + +The tags in a group can be mutually exclusive if using the same group +syntax as is used for grouping mutually exclusive tags together; using +curly brackets. + +: #+TAGS: { Context : @Home @Work @Call } + +When setting ~org-tag-alist~ you can use ~:startgroup~ and ~:endgroup~ +instead of ~:startgrouptag~ and ~:endgrouptag~ to make the tags +mutually exclusive. + +Furthermore, the members of a group tag can also be regular +expressions, creating the possibility of a more dynamic and rule-based +tag structure (see [[*Regular Expressions]]). The regular expressions in +the group must be specified within curly brackets. Here is an +expanded example: + +#+begin_example +,#+TAGS: [ Vision : {V@.+} ] +,#+TAGS: [ Goal : {G@.+} ] +,#+TAGS: [ AOF : {AOF@.+} ] +,#+TAGS: [ Project : {P@.+} ] +#+end_example + +Searching for the tag =Project= now lists all tags also including +regular expression matches for =P@.+=, and similarly for tag searches +on =Vision=, =Goal= and =AOF=. For example, this would work well for +a project tagged with a common project-identifier, e.g., +=P@2014_OrgTags=. + +#+kindex: C-c C-x q +#+findex: org-toggle-tags-groups +#+vindex: org-group-tags +If you want to ignore group tags temporarily, toggle group tags +support with ~org-toggle-tags-groups~, bound to {{{kbd(C-c C-x q)}}}. +If you want to disable tag groups completely, set ~org-group-tags~ to +~nil~. + +** Tag Searches +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: Searching for combinations of tags. +:END: +#+cindex: tag searches +#+cindex: searching for tags + +Once a system of tags has been set up, it can be used to collect +related information into special lists. + +- {{{kbd(C-c / m)}}} or {{{kbd(C-c \)}}} (~org-match-sparse-tree~) :: + + #+kindex: C-c / m + #+kindex: C-c \ + #+findex: org-match-sparse-tree + Create a sparse tree with all headlines matching a tags search. + With a {{{kbd(C-u)}}} prefix argument, ignore headlines that are not + a TODO line. + +- {{{kbd(M-x org-agenda m)}}} (~org-tags-view~) :: + + #+kindex: m @r{(Agenda dispatcher)} + #+findex: org-tags-view + Create a global list of tag matches from all agenda files. See + [[*Matching tags and properties]]. + +- {{{kbd(M-x org-agenda M)}}} (~org-tags-view~) :: + + #+kindex: M @r{(Agenda dispatcher)} + #+vindex: org-tags-match-list-sublevels + Create a global list of tag matches from all agenda files, but check + only TODO items and force checking subitems (see the option + ~org-tags-match-list-sublevels~). + +These commands all prompt for a match string which allows basic +Boolean logic like =+boss+urgent-project1=, to find entries with tags +=boss= and =urgent=, but not =project1=, or =Kathy|Sally= to find +entries which are tagged, like =Kathy= or =Sally=. The full syntax of +the search string is rich and allows also matching against TODO +keywords, entry levels and properties. For a complete description +with many examples, see [[*Matching tags and properties]]. + +* Properties and Columns +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: Storing information about an entry. +:END: +#+cindex: properties + +A property is a key-value pair associated with an entry. Properties +can be set so they are associated with a single entry, with every +entry in a tree, or with the whole buffer. + +There are two main applications for properties in Org mode. First, +properties are like tags, but with a value. Imagine maintaining +a file where you document bugs and plan releases for a piece of +software. Instead of using tags like =release_1=, =release_2=, you +can use a property, say =Release=, that in different subtrees has +different values, such as =1.0= or =2.0=. Second, you can use +properties to implement (very basic) database capabilities in an Org +buffer. Imagine keeping track of your music CDs, where properties +could be things such as the album, artist, date of release, number of +tracks, and so on. + +Properties can be conveniently edited and viewed in column view (see +[[*Column View]]). + +** Property Syntax +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: How properties are spelled out. +:END: +#+cindex: property syntax +#+cindex: drawer, for properties + +Properties are key--value pairs. When they are associated with +a single entry or with a tree they need to be inserted into a special +drawer (see [[*Drawers]]) with the name =PROPERTIES=, which has to be +located right below a headline, and its planning line (see [[*Deadlines +and Scheduling]]) when applicable. Each property is specified on +a single line, with the key---surrounded by colons---first, and the +value after it. Keys are case-insensitive. Here is an example: + +#+begin_example +,* CD collection +,** Classic +,*** Goldberg Variations + :PROPERTIES: + :Title: Goldberg Variations + :Composer: J.S. Bach + :Artist: Glenn Gould + :Publisher: Deutsche Grammophon + :NDisks: 1 + :END: +#+end_example + +Depending on the value of ~org-use-property-inheritance~, a property +set this way is associated either with a single entry, or with the +sub-tree defined by the entry, see [[*Property Inheritance]]. + +You may define the allowed values for a particular property =Xyz= by +setting a property =Xyz_ALL=. This special property is /inherited/, +so if you set it in a level 1 entry, it applies to the entire tree. +When allowed values are defined, setting the corresponding property +becomes easier and is less prone to typing errors. For the example +with the CD collection, we can pre-define publishers and the number of +disks in a box like this: + +#+begin_example +,* CD collection + :PROPERTIES: + :NDisks_ALL: 1 2 3 4 + :Publisher_ALL: "Deutsche Grammophon" Philips EMI + :END: +#+end_example + +Properties can be inserted on buffer level. That means they apply +before the first headline and can be inherited by all entries in a +file. Property blocks defined before first headline needs to be +located at the top of the buffer, allowing only comments above. + +Properties can also be defined using lines like: + +#+cindex: @samp{_ALL} suffix, in properties +#+cindex: @samp{PROPERTY}, keyword +: #+PROPERTY: NDisks_ALL 1 2 3 4 + +#+cindex: @samp{+} suffix, in properties +If you want to add to the value of an existing property, append a =+= +to the property name. The following results in the property =var= +having the value =foo=1 bar=2=. + +#+begin_example +,#+PROPERTY: var foo=1 +,#+PROPERTY: var+ bar=2 +#+end_example + +It is also possible to add to the values of inherited properties. The +following results in the =Genres= property having the value =Classic +Baroque= under the =Goldberg Variations= subtree. + +#+begin_example +,* CD collection +,** Classic + :PROPERTIES: + :Genres: Classic + :END: +,*** Goldberg Variations + :PROPERTIES: + :Title: Goldberg Variations + :Composer: J.S. Bach + :Artist: Glenn Gould + :Publisher: Deutsche Grammophon + :NDisks: 1 + :Genres+: Baroque + :END: +#+end_example + +Note that a property can only have one entry per drawer. + +#+vindex: org-global-properties +Property values set with the global variable ~org-global-properties~ +can be inherited by all entries in all Org files. + +The following commands help to work with properties: + +#+attr_texinfo: :sep , +- {{{kbd(M-TAB)}}} (~pcomplete~) :: + + #+kindex: M-TAB + #+findex: pcomplete + After an initial colon in a line, complete property keys. All keys + used in the current file are offered as possible completions. + +- {{{kbd(C-c C-x p)}}} (~org-set-property~) :: + + #+kindex: C-c C-x p + #+findex: org-set-property + Set a property. This prompts for a property name and a value. If + necessary, the property drawer is created as well. + +- {{{kbd(C-u M-x org-insert-drawer)}}} :: + + #+findex: org-insert-drawer + Insert a property drawer into the current entry. The drawer is + inserted early in the entry, but after the lines with planning + information like deadlines. If before first headline the drawer is + inserted at the top of the drawer after any potential comments. + +- {{{kbd(C-c C-c)}}} (~org-property-action~) :: + + #+kindex: C-c C-c + #+findex: org-property-action + With point in a property drawer, this executes property commands. + +- {{{kbd(C-c C-c s)}}} (~org-set-property~) :: + + #+kindex: C-c C-c s + #+findex: org-set-property + Set a property in the current entry. Both the property and the + value can be inserted using completion. + +- {{{kbd(S-RIGHT)}}} (~org-property-next-allowed-values~), {{{kbd(S-LEFT)}}} (~org-property-previous-allowed-value~) :: + + #+kindex: S-RIGHT + #+kindex: S-LEFT + Switch property at point to the next/previous allowed value. + +- {{{kbd(C-c C-c d)}}} (~org-delete-property~) :: + + #+kindex: C-c C-c d + #+findex: org-delete-property + Remove a property from the current entry. + +- {{{kbd(C-c C-c D)}}} (~org-delete-property-globally~) :: + + #+kindex: C-c C-c D + #+findex: org-delete-property-globally + Globally remove a property, from all entries in the current file. + +- {{{kbd(C-c C-c c)}}} (~org-compute-property-at-point~) :: + + #+kindex: C-c C-c c + #+findex: org-compute-property-at-point + Compute the property at point, using the operator and scope from the + nearest column format definition. + +** Special Properties +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: Access to other Org mode features. +:END: +#+cindex: properties, special + +Special properties provide an alternative access method to Org mode +features, like the TODO state or the priority of an entry, discussed +in the previous chapters. This interface exists so that you can +include these states in a column view (see [[*Column View]]), or to use +them in queries. The following property names are special and should +not be used as keys in the properties drawer: + +#+cindex: @samp{ALLTAGS}, special property +#+cindex: @samp{BLOCKED}, special property +#+cindex: @samp{CLOCKSUM}, special property +#+cindex: @samp{CLOCKSUM_T}, special property +#+cindex: @samp{CLOSED}, special property +#+cindex: @samp{DEADLINE}, special property +#+cindex: @samp{FILE}, special property +#+cindex: @samp{ITEM}, special property +#+cindex: @samp{PRIORITY}, special property +#+cindex: @samp{SCHEDULED}, special property +#+cindex: @samp{TAGS}, special property +#+cindex: @samp{TIMESTAMP}, special property +#+cindex: @samp{TIMESTAMP_IA}, special property +#+cindex: @samp{TODO}, special property +| =ALLTAGS= | All tags, including inherited ones. | +| =BLOCKED= | ~t~ if task is currently blocked by children or siblings. | +| =CATEGORY= | The category of an entry. | +| =CLOCKSUM= | The sum of CLOCK intervals in the subtree. ~org-clock-sum~ | +| | must be run first to compute the values in the current buffer. | +| =CLOCKSUM_T= | The sum of CLOCK intervals in the subtree for today. | +| | ~org-clock-sum-today~ must be run first to compute the | +| | values in the current buffer. | +| =CLOSED= | When was this entry closed? | +| =DEADLINE= | The deadline timestamp. | +| =FILE= | The filename the entry is located in. | +| =ITEM= | The headline of the entry. | +| =PRIORITY= | The priority of the entry, a string with a single letter. | +| =SCHEDULED= | The scheduling timestamp. | +| =TAGS= | The tags defined directly in the headline. | +| =TIMESTAMP= | The first keyword-less timestamp in the entry. | +| =TIMESTAMP_IA= | The first inactive timestamp in the entry. | +| =TODO= | The TODO keyword of the entry. | + +** Property Searches +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: Matching property values. +:END: +#+cindex: properties, searching +#+cindex: searching, of properties + +To create sparse trees and special lists with selection based on +properties, the same commands are used as for tag searches (see [[*Tag +Searches]]). + +- {{{kbd(C-c / m)}}} or {{{kbd(C-c \)}}} (~org-match-sparse-tree~) :: + + #+kindex: C-c / m + #+kindex: C-c \ + #+findex: org-match-sparse-tree + Create a sparse tree with all matching entries. With + a {{{kbd(C-u)}}} prefix argument, ignore headlines that are not + a TODO line. + +- {{{kbd(M-x org-agenda m)}}} (~org-tags-view~) :: + + #+kindex: m @r{(Agenda dispatcher)} + #+findex: org-tags-view + Create a global list of tag/property matches from all agenda files. + +- {{{kbd(M-x org-agenda M)}}} (~org-tags-view~) :: + + #+kindex: M @r{(Agenda dispatcher)} + #+vindex: org-tags-match-list-sublevels + Create a global list of tag matches from all agenda files, but check + only TODO items and force checking of subitems (see the option + ~org-tags-match-list-sublevels~). + +The syntax for the search string is described in [[*Matching tags and +properties]]. + +There is also a special command for creating sparse trees based on a +single property: + +- {{{kbd(C-c / p)}}} :: + + #+kindex: C-c / p + Create a sparse tree based on the value of a property. This first + prompts for the name of a property, and then for a value. A sparse + tree is created with all entries that define this property with the + given value. If you enclose the value in curly braces, it is + interpreted as a regular expression and matched against the property + values (see [[*Regular Expressions]]). + +** Property Inheritance +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: Passing values down a tree. +:END: +#+cindex: properties, inheritance +#+cindex: inheritance, of properties + +#+vindex: org-use-property-inheritance +The outline structure of Org documents lends itself to an inheritance +model of properties: if the parent in a tree has a certain property, +the children can inherit this property. Org mode does not turn this +on by default, because it can slow down property searches +significantly and is often not needed. However, if you find +inheritance useful, you can turn it on by setting the variable +~org-use-property-inheritance~. It may be set to ~t~ to make all +properties inherited from the parent, to a list of properties that +should be inherited, or to a regular expression that matches inherited +properties. If a property has the value ~nil~, this is interpreted as +an explicit un-define of the property, so that inheritance search +stops at this value and returns ~nil~. + +Org mode has a few properties for which inheritance is hard-coded, at +least for the special applications for which they are used: + +- ~COLUMNS~ :: + + #+cindex: @samp{COLUMNS}, property + The =COLUMNS= property defines the format of column view (see + [[*Column View]]). It is inherited in the sense that the level where + a =COLUMNS= property is defined is used as the starting point for + a column view table, independently of the location in the subtree + from where columns view is turned on. + +- ~CATEGORY~ :: + + #+cindex: @samp{CATEGORY}, property + For agenda view, a category set through a =CATEGORY= property + applies to the entire subtree. + +- ~ARCHIVE~ :: + + #+cindex: @samp{ARCHIVE}, property + For archiving, the =ARCHIVE= property may define the archive + location for the entire subtree (see [[*Moving a tree to an archive + file]]). + +- ~LOGGING~ :: + + #+cindex: @samp{LOGGING}, property + The =LOGGING= property may define logging settings for an entry or + a subtree (see [[*Tracking TODO state changes]]). + +** Column View +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: Tabular viewing and editing. +:END: + +A great way to view and edit properties in an outline tree is /column +view/. In column view, each outline node is turned into a table row. +Columns in this table provide access to properties of the entries. +Org mode implements columns by overlaying a tabular structure over the +headline of each item. While the headlines have been turned into +a table row, you can still change the visibility of the outline tree. +For example, you get a compact table by switching to "contents" +view---{{{kbd(S-TAB)}}} {{{kbd(S-TAB)}}}, or simply {{{kbd(c)}}} +while column view is active---but you can still open, read, and edit +the entry below each headline. Or, you can switch to column view +after executing a sparse tree command and in this way get a table only +for the selected items. Column view also works in agenda buffers (see +[[*Agenda Views]]) where queries have collected selected items, possibly +from a number of files. + +*** Defining columns +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: The COLUMNS format property. +:END: +#+cindex: column view, for properties +#+cindex: properties, column view + +Setting up a column view first requires defining the columns. This is +done by defining a column format line. + +**** Scope of column definitions +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: Where defined, where valid? +:END: + +To specify a format that only applies to a specific tree, add +a =COLUMNS= property to the top node of that tree, for example: + +#+begin_example +,** Top node for columns view + :PROPERTIES: + :COLUMNS: %25ITEM %TAGS %PRIORITY %TODO + :END: +#+end_example + +A =COLUMNS= property within a property drawer before first headline +will apply to the entire file. As an addition to property drawers, +keywords can also be defined for an entire file using a line like: + +#+cindex: @samp{COLUMNS}, keyword +: #+COLUMNS: %25ITEM %TAGS %PRIORITY %TODO + +If a =COLUMNS= property is present in an entry, it defines columns for +the entry itself, and for the entire subtree below it. Since the +column definition is part of the hierarchical structure of the +document, you can define columns on level 1 that are general enough +for all sublevels, and more specific columns further down, when you +edit a deeper part of the tree. + +**** Column attributes +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: Appearance and content of a column. +:END: + +A column definition sets the attributes of a column. The general +definition looks like this: + +: %[WIDTH]PROPERTY[(TITLE)][{SUMMARY-TYPE}] + +#+texinfo: @noindent +Except for the percent sign and the property name, all items are +optional. The individual parts have the following meaning: + +- {{{var(WIDTH)}}} :: + + An integer specifying the width of the column in characters. If + omitted, the width is determined automatically. + +- {{{var(PROPERTY)}}} :: + + The property that should be edited in this column. Special + properties representing meta data are allowed here as well (see + [[*Special Properties]]). + +- {{{var(TITLE)}}} :: + + The header text for the column. If omitted, the property name is + used. + +- {{{var(SUMMARY-TYPE)}}} :: + + The summary type. If specified, the column values for parent nodes + are computed from the children[fn:55]. + + Supported summary types are: + + | =+= | Sum numbers in this column. | + | =+;%.1f= | Like =+=, but format result with =%.1f=. | + | =$= | Currency, short for =+;%.2f=. | + | =min= | Smallest number in column. | + | =max= | Largest number. | + | =mean= | Arithmetic mean of numbers. | + | =X= | Checkbox status, =[X]= if all children are =[X]=. | + | =X/= | Checkbox status, =[n/m]=. | + | =X%= | Checkbox status, =[n%]=. | + | =:= | Sum times, HH:MM, plain numbers are minutes. | + | =:min= | Smallest time value in column. | + | =:max= | Largest time value. | + | =:mean= | Arithmetic mean of time values. | + | =@min= | Minimum age[fn:56] (in days/hours/mins/seconds). | + | =@max= | Maximum age (in days/hours/mins/seconds). | + | =@mean= | Arithmetic mean of ages (in days/hours/mins/seconds). | + | =est+= | Add low-high estimates. | + + #+vindex: org-columns-summary-types + You can also define custom summary types by setting + ~org-columns-summary-types~. + +The =est+= summary type requires further explanation. It is used for +combining estimates, expressed as low-high ranges. For example, +instead of estimating a particular task will take 5 days, you might +estimate it as 5--6 days if you're fairly confident you know how much +work is required, or 1--10 days if you do not really know what needs +to be done. Both ranges average at 5.5 days, but the first represents +a more predictable delivery. + +When combining a set of such estimates, simply adding the lows and +highs produces an unrealistically wide result. Instead, =est+= adds +the statistical mean and variance of the subtasks, generating a final +estimate from the sum. For example, suppose you had ten tasks, each +of which was estimated at 0.5 to 2 days of work. Straight addition +produces an estimate of 5 to 20 days, representing what to expect if +everything goes either extremely well or extremely poorly. In +contrast, =est+= estimates the full job more realistically, at 10--15 +days. + +Here is an example for a complete columns definition, along with +allowed values[fn:57]. + +#+begin_example +:COLUMNS: %25ITEM %9Approved(Approved?){X} %Owner %11Status \ + %10Time_Estimate{:} %CLOCKSUM %CLOCKSUM_T +:Owner_ALL: Tammy Mark Karl Lisa Don +:Status_ALL: "In progress" "Not started yet" "Finished" "" +:Approved_ALL: "[ ]" "[X]" +#+end_example + +#+texinfo: @noindent +The first column, =%25ITEM=, means the first 25 characters of the item +itself, i.e., of the headline. You probably always should start the +column definition with the =ITEM= specifier. The other specifiers +create columns =Owner= with a list of names as allowed values, for +=Status= with four different possible values, and for a checkbox field +=Approved=. When no width is given after the =%= character, the +column is exactly as wide as it needs to be in order to fully display +all values. The =Approved= column does have a modified title +(=Approved?=, with a question mark). Summaries are created for the +=Time_Estimate= column by adding time duration expressions like HH:MM, +and for the =Approved= column, by providing an =[X]= status if all +children have been checked. The =CLOCKSUM= and =CLOCKSUM_T= columns +are special, they lists the sums of CLOCK intervals in the subtree, +either for all clocks or just for today. + +*** Using column view +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: How to create and use column view. +:END: + +**** Turning column view on or off +:PROPERTIES: +:UNNUMBERED: notoc +:END: + +- {{{kbd(C-c C-x C-c)}}} (~org-columns~) :: + + #+kindex: C-c C-x C-c + #+vindex: org-columns + #+vindex: org-columns-default-format + Turn on column view. If point is before the first headline in the + file, column view is turned on for the entire file, using the + =#+COLUMNS= definition. If point is somewhere inside the outline, + this command searches the hierarchy, up from point, for a =COLUMNS= + property that defines a format. When one is found, the column view + table is established for the tree starting at the entry that + contains the =COLUMNS= property. If no such property is found, the + format is taken from the =#+COLUMNS= line or from the variable + ~org-columns-default-format~, and column view is established for the + current entry and its subtree. + +- {{{kbd(r)}}} or {{{kbd(g)}}} on a columns view line (~org-columns-redo~) :: + + #+kindex: r + #+kindex: g + #+findex: org-columns-redo + Recreate the column view, to include recent changes made in the + buffer. + +- {{{kbd(C-c C-c)}}} or {{{kbd(q)}}} on a columns view line (~org-columns-quit~) :: + + #+kindex: q + #+kindex: C-c C-c + #+findex: org-columns-quit + Exit column view. + +**** Editing values +:PROPERTIES: +:UNNUMBERED: notoc +:END: + +#+attr_texinfo: :sep and +- {{{kbd(LEFT)}}}, {{{kbd(RIGHT)}}}, {{{kbd(UP)}}}, {{{kbd(DOWN)}}} :: + + Move through the column view from field to field. + +- {{{kbd(1..9\,0)}}} :: + + #+kindex: 1..9,0 + Directly select the Nth allowed value, {{{kbd(0)}}} selects the + 10th value. + +- {{{kbd(n)}}} or {{{kbd(S-RIGHT)}}} (~org-columns-next-allowed-value~) and {{{kbd(p)}}} or {{{kbd(S-LEFT)}}} (~org-columns-previous-allowed-value~) :: + + #+kindex: n + #+kindex: S-RIGHT + #+kindex: p + #+kindex: S-LEFT + #+findex: org-columns-next-allowed-value + #+findex: org-columns-previous-allowed-value + Switch to the next/previous allowed value of the field. For this, + you have to have specified allowed values for a property. + +- {{{kbd(e)}}} (~org-columns-edit-value~) :: + + #+kindex: e + #+findex: org-columns-edit-value + Edit the property at point. For the special properties, this + invokes the same interface that you normally use to change that + property. For example, the tag completion or fast selection + interface pops up when editing a =TAGS= property. + +- {{{kbd(C-c C-c)}}} (~org-columns-toggle-or-columns-quit~) :: + + #+kindex: C-c C-c + #+findex: org-columns-toggle-or-columns-quit + When there is a checkbox at point, toggle it. Else exit column + view. + +- {{{kbd(v)}}} (~org-columns-show-value~) :: + + #+kindex: v + #+findex: org-columns-show-value + View the full value of this property. This is useful if the width + of the column is smaller than that of the value. + +- {{{kbd(a)}}} (~org-columns-edit-allowed~) :: + + #+kindex: a + #+findex: org-columns-edit-allowed + Edit the list of allowed values for this property. If the list is + found in the hierarchy, the modified values is stored there. If no + list is found, the new value is stored in the first entry that is + part of the current column view. + +**** Modifying column view on-the-fly +:PROPERTIES: +:UNNUMBERED: notoc +:END: + +#+attr_texinfo: :sep and +- {{{kbd(<)}}} (~org-columns-narrow~) and {{{kbd(>)}}} (~org-columns-widen~) :: + + #+kindex: < + #+kindex: > + #+findex: org-columns-narrow + #+findex: org-columns-widen + Make the column narrower/wider by one character. + +- {{{kbd(S-M-RIGHT)}}} (~org-columns-new~) :: + + #+kindex: S-M-RIGHT + #+findex: org-columns-new + Insert a new column, to the left of the current column. + +- {{{kbd(S-M-LEFT)}}} (~org-columns-delete~) :: + + #+kindex: S-M-LEFT + #+findex: org-columns-delete + Delete the current column. + +*** Capturing column view +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: A dynamic block for column view. +:END: + +Since column view is just an overlay over a buffer, it cannot be +exported or printed directly. If you want to capture a column view, +use a =columnview= dynamic block (see [[*Dynamic Blocks]]). The frame of +this block looks like this: + +#+cindex: @samp{BEGIN columnview} +#+begin_example +,* The column view +,#+BEGIN: columnview :hlines 1 :id "label" + +,#+END: +#+end_example + +This dynamic block has the following parameters: + +- =:id= :: + + This is the most important parameter. Column view is a feature that + is often localized to a certain (sub)tree, and the capture block + might be at a different location in the file. To identify the tree + whose view to capture, you can use four values: + + - =local= :: + + Use the tree in which the capture block is located. + + - =global= :: + + Make a global view, including all headings in the file. + + - =file:FILENAME= :: + + Run column view at the top of the {{{var(FILENAME)}}} file. + + - =LABEL= :: + + #+cindex: @samp{ID}, property + Call column view in the tree that has an =ID= property with the + value {{{var(LABEL)}}}. You can use {{{kbd(M-x org-id-copy)}}} to + create a globally unique ID for the current entry and copy it to + the kill-ring. + +- =:match= :: + + When set to a string, use this as a tags/property match filter to + select only a subset of the headlines in the scope set by the ~:id~ + parameter. + + +- =:hlines= :: + + When ~t~, insert an hline after every line. When a number N, insert + an hline before each headline with level ~<= N~. + +- =:vlines= :: + + When non-~nil~, force column groups to get vertical lines. + +- =:maxlevel= :: + + When set to a number, do not capture entries below this level. + +- =:skip-empty-rows= :: + + When non-~nil~, skip rows where the only non-empty specifier of + the column view is =ITEM=. + +- =:exclude-tags= :: + + List of tags to exclude from column view table: entries with these + tags will be excluded from the column view. + +- =:indent= :: + + When non-~nil~, indent each =ITEM= field according to its level. + +- =:format= :: + + Specify a column attribute (see [[*Column attributes]]) for the dynamic + block. + +The following commands insert or update the dynamic block: + +- ~org-columns-insert-dblock~ :: + + #+kindex: C-c C-x x + #+findex: org-columns-insert-dblock + Insert a dynamic block capturing a column view. Prompt for the + scope or ID of the view. + + This command can be invoked by calling + ~org-dynamic-block-insert-dblock~ ({{{kbd(C-c C-x x)}}}) and + selecting "columnview" (see [[*Dynamic Blocks]]). + +- {{{kbd(C-c C-c)}}} {{{kbd(C-c C-x C-u)}}} (~org-dblock-update~) :: + + #+kindex: C-c C-c + #+kindex: C-c C-x C-u + #+findex: org-dblock-update + Update dynamic block at point. point needs to be in the =#+BEGIN= + line of the dynamic block. + +- {{{kbd(C-u C-c C-x C-u)}}} (~org-update-all-dblocks~) :: + + #+kindex: C-u C-c C-x C-u + Update all dynamic blocks (see [[*Dynamic Blocks]]). This is useful if + you have several clock table blocks, column-capturing blocks or + other dynamic blocks in a buffer. + +You can add formulas to the column view table and you may add plotting +instructions in front of the table---these survive an update of the +block. If there is a =TBLFM= keyword after the table, the table is +recalculated automatically after an update. + +An alternative way to capture and process property values into a table +is provided by Eric Schulte's =org-collector.el=, which is a package +in =org-contrib=[fn:58]. It provides a general API to collect +properties from entries in a certain scope, and arbitrary Lisp +expressions to process these values before inserting them into a table +or a dynamic block. + +* Dates and Times +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: Making items useful for planning. +:END: +#+cindex: dates +#+cindex: times +#+cindex: timestamp +#+cindex: date stamp + +To assist project planning, TODO items can be labeled with a date +and/or a time. The specially formatted string carrying the date and +time information is called a /timestamp/ in Org mode. This may be +a little confusing because timestamp is often used as indicating when +something was created or last changed. However, in Org mode this term +is used in a much wider sense. + +** Timestamps +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: Assigning a time to a tree entry. +:END: +#+cindex: timestamps +#+cindex: ranges, time +#+cindex: date stamps +#+cindex: deadlines +#+cindex: scheduling + +A timestamp is a specification of a date (possibly with a time or +a range of times) in a special format, either =<2003-09-16 Tue>= or +=<2003-09-16 Tue 09:39>= or =<2003-09-16 Tue 12:00-12:30>=[fn:59]. +A timestamp can appear anywhere in the headline or body of an Org tree +entry. Its presence causes entries to be shown on specific dates in +the agenda (see [[*Weekly/daily agenda]]). We distinguish: + +- Plain timestamp; Event; Appointment :: + + #+cindex: timestamp + #+cindex: appointment + A simple timestamp just assigns a date/time to an item. This is + just like writing down an appointment or event in a paper agenda. + In the agenda display, the headline of an entry associated with + a plain timestamp is shown exactly on that date. + + #+begin_example + ,* Meet Peter at the movies + <2006-11-01 Wed 19:15> + ,* Discussion on climate change + <2006-11-02 Thu 20:00-22:00> + #+end_example + +- Timestamp with repeater interval :: + + #+cindex: timestamp, with repeater interval + A timestamp may contain a /repeater interval/, indicating that it + applies not only on the given date, but again and again after + a certain interval of N days (d), weeks (w), months (m), or years + (y). The following shows up in the agenda every Wednesday: + + #+begin_example + ,* Pick up Sam at school + <2007-05-16 Wed 12:30 +1w> + #+end_example + +- Diary-style expression entries :: + + #+cindex: diary style timestamps + #+cindex: sexp timestamps + For more complex date specifications, Org mode supports using the + special expression diary entries implemented in the Emacs Calendar + package[fn:60]. For example, with optional time: + + #+begin_example + ,* 22:00-23:00 The nerd meeting on every 2nd Thursday of the month + <%%(diary-float t 4 2)> + #+end_example + +- Time/Date range :: + + #+cindex: timerange + #+cindex: date range + Two timestamps connected by =--= denote a range. The headline is + shown on the first and last day of the range, and on any dates that + are displayed and fall in the range. Here is an example: + + #+begin_example + ,** Meeting in Amsterdam + <2004-08-23 Mon>--<2004-08-26 Thu> + #+end_example + +- Inactive timestamp :: + + #+cindex: timestamp, inactive + #+cindex: inactive timestamp + Just like a plain timestamp, but with square brackets instead of + angular ones. These timestamps are inactive in the sense that they + do /not/ trigger an entry to show up in the agenda. + + #+begin_example + ,* Gillian comes late for the fifth time + [2006-11-01 Wed] + #+end_example + +** Creating Timestamps +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: Commands to insert timestamps. +:END: + +For Org mode to recognize timestamps, they need to be in the specific +format. All commands listed below produce timestamps in the correct +format. + +#+attr_texinfo: :sep , +- {{{kbd(C-c .)}}} (~org-time-stamp~) :: + + #+kindex: C-c . + #+findex: org-time-stamp + Prompt for a date and insert a corresponding timestamp. When point + is at an existing timestamp in the buffer, the command is used to + modify this timestamp instead of inserting a new one. When this + command is used twice in succession, a time range is inserted. + + #+kindex: C-u C-c . + #+vindex: org-time-stamp-rounding-minutes + When called with a prefix argument, use the alternative format which + contains date and time. The default time can be rounded to + multiples of 5 minutes. See the option + ~org-time-stamp-rounding-minutes~. + + #+kindex: C-u C-u C-c . + With two prefix arguments, insert an active timestamp with the + current time without prompting. + +- {{{kbd(C-c !)}}} (~org-time-stamp-inactive~) :: + + #+kindex: C-c ! + #+kindex: C-u C-c ! + #+kindex: C-u C-u C-c ! + #+findex: org-time-stamp-inactive + Like {{{kbd(C-c .)}}}, but insert an inactive timestamp that does + not cause an agenda entry. + +- {{{kbd(C-c C-c)}}} :: + + #+kindex: C-c C-c + Normalize timestamp, insert or fix day name if missing or wrong. + +- {{{kbd(C-c <)}}} (~org-date-from-calendar~) :: + + #+kindex: C-c < + #+findex: org-date-from-calendar + Insert a timestamp corresponding to point date in the calendar. + +- {{{kbd(C-c >)}}} (~org-goto-calendar~) :: + + #+kindex: C-c > + #+findex: org-goto-calendar + Access the Emacs calendar for the current date. If there is + a timestamp in the current line, go to the corresponding date + instead. + +- {{{kbd(C-c C-o)}}} (~org-open-at-point~) :: + + #+kindex: C-c C-o + #+findex: org-open-at-point + Access the agenda for the date given by the timestamp or -range at + point (see [[*Weekly/daily agenda]]). + +- {{{kbd(S-LEFT)}}} (~org-timestamp-down-day~), {{{kbd(S-RIGHT)}}} (~org-timestamp-up-day~) :: + + #+kindex: S-LEFT + #+kindex: S-RIGHT + #+findex: org-timestamp-down-day + #+findex: org-timestamp-up-day + Change date at point by one day. These key bindings conflict with + shift-selection and related modes (see [[*Packages that conflict with + Org mode]]). + +- {{{kbd(S-UP)}}} (~org-timestamp-up~), {{{kbd(S-DOWN)}}} (~org-timestamp-down~) :: + + #+kindex: S-UP + #+kindex: S-DOWN + On the beginning or enclosing bracket of a timestamp, change its + type. Within a timestamp, change the item under point. Point can + be on a year, month, day, hour or minute. When the timestamp + contains a time range like =15:30-16:30=, modifying the first time + also shifts the second, shifting the time block with constant + length. To change the length, modify the second time. Note that if + point is in a headline and not at a timestamp, these same keys + modify the priority of an item (see [[*Priorities]]). The key bindings + also conflict with shift-selection and related modes (see [[*Packages + that conflict with Org mode]]). + +- {{{kbd(C-c C-y)}}} (~org-evaluate-time-range~) :: + + #+kindex: C-c C-y + #+findex: org-evaluate-time-range + #+cindex: evaluate time range + Evaluate a time range by computing the difference between start and + end. With a prefix argument, insert result after the time range (in + a table: into the following column). + +*** The date/time prompt +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: How Org mode helps you enter dates and times. +:END: +#+cindex: date, reading in minibuffer +#+cindex: time, reading in minibuffer + +#+vindex: org-read-date-prefer-future +When Org mode prompts for a date/time, the default is shown in default +date/time format, and the prompt therefore seems to ask for a specific +format. But it in fact accepts date/time information in a variety of +formats. Generally, the information should start at the beginning of +the string. Org mode finds whatever information is in there and +derives anything you have not specified from the /default date and +time/. The default is usually the current date and time, but when +modifying an existing timestamp, or when entering the second stamp of +a range, it is taken from the stamp in the buffer. When filling in +information, Org mode assumes that most of the time you want to enter +a date in the future: if you omit the month/year and the given +day/month is /before/ today, it assumes that you mean a future +date[fn:61]. If the date has been automatically shifted into the +future, the time prompt shows this with =(=>F)=. + +For example, let's assume that today is *June 13, 2006*. Here is how +various inputs are interpreted, the items filled in by Org mode are in +*bold*. + +| =3-2-5= | \rArr{} 2003-02-05 | +| =2/5/3= | \rArr{} 2003-02-05 | +| =14= | \rArr{} *2006*-*06*-14 | +| =12= | \rArr{} *2006*-*07*-12 | +| =2/5= | \rArr{} *2007*-02-05 | +| =Fri= | \rArr{} nearest Friday (default date or later) | +| =sep 15= | \rArr{} *2006*-09-15 | +| =feb 15= | \rArr{} *2007*-02-15 | +| =sep 12 9= | \rArr{} 2009-09-12 | +| =12:45= | \rArr{} *2006*-*06*-*13* 12:45 | +| =22 sept 0:34= | \rArr{} *2006*-09-22 0:34 | +| =w4= | \rArr{} ISO week for of the current year *2006* | +| =2012 w4 fri= | \rArr{} Friday of ISO week 4 in 2012 | +| =2012-w04-5= | \rArr{} Same as above | + +Furthermore you can specify a relative date by giving, as the /first/ +thing in the input: a plus/minus sign, a number and a letter---=h=, +=d=, =w=, =m= or =y=---to indicate a change in hours, days, weeks, +months, or years. With =h= the date is relative to the current time, +with the other letters and a single plus or minus, the date is +relative to today at 00:00. With a double plus or minus, it is +relative to the default date. If instead of a single letter, you use +the abbreviation of day name, the date is the Nth such day, e.g.: + +| =+0= | \rArr{} today | +| =.= | \rArr{} today | +| =+2h= | \rArr{} two hours from now | +| =+4d= | \rArr{} four days from today | +| =+4= | \rArr{} same as +4d | +| =+2w= | \rArr{} two weeks from today | +| =++5= | \rArr{} five days from default date | +| =+2tue= | \rArr{} second Tuesday from now | + +#+vindex: parse-time-months +#+vindex: parse-time-weekdays +The function understands English month and weekday abbreviations. If +you want to use un-abbreviated names and/or other languages, configure +the variables ~parse-time-months~ and ~parse-time-weekdays~. + +#+vindex: org-read-date-force-compatible-dates +Not all dates can be represented in a given Emacs implementation. By +default Org mode forces dates into the compatibility range 1970--2037 +which works on all Emacs implementations. If you want to use dates +outside of this range, read the docstring of the variable +~org-read-date-force-compatible-dates~. + +You can specify a time range by giving start and end times or by +giving a start time and a duration (in HH:MM format). Use one or two +dash(es) as the separator in the former case and use =+= as the +separator in the latter case, e.g.: + +| =11am-1:15pm= | \rArr{} 11:00-13:15 | +| =11h-13h15= | \rArr{} same as above | +| =11am--1:15pm= | \rArr{} same as above | +| =11am+2:15= | \rArr{} same as above | + +#+cindex: calendar, for selecting date +#+vindex: org-popup-calendar-for-date-prompt +Parallel to the minibuffer prompt, a calendar is popped up[fn:62]. +When you exit the date prompt, either by clicking on a date in the +calendar, or by pressing {{{kbd(RET)}}}, the date selected in the +calendar is combined with the information entered at the prompt. You +can control the calendar fully from the minibuffer: + +#+kindex: < +#+kindex: > +#+kindex: M-v +#+kindex: C-v +#+kindex: mouse-1 +#+kindex: S-RIGHT +#+kindex: S-LEFT +#+kindex: S-DOWN +#+kindex: S-UP +#+kindex: M-S-RIGHT +#+kindex: M-S-LEFT +#+kindex: RET +#+kindex: . +#+kindex: C-. +#+attr_texinfo: :columns 0.25 0.55 +| {{{kbd(RET)}}} | Choose date at point in calendar. | +| {{{kbd(mouse-1)}}} | Select date by clicking on it. | +| {{{kbd(S-RIGHT)}}} | One day forward. | +| {{{kbd(S-LEFT)}}} | One day backward. | +| {{{kbd(S-DOWN)}}} | One week forward. | +| {{{kbd(S-UP)}}} | One week backward. | +| {{{kbd(M-S-RIGHT)}}} | One month forward. | +| {{{kbd(M-S-LEFT)}}} | One month backward. | +| {{{kbd(>)}}} | Scroll calendar forward by one month. | +| {{{kbd(<)}}} | Scroll calendar backward by one month. | +| {{{kbd(M-v)}}} | Scroll calendar forward by 3 months. | +| {{{kbd(C-v)}}} | Scroll calendar backward by 3 months. | +| {{{kbd(C-.)}}} | Select today's date[fn:63] | + +#+vindex: org-read-date-display-live +The actions of the date/time prompt may seem complex, but I assure you +they will grow on you, and you will start getting annoyed by pretty +much any other way of entering a date/time out there. To help you +understand what is going on, the current interpretation of your input +is displayed live in the minibuffer[fn:64]. + +*** Custom time format +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: Making dates look different. +:END: +#+cindex: custom date/time format +#+cindex: time format, custom +#+cindex: date format, custom + +#+vindex: org-display-custom-times +#+vindex: org-time-stamp-custom-formats +Org mode uses the standard ISO notation for dates and times as it is +defined in ISO 8601. If you cannot get used to this and require +another representation of date and time to keep you happy, you can get +it by customizing the variables ~org-display-custom-times~ and +~org-time-stamp-custom-formats~. + +- {{{kbd(C-c C-x C-t)}}} (~org-toggle-time-stamp-overlays~) :: + + #+kindex: C-c C-x C-t + #+findex: org-toggle-time-stamp-overlays + Toggle the display of custom formats for dates and times. + +Org mode needs the default format for scanning, so the custom +date/time format does not /replace/ the default format. Instead, it +is put /over/ the default format using text properties. This has the +following consequences: + +- You cannot place point onto a timestamp anymore, only before or + after. + +- The {{{kbd(S-UP)}}} and {{{kbd(S-DOWN)}}} keys can no longer be used + to adjust each component of a timestamp. If point is at the + beginning of the stamp, {{{kbd(S-UP)}}} and {{{kbd(S-DOWN)}}} change + the stamp by one day, just like {{{kbd(S-LEFT)}}} + {{{kbd(S-RIGHT)}}}. At the end of the stamp, change the time by one + minute. + +- If the timestamp contains a range of clock times or a repeater, + these are not overlaid, but remain in the buffer as they were. + +- When you delete a timestamp character-by-character, it only + disappears from the buffer after /all/ (invisible) characters + belonging to the ISO timestamp have been removed. + +- If the custom timestamp format is longer than the default and you + are using dates in tables, table alignment will be messed up. If + the custom format is shorter, things do work as expected. + +** Deadlines and Scheduling +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: Planning your work. +:END: + +A timestamp may be preceded by special keywords to facilitate +planning. Both the timestamp and the keyword have to be positioned +immediately after the task they refer to. + +- =DEADLINE= :: + + #+cindex: @samp{DEADLINE} marker + Meaning: the task---most likely a TODO item, though not + necessarily---is supposed to be finished on that date. + + #+vindex: org-deadline-warning-days + On the deadline date, the task is listed in the agenda. In + addition, the agenda for /today/ carries a warning about the + approaching or missed deadline, starting ~org-deadline-warning-days~ + before the due date, and continuing until the entry is marked as + done. An example: + + #+begin_example + ,*** TODO write article about the Earth for the Guide + DEADLINE: <2004-02-29 Sun> + The editor in charge is [[bbdb:Ford Prefect]] + #+end_example + + #+vindex: org-agenda-skip-deadline-prewarning-if-scheduled + You can specify a different lead time for warnings for a specific + deadlines using the following syntax. Here is an example with + a warning period of 5 days =DEADLINE: <2004-02-29 Sun -5d>=. This + warning is deactivated if the task gets scheduled and you set + ~org-agenda-skip-deadline-prewarning-if-scheduled~ to ~t~. + +- =SCHEDULED= :: + + #+cindex: @samp{SCHEDULED} marker + Meaning: you are planning to start working on that task on the given + date. + + #+vindex: org-agenda-skip-scheduled-if-done + The headline is listed under the given date[fn:65]. In addition, + a reminder that the scheduled date has passed is present in the + compilation for /today/, until the entry is marked as done, i.e., + the task is automatically forwarded until completed. + + #+begin_example + ,*** TODO Call Trillian for a date on New Years Eve. + SCHEDULED: <2004-12-25 Sat> + #+end_example + + #+vindex: org-scheduled-delay-days + #+vindex: org-agenda-skip-scheduled-delay-if-deadline + If you want to /delay/ the display of this task in the agenda, use + =SCHEDULED: <2004-12-25 Sat -2d>=: the task is still scheduled on + the 25th but will appear two days later. In case the task contains + a repeater, the delay is considered to affect all occurrences; if + you want the delay to only affect the first scheduled occurrence of + the task, use =--2d= instead. See ~org-scheduled-delay-days~ and + ~org-agenda-skip-scheduled-delay-if-deadline~ for details on how to + control this globally or per agenda. + + #+attr_texinfo: :tag Important + #+begin_quote + Scheduling an item in Org mode should /not/ be understood in the + same way that we understand /scheduling a meeting/. Setting a date + for a meeting is just a simple appointment, you should mark this + entry with a simple plain timestamp, to get this item shown on the + date where it applies. This is a frequent misunderstanding by Org + users. In Org mode, /scheduling/ means setting a date when you want + to start working on an action item. + #+end_quote + +You may use timestamps with repeaters in scheduling and deadline +entries. Org mode issues early and late warnings based on the +assumption that the timestamp represents the /nearest instance/ of the +repeater. However, the use of diary expression entries like + +: <%%(diary-float t 42)> + +#+texinfo: @noindent +in scheduling and deadline timestamps is limited. Org mode does not +know enough about the internals of each function to issue early and +late warnings. However, it shows the item on each day where the +expression entry matches. + +*** Inserting deadlines or schedules +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: Planning items. +:ALT_TITLE: Inserting deadline/schedule +:END: + +The following commands allow you to quickly insert a deadline or to +schedule an item:[fn:66] + +- {{{kbd(C-c C-d)}}} (~org-deadline~) :: + + #+kindex: C-c C-d + #+findex: org-deadline + #+vindex: org-log-redeadline + Insert =DEADLINE= keyword along with a stamp. The insertion happens + in the line directly following the headline. Remove any =CLOSED= + timestamp . When called with a prefix argument, also remove any + existing deadline from the entry. Depending on the variable + ~org-log-redeadline~, take a note when changing an existing + deadline[fn:67]. + +- {{{kbd(C-c C-s)}}} (~org-schedule~) :: + + #+kindex: C-c C-s + #+findex: org-schedule + #+vindex: org-log-reschedule + Insert =SCHEDULED= keyword along with a stamp. The insertion + happens in the line directly following the headline. Remove any + =CLOSED= timestamp. When called with a prefix argument, also remove + the scheduling date from the entry. Depending on the variable + ~org-log-reschedule~, take a note when changing an existing + scheduling time[fn:68]. + +- {{{kbd(C-c / d)}}} (~org-check-deadlines~) :: + + #+kindex: C-c / d + #+findex: org-check-deadlines + #+cindex: sparse tree, for deadlines + #+vindex: org-deadline-warning-days + Create a sparse tree with all deadlines that are either past-due, or + which will become due within ~org-deadline-warning-days~. With + {{{kbd(C-u)}}} prefix, show all deadlines in the file. With + a numeric prefix, check that many days. For example, {{{kbd(C-1 C-c + / d)}}} shows all deadlines due tomorrow. + +- {{{kbd(C-c / b)}}} (~org-check-before-date~) :: + + #+kindex: C-c / b + #+findex: org-check-before-date + Sparse tree for deadlines and scheduled items before a given date. + +- {{{kbd(C-c / a)}}} (~org-check-after-date~) :: + + #+kindex: C-c / a + #+findex: org-check-after-date + Sparse tree for deadlines and scheduled items after a given date. + +Note that ~org-schedule~ and ~org-deadline~ supports setting the date +by indicating a relative time e.g., =+1d= sets the date to the next +day after today, and =--1w= sets the date to the previous week before +any current timestamp. + +*** Repeated tasks +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: Items that show up again and again. +:END: +#+cindex: tasks, repeated +#+cindex: repeated tasks + +Some tasks need to be repeated again and again. Org mode helps to +organize such tasks using a so-called repeater in a =DEADLINE=, +=SCHEDULED=, or plain timestamps[fn:69]. In the following example: + +#+begin_example +,** TODO Pay the rent + DEADLINE: <2005-10-01 Sat +1m> +#+end_example + +#+texinfo: @noindent +the =+1m= is a repeater; the intended interpretation is that the task +has a deadline on =<2005-10-01>= and repeats itself every (one) month +starting from that time. You can use yearly, monthly, weekly, daily +and hourly repeat cookies by using the =y=, =m=, =w=, =d= and =h= +letters. If you need both a repeater and a special warning period in +a deadline entry, the repeater should come first and the warning +period last + +: DEADLINE: <2005-10-01 Sat +1m -3d> + +#+vindex: org-todo-repeat-to-state +Deadlines and scheduled items produce entries in the agenda when they +are over-due, so it is important to be able to mark such an entry as +done once you have done so. When you mark a =DEADLINE= or +a =SCHEDULED= with the TODO keyword =DONE=, it no longer produces +entries in the agenda. The problem with this is, however, is that +then also the /next/ instance of the repeated entry will not be +active. Org mode deals with this in the following way: when you try +to mark such an entry as done, using {{{kbd(C-c C-t)}}}, it shifts the +base date of the repeating timestamp by the repeater interval, and +immediately sets the entry state back to TODO[fn:70]. In the example +above, setting the state to =DONE= would actually switch the date like +this: + +#+begin_example +,** TODO Pay the rent + DEADLINE: <2005-11-01 Tue +1m> +#+end_example + +To mark a task with a repeater as DONE, use {{{kbd(C-- 1 C-c C-t)}}}, +i.e., ~org-todo~ with a numeric prefix argument of =-1=. + +#+vindex: org-log-repeat +A timestamp[fn:71] is added under the deadline, to keep a record that +you actually acted on the previous instance of this deadline. + +As a consequence of shifting the base date, this entry is no longer +visible in the agenda when checking past dates, but all future +instances will be visible. + +With the =+1m= cookie, the date shift is always exactly one month. So +if you have not paid the rent for three months, marking this entry +DONE still keeps it as an overdue deadline. Depending on the task, +this may not be the best way to handle it. For example, if you forgot +to call your father for 3 weeks, it does not make sense to call him +3 times in a single day to make up for it. Finally, there are tasks, +like changing batteries, which should always repeat a certain time +/after/ the last time you did it. For these tasks, Org mode has +special repeaters =++= and =.+=. For example: + +#+begin_example +,** TODO Call Father + DEADLINE: <2008-02-10 Sun ++1w> + Marking this DONE shifts the date by at least one week, but also + by as many weeks as it takes to get this date into the future. + However, it stays on a Sunday, even if you called and marked it + done on Saturday. + +,** TODO Empty kitchen trash + DEADLINE: <2008-02-08 Fri 20:00 ++1d> + Marking this DONE shifts the date by at least one day, and also + by as many days as it takes to get the timestamp into the future. + Since there is a time in the timestamp, the next deadline in the + future will be on today's date if you complete the task before + 20:00. + +,** TODO Check the batteries in the smoke detectors + DEADLINE: <2005-11-01 Tue .+1m> + Marking this DONE shifts the date to one month after today. + +,** TODO Wash my hands + DEADLINE: <2019-04-05 08:00 Sun .+1h> + Marking this DONE shifts the date to exactly one hour from now. +#+end_example + +#+vindex: org-agenda-skip-scheduled-if-deadline-is-shown +You may have both scheduling and deadline information for a specific +task. If the repeater is set for the scheduling information only, you +probably want the repeater to be ignored after the deadline. If so, +set the variable ~org-agenda-skip-scheduled-if-deadline-is-shown~ to +~repeated-after-deadline~. However, any scheduling information +without a repeater is no longer relevant once the task is done, and +thus, removed upon repeating the task. If you want both scheduling +and deadline information to repeat after the same interval, set the +same repeater for both timestamps. + +An alternative to using a repeater is to create a number of copies of +a task subtree, with dates shifted in each copy. The command +{{{kbd(C-c C-x c)}}} was created for this purpose; it is described in +[[*Structure Editing]]. + +** Clocking Work Time +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: Tracking how long you spend on a task. +:END: +#+cindex: clocking time +#+cindex: time clocking + +Org mode allows you to clock the time you spend on specific tasks in +a project. When you start working on an item, you can start the +clock. When you stop working on that task, or when you mark the task +done, the clock is stopped and the corresponding time interval is +recorded. It also computes the total time spent on each +subtree[fn:72] of a project. And it remembers a history or tasks +recently clocked, so that you can jump quickly between a number of +tasks absorbing your time. + +To save the clock history across Emacs sessions, use: + +#+begin_src emacs-lisp +(setq org-clock-persist 'history) +(org-clock-persistence-insinuate) +#+end_src + +#+vindex: org-clock-persist +When you clock into a new task after resuming Emacs, the incomplete +clock[fn:73] is retrieved (see [[*Resolving idle time]]) and you are +prompted about what to do with it. + +*** Clocking commands +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: Starting and stopping a clock. +:END: + +#+attr_texinfo: :sep , +- {{{kbd(C-c C-x C-i)}}} (~org-clock-in~) :: + + #+kindex: C-c C-x C-i + #+findex: org-clock-in + #+vindex: org-clock-into-drawer + #+vindex: org-clock-continuously + #+cindex: @samp{LOG_INTO_DRAWER}, property + Start the clock on the current item (clock-in). This inserts the + =CLOCK= keyword together with a timestamp. If this is not the first + clocking of this item, the multiple =CLOCK= lines are wrapped into + a =LOGBOOK= drawer (see also the variable ~org-clock-into-drawer~). + You can also overrule the setting of this variable for a subtree by + setting a =CLOCK_INTO_DRAWER= or =LOG_INTO_DRAWER= property. When + called with a {{{kbd(C-u)}}} prefix argument, select the task from + a list of recently clocked tasks. With two {{{kbd(C-u C-u)}}} + prefixes, clock into the task at point and mark it as the default + task; the default task is always be available with letter + {{{kbd(d)}}} when selecting a clocking task. With three {{{kbd(C-u + C-u C-u)}}} prefixes, force continuous clocking by starting the + clock when the last clock stopped. + + #+cindex: @samp{CLOCK_MODELINE_TOTAL}, property + #+cindex: @samp{LAST_REPEAT}, property + #+vindex: org-clock-mode-line-total + #+vindex: org-clock-in-prepare-hook + While the clock is running, Org shows the current clocking time in + the mode line, along with the title of the task. The clock time + shown is all time ever clocked for this task and its children. If + the task has an effort estimate (see [[*Effort Estimates]]), the mode + line displays the current clocking time against it[fn:74]. If the + task is a repeating one (see [[*Repeated tasks]]), show only the time + since the last reset of the task[fn:75]. You can exercise more + control over show time with the =CLOCK_MODELINE_TOTAL= property. It + may have the values =current= to show only the current clocking + instance, =today= to show all time clocked on this tasks today---see + also the variable ~org-extend-today-until~, ~all~ to include all + time, or ~auto~ which is the default[fn:76]. Clicking with + {{{kbd(mouse-1)}}} onto the mode line entry pops up a menu with + clocking options. + +- {{{kbd(C-c C-x C-o)}}} (~org-clock-out~) :: + + #+kindex: C-c C-x C-o + #+findex: org-clock-out + #+vindex: org-log-note-clock-out + Stop the clock (clock-out). This inserts another timestamp at the + same location where the clock was last started. It also directly + computes the resulting time in inserts it after the time range as + ==>HH:MM=. See the variable ~org-log-note-clock-out~ for the + possibility to record an additional note together with the clock-out + timestamp[fn:77]. + +- {{{kbd(C-c C-x C-x)}}} (~org-clock-in-last~) :: + + #+kindex: C-c C-x C-x + #+findex: org-clock-in-last + #+vindex: org-clock-continuously + Re-clock the last clocked task. With one {{{kbd(C-u)}}} prefix + argument, select the task from the clock history. With two + {{{kbd(C-u)}}} prefixes, force continuous clocking by starting the + clock when the last clock stopped. + +- {{{kbd(C-c C-x C-e)}}} (~org-clock-modify-effort-estimate~) :: + + #+kindex: C-c C-x C-e + #+findex: org-clock-modify-effort-estimate + Update the effort estimate for the current clock task. + +- {{{kbd(C-c C-c)}}} or {{{kbd(C-c C-y)}}} (~org-evaluate-time-range~) :: + + #+kindex: C-c C-c + #+kindex: C-c C-y + #+findex: org-evaluate-time-range + Recompute the time interval after changing one of the timestamps. + This is only necessary if you edit the timestamps directly. If you + change them with {{{kbd(S-)}}} keys, the update is + automatic. + +- {{{kbd(C-S-UP)}}} (~org-clock-timestamps-up~), {{{kbd(C-S-DOWN)}}} (~org-clock-timestamps-down~) :: + + #+kindex: C-S-UP + #+findex: org-clock-timestamps-up + #+kindex: C-S-DOWN + #+findex: org-clock-timestamps-down + On CLOCK log lines, increase/decrease both timestamps so that the + clock duration keeps the same value. + +- {{{kbd(S-M-UP)}}} (~org-timestamp-up~), {{{kbd(S-M-DOWN)}}} (~org-timestamp-down~) :: + + #+kindex: S-M-UP + #+findex: org-clock-timestamp-up + #+kindex: S-M-DOWN + #+findex: org-clock-timestamp-down + On =CLOCK= log lines, increase/decrease the timestamp at point and + the one of the previous, or the next, clock timestamp by the same + duration. For example, if you hit {{{kbd(S-M-UP)}}} to increase + a clocked-out timestamp by five minutes, then the clocked-in + timestamp of the next clock is increased by five minutes. + +- {{{kbd(C-c C-t)}}} (~org-todo~) :: + + #+kindex: C-c C-t + #+findex: org-todo + Changing the TODO state of an item to DONE automatically stops the + clock if it is running in this same item. + +- {{{kbd(C-c C-x C-q)}}} (~org-clock-cancel~) :: + + #+kindex: C-c C-x C-q + #+findex: org-clock-cancel + Cancel the current clock. This is useful if a clock was started by + mistake, or if you ended up working on something else. + +- {{{kbd(C-c C-x C-j)}}} (~org-clock-goto~) :: + + #+kindex: C-c C-x C-j + #+findex: or-clock-goto + Jump to the headline of the currently clocked in task. With + a {{{kbd(C-u)}}} prefix argument, select the target task from a list + of recently clocked tasks. + +- {{{kbd(C-c C-x C-d)}}} (~org-clock-display~) :: + + #+kindex: C-c C-x C-d + #+findex: org-clock-display + #+vindex: org-remove-highlights-with-change + Display time summaries for each subtree in the current buffer. This + puts overlays at the end of each headline, showing the total time + recorded under that heading, including the time of any subheadings. + You can use visibility cycling to study the tree, but the overlays + disappear when you change the buffer (see variable + ~org-remove-highlights-with-change~) or press {{{kbd(C-c C-c)}}}. + +The {{{kbd(l)}}} key may be used in the agenda (see [[*Weekly/daily +agenda]]) to show which tasks have been worked on or closed during +a day. + +*Important:* note that both ~org-clock-out~ and ~org-clock-in-last~ +can have a global keybinding and do not modify the window disposition. + +*** The clock table +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: Detailed reports. +:END: +#+cindex: clocktable, dynamic block +#+cindex: report, of clocked time + +Org mode can produce quite complex reports based on the time clocking +information. Such a report is called a /clock table/, because it is +formatted as one or several Org tables. + +#+attr_texinfo: :sep , +- ~org-clock-report~ :: + + #+kindex: C-c C-x x + #+findex: org-clock-report + Insert or update a clock table. When called with a prefix argument, + jump to the first clock table in the current document and update it. + The clock table includes archived trees. + + This command can be invoked by calling + ~org-dynamic-block-insert-dblock~ ({{{kbd(C-c C-x x)}}}) and + selecting "clocktable" (see [[*Dynamic Blocks]]). + +- {{{kbd(C-c C-c)}}} or {{{kbd(C-c C-x C-u)}}} (~org-dblock-update~) :: + + #+kindex: C-c C-c + #+kindex: C-c C-x C-u + #+findex: org-dblock-update + Update dynamic block at point. Point needs to be in the =BEGIN= + line of the dynamic block. + +- {{{kbd(C-u C-c C-x C-u)}}} :: + + #+kindex: C-u C-c C-x C-u + Update all dynamic blocks (see [[*Dynamic Blocks]]). This is useful if + you have several clock table blocks in a buffer. + +- {{{kbd(S-LEFT)}}}, {{{kbd(S-RIGHT)}}} (~org-clocktable-try-shift~) :: + + #+kindex: S-LEFT + #+kindex: S-RIGHT + #+findex: org-clocktable-try-shift + Shift the current =:block= interval and update the table. Point + needs to be in the =#+BEGIN: clocktable= line for this command. If + =:block= is =today=, it is shifted to =today-1=, etc. + +Here is an example of the frame for a clock table as it is inserted +into the buffer by ~org-clock-report~: + +#+cindex: @samp{BEGIN clocktable} +#+begin_example +,#+BEGIN: clocktable :maxlevel 2 :emphasize nil :scope file +,#+END: clocktable +#+end_example + +#+vindex: org-clocktable-defaults +The =#+BEGIN= line contains options to define the scope, structure, +and formatting of the report. Defaults for all these options can be +configured in the variable ~org-clocktable-defaults~. + +First there are options that determine which clock entries are to +be selected: + +- =:maxlevel= :: + + Maximum level depth to which times are listed in the table. Clocks + at deeper levels are summed into the upper level. + +- =:scope= :: + + The scope to consider. This can be any of the following: + + | =nil= | the current buffer or narrowed region | + | =file= | the full current buffer | + | =subtree= | the subtree where the clocktable is located | + | =treeN= | the surrounding level N tree, for example =tree3= | + | =tree= | the surrounding level 1 tree | + | =agenda= | all agenda files | + | =("file" ...)= | scan these files | + | =FUNCTION= | scan files returned by calling {{{var(FUNCTION)}}} with no argument | + | =file-with-archives= | current file and its archives | + | =agenda-with-archives= | all agenda files, including archives | + +- =:block= :: + + The time block to consider. This block is specified either + absolutely, or relative to the current time and may be any of these + formats: + + | =2007-12-31= | New year eve 2007 | + | =2007-12= | December 2007 | + | =2007-W50= | ISO-week 50 in 2007 | + | =2007-Q2= | 2nd quarter in 2007 | + | =2007= | the year 2007 | + | =today=, =yesterday=, =today-N= | a relative day | + | =thisweek=, =lastweek=, =thisweek-N= | a relative week | + | =thismonth=, =lastmonth=, =thismonth-N= | a relative month | + | =thisyear=, =lastyear=, =thisyear-N= | a relative year | + | =untilnow=[fn:78] | all clocked time ever | + + #+vindex: org-clock-display-default-range + When this option is not set, Org falls back to the value in + ~org-clock-display-default-range~, which defaults to the current + year. + + Use {{{kbd(S-LEFT)}}} or {{{kbd(S-RIGHT)}}} to shift the time + interval. + +- =:tstart= :: + + A time string specifying when to start considering times. Relative + times like ="<-2w>"= can also be used. See [[*Matching tags and + properties]] for relative time syntax. + +- =:tend= :: + + A time string specifying when to stop considering times. Relative + times like =""= can also be used. See [[*Matching tags and + properties]] for relative time syntax. + +- =:wstart= :: + + The starting day of the week. The default is 1 for Monday. + +- =:mstart= :: + + The starting day of the month. The default is 1 for the first. + +- =:step= :: + + Set to =day=, =week=, =semimonth=, =month=, or =year= to split the + table into chunks. To use this, either =:block=, or =:tstart= and + =:tend= are required. + +- =:stepskip0= :: + + When non-~nil~, do not show steps that have zero time. + +- =:fileskip0= :: + + When non-~nil~, do not show table sections from files which did not + contribute. + +- =:match= :: + + A tags match to select entries that should contribute. See + [[*Matching tags and properties]] for the match syntax. + +#+findex: org-clocktable-write-default +Then there are options that determine the formatting of the table. +There options are interpreted by the function +~org-clocktable-write-default~, but you can specify your own function +using the =:formatter= parameter. + +- =:emphasize= :: + + When non-~nil~, emphasize level one and level two items. + +- =:lang= :: + + Language[fn:79] to use for descriptive cells like "Task". + +- =:link= :: + + Link the item headlines in the table to their origins. + +- =:narrow= :: + + An integer to limit the width of the headline column in the Org + table. If you write it like =50!=, then the headline is also + shortened in export. + +- =:indent= :: + + Indent each headline field according to its level. + +- =:hidefiles= :: + + Hide the file column when multiple files are used to produce the + table. + +- =:tcolumns= :: + + Number of columns to be used for times. If this is smaller than + =:maxlevel=, lower levels are lumped into one column. + +- =:level= :: + + Should a level number column be included? + +- =:sort= :: + + A cons cell containing the column to sort and a sorting type. E.g., + =:sort (1 . ?a)= sorts the first column alphabetically. + +- =:compact= :: + + Abbreviation for =:level nil :indent t :narrow 40! :tcolumns 1=. + All are overwritten except if there is an explicit =:narrow=. + +- =:timestamp= :: + + A timestamp for the entry, when available. Look for =SCHEDULED=, + =DEADLINE=, =TIMESTAMP= and =TIMESTAMP_IA= special properties (see + [[*Special Properties]]), in this order. + +- =:tags= :: + + When this flag is non-~nil~, show the headline's tags. + +- =:properties= :: + + List of properties shown in the table. Each property gets its own + column. + +- =:inherit-props= :: + + When this flag is non-~nil~, the values for =:properties= are + inherited. + +- =:formula= :: + + Content of a =TBLFM= keyword to be added and evaluated. As + a special case, =:formula %= adds a column with % time. If you do + not specify a formula here, any existing formula below the clock + table survives updates and is evaluated. + +- =:formatter= :: + + A function to format clock data and insert it into the buffer. + +To get a clock summary of the current level 1 tree, for the current +day, you could write: + +#+begin_example +,#+BEGIN: clocktable :maxlevel 2 :block today :scope tree1 :link t +,#+END: clocktable +#+end_example + +#+texinfo: @noindent +To use a specific time range you could write[fn:80] + +#+begin_example +,#+BEGIN: clocktable :tstart "<2006-08-10 Thu 10:00>" + :tend "<2006-08-10 Thu 12:00>" +,#+END: clocktable +#+end_example + +#+texinfo: @noindent +A range starting a week ago and ending right now could be written as + +#+begin_example +,#+BEGIN: clocktable :tstart "<-1w>" :tend "" +,#+END: clocktable +#+end_example + +#+texinfo: @noindent +A summary of the current subtree with % times would be + +#+begin_example +,#+BEGIN: clocktable :scope subtree :link t :formula % +,#+END: clocktable +#+end_example + +#+texinfo: @noindent +A horizontally compact representation of everything clocked during +last week would be + +#+begin_example +,#+BEGIN: clocktable :scope agenda :block lastweek :compact t +,#+END: clocktable +#+end_example + +*** Resolving idle time and continuous clocking +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: Resolving time when you've been idle. +:ALT_TITLE: Resolving idle time +:END: + +**** Resolving idle time +:PROPERTIES: +:UNNUMBERED: notoc +:END: + +#+cindex: resolve idle time +#+cindex: idle, resolve, dangling + +If you clock in on a work item, and then walk away from your +computer---perhaps to take a phone call---you often need to +"resolve" the time you were away by either subtracting it from the +current clock, or applying it to another one. + +#+vindex: org-clock-idle-time +#+vindex: org-clock-x11idle-program-name +By customizing the variable ~org-clock-idle-time~ to some integer, +such as 10 or 15, Emacs can alert you when you get back to your +computer after being idle for that many minutes[fn:81], and ask what +you want to do with the idle time. There will be a question waiting +for you when you get back, indicating how much idle time has passed +constantly updated with the current amount, as well as a set of +choices to correct the discrepancy: + +- {{{kbd(k)}}} :: + + #+kindex: k + To keep some or all of the minutes and stay clocked in, press + {{{kbd(k)}}}. Org asks how many of the minutes to keep. Press + {{{kbd(RET)}}} to keep them all, effectively changing nothing, or + enter a number to keep that many minutes. + +- {{{kbd(K)}}} :: + + #+kindex: K + If you use the shift key and press {{{kbd(K)}}}, it keeps however + many minutes you request and then immediately clock out of that + task. If you keep all of the minutes, this is the same as just + clocking out of the current task. + +- {{{kbd(s)}}} :: + + #+kindex: s + To keep none of the minutes, use {{{kbd(s)}}} to subtract all the + away time from the clock, and then check back in from the moment you + returned. + +- {{{kbd(S)}}} :: + + #+kindex: S + To keep none of the minutes and just clock out at the start of the + away time, use the shift key and press {{{kbd(S)}}}. Remember that + using shift always leave you clocked out, no matter which option you + choose. + +- {{{kbd(C)}}} :: + + #+kindex: C + To cancel the clock altogether, use {{{kbd(C)}}}. Note that if + instead of canceling you subtract the away time, and the resulting + clock amount is less than a minute, the clock is still canceled + rather than cluttering up the log with an empty entry. + +What if you subtracted those away minutes from the current clock, and +now want to apply them to a new clock? Simply clock in to any task +immediately after the subtraction. Org will notice that you have +subtracted time "on the books", so to speak, and will ask if you want +to apply those minutes to the next task you clock in on. + +There is one other instance when this clock resolution magic occurs. +Say you were clocked in and hacking away, and suddenly your cat chased +a mouse who scared a hamster that crashed into your UPS's power +button! You suddenly lose all your buffers, but thanks to auto-save +you still have your recent Org mode changes, including your last clock +in. + +If you restart Emacs and clock into any task, Org will notice that you +have a dangling clock which was never clocked out from your last +session. Using that clock's starting time as the beginning of the +unaccounted-for period, Org will ask how you want to resolve that +time. The logic and behavior is identical to dealing with away time +due to idleness; it is just happening due to a recovery event rather +than a set amount of idle time. + +You can also check all the files visited by your Org agenda for +dangling clocks at any time using {{{kbd(M-x org-resolve-clocks +RET)}}} (or {{{kbd(C-c C-x C-z)}}}). + +**** Continuous clocking +:PROPERTIES: +:UNNUMBERED: notoc +:END: +#+cindex: continuous clocking + +#+vindex: org-clock-continuously +You may want to start clocking from the time when you clocked out the +previous task. To enable this systematically, set +~org-clock-continuously~ to non-~nil~. Each time you clock in, Org +retrieves the clock-out time of the last clocked entry for this +session, and start the new clock from there. + +If you only want this from time to time, use three universal prefix +arguments with ~org-clock-in~ and two {{{kbd(C-u C-u)}}} with +~org-clock-in-last~. + +**** Clocking out automatically after some idle time +:PROPERTIES: +:UNNUMBERED: notoc +:END: +#+cindex: auto clocking out after idle time + +#+vindex: org-clock-auto-clockout-timer +When you often forget to clock out before being idle and you don't +want to manually set the clocking time to take into account, you can +set ~org-clock-auto-clockout-timer~ to a number of seconds and add +=(org-clock-auto-clockout-insinuate)= to your =.emacs= file. + +When the clock is running and Emacs is idle for more than this number +of seconds, the clock will be clocked out automatically. + +Use =M-x org-clock-toggle-auto-clockout RET= to temporarily turn this +on or off. + +** Effort Estimates +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: Planning work effort in advance. +:END: +#+cindex: effort estimates +#+cindex: @samp{EFFORT}, property +#+vindex: org-effort-property + +If you want to plan your work in a very detailed way, or if you need +to produce offers with quotations of the estimated work effort, you +may want to assign effort estimates to entries. If you are also +clocking your work, you may later want to compare the planned effort +with the actual working time, a great way to improve planning +estimates. + +Effort estimates are stored in a special property =EFFORT=. Multiple +formats are supported, such as =3:12=, =1:23:45=, or =1d3h5min=; see +the file =org-duration.el= for more detailed information about the +format. + +You can set the effort for an entry with the following commands: + +- {{{kbd(C-c C-x e)}}} (~org-set-effort~) :: + + #+kindex: C-c C-x e + #+findex: org-set-effort + Set the effort estimate for the current entry. With a prefix + argument, set it to the next allowed value---see below. This + command is also accessible from the agenda with the {{{kbd(e)}}} + key. + +- {{{kbd(C-c C-x C-e)}}} (~org-clock-modify-effort-estimate~) :: + + #+kindex: C-c C-x C-e + #+findex: org-clock-modify-effort-estimate + Modify the effort estimate of the item currently being clocked. + +Clearly the best way to work with effort estimates is through column +view (see [[*Column View]]). You should start by setting up discrete +values for effort estimates, and a =COLUMNS= format that displays +these values together with clock sums---if you want to clock your +time. For a specific buffer you can use: + +#+begin_example +,#+PROPERTY: Effort_ALL 0 0:10 0:30 1:00 2:00 3:00 4:00 5:00 6:00 7:00 +,#+COLUMNS: %40ITEM(Task) %17Effort(Estimated Effort){:} %CLOCKSUM +#+end_example + +#+texinfo: @noindent +#+vindex: org-global-properties +#+vindex: org-columns-default-format +or, even better, you can set up these values globally by customizing +the variables ~org-global-properties~ and +~org-columns-default-format~. In particular if you want to use this +setup also in the agenda, a global setup may be advised. + +The way to assign estimates to individual items is then to switch to +column mode, and to use {{{kbd(S-RIGHT)}}} and {{{kbd(S-LEFT)}}} to +change the value. The values you enter are immediately summed up in +the hierarchy. In the column next to it, any clocked time is +displayed. + +#+vindex: org-agenda-columns-add-appointments-to-effort-sum +If you switch to column view in the daily/weekly agenda, the effort +column summarizes the estimated work effort for each day[fn:82], and +you can use this to find space in your schedule. To get an overview +of the entire part of the day that is committed, you can set the +option ~org-agenda-columns-add-appointments-to-effort-sum~. The +appointments on a day that take place over a specified time interval +are then also added to the load estimate of the day. + +Effort estimates can be used in secondary agenda filtering that is +triggered with the {{{kbd(/)}}} key in the agenda (see [[*Commands in +the Agenda Buffer]]). If you have these estimates defined consistently, +two or three key presses narrow down the list to stuff that fits into +an available time slot. + +** Taking Notes with a Relative Timer +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: Notes with a running timer. +:ALT_TITLE: Timers +:END: +#+cindex: relative timer +#+cindex: countdown timer + +Org provides two types of timers. There is a relative timer that +counts up, which can be useful when taking notes during, for example, +a meeting or a video viewing. There is also a countdown timer. + +The relative and countdown are started with separate commands. + +- {{{kbd(C-c C-x 0)}}} (~org-timer-start~) :: + + #+kindex: C-c C-x 0 + #+findex: org-timer-start + Start or reset the relative timer. By default, the timer is set + to 0. When called with a {{{kbd(C-u)}}} prefix, prompt the user for + a starting offset. If there is a timer string at point, this is + taken as the default, providing a convenient way to restart taking + notes after a break in the process. When called with a double + prefix argument {{{kbd(C-u C-u)}}}, change all timer strings in the + active region by a certain amount. This can be used to fix timer + strings if the timer was not started at exactly the right moment. + +- {{{kbd(C-c C-x ;)}}} (~org-timer-set-timer~) :: + + #+kindex: C-c C-x ; + #+findex: org-timer-set-timer + #+vindex: org-timer-default-timer + Start a countdown timer. The user is prompted for a duration. + ~org-timer-default-timer~ sets the default countdown value. Giving + a numeric prefix argument overrides this default value. This + command is available as {{{kbd(;)}}} in agenda buffers. + +Once started, relative and countdown timers are controlled with the +same commands. + +- {{{kbd(C-c C-x .)}}} (~org-timer~) :: + + #+kindex: C-c C-x . + #+findex: org-timer + Insert a relative time into the buffer. The first time you use + this, the timer starts. Using a prefix argument restarts it. + +- {{{kbd(C-c C-x -)}}} (~org-timer-item~) :: + + #+kindex: C-c C-x - + #+findex: org-timer-item + Insert a description list item with the current relative time. With + a prefix argument, first reset the timer to 0. + +- {{{kbd(M-RET)}}} (~org-insert-heading~) :: + + #+kindex: M-RET + #+findex: org-insert-heading + Once the timer list is started, you can also use {{{kbd(M-RET)}}} to + insert new timer items. + +- {{{kbd(C-c C-x \,)}}} (~org-timer-pause-or-continue~) :: + + #+kindex: C-c C-x , + #+findex: org-timer-pause-or-continue + Pause the timer, or continue it if it is already paused. + +- {{{kbd(C-c C-x _)}}} (~org-timer-stop~) :: + + #+kindex: C-c C-x _ + #+findex: org-timer-stop + Stop the timer. After this, you can only start a new timer, not + continue the old one. This command also removes the timer from the + mode line. + +* Refiling and Archiving +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: Moving and copying information with ease. +:END: +#+cindex: refiling notes +#+cindex: copying notes +#+cindex: archiving + +Once information is in the system, it may need to be moved around. +Org provides Refile, Copy and Archive commands for this. Refile and +Copy helps with moving and copying outlines. Archiving helps to keep +the system compact and fast. + +** Refile and Copy +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: Moving/copying a tree from one place to another. +:END: +#+cindex: refiling notes +#+cindex: copying notes + +When reviewing the captured data, you may want to refile or to copy +some of the entries into a different list, for example into a project. +Cutting, finding the right location, and then pasting the note is +cumbersome. To simplify this process, you can use the following +special command: + +- {{{kbd(C-c C-w)}}} (~org-refile~) :: + + #+kindex: C-c C-w + #+findex: org-refile + #+vindex: org-reverse-note-order + #+vindex: org-refile-targets + #+vindex: org-refile-use-outline-path + #+vindex: org-outline-path-complete-in-steps + #+vindex: org-refile-allow-creating-parent-nodes + #+vindex: org-log-refile + Refile the entry or region at point. This command offers possible + locations for refiling the entry and lets you select one with + completion. The item (or all items in the region) is filed below + the target heading as a subitem. Depending on + ~org-reverse-note-order~, it is either the first or last subitem. + + By default, all level 1 headlines in the current buffer are + considered to be targets, but you can have more complex definitions + across a number of files. See the variable ~org-refile-targets~ for + details. If you would like to select a location via + a file-path-like completion along the outline path, see the + variables ~org-refile-use-outline-path~ and + ~org-outline-path-complete-in-steps~. If you would like to be able + to create new nodes as new parents for refiling on the fly, check + the variable ~org-refile-allow-creating-parent-nodes~. When the + variable ~org-log-refile~[fn:83] is set, a timestamp or a note is + recorded whenever an entry is refiled. + +- {{{kbd(C-u C-c C-w)}}} :: + + #+kindex: C-u C-c C-w + Use the refile interface to jump to a heading. + +- {{{kbd(C-u C-u C-c C-w)}}} (~org-refile-goto-last-stored~) :: + + #+kindex: C-u C-u C-c C-w + #+findex: org-refile-goto-last-stored + Jump to the location where ~org-refile~ last moved a tree to. + +- {{{kbd(C-2 C-c C-w)}}} :: + + #+kindex: C-2 C-c C-w + Refile as the child of the item currently being clocked. + +- {{{kbd(C-3 C-c C-w)}}} :: + + #+kindex: C-3 C-c C-w + #+vindex: org-refile-keep + Refile and keep the entry in place. Also see ~org-refile-keep~ to + make this the default behavior, and beware that this may result in + duplicated =ID= properties. + +- {{{kbd(C-0 C-c C-w)}}} or {{{kbd(C-u C-u C-u C-c C-w)}}} (~org-refile-cache-clear~) :: + + #+kindex: C-u C-u C-u C-c C-w + #+kindex: C-0 C-c C-w + #+findex: org-refile-cache-clear + #+vindex: org-refile-use-cache + Clear the target cache. Caching of refile targets can be turned on + by setting ~org-refile-use-cache~. To make the command see new + possible targets, you have to clear the cache with this command. + +- {{{kbd(C-c M-w)}}} (~org-refile-copy~) :: + + #+kindex: C-c M-w + #+findex: org-refile-copy + Copying works like refiling, except that the original note is not + deleted. + +- {{{kbd(C-c C-M-w)}}} (~org-refile-reverse~) :: + + #+kindex: C-c C-M-w + #+findex: org-refile-reverse + Works like refiling, except that it temporarily toggles how the + value of ~org-reverse-note-order~ applies to the current buffer. So + if ~org-refile~ would append the entry as the last entry under the + target header, ~org-refile-reverse~ will prepend it as the first + entry, and vice-versa. + +** Archiving +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: What to do with finished products. +:END: +#+cindex: archiving + +When a project represented by a (sub)tree is finished, you may want to +move the tree out of the way and to stop it from contributing to the +agenda. Archiving is important to keep your working files compact and +global searches like the construction of agenda views fast. + +- {{{kbd(C-c C-x C-a)}}} (~org-archive-subtree-default~) :: + + #+kindex: C-c C-x C-a + #+findex: org-archive-subtree-default + #+vindex: org-archive-default-command + Archive the current entry using the command specified in the + variable ~org-archive-default-command~. + +*** Moving a tree to an archive file +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: Moving a tree to an archive file. +:ALT_TITLE: Moving subtrees +:END: +#+cindex: external archiving + +The most common archiving action is to move a project tree to another +file, the archive file. + +- {{{kbd(C-c C-x C-s)}}} or short {{{kbd(C-c $)}}} (~org-archive-subtree~) :: + + #+kindex: C-c C-x C-s + #+kindex: C-c $ + #+findex: org-archive-subtree + #+vindex: org-archive-location + Archive the subtree starting at point position to the location given + by ~org-archive-location~. + +- {{{kbd(C-u C-c C-x C-s)}}} :: + + #+kindex: C-u C-c C-x C-s + Check if any direct children of the current headline could be moved + to the archive. To do this, check each subtree for open TODO + entries. If none is found, the command offers to move it to the + archive location. If point is /not/ on a headline when this command + is invoked, check level 1 trees. + +- {{{kbd(C-u C-u C-c C-x C-s)}}} :: + + #+kindex: C-u C-u C-c C-x C-s + As above, but check subtree for timestamps instead of TODO entries. + The command offers to archive the subtree if it /does/ contain + a timestamp, and that timestamp is in the past. + +#+cindex: archive locations +The default archive location is a file in the same directory as the +current file, with the name derived by appending =_archive= to the +current file name. You can also choose what heading to file archived +items under, with the possibility to add them to a datetree in a file. +For information and examples on how to specify the file and the +heading, see the documentation string of the variable +~org-archive-location~. + +There is also an in-buffer option for setting this variable, for +example: + +#+cindex: @samp{ARCHIVE}, keyword +: #+ARCHIVE: %s_done:: + +#+cindex: ARCHIVE, property +If you would like to have a special archive location for a single +entry or a (sub)tree, give the entry an =ARCHIVE= property with the +location as the value (see [[*Properties and Columns]]). + +#+vindex: org-archive-save-context-info +When a subtree is moved, it receives a number of special properties +that record context information like the file from where the entry +came, its outline path the archiving time etc. Configure the variable +~org-archive-save-context-info~ to adjust the amount of information +added. + +#+vindex: org-archive-subtree-save-file-p +When ~org-archive-subtree-save-file-p~ is non-~nil~, save the target +archive buffer. + +*** Internal archiving +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: Switch off a tree but keep it in the file. +:END: + +#+cindex: @samp{ARCHIVE}, tag +If you want to just switch off---for agenda views---certain subtrees +without moving them to a different file, you can use the =ARCHIVE= +tag. + +A headline that is marked with the =ARCHIVE= tag (see [[*Tags]]) stays at +its location in the outline tree, but behaves in the following way: + +- + #+vindex: org-cycle-open-archived-trees + It does not open when you attempt to do so with a visibility cycling + command (see [[*Visibility Cycling]]). You can force cycling archived + subtrees with {{{kbd(C-TAB)}}}, or by setting the option + ~org-cycle-open-archived-trees~. Also normal outline commands, like + ~outline-show-all~, open archived subtrees. + +- + #+vindex: org-sparse-tree-open-archived-trees + During sparse tree construction (see [[*Sparse Trees]]), matches in + archived subtrees are not exposed, unless you configure the option + ~org-sparse-tree-open-archived-trees~. + +- + #+vindex: org-agenda-skip-archived-trees + During agenda view construction (see [[*Agenda Views]]), the content of + archived trees is ignored unless you configure the option + ~org-agenda-skip-archived-trees~, in which case these trees are + always included. In the agenda you can press {{{kbd(v a)}}} to get + archives temporarily included. + +- + #+vindex: org-export-with-archived-trees + Archived trees are not exported (see [[*Exporting]]), only the headline + is. Configure the details using the variable + ~org-export-with-archived-trees~. + +- + #+vindex: org-columns-skip-archived-trees + Archived trees are excluded from column view unless the variable + ~org-columns-skip-archived-trees~ is configured to ~nil~. + +The following commands help manage the =ARCHIVE= tag: + +- {{{kbd(C-c C-x a)}}} (~org-toggle-archive-tag~) :: + + #+kindex: C-c C-x a + #+findex: org-toggle-archive-tag + Toggle the archive tag for the current headline. When the tag is + set, the headline changes to a shadowed face, and the subtree below + it is hidden. + +- {{{kbd(C-u C-c C-x a)}}} :: + + #+kindex: C-u C-c C-x a + Check if any direct children of the current headline should be + archived. To do this, check each subtree for open TODO entries. If + none is found, the command offers to set the =ARCHIVE= tag for the + child. If point is /not/ on a headline when this command is + invoked, check the level 1 trees. + +- {{{kbd(C-c C-TAB)}}} (~org-force-cycle-archived~) :: + + #+kindex: C-TAB + Cycle a tree even if it is tagged with =ARCHIVE=. + +- {{{kbd(C-c C-x A)}}} (~org-archive-to-archive-sibling~) :: + + #+kindex: C-c C-x A + #+findex: org-archive-to-archive-sibling + Move the current entry to the /Archive Sibling/. This is a sibling + of the entry with the heading =Archive= and the archive tag. The + entry becomes a child of that sibling and in this way retains a lot + of its original context, including inherited tags and approximate + position in the outline. + +* Capture and Attachments +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: Dealing with external data. +:END: +#+cindex: capture +#+cindex: attachments +#+cindex: RSS feeds +#+cindex: Atom feeds +#+cindex: protocols, for external access + +An important part of any organization system is the ability to quickly +capture new ideas and tasks, and to associate reference material with +them. Org does this using a process called /capture/. It also can +store files related to a task (/attachments/) in a special directory. +Finally, it can parse RSS feeds for information. To learn how to let +external programs (for example a web browser) trigger Org to capture +material, see [[*Protocols for External Access]]. + +** Capture +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: Capturing new stuff. +:END: +#+cindex: capture + +Capture lets you quickly store notes with little interruption of your +work flow. Org's method for capturing new items is heavily inspired +by John Wiegley's excellent Remember package. + +*** Setting up capture +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: Where notes will be stored. +:END: + +The following customization sets a default target file for notes. + +#+vindex: org-default-notes-file +#+begin_src emacs-lisp +(setq org-default-notes-file (concat org-directory "/notes.org")) +#+end_src + +You may also define a global key for capturing new material (see +[[*Activation]]). + +*** Using capture +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: Commands to invoke and terminate capture. +:END: + +- {{{kbd(M-x org-capture)}}} (~org-capture~) :: + + #+findex: org-capture + #+cindex: date tree + Display the capture templates menu. If you have templates defined + (see [[*Capture templates]]), it offers these templates for selection or + use a new Org outline node as the default template. It inserts the + template into the target file and switch to an indirect buffer + narrowed to this new node. You may then insert the information you + want. + +- {{{kbd(C-c C-c)}}} (~org-capture-finalize~) :: + + #+kindex: C-c C-c @r{(Capture buffer)} + #+findex: org-capture-finalize + Once you have finished entering information into the capture buffer, + {{{kbd(C-c C-c)}}} returns you to the window configuration before + the capture process, so that you can resume your work without + further distraction. When called with a prefix argument, finalize + and then jump to the captured item. + +- {{{kbd(C-c C-w)}}} (~org-capture-refile~) :: + + #+kindex: C-c C-w @r{(Capture buffer)} + #+findex: org-capture-refile + Finalize the capture process by refiling the note to a different + place (see [[*Refile and Copy]]). Please realize that this is a normal + refiling command that will be executed---so point position at the + moment you run this command is important. If you have inserted + a tree with a parent and children, first move point back to the + parent. Any prefix argument given to this command is passed on to + the ~org-refile~ command. + +- {{{kbd(C-c C-k)}}} (~org-capture-kill~) :: + + #+kindex: C-c C-k @r{(Capture buffer)} + #+findex: org-capture-kill + Abort the capture process and return to the previous state. + +#+kindex: k c @r{(Agenda)} +You can also call ~org-capture~ in a special way from the agenda, +using the {{{kbd(k c)}}} key combination. With this access, any +timestamps inserted by the selected capture template defaults to the +date at point in the agenda, rather than to the current date. + +To find the locations of the last stored capture, use ~org-capture~ +with prefix commands: + +- {{{kbd(C-u M-x org-capture)}}} :: + + Visit the target location of a capture template. You get to select + the template in the usual way. + +- {{{kbd(C-u C-u M-x org-capture)}}} :: + + Visit the last stored capture item in its buffer. + +#+vindex: org-capture-bookmark +#+vindex: org-capture-last-stored +You can also jump to the bookmark ~org-capture-last-stored~, which is +automatically created unless you set ~org-capture-bookmark~ to ~nil~. + +To insert the capture at point in an Org buffer, call ~org-capture~ +with a {{{kbd(C-0)}}} prefix argument. + +*** Capture templates +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: Define the outline of different note types. +:END: +#+cindex: templates, for Capture + +You can use templates for different types of capture items, and for +different target locations. The easiest way to create such templates +is through the customize interface. + +- {{{kbd(C)}}} :: + + #+kindex: C @r{(Capture menu} + #+vindex: org-capture-templates + Customize the variable ~org-capture-templates~. + +Before we give the formal description of template definitions, let's +look at an example. Say you would like to use one template to create +general TODO entries, and you want to put these entries under the +heading =Tasks= in your file =~/org/gtd.org=. Also, a date tree in +the file =journal.org= should capture journal entries. A possible +configuration would look like: + +#+begin_src emacs-lisp +(setq org-capture-templates + '(("t" "Todo" entry (file+headline "~/org/gtd.org" "Tasks") + "* TODO %?\n %i\n %a") + ("j" "Journal" entry (file+datetree "~/org/journal.org") + "* %?\nEntered on %U\n %i\n %a"))) +#+end_src + +If you then press {{{kbd(t)}}} from the capture menu, Org will prepare +the template for you like this: + +#+begin_example +,* TODO + [[file:LINK TO WHERE YOU INITIATED CAPTURE]] +#+end_example + +#+texinfo: @noindent +During expansion of the template, =%a= has been replaced by a link to +the location from where you called the capture command. This can be +extremely useful for deriving tasks from emails, for example. You +fill in the task definition, press {{{kbd(C-c C-c)}}} and Org returns +you to the same place where you started the capture process. + +To define special keys to capture to a particular template without +going through the interactive template selection, you can create your +key binding like this: + +#+begin_src emacs-lisp +(define-key global-map (kbd "C-c x") + (lambda () (interactive) (org-capture nil "x"))) +#+end_src + +**** Template elements +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: What is needed for a complete template entry. +:END: + +Now lets look at the elements of a template definition. Each entry in +~org-capture-templates~ is a list with the following items: + +- keys :: + + The keys that selects the template, as a string, characters only, + for example ="a"=, for a template to be selected with a single key, + or ="bt"= for selection with two keys. When using several keys, + keys using the same prefix key must be sequential in the list and + preceded by a 2-element entry explaining the prefix key, for + example: + + #+begin_src emacs-lisp + ("b" "Templates for marking stuff to buy") + #+end_src + + If you do not define a template for the {{{kbd(C)}}} key, this key + opens the Customize buffer for this complex variable. + +- description :: + + A short string describing the template, shown during selection. + +- type :: + + The type of entry, a symbol. Valid values are: + + - ~entry~ :: + + An Org mode node, with a headline. Will be filed as the child of + the target entry or as a top-level entry. The target file should + be an Org file. + + - ~item~ :: + + A plain list item, placed in the first plain list at the target + location. Again the target file should be an Org file. + + - ~checkitem~ :: + + A checkbox item. This only differs from the plain list item by + the default template. + + - ~table-line~ :: + + A new line in the first table at the target location. Where + exactly the line will be inserted depends on the properties + ~:prepend~ and ~:table-line-pos~ (see below). + + - ~plain~ :: + + Text to be inserted as it is. + +- target :: + + #+vindex: org-default-notes-file + #+vindex: org-directory + Specification of where the captured item should be placed. In Org + files, targets usually define a node. Entries will become children + of this node. Other types will be added to the table or list in the + body of this node. Most target specifications contain a file name. + If that file name is the empty string, it defaults to + ~org-default-notes-file~. A file can also be given as a variable or + as a function called with no argument. When an absolute path is not + specified for a target, it is taken as relative to ~org-directory~. + + Valid values are: + + - =(file "path/to/file")= :: + + Text will be placed at the beginning or end of that file. + + - =(id "id of existing org entry")= :: + + Filing as child of this entry, or in the body of the entry. + + - =(file+headline "filename" "node headline")= :: + + Fast configuration if the target heading is unique in the file. + + - =(file+olp "filename" "Level 1 heading" "Level 2" ...)= :: + + For non-unique headings, the full path is safer. + + - =(file+regexp "filename" "regexp to find location")= :: + + Use a regular expression to position point. + + - =(file+olp+datetree "filename" [ "Level 1 heading" ...])= :: + + This target[fn:84] creates a heading in a date tree[fn:85] for + today's date. If the optional outline path is given, the tree + will be built under the node it is pointing to, instead of at top + level. Check out the ~:time-prompt~ and ~:tree-type~ properties + below for additional options. + + - =(file+function "filename" function-finding-location)= :: + + A function to find the right location in the file. + + - =(clock)= :: + + File to the entry that is currently being clocked. + + - =(function function-finding-location)= :: + + Most general way: write your own function which both visits the + file and moves point to the right location. + +- template :: + + The template for creating the capture item. If you leave this + empty, an appropriate default template will be used. Otherwise this + is a string with escape codes, which will be replaced depending on + time and context of the capture call. You may also get this + template string from a file[fn:86], or dynamically, from a function + using either syntax: + + : (file "/path/to/template-file") + : (function FUNCTION-RETURNING-THE-TEMPLATE) + +- properties :: + + The rest of the entry is a property list of additional options. + Recognized properties are: + + - ~:prepend~ :: + + Normally new captured information will be appended at the target + location (last child, last table line, last list item, ...). + Setting this property changes that. + + - ~:immediate-finish~ :: + + When set, do not offer to edit the information, just file it away + immediately. This makes sense if the template only needs + information that can be added automatically. + + - ~:jump-to-captured~ :: + + When set, jump to the captured entry when finished. + + - ~:empty-lines~ :: + + Set this to the number of lines to insert before and after the new + item. Default 0, and the only other common value is 1. + + - ~:empty-lines-after~ :: + + Set this to the number of lines that should be inserted after the + new item. Overrides ~:empty-lines~ for the number of lines + inserted after. + + - ~:empty-lines-before~ :: + + Set this to the number of lines that should be inserted before the + new item. Overrides ~:empty-lines~ for the number lines inserted + before. + + - ~:clock-in~ :: + + Start the clock in this item. + + - ~:clock-keep~ :: + + Keep the clock running when filing the captured entry. + + - ~:clock-resume~ :: + + If starting the capture interrupted a clock, restart that clock + when finished with the capture. Note that ~:clock-keep~ has + precedence over ~:clock-resume~. When setting both to non-~nil~, + the current clock will run and the previous one will not be + resumed. + + - ~:time-prompt~ :: + + Prompt for a date/time to be used for date/week trees and when + filling the template. Without this property, capture uses the + current date and time. Even if this property has not been set, + you can force the same behavior by calling ~org-capture~ with + a {{{kbd(C-1)}}} prefix argument. + + - ~:tree-type~ :: + + Use ~week~ to make a week tree instead of the month-day tree, + i.e., place the headings for each day under a heading with the + current ISO week. Use ~month~ to group entries by month + only. Default is to group entries by day. + + - ~:unnarrowed~ :: + + Do not narrow the target buffer, simply show the full buffer. + Default is to narrow it so that you only see the new material. + + - ~:table-line-pos~ :: + + Specification of the location in the table where the new line + should be inserted. It should be a string like =II-3= meaning + that the new line should become the third line before the second + horizontal separator line. + + - ~:kill-buffer~ :: + + If the target file was not yet visited when capture was invoked, + kill the buffer again after capture is completed. + + - ~:no-save~ :: + + Do not save the target file after finishing the capture. + + - ~:refile-targets :: Temporarily set ~org-refile-targets~ to the + value of this property. + +**** Template expansion +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: Filling in information about time and context. +:END: + +In the template itself, special "%-escapes"[fn:87] allow dynamic +insertion of content. The templates are expanded in the order given +here: + +- =%[FILE]= :: + + Insert the contents of the file given by {{{var(FILE)}}}. + +- =%(EXP)= :: + + Evaluate Elisp expression {{{var(EXP)}}} and replace it with the + result. The {{{var(EXP)}}} form must return a string. Only + placeholders pre-existing within the template, or introduced with + =%[file]=, are expanded this way. Since this happens after + expanding non-interactive "%-escapes", those can be used to fill the + expression. + +- =%= :: + + The result of format-time-string on the {{{var(FORMAT)}}} + specification. + +- =%t= :: + + Timestamp, date only. + +- =%T= :: + + Timestamp, with date and time. + +- =%u=, =%U= :: + + Like =%t=, =%T= above, but inactive timestamps. + +- =%i= :: + + Initial content, the region when capture is called while the region + is active. If there is text before =%i= on the same line, such as + indentation, and =%i= is not inside a =%(exp)= form, that prefix is + added before every line in the inserted text. + +- =%a= :: + + Annotation, normally the link created with ~org-store-link~. + +- =%A= :: + + Like =%a=, but prompt for the description part. + +- =%l= :: + + Like =%a=, but only insert the literal link. + +- =%L= :: + + Like =%l=, but without brackets (the link content itself). + +- =%c= :: + + Current kill ring head. + +- =%x= :: + + Content of the X clipboard. + +- =%k= :: + + Title of the currently clocked task. + +- =%K= :: + + Link to the currently clocked task. + +- =%n= :: + + User name (taken from ~user-full-name~). + +- =%f= :: + + File visited by current buffer when org-capture was called. + +- =%F= :: + + Full path of the file or directory visited by current buffer. + +- =%:keyword= :: + + Specific information for certain link types, see below. + +- =%^g= :: + + Prompt for tags, with completion on tags in target file. + +- =%^G= :: + + Prompt for tags, with completion all tags in all agenda files. + +- =%^t= :: + + Like =%t=, but prompt for date. Similarly =%^T=, =%^u=, =%^U=. You + may define a prompt like =%^{Birthday}t=. + +- =%^C= :: + + Interactive selection of which kill or clip to use. + +- =%^L= :: + + Like =%^C=, but insert as link. + +- =%^{PROP}p= :: + + Prompt the user for a value for property {{{var(PROP)}}}. You may + specify a default value with =%^{PROP|default}=. + +- =%^{PROMPT}= :: + + Prompt the user for a string and replace this sequence with it. You + may specify a default value and a completion table with + =%^{prompt|default|completion2|completion3...}=. The arrow keys + access a prompt-specific history. + +- =%\N= :: + + Insert the text entered at the {{{var(N)}}}th =%^{PROMPT}=, where + {{{var(N)}}} is a number, starting from 1. + +- =%?= :: + + After completing the template, position point here. + +#+vindex: org-store-link-props +For specific link types, the following keywords are defined[fn:88]: + +#+vindex: org-link-from-user-regexp +| Link type | Available keywords | +|--------------+----------------------------------------------------------| +| bbdb | =%:name=, =%:company= | +| irc | =%:server=, =%:port=, =%:nick= | +| mh, rmail | =%:type=, =%:subject=, =%:message-id= | +| | =%:from=, =%:fromname=, =%:fromaddress= | +| | =%:to=, =%:toname=, =%:toaddress= | +| | =%:date= (message date header field) | +| | =%:date-timestamp= (date as active timestamp) | +| | =%:date-timestamp-inactive= (date as inactive timestamp) | +| | =%:fromto= (either "to NAME" or "from NAME")[fn:89] | +| gnus | =%:group=, for messages also all email fields | +| w3, w3m | =%:url= | +| info | =%:file=, =%:node= | +| calendar | =%:date= | +| org-protocol | =%:link=, =%:description=, =%:annotation= | + +**** Templates in contexts +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: Only show a template in a specific context. +:END: + +#+vindex: org-capture-templates-contexts +To control whether a capture template should be accessible from +a specific context, you can customize +~org-capture-templates-contexts~. Let's say, for example, that you +have a capture template "p" for storing Gnus emails containing +patches. Then you would configure this option like this: + +#+begin_src emacs-lisp +(setq org-capture-templates-contexts + '(("p" ((in-mode . "message-mode"))))) +#+end_src + +You can also tell that the command key {{{kbd(p)}}} should refer to +another template. In that case, add this command key like this: + +#+begin_src emacs-lisp +(setq org-capture-templates-contexts + '(("p" "q" ((in-mode . "message-mode"))))) +#+end_src + +See the docstring of the variable for more information. + +** Attachments +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: Attach files to outlines. +:END: +#+cindex: attachments + +It is often useful to associate reference material with an outline +node. Small chunks of plain text can simply be stored in the subtree +of a project. Hyperlinks (see [[*Hyperlinks]]) can establish associations +with files that live elsewhere on a local, or even remote, computer, +like emails or source code files belonging to a project. + +Another method is /attachments/, which are files located in a +directory belonging to an outline node. Org uses directories either +named by a unique ID of each entry, or by a =DIR= property. + +*** Attachment defaults and dispatcher +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: How to access attachment commands +:END: + +By default, Org attach uses ID properties when adding attachments to +outline nodes. This makes working with attachments fully automated. +There is no decision needed for folder-name or location. ID-based +directories are by default located in the =data/= directory, which +lives in the same directory where your Org file lives[fn:90]. + +When attachments are made using ~org-attach~ a default tag =ATTACH= is +added to the node that gets the attachments. + +For more control over the setup, see [[*Attachment options]]. + +The following commands deal with attachments: + +- {{{kbd(C-c C-a)}}} (~org-attach~) :: + + #+kindex: C-c C-a + #+findex: org-attach + The dispatcher for commands related to the attachment system. After + these keys, a list of commands is displayed and you must press an + additional key to select a command: + + - {{{kbd(a)}}} (~org-attach-attach~) :: + + #+kindex: C-c C-a a + #+findex: org-attach-attach + #+vindex: org-attach-method + Select a file and move it into the task's attachment directory. + The file is copied, moved, or linked, depending on + ~org-attach-method~. Note that hard links are not supported on + all systems. + + - {{{kbd(c)}}}/{{{kbd(m)}}}/{{{kbd(l)}}} :: + + #+kindex: C-c C-a c + #+kindex: C-c C-a m + #+kindex: C-c C-a l + Attach a file using the copy/move/link method. Note that hard + links are not supported on all systems. + + - {{{kbd(b)}}} (~org-attach-buffer~) :: + + #+kindex: C-c C-a b + #+findex: org-attach-buffer + Select a buffer and save it as a file in the task's attachment + directory. + + - {{{kbd(n)}}} (~org-attach-new~) :: + + #+kindex: C-c C-a n + #+findex: org-attach-new + Create a new attachment as an Emacs buffer. + + - {{{kbd(z)}}} (~org-attach-sync~) :: + + #+kindex: C-c C-a z + #+findex: org-attach-sync + Synchronize the current task with its attachment directory, in + case you added attachments yourself. + + - {{{kbd(o)}}} (~org-attach-open~) :: + + #+kindex: C-c C-a o + #+findex: org-attach-open + #+vindex: org-file-apps + Open current task's attachment. If there is more than one, prompt + for a file name first. Opening follows the rules set by + ~org-file-apps~. For more details, see the information on + following hyperlinks (see [[*Handling Links]]). + + - {{{kbd(O)}}} (~org-attach-open-in-emacs~) :: + + #+kindex: C-c C-a O + #+findex: org-attach-open-in-emacs + Also open the attachment, but force opening the file in Emacs. + + - {{{kbd(f)}}} (~org-attach-reveal~) :: + + #+kindex: C-c C-a f + #+findex: org-attach-reveal + Open the current task's attachment directory. + + - {{{kbd(F)}}} (~org-attach-reveal-in-emacs~) :: + + #+kindex: C-c C-a F + #+findex: org-attach-reveal-in-emacs + Also open the directory, but force using Dired in Emacs. + + - {{{kbd(d)}}} (~org-attach-delete-one~) :: + + #+kindex: C-c C-a d + Select and delete a single attachment. + + - {{{kbd(D)}}} (~org-attach-delete-all~) :: + + #+kindex: C-c C-a D + Delete all of a task's attachments. A safer way is to open the + directory in Dired and delete from there. + + - {{{kbd(s)}}} (~org-attach-set-directory~) :: + + #+kindex: C-c C-a s + #+cindex: @samp{DIR}, property + Set a specific directory as the entry's attachment directory. + This works by putting the directory path into the =DIR= + property. + + - {{{kbd(S)}}} (~org-attach-unset-directory~) :: + + #+kindex: C-c C-a S + #+cindex: @samp{DIR}, property + Remove the attachment directory. This command removes the =DIR= + property and asks the user to either move content inside that + folder, if an =ID= property is set, delete the content, or to + leave the attachment directory as is but no longer attached to the + outline node. + +*** Attachment options +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: Configuring the attachment system +:END: + +There are a couple of options for attachments that are worth +mentioning. + +- ~org-attach-id-dir~ :: + #+vindex: org-attach-id-dir + The directory where attachments are stored when =ID= is used as + method. + +- ~org-attach-dir-relative~ :: + #+vindex: org-attach-dir-relative + When setting the =DIR= property on a node using {{{kbd(C-c C-a s)}}} + (~org-attach-set-directory~), absolute links are entered by default. + This option changes that to relative links. + +- ~org-attach-use-inheritance~ :: + #+vindex: org-attach-use-inheritance + By default folders attached to an outline node are inherited from + parents according to ~org-use-property-inheritance~. If one instead + want to set inheritance specifically for Org attach that can be done + using ~org-attach-use-inheritance~. Inheriting documents through + the node hierarchy makes a lot of sense in most cases. Especially + when using attachment links (see [[*Attachment links]]). The following + example shows one use case for attachment inheritance: + + #+begin_example + ,* Chapter A ... + :PROPERTIES: + :DIR: Chapter A/ + :END: + ,** Introduction + Some text + + #+NAME: Image 1 + [[attachment:image 1.jpg]] + #+end_example + + Without inheritance one would not be able to resolve the link to + =image 1.jpg=, since the link is inside a sub-heading to =Chapter + A=. + + Inheritance works the same way for both =ID= and =DIR= property. If + both properties are defined on the same headline then =DIR= takes + precedence. This is also true if inheritance is enabled. If =DIR= + is inherited from a parent node in the outline, that property still + takes precedence over an =ID= property defined on the node itself. + +- ~org-attach-method~ :: + #+vindex: org-attach-method + When attaching files using the dispatcher {{{kbd(C-c C-a)}}} it + defaults to copying files. The behavior can be changed by + customizing ~org-attach-method~. Options are Copy, Move/Rename, + Hard link or Symbolic link. + +- ~org-attach-preferred-new-method~ :: + #+vindex: org-attach-preferred-new-method + This customization lets you choose the default way to attach to + nodes without existing =ID= and =DIR= property. It defaults to ~id~ + but can also be set to ~dir~, ~ask~ or ~nil~. + +- ~org-attach-archive-delete~ :: + #+vindex: org-attach-archive-delete + Configure this to determine if attachments should be deleted or not + when a subtree that has attachments is archived. + +- ~org-attach-auto-tag~ :: + #+vindex: org-attach-auto-tag + When attaching files to a heading it will be assigned a tag + according to what is set here. + +- ~org-attach-id-to-path-function-list~ :: + #+vindex: org-attach-id-to-path-function-list + When =ID= is used for attachments, the ID is parsed into a part of a + directory-path. See ~org-attach-id-uuid-folder-format~ for the + default function. Define a new one and add it as first element in + ~org-attach-id-to-path-function-list~ if you want the folder + structure in any other way. All functions in this list will be + tried when resolving existing ID's into paths, to maintain backward + compatibility with existing folders in your system. + +- ~org-attach-store-link-p~ :: + #+vindex: org-attach-store-link-p + Stores a link to the file that is being attached. The link is + stored in ~org-stored-links~ for later insertion with {{{kbd(C-c + C-l)}}} (see [[*Handling Links]]). Depending on what option is set in + ~org-attach-store-link-p~, the link is stored to either the original + location as a file link, the attachment location as an attachment + link or to the attachment location as a file link. + +- ~org-attach-commands~ :: + #+vindex: org-attach-commands + List of all commands used in the attach dispatcher. + +- ~org-attach-expert~ :: + #+vindex: org-attach-expert + Do not show the splash buffer with the attach dispatcher when + ~org-attach-expert~ is set to non-~nil~. + +See customization group =Org Attach= if you want to change the +default settings. + +*** Attachment links +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: Hyperlink access to attachments +:END: + +Attached files and folders can be referenced using attachment links. +This makes it easy to refer to the material added to an outline node. +Especially if it was attached using the unique ID of the entry! + +#+begin_example +,* TODO Some task + :PROPERTIES: + :ID: 95d50008-c12e-479f-a4f2-cc0238205319 + :END: +See attached document for more information: [[attachment:info.org]] +#+end_example + +See [[*External Links]] for more information about these links. + +*** Automatic version-control with Git +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: Everything safely stored away +:END: + +If the directory attached to an outline node is a Git repository, Org +can be configured to automatically commit changes to that repository +when it sees them. + +To make Org mode take care of versioning of attachments for you, add +the following to your Emacs config: + +#+begin_src emacs-lisp +(require 'org-attach-git) +#+end_src + +*** Attach from Dired +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: Using dired to select an attachment +:END: +#+cindex: attach from Dired +#+findex: org-attach-dired-to-subtree + +It is possible to attach files to a subtree from a Dired buffer. To +use this feature, have one window in Dired mode containing the file(s) +to be attached and another window with point in the subtree that shall +get the attachments. In the Dired window, with point on a file, +{{{kbd(M-x org-attach-dired-to-subtree)}}} attaches the file to the +subtree using the attachment method set by variable +~org-attach-method~. When files are marked in the Dired window then +all marked files get attached. + +Add the following lines to the Emacs init file to have {{{kbd(C-c C-x +a)}}} attach files in Dired buffers. + +#+begin_src emacs-lisp +(add-hook 'dired-mode-hook + (lambda () + (define-key dired-mode-map + (kbd "C-c C-x a") + #'org-attach-dired-to-subtree))) +#+end_src + +The following code shows how to bind the previous command with +a specific attachment method. + +#+begin_src emacs-lisp +(add-hook 'dired-mode-hook + (lambda () + (define-key dired-mode-map (kbd "C-c C-x c") + (lambda () + (interactive) + (let ((org-attach-method 'cp)) + (call-interactively #'org-attach-dired-to-subtree)))))) +#+end_src + +** RSS Feeds +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: Getting input from RSS feeds. +:END: +#+cindex: RSS feeds +#+cindex: Atom feeds + +Org can add and change entries based on information found in RSS feeds +and Atom feeds. You could use this to make a task out of each new +podcast in a podcast feed. Or you could use a phone-based +note-creating service on the web to import tasks into Org. To access +feeds, configure the variable ~org-feed-alist~. The docstring of this +variable has detailed information. With the following + +#+begin_src emacs-lisp +(setq org-feed-alist + '(("Slashdot" + "https://rss.slashdot.org/Slashdot/slashdot" + "~/txt/org/feeds.org" "Slashdot Entries"))) +#+end_src + +#+texinfo: @noindent +new items from the feed provided by =rss.slashdot.org= result in new +entries in the file =~/org/feeds.org= under the heading =Slashdot +Entries=, whenever the following command is used: + +- {{{kbd(C-c C-x g)}}} (~org-feed-update-all~) :: + + #+kindex: C-c C-x g + Collect items from the feeds configured in ~org-feed-alist~ and act + upon them. + +- {{{kbd(C-c C-x G)}}} (~org-feed-goto-inbox~) :: + + #+kindex: C-c C-x G + Prompt for a feed name and go to the inbox configured for this feed. + +Under the same headline, Org creates a drawer =FEEDSTATUS= in which it +stores information about the status of items in the feed, to avoid +adding the same item several times. + +For more information, including how to read atom feeds, see +=org-feed.el= and the docstring of ~org-feed-alist~. + +* Agenda Views +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: Collecting information into views. +:END: +#+cindex: agenda views + +Due to the way Org works, TODO items, time-stamped items, and tagged +headlines can be scattered throughout a file or even a number of +files. To get an overview of open action items, or of events that are +important for a particular date, this information must be collected, +sorted and displayed in an organized way. + +Org can select items based on various criteria and display them in +a separate buffer. Six different view types are provided: + +- an /agenda/ that is like a calendar and shows information for + specific dates, + +- a /TODO list/ that covers all unfinished action items, + +- a /match view/, showings headlines based on the tags, properties, + and TODO state associated with them, + +- a /text search view/ that shows all entries from multiple files that + contain specified keywords, + +- a /stuck projects view/ showing projects that currently do not move + along, and + +- /custom views/ that are special searches and combinations of + different views. + +The extracted information is displayed in a special /agenda buffer/. +This buffer is read-only, but provides commands to visit the +corresponding locations in the original Org files, and even to edit +these files remotely. + +#+vindex: org-agenda-skip-comment-trees +#+vindex: org-agenda-skip-archived-trees +#+cindex: commented entries, in agenda views +#+cindex: archived entries, in agenda views +By default, the report ignores commented (see [[*Comment Lines]]) and +archived (see [[*Internal archiving]]) entries. You can override this by +setting ~org-agenda-skip-comment-trees~ and +~org-agenda-skip-archived-trees~ to ~nil~. + +#+vindex: org-agenda-window-setup +#+vindex: org-agenda-restore-windows-after-quit +Two variables control how the agenda buffer is displayed and whether +the window configuration is restored when the agenda exits: +~org-agenda-window-setup~ and ~org-agenda-restore-windows-after-quit~. + +** Agenda Files +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: Files being searched for agenda information. +:END: +#+cindex: agenda files +#+cindex: files for agenda + +#+vindex: org-agenda-files +The information to be shown is normally collected from all /agenda +files/, the files listed in the variable ~org-agenda-files~[fn:91]. +If a directory is part of this list, all files with the extension +=.org= in this directory are part of the list. + +Thus, even if you only work with a single Org file, that file should +be put into the list[fn:92]. You can customize ~org-agenda-files~, +but the easiest way to maintain it is through the following commands + +#+attr_texinfo: :sep and +- {{{kbd(C-c [)}}} (~org-agenda-file-to-front~) :: + + #+kindex: C-c [ + #+findex: org-agenda-file-to-front + #+cindex: files, adding to agenda list + Add current file to the list of agenda files. The file is added to + the front of the list. If it was already in the list, it is moved + to the front. With a prefix argument, file is added/moved to the + end. + +- {{{kbd(C-c ])}}} (~org-remove-file~) :: + + #+kindex: C-c ] + #+findex: org-remove-file + Remove current file from the list of agenda files. + +- {{{kbd(C-')}}} and {{{kbd(C-\,)}}} (~org-cycle-agenda-files~) :: + + #+kindex: C-' + #+kindex: C-, + #+findex: org-cycle-agenda-files + #+cindex: cycling, of agenda files + Cycle through agenda file list, visiting one file after the other. + +- {{{kbd(M-x org-switchb)}}} :: + + #+findex: org-switchb + Command to use an Iswitchb-like interface to switch to and between + Org buffers. + +#+texinfo: @noindent +The Org menu contains the current list of files and can be used to +visit any of them. + +If you would like to focus the agenda temporarily on a file not in +this list, or on just one file in the list, or even on only a subtree +in a file, then this can be done in different ways. For a single +agenda command, you may press {{{kbd(<)}}} once or several times in +the dispatcher (see [[*The Agenda Dispatcher]]). To restrict the agenda +scope for an extended period, use the following commands: + +- {{{kbd(C-c C-x <)}}} (~org-agenda-set-restriction-lock~) :: + + #+kindex: C-c C-x < + #+findex: org-agenda-set-restriction-lock + Restrict the agenda to the current subtree. If there already is + a restriction at point, remove it. When called with a universal + prefix argument or with point before the first headline in a file, + set the agenda scope to the entire file. This restriction remains + in effect until removed with {{{kbd(C-c C-x >)}}}, or by typing + either {{{kbd(<)}}} or {{{kbd(>)}}} in the agenda dispatcher. If + there is a window displaying an agenda view, the new restriction + takes effect immediately. + +- {{{kbd(C-c C-x >)}}} (~org-agenda-remove-restriction-lock~) :: + + #+kindex: C-c C-x > + #+findex: org-agenda-remove-restriction-lock + Remove the restriction created by {{{kbd(C-c C-x <)}}}. + +When working with Speedbar, you can use the following commands in the +Speedbar frame: + +- {{{kbd(<)}}} (~org-speedbar-set-agenda-restriction~) :: + + #+findex: org-speedbar-set-agenda-restriction + Restrict the agenda to the item---either an Org file or a subtree in + such a file---at point in the Speedbar frame. If agenda is already + restricted there, remove the restriction. If there is a window + displaying an agenda view, the new restriction takes effect + immediately. + +- {{{kbd(>)}}} (~org-agenda-remove-restriction-lock~) :: + + #+findex: org-agenda-remove-restriction-lock + Remove the restriction. + +** The Agenda Dispatcher +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: Keyboard access to agenda views. +:ALT_TITLE: Agenda Dispatcher +:END: +#+cindex: agenda dispatcher +#+cindex: dispatching agenda commands + +The views are created through a dispatcher, accessible with {{{kbd(M-x +org-agenda)}}}, or, better, bound to a global key (see [[*Activation]]). +It displays a menu from which an additional letter is required to +execute a command. The dispatcher offers the following default +commands: + +#+attr_texinfo: :sep , +- {{{kbd(a)}}} :: + + Create the calendar-like agenda (see [[*Weekly/daily agenda]]). + +- {{{kbd(t)}}}, {{{kbd(T)}}} :: + + Create a list of all TODO items (see [[*The global TODO list]]). + +- {{{kbd(m)}}}, {{{kbd(M)}}} :: + + Create a list of headlines matching a given expression (see + [[*Matching tags and properties]]). + +- {{{kbd(s)}}} :: + + #+kindex: s @r{(Agenda dispatcher)} + Create a list of entries selected by a boolean expression of + keywords and/or regular expressions that must or must not occur in + the entry. + +- {{{kbd(/)}}} :: + + #+kindex: / @r{(Agenda dispatcher)} + #+vindex: org-agenda-text-search-extra-files + Search for a regular expression in all agenda files and additionally + in the files listed in ~org-agenda-text-search-extra-files~. This + uses the Emacs command ~multi-occur~. A prefix argument can be used + to specify the number of context lines for each match, default is + 1. + +- {{{kbd(#)}}} :: + + Create a list of stuck projects (see [[*Stuck projects]]). + +- {{{kbd(!)}}} :: + + Configure the list of stuck projects (see [[*Stuck projects]]). + +- {{{kbd(<)}}} :: + + #+kindex: < @r{(Agenda dispatcher)} + Restrict an agenda command to the current buffer[fn:93]. If + narrowing is in effect restrict to the narrowed part of the buffer. + After pressing {{{kbd(<)}}}, you still need to press the character + selecting the command. + +- {{{kbd(< <)}}} :: + + #+kindex: < < @r{(Agenda dispatcher)} + If there is an active region, restrict the following agenda command + to the region. Otherwise, restrict it to the current + subtree[fn:94]. After pressing {{{kbd(< <)}}}, you still need to + press the character selecting the command. + +- {{{kbd(*)}}} :: + + #+kindex: * @r{(Agenda dispatcher)} + #+vindex: org-agenda-sticky + #+findex: org-toggle-sticky-agenda + Toggle sticky agenda views. By default, Org maintains only a single + agenda buffer and rebuilds it each time you change the view, to make + sure everything is always up to date. If you switch between views + often and the build time bothers you, you can turn on sticky agenda + buffers (make this the default by customizing the variable + ~org-agenda-sticky~). With sticky agendas, the dispatcher only + switches to the selected view, you need to update it by hand with + {{{kbd(r)}}} or {{{kbd(g)}}}. You can toggle sticky agenda view any + time with ~org-toggle-sticky-agenda~. + +You can also define custom commands that are accessible through the +dispatcher, just like the default commands. This includes the +possibility to create extended agenda buffers that contain several +blocks together, for example the weekly agenda, the global TODO list +and a number of special tags matches. See [[*Custom Agenda Views]]. + +** The Built-in Agenda Views +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: What is available out of the box? +:ALT_TITLE: Built-in Agenda Views +:END: + +In this section we describe the built-in views. + +*** Weekly/daily agenda +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: The calendar page with current tasks. +:END: +#+cindex: agenda +#+cindex: weekly agenda +#+cindex: daily agenda + +The purpose of the weekly/daily /agenda/ is to act like a page of +a paper agenda, showing all the tasks for the current week or day. + +- {{{kbd(M-x org-agenda a)}}} (~org-agenda-list~) :: + + #+kindex: a @r{(Agenda dispatcher)} + #+findex: org-agenda-list + #+cindex: org-agenda, command + Compile an agenda for the current week from a list of Org files. + The agenda shows the entries for each day. With a numeric prefix + argument[fn:95]---like {{{kbd(C-u 2 1 M-x org-agenda a)}}}---you may + set the number of days to be displayed. + +#+vindex: org-agenda-span +#+vindex: org-agenda-start-day +#+vindex: org-agenda-start-on-weekday +The default number of days displayed in the agenda is set by the +variable ~org-agenda-span~. This variable can be set to any number of +days you want to see by default in the agenda, or to a span name, such +a ~day~, ~week~, ~month~ or ~year~. For weekly agendas, the default +is to start on the previous Monday (see +~org-agenda-start-on-weekday~). You can also set the start date using +a date shift: =(setq org-agenda-start-day "+10d")= starts the agenda +ten days from today in the future. + +Remote editing from the agenda buffer means, for example, that you can +change the dates of deadlines and appointments from the agenda buffer. +The commands available in the Agenda buffer are listed in [[*Commands in +the Agenda Buffer]]. + +**** Calendar/Diary integration +:PROPERTIES: +:UNNUMBERED: notoc +:END: +#+cindex: calendar integration +#+cindex: diary integration + +Emacs contains the calendar and diary by Edward\nbsp{}M.\nbsp{}Reingold. The +calendar displays a three-month calendar with holidays from different +countries and cultures. The diary allows you to keep track of +anniversaries, lunar phases, sunrise/set, recurrent appointments +(weekly, monthly) and more. In this way, it is quite complementary to +Org. It can be very useful to combine output from Org with the diary. + +In order to include entries from the Emacs diary into Org mode's +agenda, you only need to customize the variable + +#+begin_src emacs-lisp +(setq org-agenda-include-diary t) +#+end_src + +#+texinfo: @noindent +After that, everything happens automatically. All diary entries +including holidays, anniversaries, etc., are included in the agenda +buffer created by Org mode. {{{kbd(SPC)}}}, {{{kbd(TAB)}}}, and +{{{kbd(RET)}}} can be used from the agenda buffer to jump to the diary +file in order to edit existing diary entries. The {{{kbd(i)}}} +command to insert new entries for the current date works in the agenda +buffer, as well as the commands {{{kbd(S)}}}, {{{kbd(M)}}}, and +{{{kbd(C)}}} to display Sunrise/Sunset times, show lunar phases and to +convert to other calendars, respectively. {{{kbd(c)}}} can be used to +switch back and forth between calendar and agenda. + +If you are using the diary only for expression entries and holidays, +it is faster to not use the above setting, but instead to copy or even +move the entries into an Org file. Org mode evaluates diary-style +expression entries, and does it faster because there is no overhead +for first creating the diary display. Note that the expression +entries must start at the left margin, no whitespace is allowed before +them, as seen in the following segment of an Org file:[fn:96] + +#+begin_example +,* Holidays + :PROPERTIES: + :CATEGORY: Holiday + :END: +%%(org-calendar-holiday) ; special function for holiday names + +,* Birthdays + :PROPERTIES: + :CATEGORY: Ann + :END: +%%(org-anniversary 1956 5 14) Arthur Dent is %d years old +%%(org-anniversary 1869 10 2) Mahatma Gandhi would be %d years old +#+end_example + +**** Anniversaries from BBDB +:PROPERTIES: +:UNNUMBERED: notoc +:END: +#+cindex: BBDB, anniversaries +#+cindex: anniversaries, from BBDB + +#+findex: org-bbdb-anniversaries +If you are using the Insidious Big Brother Database to store your +contacts, you very likely prefer to store anniversaries in BBDB rather +than in a separate Org or diary file. Org supports this and can show +BBDB anniversaries as part of the agenda. All you need to do is to +add the following to one of your agenda files: + +#+begin_example +,* Anniversaries + :PROPERTIES: + :CATEGORY: Anniv + :END: +%%(org-bbdb-anniversaries) +#+end_example + +You can then go ahead and define anniversaries for a BBDB record. +Basically, you need a field named =anniversary= for the BBDB record +which contains the date in the format =YYYY-MM-DD= or =MM-DD=, +followed by a space and the class of the anniversary (=birthday=, +=wedding=, or a format string). If you omit the class, it defaults to +=birthday=. Here are a few examples, the header for the file +=ol-bbdb.el= contains more detailed information. + +#+begin_example +1973-06-22 +06-22 +1955-08-02 wedding +2008-04-14 %s released version 6.01 of Org mode, %d years ago +#+end_example + +After a change to BBDB, or for the first agenda display during an +Emacs session, the agenda display suffers a short delay as Org updates +its hash with anniversaries. However, from then on things will be +very fast, much faster in fact than a long list of +=%%(diary-anniversary)= entries in an Org or Diary file. + +#+findex: org-bbdb-anniversaries-future +If you would like to see upcoming anniversaries with a bit of +forewarning, you can use the following instead: + +#+begin_example +,* Anniversaries + :PROPERTIES: + :CATEGORY: Anniv + :END: +%%(org-bbdb-anniversaries-future 3) +#+end_example + +That will give you three days' warning: on the anniversary date itself +and the two days prior. The argument is optional: if omitted, it +defaults to 7. + +**** Appointment reminders +:PROPERTIES: +:UNNUMBERED: notoc +:END: +#+cindex: @file{appt.el} +#+cindex: appointment reminders +#+cindex: appointment +#+cindex: reminders + +#+cindex: APPT_WARNTIME, keyword +Org can interact with Emacs appointments notification facility. To +add the appointments of your agenda files, use the command +~org-agenda-to-appt~. This command lets you filter through the list +of your appointments and add only those belonging to a specific +category or matching a regular expression. It also reads +a =APPT_WARNTIME= property which overrides the value of +~appt-message-warning-time~ for this appointment. See the docstring +for details. + +*** The global TODO list +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: All unfinished action items. +:ALT_TITLE: Global TODO list +:END: +#+cindex: global TODO list +#+cindex: TODO list, global + +The global TODO list contains all unfinished TODO items formatted and +collected into a single place. + +- {{{kbd(M-x org-agenda t)}}} (~org-todo-list~) :: + + #+kindex: t @r{(Agenda dispatcher)} + #+findex: org-todo-list + Show the global TODO list. This collects the TODO items from all + agenda files (see [[*Agenda Views]]) into a single buffer. By default, + this lists items with a state the is not a DONE state. The buffer + is in Agenda mode, so there are commands to examine and manipulate + the TODO entries directly from that buffer (see [[*Commands in the + Agenda Buffer]]). + +- {{{kbd(M-x org-agenda T)}}} (~org-todo-list~) :: + + #+kindex: T @r{(Agenda dispatcher)} + #+findex: org-todo-list + #+cindex: TODO keyword matching + #+vindex: org-todo-keywords + Like the above, but allows selection of a specific TODO keyword. + You can also do this by specifying a prefix argument to + {{{kbd(t)}}}. You are prompted for a keyword, and you may also + specify several keywords by separating them with =|= as the boolean + OR operator. With a numeric prefix, the Nth keyword in + ~org-todo-keywords~ is selected. + + #+kindex: r + The {{{kbd(r)}}} key in the agenda buffer regenerates it, and you + can give a prefix argument to this command to change the selected + TODO keyword, for example {{{kbd(3 r)}}}. If you often need + a search for a specific keyword, define a custom command for it (see + [[*The Agenda Dispatcher]]). + + Matching specific TODO keywords can also be done as part of a tags + search (see [[*Tag Searches]]). + +Remote editing of TODO items means that you can change the state of +a TODO entry with a single key press. The commands available in the +TODO list are described in [[*Commands in the Agenda Buffer]]. + +#+cindex: sublevels, inclusion into TODO list +Normally the global TODO list simply shows all headlines with TODO +keywords. This list can become very long. There are two ways to keep +it more compact: + +- + #+vindex: org-agenda-todo-ignore-scheduled + #+vindex: org-agenda-todo-ignore-deadlines + #+vindex: org-agenda-todo-ignore-timestamp + #+vindex: org-agenda-todo-ignore-with-date + Some people view a TODO item that has been /scheduled/ for execution + or have a /deadline/ (see [[*Timestamps]]) as no longer /open/. + Configure the variables ~org-agenda-todo-ignore-scheduled~ to + exclude some or all scheduled items from the global TODO list, + ~org-agenda-todo-ignore-deadlines~ to exclude some or all items with + a deadline set, ~org-agenda-todo-ignore-timestamp~ to exclude some + or all items with an active timestamp other than a DEADLINE or + a SCHEDULED timestamp and/or ~org-agenda-todo-ignore-with-date~ to + exclude items with at least one active timestamp. + +- + #+vindex: org-agenda-todo-list-sublevels + TODO items may have sublevels to break up the task into subtasks. + In such cases it may be enough to list only the highest level TODO + headline and omit the sublevels from the global list. Configure the + variable ~org-agenda-todo-list-sublevels~ to get this behavior. + +*** Matching tags and properties +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: Structured information with fine-tuned search. +:END: +#+cindex: matching, of tags +#+cindex: matching, of properties +#+cindex: tags view +#+cindex: match view + +If headlines in the agenda files are marked with /tags/ (see [[*Tags]]), +or have properties (see [[*Properties and Columns]]), you can select +headlines based on this metadata and collect them into an agenda +buffer. The match syntax described here also applies when creating +sparse trees with {{{kbd(C-c / m)}}}. + +- {{{kbd(M-x org-agenda m)}}} (~org-tags-view~) :: + + #+kindex: m @r{(Agenda dispatcher)} + #+findex: org-tags-view + Produce a list of all headlines that match a given set of tags. The + command prompts for a selection criterion, which is a boolean logic + expression with tags, like =+work+urgent-withboss= or =work|home= + (see [[*Tags]]). If you often need a specific search, define a custom + command for it (see [[*The Agenda Dispatcher]]). + +- {{{kbd(M-x org-agenda M)}}} (~org-tags-view~) :: + + #+kindex: M @r{(Agenda dispatcher)} + #+findex: org-tags-view + #+vindex: org-tags-match-list-sublevels + #+vindex: org-agenda-tags-todo-honor-ignore-options + Like {{{kbd(m)}}}, but only select headlines that are also TODO + items and force checking subitems (see the variable + ~org-tags-match-list-sublevels~). To exclude scheduled/deadline + items, see the variable ~org-agenda-tags-todo-honor-ignore-options~. + Matching specific TODO keywords together with a tags match is also + possible, see [[*Tag Searches]]. + +The commands available in the tags list are described in [[*Commands in +the Agenda Buffer]]. + +#+cindex: boolean logic, for agenda searches +A search string can use Boolean operators =&= for AND and =|= for OR. +=&= binds more strongly than =|=. Parentheses are currently not +implemented. Each element in the search is either a tag, a regular +expression matching tags, or an expression like =PROPERTY OPERATOR +VALUE= with a comparison operator, accessing a property value. Each +element may be preceded by =-= to select against it, and =+= is +syntactic sugar for positive selection. The AND operator =&= is +optional when =+= or =-= is present. Here are some examples, using +only tags. + +- =+work-boss= :: + + Select headlines tagged =work=, but discard those also tagged + =boss=. + +- =work|laptop= :: + + Selects lines tagged =work= or =laptop=. + +- =work|laptop+night= :: + + Like before, but require the =laptop= lines to be tagged also + =night=. + +#+cindex: regular expressions, with tags search +Instead of a tag, you may also specify a regular expression enclosed +in curly braces (see [[*Regular Expressions]]). For example, +=work+{^boss.*}= matches headlines that contain the tag =:work:= and +any tag /starting/ with =boss=. + +#+cindex: group tags, as regular expressions +Group tags (see [[*Tag Hierarchy]]) are expanded as regular expressions. +E.g., if =work= is a group tag for the group =:work:lab:conf:=, then +searching for =work= also searches for ={\(?:work\|lab\|conf\)}= and +searching for =-work= searches for all headlines but those with one of +the tags in the group (i.e., =-{\(?:work\|lab\|conf\)}=). + +#+cindex: TODO keyword matching, with tags search +#+cindex: level, for tags/property match +#+cindex: category, for tags/property match +#+vindex: org-odd-levels-only +You may also test for properties (see [[*Properties and Columns]]) at the +same time as matching tags. The properties may be real properties, or +special properties that represent other metadata (see [[*Special +Properties]]). For example, the property =TODO= represents the TODO +keyword of the entry. Or, the property =LEVEL= represents the level +of an entry. So searching =+LEVEL=3+boss-TODO​="DONE"= lists all level +three headlines that have the tag =boss= and are /not/ marked with the +TODO keyword =DONE=. In buffers with ~org-odd-levels-only~ set, +=LEVEL= does not count the number of stars, but =LEVEL=2= corresponds +to 3 stars etc. + +Here are more examples: + +- =work+TODO​="WAITING"= :: + + Select =work=-tagged TODO lines with the specific TODO keyword + =WAITING=. + +- =work+TODO​="WAITING"|home+TODO​="WAITING"= :: + + Waiting tasks both at work and at home. + +When matching properties, a number of different operators can be used +to test the value of a property. Here is a complex example: + +#+begin_example ++work-boss+PRIORITY="A"+Coffee="unlimited"+Effort<2 + +With={Sarah\|Denny}+SCHEDULED>="<2008-10-11>" +#+end_example + +#+texinfo: @noindent +The type of comparison depends on how the comparison value is written: + +- If the comparison value is a plain number, a numerical comparison is + done, and the allowed operators are =<=, ===, =>=, =<==, =>==, and + =<>=. + +- If the comparison value is enclosed in double-quotes, a string + comparison is done, and the same operators are allowed. + +- If the comparison value is enclosed in double-quotes /and/ angular + brackets (like =DEADLINE<​="<2008-12-24 18:30>"=), both values are + assumed to be date/time specifications in the standard Org way, and + the comparison is done accordingly. Valid values also include + =""= for now (including time), =""=, and =""= + for these days at 0:00 hours, i.e., without a time specification. + You can also use strings like ="<+5d>"= or ="<-2m>"= with units =d=, + =w=, =m=, and =y= for day, week, month, and year, respectively. + +- If the comparison value is enclosed in curly braces, a regexp match + is performed, with === meaning that the regexp matches the property + value, and =<>= meaning that it does not match. + +So the search string in the example finds entries tagged =work= but +not =boss=, which also have a priority value =A=, a =Coffee= property +with the value =unlimited=, an =EFFORT= property that is numerically +smaller than 2, a =With= property that is matched by the regular +expression =Sarah\|Denny=, and that are scheduled on or after October +11, 2008. + +You can configure Org mode to use property inheritance during +a search, but beware that this can slow down searches considerably. +See [[*Property Inheritance]], for details. + +For backward compatibility, and also for typing speed, there is also +a different way to test TODO states in a search. For this, terminate +the tags/property part of the search string (which may include several +terms connected with =|=) with a =/= and then specify a Boolean +expression just for TODO keywords. The syntax is then similar to that +for tags, but should be applied with care: for example, a positive +selection on several TODO keywords cannot meaningfully be combined +with boolean AND. However, /negative selection/ combined with AND can +be meaningful. To make sure that only lines are checked that actually +have any TODO keyword (resulting in a speed-up), use {{{kbd(M-x +org-agenda M)}}}, or equivalently start the TODO part after the slash +with =!=. Using {{{kbd(M-x org-agenda M)}}} or =/!= does not match +TODO keywords in a DONE state. Examples: + +- =work/WAITING= :: + + Same as =work+TODO​="WAITING"=. + +- =work/!-WAITING-NEXT= :: + + Select =work=-tagged TODO lines that are neither =WAITING= nor + =NEXT=. + +- =work/!+WAITING|+NEXT= :: + + Select =work=-tagged TODO lines that are either =WAITING= or =NEXT=. + +*** Search view +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: Find entries by searching for text. +:END: +#+cindex: search view +#+cindex: text search +#+cindex: searching, for text + +This agenda view is a general text search facility for Org mode +entries. It is particularly useful to find notes. + +- {{{kbd(M-x org-agenda s)}}} (~org-search-view~) :: + + #+kindex: s @r{(Agenda dispatcher)} + #+findex: org-search-view + This is a special search that lets you select entries by matching + a substring or specific words using a boolean logic. + +For example, the search string =computer equipment= matches entries +that contain =computer equipment= as a substring, even if the two +words are separated by more space or a line break. + +Search view can also search for specific keywords in the entry, using +Boolean logic. The search string =+computer ++wifi -ethernet -{8\.11[bg]}= matches note entries that contain the +keywords =computer= and =wifi=, but not the keyword =ethernet=, and +which are also not matched by the regular expression =8\.11[bg]=, +meaning to exclude both =8.11b= and =8.11g=. The first =+= is +necessary to turn on boolean search, other =+= characters are +optional. For more details, see the docstring of the command +~org-search-view~. + +You can incrementally and conveniently adjust a boolean search from +the agenda search view with the following keys + +#+attr_texinfo: :columns 0.1 0.6 +| {{{kbd([)}}} | Add a positive search word | +| {{{kbd(])}}} | Add a negative search word | +| {{{kbd({)}}} | Add a positive regular expression | +| {{{kbd(})}}} | Add a negative regular expression | + +#+vindex: org-agenda-text-search-extra-files +Note that in addition to the agenda files, this command also searches +the files listed in ~org-agenda-text-search-extra-files~. + +*** Stuck projects +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: Find projects you need to review. +:END: +#+pindex: GTD, Getting Things Done + +If you are following a system like David Allen's GTD to organize your +work, one of the "duties" you have is a regular review to make sure +that all projects move along. A /stuck/ project is a project that has +no defined next actions, so it never shows up in the TODO lists Org +mode produces. During the review, you need to identify such projects +and define next actions for them. + +- {{{kbd(M-x org-agenda #)}}} (~org-agenda-list-stuck-projects~) :: + + #+kindex: # @r{(Agenda dispatcher)} + #+findex: org-agenda-list-stuck-projects + List projects that are stuck. + +- {{{kbd(M-x org-agenda !)}}} :: + + #+kindex: ! @r{(Agenda dispatcher)} + #+vindex: org-stuck-projects + Customize the variable ~org-stuck-projects~ to define what a stuck + project is and how to find it. + +You almost certainly need to configure this view before it works for +you. The built-in default assumes that all your projects are level-2 +headlines, and that a project is not stuck if it has at least one +entry marked with a TODO keyword =TODO= or =NEXT= or =NEXTACTION=. + +Let's assume that you, in your own way of using Org mode, identify +projects with a tag =:PROJECT:=, and that you use a TODO keyword +=MAYBE= to indicate a project that should not be considered yet. +Let's further assume that the TODO keyword =DONE= marks finished +projects, and that =NEXT= and =TODO= indicate next actions. The tag +=:@shop:= indicates shopping and is a next action even without the +NEXT tag. Finally, if the project contains the special word =IGNORE= +anywhere, it should not be listed either. In this case you would +start by identifying eligible projects with a tags/TODO match (see +[[*Tag Searches]]) =+PROJECT/-MAYBE-DONE=, and then check for =TODO=, +=NEXT=, =@shop=, and =IGNORE= in the subtree to identify projects that +are not stuck. The correct customization for this is: + +#+begin_src emacs-lisp +(setq org-stuck-projects + '("+PROJECT/-MAYBE-DONE" ("NEXT" "TODO") ("@shop") + "\\")) +#+end_src + +Note that if a project is identified as non-stuck, the subtree of this +entry is searched for stuck projects. + +** Presentation and Sorting +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: How agenda items are prepared for display. +:END: +#+cindex: presentation, of agenda items + +#+vindex: org-agenda-prefix-format +#+vindex: org-agenda-tags-column +Before displaying items in an agenda view, Org mode visually prepares +the items and sorts them. Each item occupies a single line. The line +starts with a /prefix/ that contains the /category/ (see [[*Categories]]) +of the item and other important information. You can customize in +which column tags are displayed through ~org-agenda-tags-column~. You +can also customize the prefix using the option +~org-agenda-prefix-format~. This prefix is followed by a cleaned-up +version of the outline headline associated with the item. + +*** Categories +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: Not all tasks are equal. +:END: +#+cindex: category +#+cindex: @samp{CATEGORY}, keyword + +The category is a broad label assigned to each agenda item. By +default, the category is simply derived from the file name, but you +can also specify it with a special line in the buffer, like +this: + +: #+CATEGORY: Thesis + +#+cindex: @samp{CATEGORY}, property +If you would like to have a special category for a single entry or +a (sub)tree, give the entry a =CATEGORY= property with the special +category you want to apply as the value. + +#+vindex: org-agenda-category-icon-alist +The display in the agenda buffer looks best if the category is not +longer than 10 characters. You can set up icons for category by +customizing the ~org-agenda-category-icon-alist~ variable. + +*** Time-of-day specifications +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: How the agenda knows the time. +:END: +#+cindex: time-of-day specification + +Org mode checks each agenda item for a time-of-day specification. The +time can be part of the timestamp that triggered inclusion into the +agenda, for example + +: <2005-05-10 Tue 19:00> + +#+texinfo: @noindent +Time ranges can be specified with two timestamps: + +: <2005-05-10 Tue 20:30>--<2005-05-10 Tue 22:15> + +#+vindex: org-agenda-search-headline-for-time +In the headline of the entry itself, a time(range)---like =12:45= or +a =8:30-1pm=---may also appear as plain text[fn:97]. + +If the agenda integrates the Emacs diary (see [[*Weekly/daily agenda]]), +time specifications in diary entries are recognized as well. + +For agenda display, Org mode extracts the time and displays it in +a standard 24 hour format as part of the prefix. The example times in +the previous paragraphs would end up in the agenda like this: + +#+begin_example + 8:30-13:00 Arthur Dent lies in front of the bulldozer +12:45...... Ford Prefect arrives and takes Arthur to the pub +19:00...... The Vogon reads his poem +20:30-22:15 Marvin escorts the Hitchhikers to the bridge +#+end_example + +#+cindex: time grid +If the agenda is in single-day mode, or for the display of today, the +timed entries are embedded in a time grid, like + +#+begin_example + 8:00...... ------------------ + 8:30-13:00 Arthur Dent lies in front of the bulldozer +10:00...... ------------------ +12:00...... ------------------ +12:45...... Ford Prefect arrives and takes Arthur to the pub +14:00...... ------------------ +16:00...... ------------------ +18:00...... ------------------ +19:00...... The Vogon reads his poem +20:00...... ------------------ +20:30-22:15 Marvin escorts the Hitchhikers to the bridge +#+end_example + +#+vindex: org-agenda-use-time-grid +#+vindex: org-agenda-time-grid +The time grid can be turned on and off with the variable +~org-agenda-use-time-grid~, and can be configured with +~org-agenda-time-grid~. + +*** Sorting of agenda items +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: The order of things. +:END: +#+cindex: sorting, of agenda items +#+cindex: priorities, of agenda items + +Before being inserted into a view, the items are sorted. How this is +done depends on the type of view. + +- + #+vindex: org-agenda-files + For the daily/weekly agenda, the items for each day are sorted. The + default order is to first collect all items containing an explicit + time-of-day specification. These entries are shown at the beginning + of the list, as a /schedule/ for the day. After that, items remain + grouped in categories, in the sequence given by ~org-agenda-files~. + Within each category, items are sorted by priority (see + [[*Priorities]]), which is composed of the base priority (2000 for + priority =A=, 1000 for =B=, and 0 for =C=), plus additional + increments for overdue scheduled or deadline items. + +- For the TODO list, items remain in the order of categories, but + within each category, sorting takes place according to priority (see + [[*Priorities]]). The priority used for sorting derives from the + priority cookie, with additions depending on how close an item is to + its due or scheduled date. + +- For tags matches, items are not sorted at all, but just appear in + the sequence in which they are found in the agenda files. + +#+vindex: org-agenda-sorting-strategy +Sorting can be customized using the variable +~org-agenda-sorting-strategy~, and may also include criteria based on +the estimated effort of an entry (see [[*Effort Estimates]]). + +*** Filtering/limiting agenda items +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: Dynamically narrow the agenda. +:END: + +#+vindex: org-agenda-category-filter-preset +#+vindex: org-agenda-tag-filter-preset +#+vindex: org-agenda-effort-filter-preset +#+vindex: org-agenda-regexp-filter-preset +Agenda built-in or custom commands are statically defined. Agenda +filters and limits allow to flexibly narrow down the list of agenda +entries. + +/Filters/ only change the visibility of items, are very fast and are +mostly used interactively[fn:98]. You can switch quickly between +different filters without having to recreate the agenda. /Limits/ on +the other hand take effect before the agenda buffer is populated, so +they are mostly useful when defined as local variables within custom +agenda commands. + +**** Filtering in the agenda +:PROPERTIES: +:UNNUMBERED: notoc +:END: +#+cindex: agenda filtering +#+cindex: filtering entries, in agenda +#+cindex: tag filtering, in agenda +#+cindex: category filtering, in agenda +#+cindex: top headline filtering, in agenda +#+cindex: effort filtering, in agenda +#+cindex: query editing, in agenda + +The general filtering command is ~org-agenda-filter~, bound to +{{{kbd(/)}}}. Before we introduce it, we describe commands for +individual filter types. All filtering commands handle prefix +arguments in the same way: A single {{{kbd(C-u)}}} prefix negates the +filter, so it removes lines selected by the filter. A double prefix +adds the new filter condition to the one(s) already in place, so +filter elements are accumulated. + +- {{{kbd(\)}}} (~org-agenda-filter-by-tag~) :: + + #+findex: org-agenda-filter-by-tag + Filter the agenda view with respect to a tag. You are prompted for + a tag selection letter; {{{kbd(SPC)}}} means any tag at all. + Pressing {{{kbd(TAB)}}} at that prompt offers completion to select a + tag, including any tags that do not have a selection character. The + command then hides all entries that do not contain or inherit this + tag. Pressing {{{kbd(+)}}} or {{{kbd(-)}}} at the prompt switches + between filtering for and against the next tag. To clear the + filter, press {{{kbd(\)}}} twice (once to call the command again, + and once at the prompt). + +- {{{kbd(<)}}} (~org-agenda-filter-by-category~) :: + + #+findex: org-agenda-filter-by-category + Filter by category of the line at point, and show only entries with + this category. When called with a prefix argument, hide all entries + with the category at point. To clear the filter, call this command + again by pressing {{{kbd(<)}}}. + +- {{{kbd(=)}}} (~org-agenda-filter-by-regexp~) :: + + #+findex: org-agenda-filter-by-regexp + Filter the agenda view by a regular expression: only show agenda + entries matching the regular expression the user entered. To clear + the filter, call the command again by pressing {{{kbd(=)}}}. + +- {{{kbd(_)}}} (~org-agenda-filter-by-effort~) :: + + #+findex: org-agenda-filter-by-effort + Filter the agenda view with respect to effort estimates, so select + tasks that take the right amount of time. You first need to set up + a list of efforts globally, for example + + #+begin_src emacs-lisp + (setq org-global-properties + '(("Effort_ALL". "0 0:10 0:30 1:00 2:00 3:00 4:00"))) + #+end_src + + #+vindex: org-sort-agenda-noeffort-is-high + You can then filter for an effort by first typing an operator, one + of {{{kbd(<)}}}, {{{kbd(>)}}} and {{{kbd(=)}}}, and then the + one-digit index of an effort estimate in your array of allowed + values, where {{{kbd(0)}}} means the 10th value. The filter then + restricts to entries with effort smaller-or-equal, equal, or + larger-or-equal than the selected value. For application of the + operator, entries without a defined effort are treated according to + the value of ~org-sort-agenda-noeffort-is-high~. To clear the + filter, press {{{kbd(_)}}} twice (once to call the command again, + and once at the first prompt). + +- {{{kbd(^)}}} (~org-agenda-filter-by-top-headline~) :: + + #+findex: org-agenda-filter-by-top-headline + Filter the current agenda view and only display items that fall + under the same top-level headline as the current entry. To clear + the filter, call this command again by pressing {{{kbd(^)}}}. + +- {{{kbd(/)}}} (~org-agenda-filter~) :: + + #+findex: org-agenda-filter + This is the unified interface to four of the five filter methods + described above. At the prompt, specify different filter elements + in a single string, with full completion support. For example, + + : +work-John+<0:10-/plot/ + + selects entries with category =work= and effort estimates below 10 + minutes, and deselects entries with tag =John= or matching the + regexp =plot= (see [[*Regular Expressions]]). You can leave =+= out if + that does not lead to ambiguities. The sequence of elements is + arbitrary. The filter syntax assumes that there is no overlap + between categories and tags. Otherwise, tags take priority. If you + reply to the prompt with the empty string, all filtering is removed. + If a filter is specified, it replaces all current filters. But if + you call the command with a double prefix argument, or if you add an + additional =+= (e.g., =++work=) to the front of the string, the new + filter elements are added to the active ones. A single prefix + argument applies the entire filter in a negative sense. + +- {{{kbd(|)}}} (~org-agenda-filter-remove-all~) :: + + Remove all filters in the current agenda view. + +**** Computed tag filtering +:PROPERTIES: +:UNNUMBERED: notoc +:END: + +#+vindex: org-agenda-auto-exclude-function +If the variable ~org-agenda-auto-exclude-function~ is set to +a user-defined function, that function can select tags that should be +used as a tag filter when requested. The function will be called with +lower-case versions of all tags represented in the current view. The +function should return ="-tag"= if the filter should remove +entries with that tag, ="+tag"= if only entries with this tag should +be kept, or =nil= if that tag is irrelevant. For example, let's say +you use a =Net= tag to identify tasks which need network access, an +=Errand= tag for errands in town, and a =Call= tag for making phone +calls. You could auto-exclude these tags based on the availability of +the Internet, and outside of business hours, with something like this: + +#+begin_src emacs-lisp +(defun my-auto-exclude-fn (tag) + (when (cond ((string= tag "net") + (/= 0 (call-process "/sbin/ping" nil nil nil + "-c1" "-q" "-t1" "mail.gnu.org"))) + ((member tag '("errand" "call")) + (let ((hr (nth 2 (decode-time)))) + (or (< hr 8) (> hr 21))))) + (concat "-" tag))) + +(setq org-agenda-auto-exclude-function #'my-auto-exclude-fn) +#+end_src + +You can apply this self-adapting filter by using a triple prefix +argument to ~org-agenda-filter~, i.e.\nbsp{}press {{{kbd(C-u C-u C-u /)}}}, +or by pressing {{{kbd(RET)}}} in ~org-agenda-filter-by-tag~. + +**** Setting limits for the agenda +:PROPERTIES: +:UNNUMBERED: notoc +:END: +#+cindex: limits, in agenda + +Here is a list of options that you can set, either globally, or +locally in your custom agenda views (see [[*Custom Agenda Views]]). + +- ~org-agenda-max-entries~ :: + + #+vindex: org-agenda-max-entries + Limit the number of entries. + +- ~org-agenda-max-effort~ :: + + #+vindex: org-agenda-max-effort + Limit the duration of accumulated efforts (as minutes). + +- ~org-agenda-max-todos~ :: + + #+vindex: org-agenda-max-todos + Limit the number of entries with TODO keywords. + +- ~org-agenda-max-tags~ :: + + #+vindex: org-agenda-max-tags + Limit the number of tagged entries. + +When set to a positive integer, each option excludes entries from +other categories: for example, =(setq org-agenda-max-effort 100)= +limits the agenda to 100 minutes of effort and exclude any entry that +has no effort property. If you want to include entries with no effort +property, use a negative value for ~org-agenda-max-effort~. One +useful setup is to use ~org-agenda-max-entries~ locally in a custom +command. For example, this custom command displays the next five +entries with a =NEXT= TODO keyword. + +#+begin_src emacs-lisp +(setq org-agenda-custom-commands + '(("n" todo "NEXT" + ((org-agenda-max-entries 5))))) +#+end_src + +Once you mark one of these five entry as DONE, rebuilding the agenda +will again the next five entries again, including the first entry that +was excluded so far. + +You can also dynamically set temporary limits, which are lost when +rebuilding the agenda: + +- {{{kbd(~ )}}} (~org-agenda-limit-interactively~) :: + + #+findex: org-agenda-limit-interactively + This prompts for the type of limit to apply and its value. + +** Commands in the Agenda Buffer +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: Remote editing of Org trees. +:ALT_TITLE: Agenda Commands +:END: +#+cindex: commands, in agenda buffer + +Entries in the agenda buffer are linked back to the Org file or diary +file where they originate. You are not allowed to edit the agenda +buffer itself, but commands are provided to show and jump to the +original entry location, and to edit the Org files "remotely" from the +agenda buffer. In this way, all information is stored only once, +removing the risk that your agenda and note files may diverge. + +Some commands can be executed with mouse clicks on agenda lines. For +the other commands, point needs to be in the desired line. + +*** Motion +:PROPERTIES: +:UNNUMBERED: notoc +:END: +#+cindex: motion commands in agenda + +- {{{kbd(n)}}} (~org-agenda-next-line~) :: + + #+kindex: n + #+findex: org-agenda-next-line + Next line (same as {{{kbd(DOWN)}}} and {{{kbd(C-n)}}}). + +- {{{kbd(p)}}} (~org-agenda-previous-line~) :: + + #+kindex: p + #+findex: org-agenda-previous-line + Previous line (same as {{{kbd(UP)}}} and {{{kbd(C-p)}}}). + +*** View/Go to Org file +:PROPERTIES: +:UNNUMBERED: notoc +:END: +#+cindex: view file commands in agenda + +- {{{kbd(SPC)}}} or {{{kbd(mouse-3)}}} (~org-agenda-show-and-scroll-up~) :: + + #+kindex: SPC + #+kindex: mouse-3 + #+findex: org-agenda-show-and-scroll-up + Display the original location of the item in another window. + With a prefix argument, make sure that drawers stay folded. + +- {{{kbd(L)}}} (~org-agenda-recenter~) :: + + #+findex: org-agenda-recenter + Display original location and recenter that window. + +- {{{kbd(TAB)}}} or {{{kbd(mouse-2)}}} (~org-agenda-goto~) :: + + #+kindex: TAB + #+kindex: mouse-2 + #+findex: org-agenda-goto + Go to the original location of the item in another window. + +- {{{kbd(RET)}}} (~org-agenda-switch-to~) :: + + #+kindex: RET + #+findex: org-agenda-switch-to + Go to the original location of the item and delete other windows. + +- {{{kbd(F)}}} (~org-agenda-follow-mode~) :: + + #+kindex: F + #+findex: org-agenda-follow-mode + #+vindex: org-agenda-start-with-follow-mode + Toggle Follow mode. In Follow mode, as you move point through the + agenda buffer, the other window always shows the corresponding + location in the Org file. The initial setting for this mode in new + agenda buffers can be set with the variable + ~org-agenda-start-with-follow-mode~. + +- {{{kbd(C-c C-x b)}}} (~org-agenda-tree-to-indirect-buffer~) :: + + #+kindex: C-c C-x b + #+findex: org-agenda-tree-to-indirect-buffer + Display the entire subtree of the current item in an indirect + buffer. With a numeric prefix argument N, go up to level N and then + take that tree. If N is negative, go up that many levels. With + a {{{kbd(C-u)}}} prefix, do not remove the previously used indirect + buffer. + +- {{{kbd(C-c C-o)}}} (~org-agenda-open-link~) :: + + #+kindex: C-c C-o + #+findex: org-agenda-open-link + Follow a link in the entry. This offers a selection of any links in + the text belonging to the referenced Org node. If there is only one + link, follow it without a selection prompt. + +*** Change display +:PROPERTIES: +:UNNUMBERED: notoc +:END: +#+cindex: change agenda display +#+cindex: display changing, in agenda + +#+attr_texinfo: :sep , +- {{{kbd(A)}}} :: + + #+kindex: A + Interactively select another agenda view and append it to the + current view. + +- {{{kbd(o)}}} :: + + #+kindex: o + Delete other windows. + +- {{{kbd(v d)}}} or short {{{kbd(d)}}} (~org-agenda-day-view~) :: + + #+kindex: v d + #+kindex: d + #+findex: org-agenda-day-view + Switch to day view. When switching to day view, this setting + becomes the default for subsequent agenda refreshes. A numeric + prefix argument may be used to jump directly to a specific day of + the year. For example, {{{kbd(32 d)}}} jumps to February 1st. When + setting day view, a year may be encoded in the prefix argument as + well. For example, {{{kbd(200712 d)}}} jumps to January 12, 2007. + If such a year specification has only one or two digits, it is + expanded into one of the 30 next years or the last 69 years. + +- {{{kbd(v w)}}} or short {{{kbd(w)}}} (~org-agenda-week-view~) :: + + #+kindex: v w + #+kindex: w + #+findex: org-agenda-week-view + Switch to week view. When switching week view, this setting becomes + the default for subsequent agenda refreshes. A numeric prefix + argument may be used to jump directly to a specific day of the ISO + week. For example {{{kbd(9 w)}}} to ISO week number 9. When + setting week view, a year may be encoded in the prefix argument as + well. For example, {{{kbd(200712 w)}}} jumps to week 12 in 2007. + If such a year specification has only one or two digits, it is + expanded into one of the 30 next years or the last 69 years. + +- {{{kbd(v m)}}} (~org-agenda-month-view~) :: + + #+kindex: v m + #+findex: org-agenda-month-view + Switch to month view. Because month views are slow to create, they + do not become the default for subsequent agenda refreshes. + A numeric prefix argument may be used to jump directly to a specific + day of the month. When setting month view, a year may be encoded in + the prefix argument as well. For example, {{{kbd(200712 m)}}} jumps + to December, 2007. If such a year specification has only one or two + digits, it is expanded into one of the 30 next years or the last 69 + years. + +- {{{kbd(v y)}}} (~org-agenda-year-view~) :: + + #+kindex: v y + #+findex: org-agenda-year-view + Switch to year view. Because year views are slow to create, they do + not become the default for subsequent agenda refreshes. A numeric + prefix argument may be used to jump directly to a specific day of + the year. + +- {{{kbd(v SPC)}}} (~org-agenda-reset-view~) :: + + #+kindex: v SPC + #+findex: org-agenda-reset-view + #+vindex: org-agenda-span + Reset the current view to ~org-agenda-span~. + +- {{{kbd(f)}}} (~org-agenda-later~) :: + + #+kindex: f + #+findex: org-agenda-later + Go forward in time to display the span following the current one. + For example, if the display covers a week, switch to the following + week. With a prefix argument, repeat that many times. + +- {{{kbd(b)}}} (~org-agenda-earlier~) :: + + #+kindex: b + #+findex: org-agenda-earlier + Go backward in time to display earlier dates. + +- {{{kbd(.)}}} (~org-agenda-goto-today~) :: + + #+kindex: . + #+findex: org-agenda-goto-today + Go to today. + +- {{{kbd(j)}}} (~org-agenda-goto-date~) :: + + #+kindex: j + #+findex: org-agenda-goto-date + Prompt for a date and go there. + +- {{{kbd(J)}}} (~org-agenda-clock-goto~) :: + + #+kindex: J + #+findex: org-agenda-clock-goto + Go to the currently clocked-in task /in the agenda buffer/. + +- {{{kbd(D)}}} (~org-agenda-toggle-diary~) :: + + #+kindex: D + #+findex: org-agenda-toggle-diary + Toggle the inclusion of diary entries. See [[*Weekly/daily agenda]]. + +- {{{kbd(v l)}}} or {{{kbd(v L)}}} or short {{{kbd(l)}}} (~org-agenda-log-mode~) :: + + #+kindex: v l + #+kindex: l + #+kindex: v L + #+findex: org-agenda-log-mode + #+vindex: org-log-done + #+vindex: org-agenda-log-mode-items + Toggle Logbook mode. In Logbook mode, entries that were marked as + done while logging was on (see the variable ~org-log-done~) are + shown in the agenda, as are entries that have been clocked on that + day. You can configure the entry types that should be included in + log mode using the variable ~org-agenda-log-mode-items~. When + called with a {{{kbd(C-u)}}} prefix argument, show all possible + logbook entries, including state changes. When called with two + prefix arguments {{{kbd(C-u C-u)}}}, show only logging information, + nothing else. {{{kbd(v L)}}} is equivalent to {{{kbd(C-u v l)}}}. + +- {{{kbd(v [)}}} or short {{{kbd([)}}} (~org-agenda-manipulate-query-add~) :: + + #+kindex: v [ + #+kindex: [ + #+findex: org-agenda-manipulate-query-add + Include inactive timestamps into the current view. Only for + weekly/daily agenda. + +- {{{kbd(v a)}}} (~org-agenda-archives-mode~) :: + + #+kindex: v a + #+findex: org-agenda-archives-mode + Toggle Archives mode. In Archives mode, trees that are archived + (see [[*Internal archiving]]) are also scanned when producing the + agenda. To exit archives mode, press {{{kbd(v a)}}} again. + +- {{{kbd(v A)}}} :: + + #+kindex: v A + Toggle Archives mode. Include all archive files as well. + +- {{{kbd(v R)}}} or short {{{kbd(R)}}} (~org-agenda-clockreport-mode~) :: + + #+kindex: v R + #+kindex: R + #+findex: org-agenda-clockreport-mode + #+vindex: org-agenda-start-with-clockreport-mode + #+vindex: org-clock-report-include-clocking-task + Toggle Clockreport mode. In Clockreport mode, the daily/weekly + agenda always shows a table with the clocked times for the time span + and file scope covered by the current agenda view. The initial + setting for this mode in new agenda buffers can be set with the + variable ~org-agenda-start-with-clockreport-mode~. By using + a prefix argument when toggling this mode (i.e., {{{kbd(C-u R)}}}), + the clock table does not show contributions from entries that are + hidden by agenda filtering[fn:99]. See also the variable + ~org-clock-report-include-clocking-task~. + +- {{{kbd(v c)}}} :: + + #+kindex: v c + #+vindex: org-agenda-clock-consistency-checks + Show overlapping clock entries, clocking gaps, and other clocking + problems in the current agenda range. You can then visit clocking + lines and fix them manually. See the variable + ~org-agenda-clock-consistency-checks~ for information on how to + customize the definition of what constituted a clocking problem. To + return to normal agenda display, press {{{kbd(l)}}} to exit Logbook + mode. + +- {{{kbd(v E)}}} or short {{{kbd(E)}}} (~org-agenda-entry-text-mode~) :: + + #+kindex: v E + #+kindex: E + #+findex: org-agenda-entry-text-mode + #+vindex: org-agenda-start-with-entry-text-mode + #+vindex: org-agenda-entry-text-maxlines + Toggle entry text mode. In entry text mode, a number of lines from + the Org outline node referenced by an agenda line are displayed + below the line. The maximum number of lines is given by the + variable ~org-agenda-entry-text-maxlines~. Calling this command + with a numeric prefix argument temporarily modifies that number to + the prefix value. + +- {{{kbd(G)}}} (~org-agenda-toggle-time-grid~) :: + + #+kindex: G + #+vindex: org-agenda-use-time-grid + #+vindex: org-agenda-time-grid + Toggle the time grid on and off. See also the variables + ~org-agenda-use-time-grid~ and ~org-agenda-time-grid~. + +- {{{kbd(r)}}} (~org-agenda-redo~), {{{kbd(g)}}} :: + + #+kindex: r + #+kindex: g + #+findex: org-agenda-redo + Recreate the agenda buffer, for example to reflect the changes after + modification of the timestamps of items with {{{kbd(S-LEFT)}}} and + {{{kbd(S-RIGHT)}}}. When the buffer is the global TODO list, + a prefix argument is interpreted to create a selective list for + a specific TODO keyword. + +- {{{kbd(C-x C-s)}}} or short {{{kbd(s)}}} (~org-save-all-org-buffers~) :: + + #+kindex: C-x C-s + #+findex: org-save-all-org-buffers + #+kindex: s + Save all Org buffers in the current Emacs session, and also the + locations of IDs. + +- {{{kbd(C-c C-x C-c)}}} (~org-agenda-columns~) :: + + #+kindex: C-c C-x C-c + #+findex: org-agenda-columns + #+vindex: org-columns-default-format + Invoke column view (see [[*Column View]]) in the agenda buffer. The + column view format is taken from the entry at point, or, if there is + no entry at point, from the first entry in the agenda view. So + whatever the format for that entry would be in the original buffer + (taken from a property, from a =COLUMNS= keyword, or from the + default variable ~org-columns-default-format~) is used in the + agenda. + +- {{{kbd(C-c C-x >)}}} (~org-agenda-remove-restriction-lock~) :: + + #+kindex: C-c C-x > + #+findex: org-agenda-remove-restriction-lock + Remove the restriction lock on the agenda, if it is currently + restricted to a file or subtree (see [[*Agenda Files]]). + +- {{{kbd(M-UP)}}} (~org-agenda-drag-line-backward~) :: + + #+kindex: M-UP + #+findex: org-agenda-drag-line-backward + Drag the line at point backward one line. With a numeric prefix + argument, drag backward by that many lines. + + Moving agenda lines does not persist after an agenda refresh and + does not modify the contributing Org files. + +- {{{kbd(M-DOWN)}}} (~org-agenda-drag-line-forward~) :: + + #+kindex: M-DOWN + #+findex: org-agenda-drag-line-forward + Drag the line at point forward one line. With a numeric prefix + argument, drag forward by that many lines. + +*** Remote editing +:PROPERTIES: +:UNNUMBERED: notoc +:END: +#+cindex: remote editing, from agenda + +- {{{kbd(0--9)}}} :: + + Digit argument. + +- {{{kbd(C-_)}}} (~org-agenda-undo~) :: + + #+kindex: C-_ + #+findex: org-agenda-undo + #+cindex: undoing remote-editing events + #+cindex: remote editing, undo + Undo a change due to a remote editing command. The change is undone + both in the agenda buffer and in the remote buffer. + +- {{{kbd(t)}}} (~org-agenda-todo~) :: + + #+kindex: t + #+findex: org-agenda-todo + Change the TODO state of the item, both in the agenda and in the + original Org file. A prefix arg is passed through to the ~org-todo~ + command, so for example a {{{kbd(C-u)}}} prefix are will trigger + taking a note to document the state change. + +- {{{kbd(C-S-RIGHT)}}} (~org-agenda-todo-nextset~) :: + + #+kindex: C-S-RIGHT + #+findex: org-agenda-todo-nextset + Switch to the next set of TODO keywords. + +- {{{kbd(C-S-LEFT)}}}, ~org-agenda-todo-previousset~ :: + + #+kindex: C-S-LEFT + Switch to the previous set of TODO keywords. + +- {{{kbd(C-k)}}} (~org-agenda-kill~) :: + + #+kindex: C-k + #+findex: org-agenda-kill + #+vindex: org-agenda-confirm-kill + Delete the current agenda item along with the entire subtree + belonging to it in the original Org file. If the text to be deleted + remotely is longer than one line, the kill needs to be confirmed by + the user. See variable ~org-agenda-confirm-kill~. + +- {{{kbd(C-c C-w)}}} (~org-agenda-refile~) :: + + #+kindex: C-c C-w + #+findex: org-agenda-refile + Refile the entry at point. + +- {{{kbd(C-c C-x C-a)}}} or short {{{kbd(a)}}} (~org-agenda-archive-default-with-confirmation~) :: + + #+kindex: C-c C-x C-a + #+kindex: a + #+findex: org-agenda-archive-default-with-confirmation + #+vindex: org-archive-default-command + Archive the subtree corresponding to the entry at point using the + default archiving command set in ~org-archive-default-command~. + When using the {{{kbd(a)}}} key, confirmation is required. + +- {{{kbd(C-c C-x a)}}} (~org-agenda-toggle-archive-tag~) :: + + #+kindex: C-c C-x a + #+findex: org-agenda-toggle-archive-tag + Toggle the archive tag (see [[*Internal archiving]]) for the current + headline. + +- {{{kbd(C-c C-x A)}}} (~org-agenda-archive-to-archive-sibling~) :: + + #+kindex: C-c C-x A + #+findex: org-agenda-archive-to-archive-sibling + Move the subtree corresponding to the current entry to its /archive + sibling/. + +- {{{kbd(C-c C-x C-s)}}} or short {{{kbd($)}}} (~org-agenda-archive~) :: + + #+kindex: C-c C-x C-s + #+kindex: $ + #+findex: org-agenda-archive + Archive the subtree corresponding to the current headline. This + means the entry is moved to the configured archive location, most + likely a different file. + +- {{{kbd(T)}}} (~org-agenda-show-tags~) :: + + #+kindex: T + #+findex: org-agenda-show-tags + #+vindex: org-agenda-show-inherited-tags + Show all tags associated with the current item. This is useful if + you have turned off ~org-agenda-show-inherited-tags~, but still want + to see all tags of a headline occasionally. + +- {{{kbd(:)}}} (~org-agenda-set-tags~) :: + + #+kindex: : + #+findex: org-agenda-set-tags + Set tags for the current headline. If there is an active region in + the agenda, change a tag for all headings in the region. + +- {{{kbd(\,)}}} (~org-agenda-priority~) :: + + #+kindex: , + #+findex: org-agenda-priority + Set the priority for the current item. Org mode prompts for the + priority character. If you reply with {{{kbd(SPC)}}}, the priority + cookie is removed from the entry. + +- {{{kbd(+)}}} or {{{kbd(S-UP)}}} (~org-agenda-priority-up~) :: + + #+kindex: + + #+kindex: S-UP + #+findex: org-agenda-priority-up + Increase the priority of the current item. The priority is changed + in the original buffer, but the agenda is not resorted. Use the + {{{kbd(r)}}} key for this. + +- {{{kbd(-)}}} or {{{kbd(S-DOWN)}}} (~org-agenda-priority-down~) :: + + #+kindex: - + #+kindex: S-DOWN + #+findex: org-agenda-priority-down + Decrease the priority of the current item. + +- {{{kbd(C-c C-x e)}}} or short {{{kbd(e)}}} (~org-agenda-set-effort~) :: + + #+kindex: e + #+kindex: C-c C-x e + #+findex: org-agenda-set-effort + Set the effort property for the current item. + +- {{{kbd(C-c C-z)}}} or short {{{kbd(z)}}} (~org-agenda-add-note~) :: + + #+kindex: z + #+kindex: C-c C-z + #+findex: org-agenda-add-note + #+vindex: org-log-into-drawer + Add a note to the entry. This note is recorded, and then filed to + the same location where state change notes are put. Depending on + ~org-log-into-drawer~, this may be inside a drawer. + +- {{{kbd(C-c C-a)}}} (~org-attach~) :: + + #+kindex: C-c C-a + #+findex: org-attach + Dispatcher for all command related to attachments. + +- {{{kbd(C-c C-s)}}} (~org-agenda-schedule~) :: + + #+kindex: C-c C-s + #+findex: org-agenda-schedule + Schedule this item. With a prefix argument, remove the + scheduling timestamp + +- {{{kbd(C-c C-d)}}} (~org-agenda-deadline~) :: + + #+kindex: C-c C-d + #+findex: org-agenda-deadline + Set a deadline for this item. With a prefix argument, remove the + deadline. + +- {{{kbd(S-RIGHT)}}} (~org-agenda-do-date-later~) :: + + #+kindex: S-RIGHT + #+findex: org-agenda-do-date-later + Change the timestamp associated with the current line by one day + into the future. If the date is in the past, the first call to this + command moves it to today. With a numeric prefix argument, change + it by that many days. For example, {{{kbd(3 6 5 S-RIGHT)}}} changes + it by a year. With a {{{kbd(C-u)}}} prefix, change the time by one + hour. If you immediately repeat the command, it will continue to + change hours even without the prefix argument. With a double + {{{kbd(C-u C-u)}}} prefix, do the same for changing minutes. The + stamp is changed in the original Org file, but the change is not + directly reflected in the agenda buffer. Use {{{kbd(r)}}} or + {{{kbd(g)}}} to update the buffer. + +- {{{kbd(S-LEFT)}}} (~org-agenda-do-date-earlier~) :: + + #+kindex: S-LEFT + #+findex: org-agenda-do-date-earlier + Change the timestamp associated with the current line by one day + into the past. + +- {{{kbd(>)}}} (~org-agenda-date-prompt~) :: + + #+kindex: > + #+findex: org-agenda-date-prompt + Change the timestamp associated with the current line. The key + {{{kbd(>)}}} has been chosen, because it is the same as + {{{kbd(S-.)}}} on my keyboard. + +- {{{kbd(I)}}} (~org-agenda-clock-in~) :: + + #+kindex: I + #+findex: org-agenda-clock-in + Start the clock on the current item. If a clock is running already, + it is stopped first. + +- {{{kbd(O)}}} (~org-agenda-clock-out~) :: + + #+kindex: O + #+findex: org-agenda-clock-out + Stop the previously started clock. + +- {{{kbd(X)}}} (~org-agenda-clock-cancel~) :: + + #+kindex: X + #+findex: org-agenda-clock-cancel + Cancel the currently running clock. + +- {{{kbd(J)}}} (~org-agenda-clock-goto~) :: + + #+kindex: J + #+findex: org-agenda-clock-goto + Jump to the running clock in another window. + +- {{{kbd(k)}}} (~org-agenda-capture~) :: + + #+kindex: k + #+findex: org-agenda-capture + #+cindex: capturing, from agenda + #+vindex: org-capture-use-agenda-date + Like ~org-capture~, but use the date at point as the default date + for the capture template. See ~org-capture-use-agenda-date~ to make + this the default behavior of ~org-capture~. + +*** Bulk remote editing selected entries +:PROPERTIES: +:UNNUMBERED: notoc +:END: +#+cindex: remote editing, bulk, from agenda +#+vindex: org-agenda-bulk-custom-functions + +- {{{kbd(m)}}} (~org-agenda-bulk-mark~) :: + #+kindex: m + #+findex: org-agenda-bulk-mark + + Mark the entry at point for bulk action. If there is an active + region in the agenda, mark the entries in the region. With numeric + prefix argument, mark that many successive entries. + +- {{{kbd(*)}}} (~org-agenda-bulk-mark-all~) :: + #+kindex: * + #+findex: org-agenda-bulk-mark-all + + Mark all visible agenda entries for bulk action. + +- {{{kbd(u)}}} (~org-agenda-bulk-unmark~) :: + #+kindex: u + #+findex: org-agenda-bulk-unmark + + Unmark entry for bulk action. + +- {{{kbd(U)}}} (~org-agenda-bulk-remove-all-marks~) :: + #+kindex: U + #+findex: org-agenda-bulk-remove-all-marks + + Unmark all marked entries for bulk action. + +- {{{kbd(M-m)}}} (~org-agenda-bulk-toggle~) :: + #+kindex: M-m + #+findex: org-agenda-bulk-toggle + + Toggle mark of the entry at point for bulk action. + +- {{{kbd(M-*)}}} (~org-agenda-bulk-toggle-all~) :: + #+kindex: M-* + #+findex: org-agenda-bulk-toggle-all + + Toggle mark of every entry for bulk action. + +- {{{kbd(%)}}} (~org-agenda-bulk-mark-regexp~) :: + #+kindex: % + #+findex: org-agenda-bulk-mark-regexp + + Mark entries matching a regular expression for bulk action. + +- {{{kbd(B)}}} (~org-agenda-bulk-action~) :: + #+kindex: B + #+findex: org-agenda-bulk-action + #+vindex: org-agenda-bulk-persistent-marks + + Bulk action: act on all marked entries in the agenda. This prompts + for another key to select the action to be applied. The prefix + argument to {{{kbd(B)}}} is passed through to the {{{kbd(s)}}} and + {{{kbd(d)}}} commands, to bulk-remove these special timestamps. By + default, marks are removed after the bulk. If you want them to + persist, set ~org-agenda-bulk-persistent-marks~ to ~t~ or hit + {{{kbd(p)}}} at the prompt. + + - {{{kbd(p)}}} :: + + Toggle persistent marks. + + - {{{kbd($)}}} :: + + Archive all selected entries. + + - {{{kbd(A)}}} :: + + Archive entries by moving them to their respective archive + siblings. + + - {{{kbd(t)}}} :: + + Change TODO state. This prompts for a single TODO keyword and + changes the state of all selected entries, bypassing blocking and + suppressing logging notes---but not timestamps. + + - {{{kbd(+)}}} :: + + Add a tag to all selected entries. + + - {{{kbd(-)}}} :: + + Remove a tag from all selected entries. + + - {{{kbd(s)}}} :: + + Schedule all items to a new date. To shift existing schedule + dates by a fixed number of days, use something starting with + double plus at the prompt, for example =++8d= or =++2w=. + + - {{{kbd(d)}}} :: + + Set deadline to a specific date. + + - {{{kbd(r)}}} :: + + Prompt for a single refile target and move all entries. The + entries are no longer in the agenda; refresh ({{{kbd(g)}}}) to + bring them back. + + - {{{kbd(S)}}} :: + + Reschedule randomly into the coming N days. N is prompted for. + With a prefix argument ({{{kbd(C-u B S)}}}), scatter only across + weekdays. + + - {{{kbd(f)}}} :: + + #+vindex: org-agenda-bulk-custom-functions + Apply a function[fn:100] to marked entries. For example, the + function below sets the =CATEGORY= property of the entries to + =web=. + + #+begin_src emacs-lisp + (defun set-category () + (interactive "P") + (let ((marker (or (org-get-at-bol 'org-hd-marker) + (org-agenda-error)))) + (org-with-point-at marker + (org-back-to-heading t) + (org-set-property "CATEGORY" "web")))) + #+end_src + +*** Calendar commands +:PROPERTIES: +:UNNUMBERED: notoc +:END: +#+cindex: calendar commands, from agenda + +- {{{kbd(c)}}} (~org-agenda-goto-calendar~) :: + + #+kindex: c + #+findex: org-agenda-goto-calendar + Open the Emacs calendar and go to the date at point in the agenda. + +- {{{kbd(c)}}} (~org-calendar-goto-agenda~) :: + + #+kindex: c + #+findex: org-calendar-goto-agenda + When in the calendar, compute and show the Org agenda for the date + at point. + +- {{{kbd(i)}}} (~org-agenda-diary-entry~) :: + #+kindex: i + #+findex: org-agenda-diary-entry + + #+cindex: diary entries, creating from agenda + Insert a new entry into the diary, using the date at point and (for + block entries) the date at the mark. This adds to the Emacs diary + file[fn:101], in a way similar to the {{{kbd(i)}}} command in the + calendar. The diary file pops up in another window, where you can + add the entry. + + #+vindex: org-agenda-diary-file + If you configure ~org-agenda-diary-file~ to point to an Org file, + Org creates entries in that file instead. Most entries are stored + in a date-based outline tree that will later make it easy to archive + appointments from previous months/years. The tree is built under an + entry with a =DATE_TREE= property, or else with years as top-level + entries. Emacs prompts you for the entry text---if you specify it, + the entry is created in ~org-agenda-diary-file~ without further + interaction. If you directly press {{{kbd(RET)}}} at the prompt + without typing text, the target file is shown in another window for + you to finish the entry there. See also the {{{kbd(k r)}}} command. + +- {{{kbd(M)}}} (~org-agenda-phases-of-moon~) :: + + #+kindex: M + #+findex: org-agenda-phases-of-moon + Show the phases of the moon for the three months around current + date. + +- {{{kbd(S)}}} (~org-agenda-sunrise-sunset~) :: + + #+kindex: S + #+findex: org-agenda-sunrise-sunset + Show sunrise and sunset times. The geographical location must be + set with calendar variables, see the documentation for the Emacs + calendar. + +- {{{kbd(C)}}} (~org-agenda-convert-date~) :: + + #+kindex: C + #+findex: org-agenda-convert-date + Convert the date at point into many other cultural and historic + calendars. + +- {{{kbd(H)}}} (~org-agenda-holidays~) :: + + #+kindex: H + #+findex: org-agenda-holidays + Show holidays for three months around point date. + +*** Quit and exit +:PROPERTIES: +:UNNUMBERED: notoc +:END: + +- {{{kbd(q)}}} (~org-agenda-quit~) :: + #+kindex: q + #+findex: org-agenda-quit + + Quit agenda, remove the agenda buffer. + +- {{{kbd(x)}}} (~org-agenda-exit~) :: + #+kindex: x + #+findex: org-agenda-exit + + #+cindex: agenda files, removing buffers + Exit agenda, remove the agenda buffer and all buffers loaded by + Emacs for the compilation of the agenda. Buffers created by the + user to visit Org files are not removed. + +** Custom Agenda Views +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: Defining special searches and views. +:END: +#+cindex: custom agenda views +#+cindex: agenda views, custom + +Custom agenda commands serve two purposes: to store and quickly access +frequently used TODO and tags searches, and to create special +composite agenda buffers. Custom agenda commands are accessible +through the dispatcher (see [[*The Agenda Dispatcher]]), just like the +default commands. + +*** Storing searches +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: Type once, use often. +:END: + +The first application of custom searches is the definition of keyboard +shortcuts for frequently used searches, either creating an agenda +buffer, or a sparse tree (the latter covering of course only the +current buffer). + +#+kindex: C @r{(Agenda dispatcher)} +#+vindex: org-agenda-custom-commands +#+cindex: agenda views, main example +#+cindex: agenda, as an agenda views +#+cindex: agenda*, as an agenda views +#+cindex: tags, as an agenda view +#+cindex: todo, as an agenda view +#+cindex: tags-todo +#+cindex: todo-tree +#+cindex: occur-tree +#+cindex: tags-tree +Custom commands are configured in the variable +~org-agenda-custom-commands~. You can customize this variable, for +example by pressing {{{kbd(C)}}} from the agenda dispatcher (see [[*The +Agenda Dispatcher]]). You can also directly set it with Emacs Lisp in +the Emacs init file. The following example contains all valid agenda +views: + +#+begin_src emacs-lisp +(setq org-agenda-custom-commands + '(("x" agenda) + ("y" agenda*) + ("w" todo "WAITING") + ("W" todo-tree "WAITING") + ("u" tags "+boss-urgent") + ("v" tags-todo "+boss-urgent") + ("U" tags-tree "+boss-urgent") + ("f" occur-tree "\\") + ("h" . "HOME+Name tags searches") ;description for "h" prefix + ("hl" tags "+home+Lisa") + ("hp" tags "+home+Peter") + ("hk" tags "+home+Kim"))) +#+end_src + +The initial string in each entry defines the keys you have to press +after the dispatcher command in order to access the command. Usually +this is just a single character, but if you have many similar +commands, you can also define two-letter combinations where the first +character is the same in several combinations and serves as a prefix +key[fn:102]. The second parameter is the search type, followed by the +string or regular expression to be used for the matching. The example +above will therefore define: + +- {{{kbd(x)}}} :: + + as a global search for agenda entries planned[fn:103] this week/day. + +- {{{kbd(y)}}} :: + + as the same search, but only for entries with an hour specification + like =[h]h:mm=---think of them as appointments. + +- {{{kbd(w)}}} :: + + as a global search for TODO entries with =WAITING= as the TODO + keyword. + +- {{{kbd(W)}}} :: + + as the same search, but only in the current buffer and displaying + the results as a sparse tree. + +- {{{kbd(u)}}} :: + + as a global tags search for headlines tagged =boss= but not + =urgent=. + +- {{{kbd(v)}}} :: + + The same search, but limiting it to headlines that are also TODO + items. + +- {{{kbd(U)}}} :: + + as the same search, but only in the current buffer and displaying + the result as a sparse tree. + +- {{{kbd(f)}}} :: + + to create a sparse tree (again, current buffer only) with all + entries containing the word =FIXME=. + +- {{{kbd(h)}}} :: + + as a prefix command for a =HOME= tags search where you have to press + an additional key ({{{kbd(l)}}}, {{{kbd(p)}}} or {{{kbd(k)}}}) to + select a name (Lisa, Peter, or Kim) as additional tag to match. + +Note that ~*-tree~ agenda views need to be called from an Org buffer +as they operate on the current buffer only. + +*** Block agenda +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: All the stuff you need in a single buffer. +:END: +#+cindex: block agenda +#+cindex: agenda, with block views + +Another possibility is the construction of agenda views that comprise +the results of /several/ commands, each of which creates a block in +the agenda buffer. The available commands include ~agenda~ for the +daily or weekly agenda (as created with {{{kbd(a)}}}) , ~alltodo~ for +the global TODO list (as constructed with {{{kbd(t)}}}), ~stuck~ for +the list of stuck projects (as obtained with {{{kbd(#)}}}) and the +matching commands discussed above: ~todo~, ~tags~, and ~tags-todo~. + +Here are two examples: + +#+begin_src emacs-lisp +(setq org-agenda-custom-commands + '(("h" "Agenda and Home-related tasks" + ((agenda "") + (tags-todo "home") + (tags "garden"))) + ("o" "Agenda and Office-related tasks" + ((agenda "") + (tags-todo "work") + (tags "office"))))) +#+end_src + +#+texinfo: @noindent +This defines {{{kbd(h)}}} to create a multi-block view for stuff you +need to attend to at home. The resulting agenda buffer contains your +agenda for the current week, all TODO items that carry the tag =home=, +and also all lines tagged with =garden=. Finally the command +{{{kbd(o)}}} provides a similar view for office tasks. + +*** Setting options for custom commands +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: Changing the rules. +:ALT_TITLE: Setting options +:END: +#+cindex: options, for custom agenda views + +#+vindex: org-agenda-custom-commands +Org mode contains a number of variables regulating agenda construction +and display. The global variables define the behavior for all agenda +commands, including the custom commands. However, if you want to +change some settings just for a single custom view, you can do so. +Setting options requires inserting a list of variable names and values +at the right spot in ~org-agenda-custom-commands~. For example: + +#+begin_src emacs-lisp +(setq org-agenda-custom-commands + '(("w" todo "WAITING" + ((org-agenda-sorting-strategy '(priority-down)) + (org-agenda-prefix-format " Mixed: "))) + ("U" tags-tree "+boss-urgent" + ((org-show-context-detail 'minimal))) + ("N" search "" + ((org-agenda-files '("~org/notes.org")) + (org-agenda-text-search-extra-files nil))))) +#+end_src + +#+texinfo: @noindent +Now the {{{kbd(w)}}} command sorts the collected entries only by +priority, and the prefix format is modified to just say =Mixed:= +instead of giving the category of the entry. The sparse tags tree of +{{{kbd(U)}}} now turns out ultra-compact, because neither the headline +hierarchy above the match, nor the headline following the match are +shown. The command {{{kbd(N)}}} does a text search limited to only +a single file. + +For command sets creating a block agenda, ~org-agenda-custom-commands~ +has two separate spots for setting options. You can add options that +should be valid for just a single command in the set, and options that +should be valid for all commands in the set. The former are just +added to the command entry; the latter must come after the list of +command entries. Going back to the block agenda example (see [[*Block +agenda]]), let's change the sorting strategy for the {{{kbd(h)}}} +commands to ~priority-down~, but let's sort the results for =garden= +tags query in the opposite order, ~priority-up~. This would look like +this: + +#+begin_src emacs-lisp +(setq org-agenda-custom-commands + '(("h" "Agenda and Home-related tasks" + ((agenda) + (tags-todo "home") + (tags "garden" + ((org-agenda-sorting-strategy '(priority-up))))) + ((org-agenda-sorting-strategy '(priority-down)))) + ("o" "Agenda and Office-related tasks" + ((agenda) + (tags-todo "work") + (tags "office"))))) +#+end_src + +As you see, the values and parentheses setting is a little complex. +When in doubt, use the customize interface to set this variable---it +fully supports its structure. Just one caveat: when setting options +in this interface, the /values/ are just Lisp expressions. So if the +value is a string, you need to add the double-quotes around the value +yourself. + +#+vindex: org-agenda-custom-commands-contexts +To control whether an agenda command should be accessible from +a specific context, you can customize +~org-agenda-custom-commands-contexts~. Let's say for example that you +have an agenda command {{{kbd(o)}}} displaying a view that you only +need when reading emails. Then you would configure this option like +this: + +#+begin_src emacs-lisp +(setq org-agenda-custom-commands-contexts + '(("o" (in-mode . "message-mode")))) +#+end_src + +You can also tell that the command key {{{kbd(o)}}} should refer to +another command key {{{kbd(r)}}}. In that case, add this command key +like this: + +#+begin_src emacs-lisp +(setq org-agenda-custom-commands-contexts + '(("o" "r" (in-mode . "message-mode")))) +#+end_src + +See the docstring of the variable for more information. + +** Exporting Agenda Views +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: Writing a view to a file. +:END: +#+cindex: agenda views, exporting + +If you are away from your computer, it can be very useful to have +a printed version of some agenda views to carry around. Org mode can +export custom agenda views as plain text, HTML[fn:104], Postscript, +PDF[fn:105], and iCalendar files. If you want to do this only +occasionally, use the following command: + +- {{{kbd(C-x C-w)}}} (~org-agenda-write~) :: + #+kindex: C-x C-w + #+findex: org-agenda-write + #+cindex: exporting agenda views + #+cindex: agenda views, exporting + + #+vindex: org-agenda-exporter-settings + Write the agenda view to a file. + +If you need to export certain agenda views frequently, you can +associate any custom agenda command with a list of output file +names[fn:106]. Here is an example that first defines custom commands +for the agenda and the global TODO list, together with a number of +files to which to export them. Then we define two block agenda +commands and specify file names for them as well. File names can be +relative to the current working directory, or absolute. + +#+begin_src emacs-lisp +(setq org-agenda-custom-commands + '(("X" agenda "" nil ("agenda.html" "agenda.ps")) + ("Y" alltodo "" nil ("todo.html" "todo.txt" "todo.ps")) + ("h" "Agenda and Home-related tasks" + ((agenda "") + (tags-todo "home") + (tags "garden")) + nil + ("~/views/home.html")) + ("o" "Agenda and Office-related tasks" + ((agenda) + (tags-todo "work") + (tags "office")) + nil + ("~/views/office.ps" "~/calendars/office.ics")))) +#+end_src + +The extension of the file name determines the type of export. If it +is =.html=, Org mode uses the htmlize package to convert the buffer to +HTML and save it to this file name. If the extension is =.ps=, +~ps-print-buffer-with-faces~ is used to produce Postscript output. If +the extension is =.ics=, iCalendar export is run export over all files +that were used to construct the agenda, and limit the export to +entries listed in the agenda. Any other extension produces a plain +ASCII file. + +The export files are /not/ created when you use one of those +commands interactively because this might use too much overhead. +Instead, there is a special command to produce /all/ specified +files in one step: + +- {{{kbd(e)}}} (~org-store-agenda-views~) :: + + #+kindex: e @r{(Agenda dispatcher)} + #+findex: org-store-agenda-views + Export all agenda views that have export file names associated with + them. + +You can use the options section of the custom agenda commands to also +set options for the export commands. For example: + +#+begin_src emacs-lisp +(setq org-agenda-custom-commands + '(("X" agenda "" + ((ps-number-of-columns 2) + (ps-landscape-mode t) + (org-agenda-prefix-format " [ ] ") + (org-agenda-with-colors nil) + (org-agenda-remove-tags t)) + ("theagenda.ps")))) +#+end_src + +#+texinfo: @noindent +#+vindex: org-agenda-exporter-settings +This command sets two options for the Postscript exporter, to make it +print in two columns in landscape format---the resulting page can be +cut in two and then used in a paper agenda. The remaining settings +modify the agenda prefix to omit category and scheduling information, +and instead include a checkbox to check off items. We also remove the +tags to make the lines compact, and we do not want to use colors for +the black-and-white printer. Settings specified in +~org-agenda-exporter-settings~ also apply, e.g., + +#+begin_src emacs-lisp +(setq org-agenda-exporter-settings + '((ps-number-of-columns 2) + (ps-landscape-mode t) + (org-agenda-add-entry-text-maxlines 5) + (htmlize-output-type 'css))) +#+end_src + +#+texinfo: @noindent +but the settings in ~org-agenda-custom-commands~ take precedence. + +From the command line you may also use: + +#+begin_src shell +emacs -eval (org-batch-store-agenda-views) -kill +#+end_src + +#+texinfo: @noindent +or, if you need to modify some parameters[fn:107] + +#+begin_src shell +emacs -eval '(org-batch-store-agenda-views \ + org-agenda-span (quote month) \ + org-agenda-start-day "2007-11-01" \ + org-agenda-include-diary nil \ + org-agenda-files (quote ("~/org/project.org")))' \ + -kill +#+end_src + +#+texinfo: @noindent +which creates the agenda views restricted to the file +=~/org/project.org=, without diary entries and with a 30-day extent. + +You can also extract agenda information in a way that allows further +processing by other programs. See [[*Extracting Agenda Information]], for +more information. + +** Using Column View in the Agenda +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: Using column view for collected entries. +:ALT_TITLE: Agenda Column View +:END: +#+cindex: column view, in agenda +#+cindex: agenda, column view + +Column view (see [[*Column View]]) is normally used to view and edit +properties embedded in the hierarchical structure of an Org file. It +can be quite useful to use column view also from the agenda, where +entries are collected by certain criteria. + +- {{{kbd(C-c C-x C-c)}}} (~org-agenda-columns~) :: + #+kindex: C-c C-x C-c + #+findex: org-agenda-columns + + Turn on column view in the agenda. + +To understand how to use this properly, it is important to realize +that the entries in the agenda are no longer in their proper outline +environment. This causes the following issues: + +1. + #+vindex: org-columns-default-format-for-agenda + #+vindex: org-columns-default-format + Org needs to make a decision which columns format to use. Since + the entries in the agenda are collected from different files, and + different files may have different columns formats, this is a + non-trivial problem. Org first checks if + ~org-overriding-columns-format~ is currently set, and if so, takes + the format from there. You should set this variable only in the + /local settings section/ of a custom agenda command (see [[*Custom + Agenda Views]]) to make it valid for that specific agenda view. If + no such binding exists, it checks, in sequence, + ~org-columns-default-format-for-agenda~, the format associated with + the first item in the agenda (through a property or a =#+COLUMNS= + setting in that buffer) and finally ~org-columns-default-format~. + +2. + #+cindex: @samp{CLOCKSUM}, special property + If any of the columns has a summary type defined (see [[*Column + attributes]]), turning on column view in the agenda visits all + relevant agenda files and make sure that the computations of this + property are up to date. This is also true for the special + =CLOCKSUM= property. Org then sums the values displayed in the + agenda. In the daily/weekly agenda, the sums cover a single day; + in all other views they cover the entire block. + + It is important to realize that the agenda may show the same entry + /twice/---for example as scheduled and as a deadline---and it may + show two entries from the same hierarchy (for example a /parent/ + and its /child/). In these cases, the summation in the agenda + leads to incorrect results because some values count double. + +3. When the column view in the agenda shows the =CLOCKSUM= property, + that is always the entire clocked time for this item. So even in + the daily/weekly agenda, the clocksum listed in column view may + originate from times outside the current view. This has the + advantage that you can compare these values with a column listing + the planned total effort for a task---one of the major + applications for column view in the agenda. If you want + information about clocked time in the displayed period use clock + table mode (press {{{kbd(R)}}} in the agenda). + +4. + #+cindex: @samp{CLOCKSUM_T}, special property + When the column view in the agenda shows the =CLOCKSUM_T= property, + that is always today's clocked time for this item. So even in the + weekly agenda, the clocksum listed in column view only originates + from today. This lets you compare the time you spent on a task for + today, with the time already spent---via =CLOCKSUM=---and with + the planned total effort for it. + +* Markup for Rich Contents +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: Compose beautiful documents. +:END: + +Org is primarily about organizing and searching through your +plain-text notes. However, it also provides a lightweight yet robust +markup language for rich text formatting and more. For instance, you +may want to center or emphasize text. Or you may need to insert +a formula or image in your writing. Org offers syntax for all of this +and more. Used in conjunction with the export framework (see +[[*Exporting]]), you can author beautiful documents in Org---like the fine +manual you are currently reading. + +** Paragraphs +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: The basic unit of text. +:END: + +#+cindex: paragraphs, markup rules +Paragraphs are separated by at least one empty line. If you need to +enforce a line break within a paragraph, use =\\= at the end of +a line. + +#+cindex: line breaks, markup rules +To preserve the line breaks, indentation and blank lines in a region, +but otherwise use normal formatting, you can use this construct, which +can also be used to format poetry. + +#+cindex: @samp{BEGIN_VERSE} +#+cindex: verse blocks +#+begin_example +,#+BEGIN_VERSE + Great clouds overhead + Tiny black birds rise and fall + Snow covers Emacs + + ---AlexSchroeder +,#+END_VERSE +#+end_example + +When quoting a passage from another document, it is customary to +format this as a paragraph that is indented on both the left and the +right margin. You can include quotations in Org documents like this: + +#+cindex: @samp{BEGIN_QUOTE} +#+cindex: quote blocks +#+begin_example +,#+BEGIN_QUOTE +Everything should be made as simple as possible, +but not any simpler ---Albert Einstein +,#+END_QUOTE +#+end_example + +If you would like to center some text, do it like this: + +#+cindex: @samp{BEGIN_CENTER} +#+cindex: center blocks +#+begin_example +,#+BEGIN_CENTER +Everything should be made as simple as possible, \\ +but not any simpler +,#+END_CENTER +#+end_example + +** Emphasis and Monospace +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: Bold, italic, etc. +:END: +#+cindex: underlined text, markup rules +#+cindex: bold text, markup rules +#+cindex: italic text, markup rules +#+cindex: verbatim text, markup rules +#+cindex: code text, markup rules +#+cindex: strike-through text, markup rules + +You can make words =*bold*=, =/italic/=, =_underlined_=, ==verbatim== +and =~code~=, and, if you must, =+strike-through+=. Text in the code +and verbatim string is not processed for Org specific syntax; it is +exported verbatim. + +#+vindex: org-fontify-emphasized-text +To turn off fontification for marked up text, you can set +~org-fontify-emphasized-text~ to ~nil~. To narrow down the list of +available markup syntax, you can customize ~org-emphasis-alist~. + +Sometimes, when marked text also contains the marker character itself, +the result may be unsettling. For example, + +#+begin_example +/One may expect this whole sentence to be italicized, but the +following ~user/?variable~ contains =/= character, which effectively +stops emphasis there./ +#+end_example + +You can use zero width space to help Org sorting out the ambiguity. +See [[*Escape Character]] for more details. + +** Subscripts and Superscripts +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: Simple syntax for raising/lowering text. +:END: +#+cindex: subscript +#+cindex: superscript + +=^= and =_= are used to indicate super- and subscripts. To increase +the readability of ASCII text, it is not necessary, but OK, to +surround multi-character sub- and superscripts with curly braces. For +example + +#+begin_example +The radius of the sun is R_sun = 6.96 x 10^8 m. On the other hand, +the radius of Alpha Centauri is R_{Alpha Centauri} = 1.28 x R_{sun}. +#+end_example + +#+vindex: org-use-sub-superscripts +If you write a text where the underscore is often used in a different +context, Org's convention to always interpret these as subscripts can +get in your way. Configure the variable ~org-use-sub-superscripts~ to +change this convention. For example, when setting this variable to +~{}~, =a_b= is not interpreted as a subscript, but =a_{b}= is. + +You can set ~org-use-sub-superscripts~ in a file using the export +option =^:= (see [[*Export Settings][Export Settings]]). For example, =#+OPTIONS: ^:{}= +sets ~org-use-sub-superscripts~ to ~{}~ and limits super- and +subscripts to the curly bracket notation. + +You can also toggle the visual display of super- and subscripts: + +- {{{kbd(C-c C-x \)}}} (~org-toggle-pretty-entities~) :: + + #+kindex: C-c C-x \ + #+findex: org-toggle-pretty-entities + This command formats sub- and superscripts in a WYSIWYM way. + +#+vindex: org-pretty-entities +#+vindex: org-pretty-entities-include-sub-superscripts +Set both ~org-pretty-entities~ and +~org-pretty-entities-include-sub-superscripts~ to ~t~ to start with +super- and subscripts /visually/ interpreted as specified by the +option ~org-use-sub-superscripts~. + +** Special Symbols +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: Greek letters and other symbols. +:END: +#+cindex: math symbols +#+cindex: special symbols +#+cindex: entities + +You can use LaTeX-like syntax to insert special symbols---named +entities---like =\alpha= to indicate the Greek letter, or =\to= to indicate +an arrow. Completion for these symbols is available, just type =\= +and maybe a few letters, and press {{{kbd(M-TAB)}}} to see possible +completions. If you need such a symbol inside a word, terminate it +with a pair of curly brackets. For example + +#+begin_example +Pro tip: Given a circle \Gamma of diameter d, the length of its +circumference is \pi{}d. +#+end_example + +#+findex: org-entities-help +#+vindex: org-entities-user +A large number of entities is provided, with names taken from both +HTML and LaTeX; you can comfortably browse the complete list from +a dedicated buffer using the command ~org-entities-help~. It is also +possible to provide your own special symbols in the variable +~org-entities-user~. + +During export, these symbols are transformed into the native format of +the exporter back-end. Strings like =\alpha= are exported as =α= in +the HTML output, and as =\(\alpha\)= in the LaTeX output. Similarly, =\nbsp= +becomes = = in HTML and =~= in LaTeX. + +#+cindex: special symbols, in-buffer display +If you would like to see entities displayed as UTF-8 characters, use +the following command[fn:108]: + +- {{{kbd(C-c C-x \)}}} (~org-toggle-pretty-entities~) :: + #+kindex: C-c C-x \ + #+findex: org-toggle-pretty-entities + + Toggle display of entities as UTF-8 characters. This does not + change the buffer content which remains plain ASCII, but it overlays + the UTF-8 character for display purposes only. + +#+cindex: shy hyphen, special symbol +#+cindex: dash, special symbol +#+cindex: ellipsis, special symbol +In addition to regular entities defined above, Org exports in +a special way[fn:109] the following commonly used character +combinations: =\-= is treated as a shy hyphen, =--= and =---= are +converted into dashes, and =...= becomes a compact set of dots. + +** Embedded LaTeX +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: LaTeX can be freely used inside Org documents. +:END: +#+cindex: @TeX{} interpretation +#+cindex: @LaTeX{} interpretation + +Plain ASCII is normally sufficient for almost all note taking. +Exceptions include scientific notes, which often require mathematical +symbols and the occasional formula. LaTeX[fn:110] is widely used to +typeset scientific documents. Org mode supports embedding LaTeX code +into its files, because many academics are used to writing and reading +LaTeX source code, and because it can be readily processed to produce +pretty output for a number of export back-ends. + +*** LaTeX fragments +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: Complex formulas made easy. +:END: +#+cindex: @LaTeX{} fragments + +#+vindex: org-format-latex-header +Org mode can contain LaTeX math fragments, and it supports ways to +process these for several export back-ends. When exporting to LaTeX, +the code is left as it is. When exporting to HTML, Org can use either +[[https://www.mathjax.org][MathJax]] (see [[*Math formatting in HTML export]]) or transcode the math +into images (see [[*Previewing LaTeX fragments]]). + +LaTeX fragments do not need any special marking at all. The following +snippets are identified as LaTeX source code: + +- Environments of any kind[fn:111]. The only requirement is that the + =\begin= statement appears on a new line, preceded by only + whitespace. + +- Text within the usual LaTeX math delimiters. To avoid conflicts + with currency specifications, single =$= characters are only + recognized as math delimiters if the enclosed text contains at most + two line breaks, is directly attached to the =$= characters with no + whitespace in between, and if the closing =$= is followed by + whitespace, punctuation or a dash. For the other delimiters, there + is no such restriction, so when in doubt, use =\(...\)= as inline + math delimiters. + +#+texinfo: @noindent +For example: + +#+begin_example +\begin{equation} % arbitrary environments, +x=\sqrt{b} % even tables, figures +\end{equation} % etc + +If $a^2=b$ and \( b=2 \), then the solution must be +either $$ a=+\sqrt{2} $$ or \[ a=-\sqrt{2} \]. +#+end_example + +#+vindex: org-export-with-latex +LaTeX processing can be configured with the variable +~org-export-with-latex~. The default setting is ~t~ which means +MathJax for HTML, and no processing for ASCII and LaTeX back-ends. +You can also set this variable on a per-file basis using one of these +lines: + +| =#+OPTIONS: tex:t= | Do the right thing automatically (MathJax) | +| =#+OPTIONS: tex:nil= | Do not process LaTeX fragments at all | +| =#+OPTIONS: tex:verbatim= | Verbatim export, for jsMath or so | + +*** Previewing LaTeX fragments +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: What will this snippet look like? +:END: +#+cindex: @LaTeX{} fragments, preview + +#+vindex: org-preview-latex-default-process +If you have a working LaTeX installation and =dvipng=, =dvisvgm= or +=convert= installed[fn:112], LaTeX fragments can be processed to +produce images of the typeset expressions to be used for inclusion +while exporting to HTML (see [[*LaTeX fragments]]), or for inline +previewing within Org mode. + +#+vindex: org-format-latex-options +#+vindex: org-format-latex-header +You can customize the variables ~org-format-latex-options~ and +~org-format-latex-header~ to influence some aspects of the preview. +In particular, the ~:scale~ (and for HTML export, ~:html-scale~) +property of the former can be used to adjust the size of the preview +images. + +- {{{kbd(C-c C-x C-l)}}} (~org-latex-preview~) :: + #+kindex: C-c C-x C-l + #+findex: org-latex-preview + + Produce a preview image of the LaTeX fragment at point and overlay + it over the source code. If there is no fragment at point, process + all fragments in the current entry---between two headlines. + + When called with a single prefix argument, clear all images in the + current entry. Two prefix arguments produce a preview image for all + fragments in the buffer, while three of them clear all the images in + that buffer. + +#+vindex: org-startup-with-latex-preview +You can turn on the previewing of all LaTeX fragments in a file with + +: #+STARTUP: latexpreview + +To disable it, simply use + +: #+STARTUP: nolatexpreview + +*** Using CDLaTeX to enter math +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: Speed up entering of formulas. +:ALT_TITLE: CDLaTeX mode +:END: +#+cindex: CD@LaTeX{} + +CDLaTeX mode is a minor mode that is normally used in combination with +a major LaTeX mode like AUCTeX in order to speed-up insertion of +environments and math templates. Inside Org mode, you can make use of +some of the features of CDLaTeX mode. You need to install +=cdlatex.el= and =texmathp.el= (the latter comes also with AUCTeX) +using [[https://melpa.org/][MELPA]] with the [[https://www.gnu.org/software/emacs/manual/html_node/emacs/Package-Installation.html][Emacs packaging system]] or alternatively from +[[https://staff.fnwi.uva.nl/c.dominik/Tools/cdlatex/]]. Do not use +CDLaTeX mode itself under Org mode, but use the special version Org +CDLaTeX minor mode that comes as part of Org. Turn it on for the +current buffer with {{{kbd(M-x org-cdlatex-mode)}}}, or for all Org +files with + +#+begin_src emacs-lisp +(add-hook 'org-mode-hook #'turn-on-org-cdlatex) +#+end_src + +When this mode is enabled, the following features are present (for +more details see the documentation of CDLaTeX mode): + +#+attr_texinfo: :sep , +- {{{kbd(C-c {)}}} :: + #+kindex: C-c @{ + + Insert an environment template. + +- {{{kbd(TAB)}}} :: + #+kindex: TAB + + The {{{kbd(TAB)}}} key expands the template if point is inside + a LaTeX fragment[fn:113]. For example, {{{kbd(TAB)}}} expands =fr= + to =\frac{}{}= and position point correctly inside the first brace. + Another {{{kbd(TAB)}}} gets you into the second brace. + + Even outside fragments, {{{kbd(TAB)}}} expands environment + abbreviations at the beginning of a line. For example, if you write + =equ= at the beginning of a line and press {{{kbd(TAB)}}}, this + abbreviation is expanded to an =equation= environment. To get + a list of all abbreviations, type {{{kbd(M-x + cdlatex-command-help)}}}. + +- {{{kbd(^)}}}, {{{kbd(_)}}} :: + #+kindex: _ + #+kindex: ^ + #+vindex: cdlatex-simplify-sub-super-scripts + + Pressing {{{kbd(_)}}} and {{{kbd(^)}}} inside a LaTeX fragment + inserts these characters together with a pair of braces. If you use + {{{kbd(TAB)}}} to move out of the braces, and if the braces surround + only a single character or macro, they are removed again (depending + on the variable ~cdlatex-simplify-sub-super-scripts~). + +- {{{kbd(`)}}} :: + #+kindex: ` + + Pressing the backquote followed by a character inserts math macros, + also outside LaTeX fragments. If you wait more than 1.5 seconds + after the backquote, a help window pops up. + +- {{{kbd(')}}} :: + #+kindex: ' + + Pressing the single-quote followed by another character modifies the + symbol before point with an accent or a font. If you wait more than + 1.5 seconds after the single-quote, a help window pops up. + Character modification works only inside LaTeX fragments; outside + the quote is normal. + +** Literal Examples +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: Source code examples with special formatting. +:END: +#+cindex: literal examples, markup rules +#+cindex: code line references, markup rules + +You can include literal examples that should not be subjected to +markup. Such examples are typeset in monospace, so this is well +suited for source code and similar examples. + +#+cindex: @samp{BEGIN_EXAMPLE} +#+cindex: example block +#+begin_example +,#+BEGIN_EXAMPLE + Some example from a text file. +,#+END_EXAMPLE +#+end_example + +#+cindex: comma escape, in literal examples +There is one limitation, however. You must insert a comma right +before lines starting with either =*=, =,*=, =#+= or =,#+=, as those +may be interpreted as outlines nodes or some other special syntax. +Org transparently strips these additional commas whenever it accesses +the contents of the block. + +#+begin_example +,#+BEGIN_EXAMPLE +,,* I am no real headline +,#+END_EXAMPLE +#+end_example + +For simplicity when using small examples, you can also start the +example lines with a colon followed by a space. There may also be +additional whitespace before the colon: + +#+begin_example +Here is an example + : Some example from a text file. +#+end_example + +#+cindex: formatting source code, markup rules +#+vindex: org-latex-listings +If the example is source code from a programming language, or any +other text that can be marked up by Font Lock in Emacs, you can ask +for the example to look like the fontified Emacs buffer[fn:114]. This +is done with the code block, where you also need to specify the name +of the major mode that should be used to fontify the example[fn:115], +see [[*Structure Templates]] for shortcuts to easily insert code blocks. + +#+cindex: @samp{BEGIN_SRC} +#+cindex: source block +#+begin_example +,#+BEGIN_SRC emacs-lisp + (defun org-xor (a b) + "Exclusive or." + (if a (not b) b)) + ,#+END_SRC +#+end_example + +Both in =example= and in =src= snippets, you can add a =-n= switch to +the end of the =#+BEGIN= line, to get the lines of the example +numbered. The =-n= takes an optional numeric argument specifying the +starting line number of the block. If you use a =+n= switch, the +numbering from the previous numbered snippet is continued in the +current one. The =+n= switch can also take a numeric argument. This +adds the value of the argument to the last line of the previous block +to determine the starting line number. + +#+begin_example +,#+BEGIN_SRC emacs-lisp -n 20 + ;; This exports with line number 20. + (message "This is line 21") +,#+END_SRC + +,#+BEGIN_SRC emacs-lisp +n 10 + ;; This is listed as line 31. + (message "This is line 32") +,#+END_SRC +#+end_example + +In literal examples, Org interprets strings like =(ref:name)= as +labels, and use them as targets for special hyperlinks like +=[[(name)]]=---i.e., the reference name enclosed in single parenthesis. +In HTML, hovering the mouse over such a link remote-highlights the +corresponding code line, which is kind of cool. + +You can also add a =-r= switch which /removes/ the labels from the +source code[fn:116]. With the =-n= switch, links to these references +are labeled by the line numbers from the code listing. Otherwise +links use the labels with no parentheses. Here is an example: + +#+begin_example -l "(dumb-reference:%s)" +,#+BEGIN_SRC emacs-lisp -n -r + (save-excursion (ref:sc) + (goto-char (point-min)) (ref:jump) +,#+END_SRC +In line [[(sc)]] we remember the current position. [[(jump)][Line (jump)]] +jumps to point-min. +#+end_example + +#+cindex: indentation, in source blocks +Source code and examples may be /indented/ in order to align nicely +with the surrounding text, and in particular with plain list structure +(see [[*Plain Lists]]). By default, Org only retains the relative +indentation between lines, e.g., when exporting the contents of the +block. However, you can use the =-i= switch to also preserve the +global indentation, if it does matter. See [[*Editing Source Code]]. + +#+vindex: org-coderef-label-format +If the syntax for the label format conflicts with the language syntax, +use a =-l= switch to change the format, for example + +: #+BEGIN_SRC pascal -n -r -l "((%s))" + +#+texinfo: @noindent +See also the variable ~org-coderef-label-format~. + +HTML export also allows examples to be published as text areas (see +[[*Text areas in HTML export]]). + +Because the =#+BEGIN= ... =#+END= patterns need to be added so often, +a shortcut is provided (see [[*Structure Templates]]). + +- {{{kbd(C-c ')}}} (~org-edit-special~) :: + + #+kindex: C-c ' + #+findex: org-edit-special + Edit the source code example at point in its native mode. This + works by switching to a temporary buffer with the source code. You + need to exit by pressing {{{kbd(C-c ')}}} again. The edited version + then replaces the old version in the Org buffer. Fixed-width + regions---where each line starts with a colon followed by + a space---are edited using Artist mode[fn:117] to allow creating + ASCII drawings easily. Using this command in an empty line creates + a new fixed-width region. + +#+cindex: storing link, in a source code buffer +Calling ~org-store-link~ (see [[*Handling Links]]) while editing a source +code example in a temporary buffer created with {{{kbd(C-c ')}}} +prompts for a label. Make sure that it is unique in the current +buffer, and insert it with the proper formatting like =(ref:label)= at +the end of the current line. Then the label is stored as a link +=(label)=, for retrieval with {{{kbd(C-c C-l)}}}. + +** Images +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: Display an image. +:END: + +#+cindex: inlining images +#+cindex: images, markup rules +An image is a link to an image file[fn:118] that does not have +a description part, for example + +: ./img/cat.jpg + +If you wish to define a caption for the image (see [[*Captions]]) and +maybe a label for internal cross references (see [[*Internal Links]]), +make sure that the link is on a line by itself and precede it with +=CAPTION= and =NAME= keywords as follows: + +#+begin_example +,#+CAPTION: This is the caption for the next figure link (or table) +,#+NAME: fig:SED-HR4049 +[[./img/a.jpg]] +#+end_example + +Such images can be displayed within the buffer with the following +command: + +- {{{kbd(C-c C-x C-v)}}} (~org-toggle-inline-images~) :: + + #+kindex: C-c C-x C-v + #+findex: org-toggle-inline-images + #+vindex: org-startup-with-inline-images + Toggle the inline display of linked images. When called with + a prefix argument, also display images that do have a link + description. You can ask for inline images to be displayed at + startup by configuring the variable + ~org-startup-with-inline-images~[fn:119]. + +** Captions +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: Describe tables, images... +:END: +#+cindex: captions, markup rules +#+cindex: @samp{CAPTION}, keyword + +You can assign a caption to a specific part of a document by inserting +a =CAPTION= keyword immediately before it: + +#+begin_example +,#+CAPTION: This is the caption for the next table (or link) +| ... | ... | +|-----+-----| +#+end_example + +Optionally, the caption can take the form: + +: #+CAPTION[Short caption]: Longer caption. + +Even though images and tables are prominent examples of captioned +structures, the same caption mechanism can apply to many +others---e.g., LaTeX equations, source code blocks. Depending on the +export back-end, those may or may not be handled. + +** Horizontal Rules +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: Make a line. +:END: + +#+cindex: horizontal rules, markup rules +A line consisting of only dashes, and at least 5 of them, is exported +as a horizontal line. + +** Creating Footnotes +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: Edit and read footnotes. +:END: +#+cindex: footnotes + +A footnote is started by a footnote marker in square brackets in +column 0, no indentation allowed. It ends at the next footnote +definition, headline, or after two consecutive empty lines. The +footnote reference is simply the marker in square brackets, inside +text. Markers always start with =fn:=. For example: + +#+begin_example +The Org homepage[fn:1] now looks a lot better than it used to. +... +[fn:1] The link is: https://orgmode.org +#+end_example + +Org mode extends the number-based syntax to /named/ footnotes and +optional inline definition. Here are the valid references: + +- =[fn:NAME]= :: + + A named footnote reference, where {{{var(NAME)}}} is a unique + label word, or, for simplicity of automatic creation, a number. + +- =[fn:: This is the inline definition of this footnote]= :: + + An anonymous footnote where the definition is given directly at the + reference point. + +- =[fn:NAME: a definition]= :: + + An inline definition of a footnote, which also specifies a name for + the note. Since Org allows multiple references to the same note, + you can then use =[fn:NAME]= to create additional references. + +#+vindex: org-footnote-auto-label +Footnote labels can be created automatically, or you can create names +yourself. This is handled by the variable ~org-footnote-auto-label~ +and its corresponding =STARTUP= keywords. See the docstring of that +variable for details. + +The following command handles footnotes: + +- {{{kbd(C-c C-x f)}}} :: + + The footnote action command. + + #+kindex: C-c C-x f + When point is on a footnote reference, jump to the definition. When + it is at a definition, jump to the---first---reference. + + #+vindex: org-footnote-define-inline + #+vindex: org-footnote-section + Otherwise, create a new footnote. Depending on the variable + ~org-footnote-define-inline~[fn:120], the definition is placed right + into the text as part of the reference, or separately into the + location determined by the variable ~org-footnote-section~. + + When this command is called with a prefix argument, a menu of + additional options is offered: + + #+attr_texinfo: :columns 0.1 0.9 + | {{{kbd(s)}}} | Sort the footnote definitions by reference sequence. | + | {{{kbd(r)}}} | Renumber the simple =fn:N= footnotes. | + | {{{kbd(S)}}} | Short for first {{{kbd(r)}}}, then {{{kbd(s)}}} action. | + | {{{kbd(n)}}} | Rename all footnotes into a =fn:1= ... =fn:n= sequence. | + | {{{kbd(d)}}} | Delete the footnote at point, including definition and references. | + + #+vindex: org-footnote-auto-adjust + Depending on the variable ~org-footnote-auto-adjust~[fn:121], + renumbering and sorting footnotes can be automatic after each + insertion or deletion. + +- {{{kbd(C-c C-c)}}} :: + + #+kindex: C-c C-c + If point is on a footnote reference, jump to the definition. If it + is at the definition, jump back to the reference. When called at + a footnote location with a prefix argument, offer the same menu as + {{{kbd(C-c C-x f)}}}. + +- {{{kbd(C-c C-o)}}} or {{{kbd(mouse-1/2)}}} :: + + #+kindex: C-c C-o + #+kindex: mouse-1 + #+kindex: mouse-2 + Footnote labels are also links to the corresponding definition or + reference, and you can use the usual commands to follow these links. + +* Exporting +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: Sharing and publishing notes. +:END: +#+cindex: exporting + +At some point you might want to print your notes, publish them on the +web, or share them with people not using Org. Org can convert and +export documents to a variety of other formats while retaining as much +structure (see [[*Document Structure]]) and markup (see [[*Markup for Rich +Contents]]) as possible. + +#+cindex: export back-end +The libraries responsible for translating Org files to other formats +are called /back-ends/. Org ships with support for the following +back-ends: + +- /ascii/ (ASCII format) +- /beamer/ (LaTeX Beamer format) +- /html/ (HTML format) +- /icalendar/ (iCalendar format) +- /latex/ (LaTeX format) +- /md/ (Markdown format) +- /odt/ (OpenDocument Text format) +- /org/ (Org format) +- /texinfo/ (Texinfo format) +- /man/ (Man page format) + +Users can install libraries for additional formats from the Emacs +packaging system. For easy discovery, these packages have a common +naming scheme: ~ox-NAME~, where {{{var(NAME)}}} is a format. For +example, ~ox-koma-letter~ for /koma-letter/ back-end. More libraries +can be found in the =org-contrib= repository (see [[*Installation]]). + +#+vindex: org-export-backends +Org only loads back-ends for the following formats by default: ASCII, +HTML, iCalendar, LaTeX, and ODT. Additional back-ends can be loaded +in either of two ways: by configuring the ~org-export-backends~ +variable, or by requiring libraries in the Emacs init file. For +example, to load the Markdown back-end, add this to your Emacs config: + +#+begin_src emacs-lisp +(require 'ox-md) +#+end_src + +** The Export Dispatcher +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: The main interface. +:END: +#+cindex: dispatcher, for export commands +#+cindex: export, dispatcher + +The export dispatcher is the main interface for Org's exports. +A hierarchical menu presents the currently configured export formats. +Options are shown as easy toggle switches on the same screen. + +#+vindex: org-export-dispatch-use-expert-ui +Org also has a minimal prompt interface for the export dispatcher. +When the variable ~org-export-dispatch-use-expert-ui~ is set to +a non-~nil~ value, Org prompts in the minibuffer. To switch back to +the hierarchical menu, press {{{kbd(?)}}}. + +- {{{kbd(C-c C-e)}}} (~org-export~) :: + #+kindex: C-c C-e + #+findex: org-export + + Invokes the export dispatcher interface. The options show default + settings. The {{{kbd(C-u)}}} prefix argument preserves options from + the previous export, including any sub-tree selections. + +Org exports the entire buffer by default. If the Org buffer has an +active region, then Org exports just that region. + +Within the dispatcher interface, the following key combinations can +further alter what is exported, and how. + +- {{{kbd(C-a)}}} :: + #+kindex: C-c C-e C-a + + Toggle asynchronous export. Asynchronous export uses an external + Emacs process with a specially configured initialization file to + complete the exporting process in the background, without tying-up + Emacs. This is particularly useful when exporting long documents. + + Output from an asynchronous export is saved on the /export stack/. + To view this stack, call the export dispatcher with a double + {{{kbd(C-u)}}} prefix argument. If already in the export dispatcher + menu, {{{kbd(&)}}} displays the stack. + + #+vindex: org-export-in-background + You can make asynchronous export the default by setting + ~org-export-in-background~. + + #+vindex: org-export-async-init-file + You can set the initialization file used by the background process + by setting ~org-export-async-init-file~. + +- {{{kbd(C-b)}}} :: + #+kindex: C-c C-e C-b + + Toggle body-only export. Useful for excluding headers and footers + in the export. Affects only those back-end formats that have + sections like =...= in HTML. + +- {{{kbd(C-s)}}} :: + #+kindex: C-c C-e C-s + + Toggle sub-tree export. When turned on, Org exports only the + sub-tree starting from point position at the time the export + dispatcher was invoked. Org uses the top heading of this sub-tree + as the document's title. If point is not on a heading, Org uses the + nearest enclosing header. If point is in the document preamble, Org + signals an error and aborts export. + + #+vindex: org-export-initial-scope + To make sub-tree export the default, customize the variable + ~org-export-initial-scope~. + +- {{{kbd(C-v)}}} :: + #+kindex: C-c C-e C-v + + Toggle visible-only export. This is useful for exporting only + certain parts of an Org document by adjusting the visibility of + particular headings. See also [[*Sparse Trees]]. + +** Export Settings +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: Common export settings. +:END: +#+cindex: options, for export +#+cindex: Export, settings + +#+cindex: @samp{OPTIONS}, keyword +Export options can be set: globally with variables; for an individual +file by making variables buffer-local with in-buffer settings (see +[[*Summary of In-Buffer Settings]]); by setting individual keywords or +specifying them in compact form with the =OPTIONS= keyword; or for +a tree by setting properties (see [[*Properties and Columns]]). Options +set at a specific level override options set at a more general level. + +#+cindex: @samp{SETUPFILE}, keyword +In-buffer settings may appear anywhere in the file, either directly or +indirectly through a file included using =#+SETUPFILE: filename or +URL= syntax. Option keyword sets tailored to a particular back-end +can be inserted from the export dispatcher (see [[*The Export +Dispatcher]]) using the =Insert template= command by pressing +{{{kbd(#)}}}. To insert keywords individually, a good way to make +sure the keyword is correct is to type =#+= and then to use +{{{kbd(M-TAB)}}}[fn:16] for completion. + +The export keywords available for every back-end, and their equivalent +global variables, include: + +- =AUTHOR= :: + + #+cindex: @samp{AUTHOR}, keyword + #+vindex: user-full-name + The document author (~user-full-name~). + +- =CREATOR= :: + + #+cindex: @samp{CREATOR}, keyword + #+vindex: org-expot-creator-string + Entity responsible for output generation + (~org-export-creator-string~). + +- =DATE= :: + + #+cindex: @samp{DATE}, keyword + #+vindex: org-export-date-timestamp-format + A date or a time-stamp[fn:122]. + +- =EMAIL= :: + + #+cindex: @samp{EMAIL}, keyword + #+vindex: user-mail-address + The email address (~user-mail-address~). + +- =LANGUAGE= :: + + #+cindex: @samp{LANGUAGE}, keyword + #+vindex: org-export-default-language + Language to use for translating certain strings + (~org-export-default-language~). With =#+LANGUAGE: fr=, for + example, Org translates =Table of contents= to the French =Table des + matières=[fn:123]. + +- =SELECT_TAGS= :: + + #+cindex: @samp{SELECT_TAGS}, keyword + #+vindex: org-export-select-tags + The default value is =("export")=. When a tree is tagged with + =export= (~org-export-select-tags~), Org selects that tree and its + sub-trees for export. Org excludes trees with =noexport= tags, see + below. When selectively exporting files with =export= tags set, Org + does not export any text that appears before the first headline. + +- =EXCLUDE_TAGS= :: + + #+cindex: @samp{EXCLUDE_TAGS}, keyword + #+vindex: org-export-exclude-tags + The default value is =("noexport")=. When a tree is tagged with + =noexport= (~org-export-exclude-tags~), Org excludes that tree and + its sub-trees from export. Entries tagged with =noexport= are + unconditionally excluded from the export, even if they have an + =export= tag. Even if a sub-tree is not exported, Org executes any + code blocks contained there. + +- =TITLE= :: + + #+cindex: @samp{TITLE}, keyword + #+cindex: document title + Org displays this title. For long titles, use multiple =#+TITLE= + lines. + +- =EXPORT_FILE_NAME= :: + + #+cindex: @samp{EXPORT_FILE_NAME}, keyword + The name of the output file to be generated. Otherwise, Org + generates the file name based on the buffer name and the extension + based on the back-end format. + +The =OPTIONS= keyword is a compact form. To configure multiple +options, use several =OPTIONS= lines. =OPTIONS= recognizes the +following arguments. + +- ~'~ :: + + #+vindex: org-export-with-smart-quotes + Toggle smart quotes (~org-export-with-smart-quotes~). Depending on + the language used, when activated, Org treats pairs of double quotes + as primary quotes, pairs of single quotes as secondary quotes, and + single quote marks as apostrophes. + +- ~*~ :: + + #+vindex: org-export-with-emphasize + Toggle emphasized text (~org-export-with-emphasize~). + +- ~-~ :: + + #+vindex: org-export-with-special-strings + Toggle conversion of special strings + (~org-export-with-special-strings~). + +- ~:~ :: + + #+vindex: org-export-with-fixed-width + Toggle fixed-width sections (~org-export-with-fixed-width~). + +- ~<~ :: + + #+vindex: org-export-with-timestamps + Toggle inclusion of time/date active/inactive stamps + (~org-export-with-timestamps~). + +- ~\n~ :: + + #+vindex: org-export-preserve-breaks + Toggles whether to preserve line breaks + (~org-export-preserve-breaks~). + +- ~^~ :: + + #+vindex: org-export-with-sub-superscripts + Toggle TeX-like syntax for sub- and superscripts. If you write + =^:{}=, =a_{b}= is interpreted, but the simple =a_b= is left as it + is (~org-export-with-sub-superscripts~). + +- ~arch~ :: + + #+vindex: org-export-with-archived-trees + Configure how archived trees are exported. When set to ~headline~, + the export process skips the contents and processes only the + headlines (~org-export-with-archived-trees~). + +- ~author~ :: + + #+vindex: org-export-with-author + Toggle inclusion of author name into exported file + (~org-export-with-author~). + +- ~broken-links~ :: + + #+vindex: org-export-with-broken-links + Toggles if Org should continue exporting upon finding a broken + internal link. When set to ~mark~, Org clearly marks the problem + link in the output (~org-export-with-broken-links~). + +- ~c~ :: + + #+vindex: org-export-with-clocks + Toggle inclusion of =CLOCK= keywords (~org-export-with-clocks~). + +- ~creator~ :: + + #+vindex: org-export-with-creator + Toggle inclusion of creator information in the exported file + (~org-export-with-creator~). + +- ~d~ :: + + #+vindex: org-export-with-drawers + Toggles inclusion of drawers, or list of drawers to include, or list + of drawers to exclude (~org-export-with-drawers~). + +- ~date~ :: + + #+vindex: org-export-with-date + Toggle inclusion of a date into exported file + (~org-export-with-date~). + +- ~e~ :: + + #+vindex: org-export-with-entities + Toggle inclusion of entities (~org-export-with-entities~). + +- ~email~ :: + + #+vindex: org-export-with-email + Toggle inclusion of the author's e-mail into exported file + (~org-export-with-email~). + +- ~f~ :: + + #+vindex: org-export-with-footnotes + Toggle the inclusion of footnotes (~org-export-with-footnotes~). + +- ~H~ :: + + #+vindex: org-export-headline-levels + Set the number of headline levels for export + (~org-export-headline-levels~). Below that level, headlines are + treated differently. In most back-ends, they become list items. + +- ~inline~ :: + + #+vindex: org-export-with-inlinetasks + Toggle inclusion of inlinetasks (~org-export-with-inlinetasks~). + +- ~num~ :: + + #+vindex: org-export-with-section-numbers + #+cindex: @samp{UNNUMBERED}, property + Toggle section-numbers (~org-export-with-section-numbers~). When + set to number N, Org numbers only those headlines at level N or + above. Set =UNNUMBERED= property to non-~nil~ to disable numbering + of heading and subheadings entirely. Moreover, when the value is + =notoc= the headline, and all its children, do not appear in the + table of contents either (see [[*Table of Contents]]). + +- ~p~ :: + + #+vindex: org-export-with-planning + Toggle export of planning information (~org-export-with-planning~). + "Planning information" comes from lines located right after the + headline and contain any combination of these cookies: =SCHEDULED=, + =DEADLINE=, or =CLOSED=. + +- ~pri~ :: + + #+vindex: org-export-with-priority + Toggle inclusion of priority cookies + (~org-export-with-priority~). + +- ~prop~ :: + + #+vindex: org-export-with-properties + Toggle inclusion of property drawers, or list the properties to + include (~org-export-with-properties~). + +- ~stat~ :: + + #+vindex: org-export-with-statistics-cookies + Toggle inclusion of statistics cookies + (~org-export-with-statistics-cookies~). + +- ~tags~ :: + + #+vindex: org-export-with-tags + Toggle inclusion of tags, may also be ~not-in-toc~ + (~org-export-with-tags~). + +- ~tasks~ :: + + #+vindex: org-export-with-tasks + Toggle inclusion of tasks (TODO items); or ~nil~ to remove all + tasks; or ~todo~ to remove done tasks; or list the keywords to keep + (~org-export-with-tasks~). + +- ~tex~ :: + + #+vindex: org-export-with-latex + ~nil~ does not export; ~t~ exports; ~verbatim~ keeps everything in + verbatim (~org-export-with-latex~). + +- ~timestamp~ :: + + #+vindex: org-export-time-stamp-file + Toggle inclusion of the creation time in the exported file + (~org-export-time-stamp-file~). + +- ~title~ :: + + #+vindex: org-export-with-title + Toggle inclusion of title (~org-export-with-title~). + +- ~toc~ :: + + #+vindex: org-export-with-toc + Toggle inclusion of the table of contents, or set the level limit + (~org-export-with-toc~). + +- ~todo~ :: + + #+vindex: org-export-with-todo-keywords + Toggle inclusion of TODO keywords into exported text + (~org-export-with-todo-keywords~). + +- ~|~ :: + + #+vindex: org-export-with-tables + Toggle inclusion of tables (~org-export-with-tables~). + +When exporting sub-trees, special node properties can override the +above keywords. These properties have an =EXPORT_= prefix. For +example, =DATE= becomes, =EXPORT_DATE= when used for a specific +sub-tree. Except for =SETUPFILE=, all other keywords listed above +have an =EXPORT_= equivalent. + +#+cindex: @samp{BIND}, keyword +#+vindex: org-export-allow-bind-keywords +If ~org-export-allow-bind-keywords~ is non-~nil~, Emacs variables can +become buffer-local during export by using the =BIND= keyword. Its +syntax is =#+BIND: variable value=. This is particularly useful for +in-buffer settings that cannot be changed using keywords. + +** Table of Contents +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: The if and where of the table of contents. +:END: +#+cindex: table of contents +#+cindex: list of tables +#+cindex: list of listings + +#+cindex: @samp{toc}, in @samp{OPTIONS} keyword +#+vindex: org-export-with-toc +The table of contents includes all headlines in the document. Its +depth is therefore the same as the headline levels in the file. If +you need to use a different depth, or turn it off entirely, set the +~org-export-with-toc~ variable accordingly. You can achieve the same +on a per file basis, using the following =toc= item in =OPTIONS= +keyword: + +#+begin_example +,#+OPTIONS: toc:2 (only include two levels in TOC) +,#+OPTIONS: toc:nil (no default TOC at all) +#+end_example + +#+cindex: excluding entries from table of contents +#+cindex: table of contents, exclude entries +Org includes both numbered and unnumbered headlines in the table of +contents[fn:124]. If you need to exclude an unnumbered headline, +along with all its children, set the =UNNUMBERED= property to =notoc= +value. + +#+begin_example +,* Subtree not numbered, not in table of contents either + :PROPERTIES: + :UNNUMBERED: notoc + :END: +#+end_example + +#+cindex: @samp{TOC}, keyword +Org normally inserts the table of contents directly before the first +headline of the file. To move the table of contents to a different +location, first turn off the default with ~org-export-with-toc~ +variable or with =#+OPTIONS: toc:nil=. Then insert =#+TOC: headlines +N= at the desired location(s). + +#+begin_example +,#+OPTIONS: toc:nil +... +,#+TOC: headlines 2 +#+end_example + +To adjust the table of contents depth for a specific section of the +Org document, append an additional =local= parameter. This parameter +becomes a relative depth for the current level. The following example +inserts a local table of contents, with direct children only. + +#+begin_example +,* Section +,#+TOC: headlines 1 local +#+end_example + +Note that for this feature to work properly in LaTeX export, the Org +file requires the inclusion of the titletoc package. Because of +compatibility issues, titletoc has to be loaded /before/ hyperref. +Customize the ~org-latex-default-packages-alist~ variable. + +The following example inserts a table of contents that links to the +children of the specified target. + +#+begin_example +,* Target + :PROPERTIES: + :CUSTOM_ID: TargetSection + :END: +,** Heading A +,** Heading B +,* Another section +,#+TOC: headlines 1 :target #TargetSection +#+end_example + +The =:target= attribute is supported in HTML, Markdown, ODT, and ASCII export. + +Use the =TOC= keyword to generate list of tables---respectively, all +listings---with captions. + +#+begin_example +,#+TOC: listings +,#+TOC: tables +#+end_example + +#+cindex: @samp{ALT_TITLE}, property +Normally Org uses the headline for its entry in the table of contents. +But with =ALT_TITLE= property, a different entry can be specified for +the table of contents. + +** Include Files +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: Include additional files into a document. +:END: +#+cindex: include files, during export +#+cindex: export, include files +#+cindex: @samp{INCLUDE}, keyword + +During export, you can include the content of another file. For +example, to include your =.emacs= file, you could use: + +: #+INCLUDE: "~/.emacs" src emacs-lisp + +#+texinfo: @noindent +The first parameter is the file name to include. The optional second +parameter specifies the block type: =example=, =export= or =src=. The +optional third parameter specifies the source code language to use for +formatting the contents. This is relevant to both =export= and =src= +block types. + +If an included file is specified as having a markup language, Org +neither checks for valid syntax nor changes the contents in any way. +For example and source blocks, Org code-escapes the contents before +inclusion. + +#+cindex: @samp{minlevel}, include +If an included file is not specified as having any markup language, +Org assumes it be in Org format and proceeds as usual with a few +exceptions. Org makes the footnote labels (see [[*Creating Footnotes]]) +in the included file local to that file. The contents of the included +file belong to the same structure---headline, item---containing the +=INCLUDE= keyword. In particular, headlines within the file become +children of the current section. That behavior can be changed by +providing an additional keyword parameter, =:minlevel=. It shifts the +headlines in the included file to become the lowest level. For +example, this syntax makes the included file a sibling of the current +top-level headline: + +: #+INCLUDE: "~/my-book/chapter2.org" :minlevel 1 + +#+cindex: @samp{lines}, include +Inclusion of only portions of files are specified using ranges +parameter with =:lines= keyword. The line at the upper end of the +range will not be included. The start and/or the end of the range may +be omitted to use the obvious defaults. + +| =#+INCLUDE: "~/.emacs" :lines "5-10"= | Include lines 5 to 10, 10 excluded | +| =#+INCLUDE: "~/.emacs" :lines "-10"= | Include lines 1 to 10, 10 excluded | +| =#+INCLUDE: "~/.emacs" :lines "10-"= | Include lines from 10 to EOF | + +Inclusions may specify a file-link to extract an object matched by +~org-link-search~[fn:125] (see [[*Search Options in File Links]]). The +ranges for =:lines= keyword are relative to the requested element. +Therefore, + +: #+INCLUDE: "./paper.org::*conclusion" :lines 1-20 + +#+texinfo: @noindent +includes the first 20 lines of the headline named =conclusion=. + +#+cindex: @samp{only-contents}, include +To extract only the contents of the matched object, set +=:only-contents= property to non-~nil~. This omits any planning lines +or property drawers. For example, to include the body of the heading +with the custom ID =theory=, you can use + +: #+INCLUDE: "./paper.org::#theory" :only-contents t + +The following command allows navigating to the included document: + +- {{{kbd(C-c ')}}} (~org-edit~special~) :: + #+kindex: C-c ' + #+findex: org-edit-special + + Visit the included file at point. + +** Macro Replacement +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: Use macros to create templates. +:END: +#+cindex: macro replacement, during export +#+cindex: @samp{MACRO}, keyword + +#+vindex: org-export-global-macros +Macros replace text snippets during export. Macros are defined +globally in ~org-export-global-macros~, or document-wise with the +following syntax: + +: #+MACRO: name replacement text; $1, $2 are arguments + +#+texinfo: @noindent +which can be referenced using ={{{name(arg1, arg2)}}}=[fn:126]. For +example + +#+begin_example +,#+MACRO: poem Rose is $1, violet's $2. Life's ordered: Org assists you. +{{{poem(red,blue)}}} +#+end_example + +#+texinfo: @noindent +becomes + +: Rose is red, violet's blue. Life's ordered: Org assists you. + +As a special case, Org parses any replacement text starting with +=(eval= as an Emacs Lisp expression and evaluates it accordingly. +Within such templates, arguments become strings. Thus, the following +macro + +: #+MACRO: gnustamp (eval (concat "GNU/" (capitalize $1))) + +#+texinfo: @noindent +turns ={{{gnustamp(linux)}}}= into =GNU/Linux= during export. + +Org recognizes macro references in following Org markup areas: +paragraphs, headlines, verse blocks, tables cells and lists. Org also +recognizes macro references in keywords, such as =CAPTION=, =TITLE=, +=AUTHOR=, =DATE=, and for some back-end specific export options. + +Org comes with following pre-defined macros: + +#+attr_texinfo: :sep ; +- ={{{keyword(NAME)}}}=; ={{{title}}}=; ={{{author}}}=; ={{{email}}}= :: + + #+cindex: @samp{keyword}, macro + #+cindex: @samp{title}, macro + #+cindex: @samp{author}, macro + #+cindex: @samp{email}, macro + The =keyword= macro collects all values from {{{var(NAME)}}} + keywords throughout the buffer, separated with white space. + =title=, =author= and =email= macros are shortcuts for, + respectively, ={{{keyword(TITLE)}}}=, ={{{keyword(AUTHOR)}}}= and + ={{{keyword(EMAIL)}}}=. + +- ={{{date}}}=; ={{{date(FORMAT)}}}= :: + + #+cindex: @samp{date}, macro + This macro refers to the =DATE= keyword. {{{var(FORMAT)}}} is an + optional argument to the =date= macro that is used only if =DATE= is + a single timestamp. {{{var(FORMAT)}}} should be a format string + understood by ~format-time-string~. + +- ={{{time(FORMAT)}}}=; ={{{modification-time(FORMAT, VC)}}}= :: + + #+cindex: @samp{time}, macro + #+cindex: @samp{modification-time}, macro + These macros refer to the document's date and time of export and + date and time of modification. {{{var(FORMAT)}}} is a string + understood by ~format-time-string~. If the second argument to the + ~modification-time~ macro is non-~nil~, Org uses =vc.el= to retrieve + the document's modification time from the version control system. + Otherwise Org reads the file attributes. + +- ={{{input-file}}}= :: + + #+cindex: @samp{input-file}, macro + This macro refers to the filename of the exported file. + +- ={{{property(PROPERTY-NAME)}}}=; ={{{property(PROPERTY-NAME, SEARCH OPTION)}}}= :: + + #+cindex: @samp{property}, macro + This macro returns the value of property {{{var(PROPERTY-NAME)}}} in + the current entry. If {{{var(SEARCH-OPTION)}}} (see [[*Search + Options in File Links]]) refers to a remote entry, use it instead. + +- ={{{n}}}=; ={{{n(NAME)}}}=; ={{{n(NAME, ACTION)}}}= :: + + #+cindex: @samp{n}, macro + #+cindex: counter, macro + This macro implements custom counters by returning the number of + times the macro has been expanded so far while exporting the buffer. + You can create more than one counter using different {{{var(NAME)}}} + values. If {{{var(ACTION)}}} is =-=, previous value of the counter + is held, i.e., the specified counter is not incremented. If the + value is a number, the specified counter is set to that value. If + it is any other non-empty string, the specified counter is reset + to 1. You may leave {{{var(NAME)}}} empty to reset the default + counter. + +#+cindex: @samp{results}, macro +Moreover, inline source blocks (see [[*Structure of Code Blocks]]) use the +special =results= macro to mark their output. As such, you are +advised against re-defining it, unless you know what you are doing. + +#+vindex: org-hide-macro-markers +The surrounding brackets can be made invisible by setting +~org-hide-macro-markers~ to a non-~nil~ value. + +Org expands macros at the very beginning of the export process. + +** Comment Lines +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: What will not be exported. +:END: +#+cindex: exporting, not + +#+cindex: comment lines +Lines starting with zero or more whitespace characters followed by one +=#= and a whitespace are treated as comments and, as such, are not +exported. + +#+cindex: @samp{BEGIN_COMMENT} +#+cindex: comment block +Likewise, regions surrounded by =#+BEGIN_COMMENT= ... =#+END_COMMENT= +are not exported. + +#+cindex: comment trees +Finally, a =COMMENT= keyword at the beginning of an entry, but after +any other keyword or priority cookie, comments out the entire subtree. +In this case, the subtree is not exported and no code block within it +is executed either[fn:127]. The command below helps changing the +comment status of a headline. + +- {{{kbd(C-c ;)}}} (~org-toggle-comment~) :: + #+kindex: C-c ; + #+findex: org-toggle-comment + + Toggle the =COMMENT= keyword at the beginning of an entry. + +** ASCII/Latin-1/UTF-8 export +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: Exporting to flat files with encoding. +:END: +#+cindex: ASCII export +#+cindex: Latin-1 export +#+cindex: UTF-8 export + +ASCII export produces an output file containing only plain ASCII +characters. This is the simplest and most direct text output. It +does not contain any Org markup. Latin-1 and UTF-8 export use +additional characters and symbols available in these encoding +standards. All three of these export formats offer the most basic of +text output for maximum portability. + +#+vindex: org-ascii-text-width +On export, Org fills and justifies text according to the text width +set in ~org-ascii-text-width~. + +#+vindex: org-ascii-links-to-notes +Org exports links using a footnote-like style where the descriptive +part is in the text and the link is in a note before the next heading. +See the variable ~org-ascii-links-to-notes~ for details. + +*** ASCII export commands +:PROPERTIES: +:UNNUMBERED: notoc +:END: + +#+attr_texinfo: :sep , +- {{{kbd(C-c C-e t a)}}} (~org-ascii-export-to-ascii~), {{{kbd(C-c C-e t l)}}}, {{{kbd(C-c C-e t u)}}} :: + #+kindex: C-c C-e t a + #+kindex: C-c C-e t l + #+kindex: C-c C-e t u + #+findex: org-ascii-export-to-ascii + + Export as an ASCII file with a =.txt= extension. For =myfile.org=, + Org exports to =myfile.txt=, overwriting without warning. For + =myfile.txt=, Org exports to =myfile.txt.txt= in order to prevent + data loss. + +- {{{kbd(C-c C-e t A)}}} (~org-ascii-export-to-ascii~), {{{kbd(C-c C-e t L)}}}, {{{kbd(C-c C-e t U)}}} :: + #+kindex: C-c C-e t A + #+kindex: C-c C-e t L + #+kindex: C-c C-e t U + #+findex: org-ascii-export-as-ascii + + Export to a temporary buffer. Does not create a file. + +*** ASCII specific export settings +:PROPERTIES: +:UNNUMBERED: notoc +:END: + +The ASCII export back-end has one extra keyword for customizing ASCII +output. Setting this keyword works similar to the general options +(see [[*Export Settings]]). + +- =SUBTITLE= :: + + #+cindex: @samp{SUBTITLE}, keyword + The document subtitle. For long subtitles, use multiple + =#+SUBTITLE= lines in the Org file. Org prints them on one + continuous line, wrapping into multiple lines if necessary. + +*** Header and sectioning structure +:PROPERTIES: +:UNNUMBERED: notoc +:END: + +Org converts the first three outline levels into headlines for ASCII +export. The remaining levels are turned into lists. To change this +cut-off point where levels become lists, see [[*Export Settings]]. + +*** Quoting ASCII text +:PROPERTIES: +:UNNUMBERED: notoc +:END: + +To insert text within the Org file by the ASCII back-end, use one the +following constructs, inline, keyword, or export block: + +#+cindex: @samp{ASCII}, keyword +#+cindex: @samp{BEGIN_EXPORT ascii} +#+begin_example +Inline text @@ascii:and additional text@@ within a paragraph. + +,#+ASCII: Some text + +,#+BEGIN_EXPORT ascii +Org exports text in this block only when using ASCII back-end. +,#+END_EXPORT +#+end_example + +*** ASCII specific attributes +:PROPERTIES: +:UNNUMBERED: notoc +:END: +#+cindex: @samp{ATTR_ASCII}, keyword +#+cindex: horizontal rules, in ASCII export + +ASCII back-end recognizes only one attribute, =:width=, which +specifies the width of a horizontal rule in number of characters. The +keyword and syntax for specifying widths is: + +#+begin_example +,#+ATTR_ASCII: :width 10 +----- +#+end_example + +*** ASCII special blocks +:PROPERTIES: +:UNNUMBERED: notoc +:END: +#+cindex: special blocks, in ASCII export +#+cindex: @samp{BEGIN_JUSTIFYLEFT} +#+cindex: @samp{BEGIN_JUSTIFYRIGHT} + +Besides =#+BEGIN_CENTER= blocks (see [[*Paragraphs]]), ASCII back-end has +these two left and right justification blocks: + +#+begin_example +,#+BEGIN_JUSTIFYLEFT +It's just a jump to the left... +,#+END_JUSTIFYLEFT + +,#+BEGIN_JUSTIFYRIGHT +...and then a step to the right. +,#+END_JUSTIFYRIGHT +#+end_example + +** Beamer Export +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: Producing presentations and slides. +:END: +#+cindex: Beamer export + +Org uses Beamer export to convert an Org file tree structure into +high-quality interactive slides for presentations. Beamer is a LaTeX +document class for creating presentations in PDF, HTML, and other +popular display formats. + +*** Beamer export commands +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: For creating Beamer documents. +:END: + +- {{{kbd(C-c C-e l b)}}} (~org-beamer-export-to-latex~) :: + #+kindex: C-c C-e l b + #+findex: org-beamer-export-to-latex + + Export as LaTeX file with a =.tex= extension. For =myfile.org=, Org + exports to =myfile.tex=, overwriting without warning. + +- {{{kbd(C-c C-e l B)}}} (~org-beamer-export-as-latex~) :: + #+kindex: C-c C-e l B + #+findex: org-beamer-export-as-latex + + Export to a temporary buffer. Does not create a file. + +- {{{kbd(C-c C-e l P)}}} (~org-beamer-export-to-pdf~) :: + #+kindex: C-c C-e l P + #+findex: org-beamer-export-to-pdf + + Export as LaTeX file and then convert it to PDF format. + +- {{{kbd(C-c C-e l O)}}} :: + #+kindex: C-c C-e l O + + Export as LaTeX file, convert it to PDF format, and then open the + PDF file. + +*** Beamer specific export settings +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: For customizing Beamer export. +:END: + +Beamer export back-end has several additional keywords for customizing +Beamer output. These keywords work similar to the general options +settings (see [[*Export Settings]]). + +- =BEAMER_THEME= :: + + #+cindex: @samp{BEAMER_THEME}, keyword + #+vindex: org-beamer-theme + The Beamer layout theme (~org-beamer-theme~). Use square brackets + for options. For example: + + : #+BEAMER_THEME: Rochester [height=20pt] + +- =BEAMER_FONT_THEME= :: + + #+cindex: @samp{BEAMER_FONT_THEME}, keyword + The Beamer font theme. + +- =BEAMER_INNER_THEME= :: + + #+cindex: @samp{BEAMER_INNER_THEME}, keyword + The Beamer inner theme. + +- =BEAMER_OUTER_THEME= :: + + #+cindex: @samp{BEAMER_OUTER_THEME}, keyword + The Beamer outer theme. + +- =BEAMER_HEADER= :: + + #+cindex: @samp{BEAMER_HEADER}, keyword + Arbitrary lines inserted in the preamble, just before the =hyperref= + settings. + +- =DESCRIPTION= :: + + #+cindex: @samp{DESCRIPTION}, keyword + The document description. For long descriptions, use multiple + =DESCRIPTION= keywords. By default, =hyperref= inserts + =DESCRIPTION= as metadata. Use ~org-latex-hyperref-template~ to + configure document metadata. Use ~org-latex-title-command~ to + configure typesetting of description as part of front matter. + +- =KEYWORDS= :: + + #+cindex: @samp{KEYWORDS}, keyword + The keywords for defining the contents of the document. Use + multiple =KEYWORDS= lines if necessary. By default, =hyperref= + inserts =KEYWORDS= as metadata. Use ~org-latex-hyperref-template~ + to configure document metadata. Use ~org-latex-title-command~ to + configure typesetting of keywords as part of front matter. + +- =SUBTITLE= :: + + #+cindex: @samp{SUBTITLE}, keyword + Document's subtitle. For typesetting, use + ~org-beamer-subtitle-format~ string. Use + ~org-latex-hyperref-template~ to configure document metadata. Use + ~org-latex-title-command~ to configure typesetting of subtitle as + part of front matter. + +*** Frames and Blocks in Beamer +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: For composing Beamer slides. +:END: + +Org transforms heading levels into Beamer's sectioning elements, +frames and blocks. Any Org tree with a not-too-deep-level nesting +should in principle be exportable as a Beamer presentation. + +- + #+vindex: org-beamer-frame-level + Org headlines become Beamer frames when the heading level in Org is + equal to ~org-beamer-frame-level~ or =H= value in a =OPTIONS= line + (see [[*Export Settings]]). + + #+cindex: @samp{BEAMER_ENV}, property + Org overrides headlines to frames conversion for the current tree of + an Org file if it encounters the =BEAMER_ENV= property set to + =frame= or =fullframe=. Org ignores whatever + ~org-beamer-frame-level~ happens to be for that headline level in + the Org tree. In Beamer terminology, a full frame is a frame + without its title. + +- Org exports a Beamer frame's objects as block environments. Org can + enforce wrapping in special block types when =BEAMER_ENV= property + is set[fn:128]. For valid values see + ~org-beamer-environments-default~. To add more values, see + ~org-beamer-environments-extra~. + #+vindex: org-beamer-environments-default + #+vindex: org-beamer-environments-extra + +- + #+cindex: @samp{BEAMER_REF}, property + If =BEAMER_ENV= is set to =appendix=, Org exports the entry as an + appendix. When set to =note=, Org exports the entry as a note + within the frame or between frames, depending on the entry's heading + level. When set to =noteNH=, Org exports the entry as a note + without its title. When set to =againframe=, Org exports the entry + with =\againframe= command, which makes setting the =BEAMER_REF= + property mandatory because =\againframe= needs frame to resume. + + When =ignoreheading= is set, Org export ignores the entry's headline + but not its content. This is useful for inserting content between + frames. It is also useful for properly closing a =column= + environment. @end itemize + + #+cindex: @samp{BEAMER_ACT}, property + #+cindex: @samp{BEAMER_OPT}, property + When =BEAMER_ACT= is set for a headline, Org export translates that + headline as an overlay or action specification. When enclosed in + square brackets, Org export makes the overlay specification + a default. Use =BEAMER_OPT= to set any options applicable to the + current Beamer frame or block. The Beamer export back-end wraps + with appropriate angular or square brackets. It also adds the + =fragile= option for any code that may require a verbatim block. + + #+cindex: @samp{BEAMER_COL}, property + To create a column on the Beamer slide, use the =BEAMER_COL= + property for its headline in the Org file. Set the value of + =BEAMER_COL= to a decimal number representing the fraction of the + total text width. Beamer export uses this value to set the column's + width and fills the column with the contents of the Org entry. If + the Org entry has no specific environment defined, Beamer export + ignores the heading. If the Org entry has a defined environment, + Beamer export uses the heading as title. Behind the scenes, Beamer + export automatically handles LaTeX column separations for contiguous + headlines. To manually adjust them for any unique configurations + needs, use the =BEAMER_ENV= property. + +*** Beamer specific syntax +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: For using in Org documents. +:END: + +Since Org's Beamer export back-end is an extension of the LaTeX +back-end, it recognizes other LaTeX specific syntax---for example, +=#+LATEX:= or =#+ATTR_LATEX:=. See [[*LaTeX Export]], for details. + +Beamer export wraps the table of contents generated with =toc:t= +=OPTION= keyword in a =frame= environment. Beamer export does not +wrap the table of contents generated with =TOC= keyword (see [[*Table of +Contents]]). Use square brackets for specifying options. + +: #+TOC: headlines [currentsection] + +Insert Beamer-specific code using the following constructs: + +#+cindex: @samp{BEAMER}, keyword +#+cindex: @samp{BEGIN_EXPORT beamer} +#+begin_example +,#+BEAMER: \pause + +,#+BEGIN_EXPORT beamer + Only Beamer export back-end exports this. +,#+END_BEAMER + +Text @@beamer:some code@@ within a paragraph. +#+end_example + +Inline constructs, such as the last one above, are useful for adding +overlay specifications to objects with ~bold~, ~item~, ~link~, +~radio-target~ and ~target~ types. Enclose the value in angular +brackets and place the specification at the beginning of the object as +shown in this example: + +: A *@@beamer:<2->@@useful* feature + +#+cindex: @samp{ATTR_BEAMER}, keyword +Beamer export recognizes the =ATTR_BEAMER= keyword with the following +attributes from Beamer configurations: =:environment= for changing +local Beamer environment, =:overlay= for specifying Beamer overlays in +angular or square brackets, and =:options= for inserting optional +arguments. + +#+begin_example +,#+ATTR_BEAMER: :environment nonindentlist +- item 1, not indented +- item 2, not indented +- item 3, not indented +#+end_example + +#+begin_example +,#+ATTR_BEAMER: :overlay <+-> +- item 1 +- item 2 +#+end_example + +#+begin_example +,#+ATTR_BEAMER: :options [Lagrange] +Let $G$ be a finite group, and let $H$ be +a subgroup of $G$. Then the order of $H$ divides the order of $G$. +#+end_example + +*** Editing support +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: Editing support. +:END: + +Org Beamer mode is a special minor mode for faster editing of Beamer +documents. + +: #+STARTUP: beamer + +- {{{kbd(C-c C-b)}}} (~org-beamer-select-environment~) :: + #+kindex: C-c C-b + #+findex: org-beamer-select-environment + + Org Beamer mode provides this key for quicker selections in Beamer + normal environments, and for selecting the =BEAMER_COL= property. + +*** A Beamer example +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: A complete presentation. +:END: + +Here is an example of an Org document ready for Beamer export. + +#+begin_example +,#+TITLE: Example Presentation +,#+AUTHOR: Carsten Dominik +,#+OPTIONS: H:2 toc:t num:t +,#+LATEX_CLASS: beamer +,#+LATEX_CLASS_OPTIONS: [presentation] +,#+BEAMER_THEME: Madrid +,#+COLUMNS: %45ITEM %10BEAMER_ENV(Env) %10BEAMER_ACT(Act) %4BEAMER_COL(Col) + +,* This is the first structural section + +,** Frame 1 +,*** Thanks to Eric Fraga :B_block: + :PROPERTIES: + :BEAMER_COL: 0.48 + :BEAMER_ENV: block + :END: + for the first viable Beamer setup in Org +,*** Thanks to everyone else :B_block: + :PROPERTIES: + :BEAMER_COL: 0.48 + :BEAMER_ACT: <2-> + :BEAMER_ENV: block + :END: + for contributing to the discussion +,**** This will be formatted as a beamer note :B_note: + :PROPERTIES: + :BEAMER_env: note + :END: +,** Frame 2 (where we will not use columns) +,*** Request + Please test this stuff! +#+end_example + +** HTML Export +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: Exporting to HTML. +:END: +#+cindex: HTML export + +Org mode contains an HTML exporter with extensive HTML formatting +compatible with XHTML 1.0 strict standard. + +*** HTML export commands +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: Invoking HTML export. +:END: + +- {{{kbd(C-c C-e h h)}}} (~org-html-export-to-html~) :: + #+kindex: C-c C-e h h + #+kindex: C-c C-e h o + #+findex: org-html-export-to-html + + Export as HTML file with a =.html= extension. For =myfile.org=, Org + exports to =myfile.html=, overwriting without warning. {{{kbd(C-c + C-e h o)}}} exports to HTML and opens it in a web browser. + +- {{{kbd(C-c C-e h H)}}} (~org-html-export-as-html~) :: + #+kindex: C-c C-e h H + #+findex: org-html-export-as-html + + Exports to a temporary buffer. Does not create a file. + +*** HTML specific export settings +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: Settings for HTML export. +:END: + +HTML export has a number of keywords, similar to the general options +settings described in [[*Export Settings]]. + +- =DESCRIPTION= :: + + #+cindex: @samp{DESCRIPTION}, keyword + This is the document's description, which the HTML exporter inserts + it as a HTML meta tag in the HTML file. For long descriptions, use + multiple =DESCRIPTION= lines. The exporter takes care of wrapping + the lines properly. + + The exporter includes a number of other meta tags, which can be customized + by modifying ~org-html-meta-tags~. + +- =HTML_DOCTYPE= :: + + #+cindex: @samp{HTML_DOCTYPE}, keyword + #+vindex: org-html-doctype + Specify the document type, for example: HTML5 (~org-html-doctype~). + +- =HTML_CONTAINER= :: + + #+cindex: @samp{HTML_CONTAINER}, keyword + #+vindex: org-html-container-element + Specify the HTML container, such as =div=, for wrapping sections and + elements (~org-html-container-element~). + +- =HTML_LINK_HOME= :: + + #+cindex: @samp{HTML_LINK_HOME}, keyword + #+vindex: org-html-link-home + The URL for home link (~org-html-link-home~). + +- =HTML_LINK_UP= :: + + #+cindex: @samp{HTML_LINK_UP}, keyword + #+vindex: org-html-link-up + The URL for the up link of exported HTML pages (~org-html-link-up~). + +- =HTML_MATHJAX= :: + + #+cindex: @samp{HTML_MATHJAX}, keyword + #+vindex: org-html-mathjax-options + Options for MathJax (~org-html-mathjax-options~). MathJax is used + to typeset LaTeX math in HTML documents. See [[*Math formatting in + HTML export]], for an example. + +- =HTML_HEAD= :: + + #+cindex: @samp{HTML_HEAD}, keyword + #+vindex: org-html-head + Arbitrary lines for appending to the HTML document's head + (~org-html-head~). + +- =HTML_HEAD_EXTRA= :: + + #+cindex: @samp{HTML_HEAD_EXTRA}, keyword + #+vindex: org-html-head-extra + More arbitrary lines for appending to the HTML document's head + (~org-html-head-extra~). + +- =KEYWORDS= :: + + #+cindex: @samp{KEYWORDS}, keyword + Keywords to describe the document's content. HTML exporter inserts + these keywords as HTML meta tags. For long keywords, use multiple + =KEYWORDS= lines. + +- =LATEX_HEADER= :: + + #+cindex: @samp{LATEX_HEADER}, keyword + Arbitrary lines for appending to the preamble; HTML exporter appends + when transcoding LaTeX fragments to images (see [[*Math formatting in + HTML export]]). + +- =SUBTITLE= :: + + #+cindex: @samp{SUBTITLE}, keyword + The document's subtitle. HTML exporter formats subtitle if document + type is =HTML5= and the CSS has a =subtitle= class. + +Some of these keywords are explained in more detail in the following +sections of the manual. + +*** HTML doctypes +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: Exporting various (X)HTML flavors. +:END: + +Org can export to various (X)HTML flavors. + +#+vindex: org-html-doctype +#+vindex: org-html-doctype-alist +Set the ~org-html-doctype~ variable for different (X)HTML variants. +Depending on the variant, the HTML exporter adjusts the syntax of HTML +conversion accordingly. Org includes the following ready-made +variants: + +- ~"html4-strict"~ +- ~"html4-transitional"~ +- ~"html4-frameset"~ +- ~"xhtml-strict"~ +- ~"xhtml-transitional"~ +- ~"xhtml-frameset"~ +- ~"xhtml-11"~ +- ~"html5"~ +- ~"xhtml5"~ + +#+texinfo: @noindent +See the variable ~org-html-doctype-alist~ for details. The default is +~"xhtml-strict"~. + +#+vindex: org-html-html5-fancy +#+cindex: @samp{HTML5}, export new elements +Org's HTML exporter does not by default enable new block elements +introduced with the HTML5 standard. To enable them, set +~org-html-html5-fancy~ to non-~nil~. Or use an =OPTIONS= line in the +file to set =html5-fancy=. + +HTML5 documents can now have arbitrary =#+BEGIN= ... =#+END= blocks. +For example: + +#+begin_example +,#+BEGIN_aside + Lorem ipsum +,#+END_aside +#+end_example + +#+texinfo: @noindent +exports to: + +#+begin_src html + +#+end_src + +#+texinfo: @noindent +while this: + +#+begin_example +,#+ATTR_HTML: :controls controls :width 350 +,#+BEGIN_video +,#+HTML: +,#+HTML: +Your browser does not support the video tag. +,#+END_video +#+end_example + +#+texinfo: @noindent +exports to: + +#+begin_src html + +#+end_src + +#+vindex: org-html-html5-elements +When special blocks do not have a corresponding HTML5 element, the +HTML exporter reverts to standard translation (see +~org-html-html5-elements~). For example, =#+BEGIN_lederhosen= exports +to ~
~. + +Special blocks cannot have headlines. For the HTML exporter to wrap +the headline and its contents in ~
~ or ~
~ tags, set +the =HTML_CONTAINER= property for the headline. + +*** HTML preamble and postamble +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: Inserting preamble and postamble. +:END: +#+vindex: org-html-preamble +#+vindex: org-html-postamble +#+vindex: org-html-preamble-format +#+vindex: org-html-postamble-format +#+vindex: org-html-validation-link +#+vindex: org-export-creator-string +#+vindex: org-export-time-stamp-file + +The HTML exporter has delineations for preamble and postamble. The +default value for ~org-html-preamble~ is ~t~, which makes the HTML +exporter insert the preamble. See the variable +~org-html-preamble-format~ for the format string. + +Set ~org-html-preamble~ to a string to override the default format +string. If the string is a function, the HTML exporter expects the +function to return a string upon execution. The HTML exporter inserts +this string in the preamble. The HTML exporter does not insert +a preamble if ~org-html-preamble~ is set ~nil~. + +The default value for ~org-html-postamble~ is ~auto~, which makes the +HTML exporter build a postamble from looking up author's name, email +address, creator's name, and date. Set ~org-html-postamble~ to ~t~ to +insert the postamble in the format specified in the +~org-html-postamble-format~ variable. The HTML exporter does not +insert a postamble if ~org-html-postamble~ is set to ~nil~. + +*** Quoting HTML tags +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: Using direct HTML in Org files. +:END: + +The HTML export back-end transforms =<= and =>= to =<= and =>=. +To include raw HTML code in the Org file so the HTML export back-end +can insert that HTML code in the output, use this inline syntax: +=@@html:...@@=. For example: + +: @@html:@@bold text@@html:@@ + +#+cindex: @samp{HTML}, keyword +#+cindex: @samp{BEGIN_EXPORT html} +For larger raw HTML code blocks, use these HTML export code blocks: + +#+begin_example +,#+HTML: Literal HTML code for export + +,#+BEGIN_EXPORT html + All lines between these markers are exported literally +,#+END_EXPORT +#+end_example + +*** Headlines in HTML export +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: Formatting headlines. +:END: +#+cindex: headlines, in HTML export + +Headlines are exported to =

=, =

=, etc. Each headline gets the +=id= attribute from =CUSTOM_ID= property, or a unique generated value, +see [[*Internal Links]]. + +#+vindex: org-html-self-link-headlines +When ~org-html-self-link-headlines~ is set to a non-~nil~ value, the +text of the headlines is also wrapped in == tags. These tags have +a =href= attribute making the headlines link to themselves. + +*** Links in HTML export +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: Inserting and formatting links. +:END: +#+cindex: links, in HTML export +#+cindex: internal links, in HTML export +#+cindex: external links, in HTML export + +The HTML export back-end transforms Org's internal links (see +[[*Internal Links]]) to equivalent HTML links in the output. The back-end +similarly handles Org's automatic links created by radio targets (see +[[*Radio Targets]]) similarly. For Org links to external files, the +back-end transforms the links to /relative/ paths. + +#+vindex: org-html-link-org-files-as-html +For Org links to other =.org= files, the back-end automatically +changes the file extension to =.html= and makes file paths relative. +If the =.org= files have an equivalent =.html= version at the same +location, then the converted links should work without any further +manual intervention. However, to disable this automatic path +translation, set ~org-html-link-org-files-as-html~ to ~nil~. When +disabled, the HTML export back-end substitutes the ID-based links in +the HTML output. For more about linking files when publishing to +a directory, see [[*Publishing links]]. + +Org files can also have special directives to the HTML export +back-end. For example, by using =#+ATTR_HTML= lines to specify new +format attributes to ~~ or ~~ tags. This example shows +changing the link's title and style: + +#+cindex: @samp{ATTR_HTML}, keyword +#+begin_example +,#+ATTR_HTML: :title The Org mode homepage :style color:red; +[[https://orgmode.org]] +#+end_example + +*** Tables in HTML export +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: How to modify the formatting of tables. +:END: +#+cindex: tables, in HTML +#+vindex: org-export-html-table-tag + +The HTML export back-end uses ~org-html-table-default-attributes~ when +exporting Org tables to HTML. By default, the exporter does not draw +frames and cell borders. To change for this for a table, use the +following lines before the table in the Org file: + +#+cindex: @samp{CAPTION}, keyword +#+cindex: @samp{ATTR_HTML}, keyword +#+begin_example +,#+CAPTION: This is a table with lines around and between cells +,#+ATTR_HTML: :border 2 :rules all :frame border +#+end_example + +The HTML export back-end preserves column groupings in Org tables (see +[[*Column Groups]]) when exporting to HTML. + +Additional options for customizing tables for HTML export. + +- ~org-html-table-align-individual-fields~ :: + + #+vindex: org-html-table-align-individual-fields + Non-~nil~ attaches style attributes for alignment to each table + field. + +- ~org-html-table-caption-above~ :: + + #+vindex: org-html-table-caption-above + Non-~nil~ places caption string at the beginning of the table. + +- ~org-html-table-data-tags~ :: + + #+vindex: org-html-table-data-tags + Opening and ending tags for table data fields. + +- ~org-html-table-default-attributes~ :: + + #+vindex: org-html-table-default-attributes + Default attributes and values for table tags. + +- ~org-html-table-header-tags~ :: + + #+vindex: org-html-table-header-tags + Opening and ending tags for table's header fields. + +- ~org-html-table-row-tags~ :: + + #+vindex: org-html-table-row-tags + Opening and ending tags for table rows. + +- ~org-html-table-use-header-tags-for-first-column~ :: + + #+vindex: org-html-table-use-header-tags-for-first-column + Non-~nil~ formats column one in tables with header tags. + +*** Images in HTML export +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: How to insert figures into HTML output. +:END: +#+cindex: images, inline in HTML +#+cindex: inlining images in HTML + +The HTML export back-end has features to convert Org image links to +HTML inline images and HTML clickable image links. + +#+vindex: org-html-inline-images +When the link in the Org file has no description, the HTML export +back-end by default in-lines that image. For example: +=[[file:myimg.jpg]]= is in-lined, while =[[file:myimg.jpg][the image]]= links to the text, +=the image=. For more details, see the variable +~org-html-inline-images~. + +On the other hand, if the description part of the Org link is itself +another link, such as =file:= or =http:= URL pointing to an image, the +HTML export back-end in-lines this image and links to the main image. +This Org syntax enables the back-end to link low-resolution thumbnail +to the high-resolution version of the image, as shown in this example: + +: [[file:highres.jpg][file:thumb.jpg]] + +To change attributes of in-lined images, use =#+ATTR_HTML= lines in +the Org file. This example shows realignment to right, and adds ~alt~ +and ~title~ attributes in support of text viewers and modern web +accessibility standards. + +#+cindex: @samp{CAPTION}, keyword +#+cindex: @samp{ATTR_HTML}, keyword +#+begin_example +,#+CAPTION: A black cat stalking a spider +,#+ATTR_HTML: :alt cat/spider image :title Action! :align right +[[./img/a.jpg]] +#+end_example + +The HTML export back-end copies the =http= links from the Org file +as-is. + +*** Math formatting in HTML export +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: Beautiful math also on the web. +:END: +#+cindex: MathJax +#+cindex: dvipng +#+cindex: dvisvgm +#+cindex: ImageMagick + +#+vindex: org-html-mathjax-options~ +LaTeX math snippets (see [[*LaTeX fragments]]) can be displayed in two +different ways on HTML pages. The default is to use the [[https://www.mathjax.org][MathJax]], +which should work out of the box with Org[fn:129][fn:130]. Some MathJax +display options can be configured via ~org-html-mathjax-options~, or +in the buffer. For example, with the following settings, + +#+begin_example +,#+HTML_MATHJAX: align: left indent: 5em tagside: left font: Neo-Euler +,#+HTML_MATHJAX: cancel.js noErrors.js +#+end_example + +#+texinfo: @noindent +equation labels are displayed on the left margin and equations are +five em from the left margin. In addition, it loads the two MathJax +extensions =cancel.js= and =noErrors.js=[fn:131]. + +#+vindex: org-html-mathjax-template +See the docstring of ~org-html-mathjax-options~ for all supported +variables. The MathJax template can be configure via +~org-html-mathjax-template~. + +If you prefer, you can also request that LaTeX fragments are processed +into small images that will be inserted into the browser page. Before +the availability of MathJax, this was the default method for Org +files. This method requires that the dvipng program, dvisvgm or +ImageMagick suite is available on your system. You can still get this +processing with + +: #+OPTIONS: tex:dvipng + +: #+OPTIONS: tex:dvisvgm + +#+texinfo: @noindent +or + +: #+OPTIONS: tex:imagemagick + +*** Text areas in HTML export +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: An alternate way to show an example. +:END: + +#+cindex: text areas, in HTML +Before Org mode's Babel, one popular approach to publishing code in +HTML was by using =:textarea=. The advantage of this approach was +that copying and pasting was built into browsers with simple +JavaScript commands. Even editing before pasting was made simple. + +The HTML export back-end can create such text areas. It requires an +=#+ATTR_HTML= line as shown in the example below with the =:textarea= +option. This must be followed by either an example or a source code +block. Other Org block types do not honor the =:textarea= option. + +By default, the HTML export back-end creates a text area 80 characters +wide and height just enough to fit the content. Override these +defaults with =:width= and =:height= options on the =#+ATTR_HTML= +line. + +#+begin_example +,#+ATTR_HTML: :textarea t :width 40 +,#+BEGIN_EXAMPLE + (defun org-xor (a b) + "Exclusive or." + (if a (not b) b)) +,#+END_EXAMPLE +#+end_example + +*** CSS support +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: Changing the appearance of the output. +:END: +#+cindex: CSS, for HTML export +#+cindex: HTML export, CSS + +#+vindex: org-export-html-todo-kwd-class-prefix +#+vindex: org-export-html-tag-class-prefix +You can modify the CSS style definitions for the exported file. The +HTML exporter assigns the following special CSS classes[fn:132] to +appropriate parts of the document---your style specifications may +change these, in addition to any of the standard classes like for +headlines, tables, etc. + +| ~p.author~ | author information, including email | +| ~p.date~ | publishing date | +| ~p.creator~ | creator info, about org mode version | +| ~.title~ | document title | +| ~.subtitle~ | document subtitle | +| ~.todo~ | TODO keywords, all not-done states | +| ~.done~ | the DONE keywords, all states that count as done | +| ~.WAITING~ | each TODO keyword also uses a class named after itself | +| ~.timestamp~ | timestamp | +| ~.timestamp-kwd~ | keyword associated with a timestamp, like =SCHEDULED= | +| ~.timestamp-wrapper~ | span around keyword plus timestamp | +| ~.tag~ | tag in a headline | +| ~._HOME~ | each tag uses itself as a class, "@" replaced by "_" | +| ~.target~ | target for links | +| ~.linenr~ | the line number in a code example | +| ~.code-highlighted~ | for highlighting referenced code lines | +| ~div.outline-N~ | div for outline level N (headline plus text) | +| ~div.outline-text-N~ | extra div for text at outline level N | +| ~.section-number-N~ | section number in headlines, different for each level | +| ~.figure-number~ | label like "Figure 1:" | +| ~.table-number~ | label like "Table 1:" | +| ~.listing-number~ | label like "Listing 1:" | +| ~div.figure~ | how to format an in-lined image | +| ~pre.src~ | formatted source code | +| ~pre.example~ | normal example | +| ~p.verse~ | verse paragraph | +| ~div.footnotes~ | footnote section headline | +| ~p.footnote~ | footnote definition paragraph, containing a footnote | +| ~.footref~ | a footnote reference number (always a ) | +| ~.footnum~ | footnote number in footnote definition (always ) | +| ~.org-svg~ | default class for a linked =.svg= image | + +#+vindex: org-html-style-default +#+vindex: org-html-head +#+vindex: org-html-head-extra +#+cindex: @samp{HTML_INCLUDE_STYLE}, keyword +The HTML export back-end includes a compact default style in each +exported HTML file. To override the default style with another style, +use these keywords in the Org file. They will replace the global +defaults the HTML exporter uses. + +#+cindex: @samp{HTML_HEAD}, keyword +#+cindex: @samp{HTML_HEAD_EXTRA}, keyword +#+begin_example +,#+HTML_HEAD: +,#+HTML_HEAD_EXTRA: +#+end_example + +#+vindex: org-html-head-include-default-style +To just turn off the default style, customize +~org-html-head-include-default-style~ variable, or use this option +line in the Org file. + +#+cindex: @samp{html-style}, @samp{OPTIONS} item +: #+OPTIONS: html-style:nil + +For longer style definitions, either use several =HTML_HEAD= and +=HTML_HEAD_EXTRA= keywords, or use ~~ blocks +around them. Both of these approaches can avoid referring to an +external file. + +#+cindex: @samp{HTML_CONTAINER_CLASS}, property +#+cindex: @samp{HTML_HEADLINE_CLASS}, property +In order to add styles to a sub-tree, use the =HTML_CONTAINER_CLASS= +property to assign a class to the tree. In order to specify CSS +styles for a particular headline, you can use the ID specified in +a =CUSTOM_ID= property. You can also assign a specific class to +a headline with the =HTML_HEADLINE_CLASS= property. + +Never change the ~org-html-style-default~ constant. Instead use other +simpler ways of customizing as described above. + +*** JavaScript supported display of web pages +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: Info and folding in a web browser. +:ALT_TITLE: JavaScript support +:END: + +Sebastian Rose has written a JavaScript program especially designed to +allow two different ways of viewing HTML files created with Org. One +is an /Info/-like mode where each section is displayed separately and +navigation can be done with the {{{kbd(n)}}} and {{{kbd(p)}}} keys, and some other +keys as well, press {{{kbd(?)}}} for an overview of the available keys. The +second one has a /folding/ view, much like Org provides inside Emacs. +The script is available at https://orgmode.org/org-info.js and the +documentation at https://orgmode.org/worg/code/org-info-js/. The +script is hosted on https://orgmode.org, but for reliability, prefer +installing it on your own web server. + +To use this program, just add this line to the Org file: + +#+cindex: @samp{INFOJS_OPT}, keyword +: #+INFOJS_OPT: view:info toc:nil + +#+texinfo: @noindent +The HTML header now has the code needed to automatically invoke the +script. For setting options, use the syntax from the above line for +options described below: + +- =path:= :: + + The path to the script. The default is to grab the script from + [[https://orgmode.org/org-info.js]], but you might want to have a local + copy and use a path like =../scripts/org-info.js=. + +- =view:= :: + + Initial view when the website is first shown. Possible values are: + + | =info= | Info-like interface with one section per page | + | =overview= | Folding interface, initially showing only top-level | + | =content= | Folding interface, starting with all headlines visible | + | =showall= | Folding interface, all headlines and text visible | + +- =sdepth:= :: + + Maximum headline level still considered as an independent section + for info and folding modes. The default is taken from + ~org-export-headline-levels~, i.e., the =H= switch in =OPTIONS=. If + this is smaller than in ~org-export-headline-levels~, each + info/folding section can still contain child headlines. + +- =toc:= :: + + Should the table of contents /initially/ be visible? Even when + =nil=, you can always get to the "toc" with {{{kbd(i)}}}. + +- =tdepth:= :: + + The depth of the table of contents. The defaults are taken from the + variables ~org-export-headline-levels~ and ~org-export-with-toc~. + +- =ftoc:= :: + + Does the CSS of the page specify a fixed position for the "toc"? If + yes, the toc is displayed as a section. + +- =ltoc:= :: + + Should there be short contents (children) in each section? Make + this =above= if the section should be above initial text. + +- =mouse:= :: + + Headings are highlighted when the mouse is over them. Should be + =underline= (default) or a background color like =#cccccc=. + +- =buttons:= :: + + Should view-toggle buttons be everywhere? When =nil= (the default), + only one such button is present. + +#+vindex: org-infojs-options +#+vindex: org-export-html-use-infojs +You can choose default values for these options by customizing the +variable ~org-infojs-options~. If you always want to apply the script +to your pages, configure the variable ~org-export-html-use-infojs~. + +** LaTeX Export +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: Exporting to @LaTeX{} and processing to PDF. +:END: +#+cindex: @LaTeX{} export +#+cindex: PDF export + +The LaTeX export back-end can handle complex documents, incorporate +standard or custom LaTeX document classes, generate documents using +alternate LaTeX engines, and produce fully linked PDF files with +indexes, bibliographies, and tables of contents, destined for +interactive online viewing or high-quality print publication. + +While the details are covered in-depth in this section, here are some +quick references to variables for the impatient: for engines, see +~org-latex-compiler~; for build sequences, see +~org-latex-pdf-process~; for packages, see +~org-latex-default-packages-alist~ and ~org-latex-packages-alist~. + +An important note about the LaTeX export back-end: it is sensitive to +blank lines in the Org document. That's because LaTeX itself depends +on blank lines to tell apart syntactical elements, such as paragraphs. + +*** LaTeX/PDF export commands +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: For producing @LaTeX{} and PDF documents. +:END: + +- {{{kbd(C-c C-e l l)}}} (~org-latex-export-to-latex~) :: + + #+kindex: C-c C-e l l + #+findex: org-latex-export-to-latex~ + Export to a LaTeX file with a =.tex= extension. For =myfile.org=, + Org exports to =myfile.tex=, overwriting without warning. + +- {{{kbd(C-c C-e l L)}}} (~org-latex-export-as-latex~) :: + + #+kindex: C-c C-e l L + #+findex: org-latex-export-as-latex + Export to a temporary buffer. Do not create a file. + +- {{{kbd(C-c C-e l p)}}} (~org-latex-export-to-pdf~) :: + + #+kindex: C-c C-e l p + #+findex: org-latex-export-to-pdf + Export as LaTeX file and convert it to PDF file. + +- {{{kbd(C-c C-e l o)}}} :: + + #+kindex: C-c C-e l o + Export as LaTeX file and convert it to PDF, then open the PDF using + the default viewer. + +- {{{kbd(M-x org-export-region-as-latex)}}} :: + + Convert the region to LaTeX under the assumption that it was in Org + mode syntax before. This is a global command that can be invoked in + any buffer. + +#+vindex: org-latex-compiler +#+vindex: org-latex-bibtex-compiler +#+vindex: org-latex-default-packages-alist +#+cindex: pdflatex +#+cindex: xelatex +#+cindex: lualatex +#+cindex: @samp{LATEX_COMPILER}, keyword +The LaTeX export back-end can use any of these LaTeX engines: +=pdflatex=, =xelatex=, and =lualatex=. These engines compile LaTeX +files with different compilers, packages, and output options. The +LaTeX export back-end finds the compiler version to use from +~org-latex-compiler~ variable or the =#+LATEX_COMPILER= keyword in the +Org file. See the docstring for the +~org-latex-default-packages-alist~ for loading packages with certain +compilers. Also see ~org-latex-bibtex-compiler~ to set the +bibliography compiler[fn:133]. + +*** LaTeX specific export settings +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: Unique to this @LaTeX{} back-end. +:END: + +The LaTeX export back-end has several additional keywords for +customizing LaTeX output. Setting these keywords works similar to the +general options (see [[*Export Settings]]). + +#+attr_texinfo: :sep , +- =DESCRIPTION= :: + #+cindex: @samp{DESCRIPTION}, keyword + #+vindex: org-latex-hyperref-template + #+vindex: org-latex-title-command + The document's description. The description along with author name, + keywords, and related file metadata are inserted in the output file + by the hyperref package. See ~org-latex-hyperref-template~ for + customizing metadata items. See ~org-latex-title-command~ for + typesetting description into the document's front matter. Use + multiple =DESCRIPTION= keywords for long descriptions. + +- =LANGUAGE= :: + #+cindex: @samp{LANGUAGE}, keyword + #+vindex: org-latex-packages-alist + In order to be effective, the =babel= or =polyglossia= + packages---according to the LaTeX compiler used---must be loaded + with the appropriate language as argument. This can be accomplished + by modifying the ~org-latex-packages-alist~ variable, e.g., with the + following snippet: + + #+begin_src emacs-lisp + (add-to-list 'org-latex-packages-alist + '("AUTO" "babel" t ("pdflatex"))) + (add-to-list 'org-latex-packages-alist + '("AUTO" "polyglossia" t ("xelatex" "lualatex"))) + #+end_src + +- =LATEX_CLASS= :: + + #+cindex: @samp{LATEX_CLASS}, keyword + #+vindex: org-latex-default-class + #+vindex: org-latex-classes + This is LaTeX document class, such as /article/, /report/, /book/, + and so on, which contain predefined preamble and headline level + mapping that the LaTeX export back-end needs. The back-end reads + the default class name from the ~org-latex-default-class~ variable. + Org has /article/ as the default class. A valid default class must + be an element of ~org-latex-classes~. + +- =LATEX_CLASS_OPTIONS= :: + + #+cindex: @samp{LATEX_CLASS_OPTIONS}, keyword + Options the LaTeX export back-end uses when calling the LaTeX + document class. + +- =LATEX_COMPILER= :: + + #+cindex: @samp{LATEX_COMPILER}, keyword + #+vindex: org-latex-compiler + The compiler, such as =pdflatex=, =xelatex=, =lualatex=, for + producing the PDF. See ~org-latex-compiler~. + +- =LATEX_HEADER=, =LATEX_HEADER_EXTRA= :: + + #+cindex: @samp{LATEX_HEADER}, keyword + #+cindex: @samp{LATEX_HEADER_EXTRA}, keyword + #+vindex: org-latex-classes + Arbitrary lines to add to the document's preamble, before the + hyperref settings. See ~org-latex-classes~ for adjusting the + structure and order of the LaTeX headers. + +- =KEYWORDS= :: + + #+cindex: @samp{KEYWORDS}, keyword + #+vindex: org-latex-hyperref-template + #+vindex: org-latex-title-command + The keywords for the document. The description along with author + name, keywords, and related file metadata are inserted in the output + file by the hyperref package. See ~org-latex-hyperref-template~ for + customizing metadata items. See ~org-latex-title-command~ for + typesetting description into the document's front matter. Use + multiple =KEYWORDS= lines if necessary. + +- =SUBTITLE= :: + + #+cindex: @samp{SUBTITLE}, keyword + #+vindex: org-latex-subtitle-separate + #+vindex: org-latex-subtitle-format + The document's subtitle. It is typeset as per + ~org-latex-subtitle-format~. If ~org-latex-subtitle-separate~ is + non-~nil~, it is typed outside of the ~\title~ macro. See + ~org-latex-hyperref-template~ for customizing metadata items. See + ~org-latex-title-command~ for typesetting description into the + document's front matter. + +The following sections have further details. + +*** LaTeX header and sectioning structure +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: Setting up the export file structure. +:ALT_TITLE: LaTeX header and sectioning +:END: +#+cindex: @LaTeX{} class +#+cindex: @LaTeX{} sectioning structure +#+cindex: @LaTeX{} header +#+cindex: header, for @LaTeX{} files +#+cindex: sectioning structure, for @LaTeX{} export + +The LaTeX export back-end converts the first three of Org's outline +levels into LaTeX headlines. The remaining Org levels are exported as +lists. To change this globally for the cut-off point between levels +and lists, (see [[*Export Settings]]). + +By default, the LaTeX export back-end uses the /article/ class. + +#+vindex: org-latex-default-class +#+vindex: org-latex-classes +#+vindex: org-latex-default-packages-alist +#+vindex: org-latex-packages-alist +To change the default class globally, edit ~org-latex-default-class~. +To change the default class locally in an Org file, add option lines +=#+LATEX_CLASS: myclass=. To change the default class for just a part +of the Org file, set a sub-tree property, =EXPORT_LATEX_CLASS=. The +class name entered here must be valid member of ~org-latex-classes~. +This variable defines a header template for each class into which the +exporter splices the values of ~org-latex-default-packages-alist~ and +~org-latex-packages-alist~. Use the same three variables to define +custom sectioning or custom classes. + +#+cindex: @samp{LATEX_CLASS}, keyword +#+cindex: @samp{LATEX_CLASS_OPTIONS}, keyword +#+cindex: @samp{EXPORT_LATEX_CLASS}, property +#+cindex: @samp{EXPORT_LATEX_CLASS_OPTIONS}, property +The LaTeX export back-end sends the =LATEX_CLASS_OPTIONS= keyword and +=EXPORT_LATEX_CLASS_OPTIONS= property as options to the LaTeX +~\documentclass~ macro. The options and the syntax for specifying +them, including enclosing them in square brackets, follow LaTeX +conventions. + +: #+LATEX_CLASS_OPTIONS: [a4paper,11pt,twoside,twocolumn] + +#+cindex: @samp{LATEX_HEADER}, keyword +#+cindex: @samp{LATEX_HEADER_EXTRA}, keyword +The LaTeX export back-end appends values from =LATEX_HEADER= and +=LATEX_HEADER_EXTRA= keywords to the LaTeX header. The docstring for +~org-latex-classes~ explains in more detail. Also note that LaTeX +export back-end does not append =LATEX_HEADER_EXTRA= to the header +when previewing LaTeX snippets (see [[*Previewing LaTeX fragments]]). + +A sample Org file with the above headers: + +#+begin_example +,#+LATEX_CLASS: article +,#+LATEX_CLASS_OPTIONS: [a4paper] +,#+LATEX_HEADER: \usepackage{xyz} + +,* Headline 1 + some text +,* Headline 2 + some more text +#+end_example + +*** Quoting LaTeX code +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: Incorporating literal @LaTeX{} code. +:END: + +The LaTeX export back-end can insert any arbitrary LaTeX code, see +[[*Embedded LaTeX]]. There are three ways to embed such code in the Org +file and they all use different quoting syntax. + +#+cindex: inline, in @LaTeX{} export +Inserting in-line quoted with @ symbols: + +: Code embedded in-line @@latex:any arbitrary LaTeX code@@ in a paragraph. + +#+cindex: @samp{LATEX}, keyword +Inserting as one or more keyword lines in the Org file: + +: #+LATEX: any arbitrary LaTeX code + +#+cindex: @samp{BEGIN_EXPORT latex} +Inserting as an export block in the Org file, where the back-end +exports any code between begin and end markers: + +#+begin_example +,#+BEGIN_EXPORT latex + any arbitrary LaTeX code +,#+END_EXPORT +#+end_example + +*** Tables in LaTeX export +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: Options for exporting tables to @LaTeX{}. +:END: +#+cindex: tables, in @LaTeX{} export + +The LaTeX export back-end can pass several LaTeX attributes for table +contents and layout. Besides specifying a label (see [[*Internal Links]]) +and a caption (see [[*Captions]]), the other valid LaTeX attributes +include: + +#+attr_texinfo: :sep , +- =:mode= :: + + #+vindex: org-latex-default-table-mode + The LaTeX export back-end wraps the table differently depending on + the mode for accurate rendering of math symbols. Mode is either + =table=, =math=, =inline-math= or =verbatim=. + + For =math= or =inline-math= mode, LaTeX export back-end wraps the + table in a math environment, but every cell in it is exported as-is. + The LaTeX export back-end determines the default mode from + ~org-latex-default-table-mode~. The LaTeX export back-end merges + contiguous tables in the same mode into a single environment. + +- =:environment= :: + + #+vindex: org-latex-default-table-environment + Set the default LaTeX table environment for the LaTeX export + back-end to use when exporting Org tables. Common LaTeX table + environments are provided by these packages: tabularx, longtable, + array, tabu, and bmatrix. For packages, such as tabularx and tabu, + or any newer replacements, include them in the + ~org-latex-packages-alist~ variable so the LaTeX export back-end can + insert the appropriate load package headers in the converted LaTeX + file. Look in the docstring for the ~org-latex-packages-alist~ + variable for configuring these packages for LaTeX snippet previews, + if any. + +- =:caption= :: + + Use =CAPTION= keyword to set a simple caption for a table (see + [[*Captions]]). For custom captions, use =:caption= attribute, which + accepts raw LaTeX code. =:caption= value overrides =CAPTION= value. + +- =:float=, =:placement= :: + + The table environments by default are not floats in LaTeX. To make + them floating objects use =:float= with one of the following + options: =sideways=, =multicolumn=, =t=, and =nil=. + + LaTeX floats can also have additional layout =:placement= + attributes. These are the usual =[h t b p ! H]= permissions + specified in square brackets. Note that for =:float sideways= + tables, the LaTeX export back-end ignores =:placement= attributes. + +- =:align=, =:font=, =:width= :: + + The LaTeX export back-end uses these attributes for regular tables + to set their alignments, fonts, and widths. + +- =:spread= :: + + When =:spread= is non-~nil~, the LaTeX export back-end spreads or + shrinks the table by the =:width= for tabu and longtabu + environments. =:spread= has no effect if =:width= is not set. + +- =:booktabs=, =:center=, =:rmlines= :: + + #+vindex: org-latex-tables-booktabs + #+vindex: org-latex-tables-centered + All three commands are toggles. =:booktabs= brings in modern + typesetting enhancements to regular tables. The booktabs package + has to be loaded through ~org-latex-packages-alist~. =:center= is + for centering the table. =:rmlines= removes all but the very first + horizontal line made of ASCII characters from "table.el" tables + only. + +- =:math-prefix=, =:math-suffix=, =:math-arguments= :: + + The LaTeX export back-end inserts =:math-prefix= string value in + a math environment before the table. The LaTeX export back-end + inserts =:math-suffix= string value in a math environment after the + table. The LaTeX export back-end inserts =:math-arguments= string + value between the macro name and the table's contents. + =:math-arguments= comes in use for matrix macros that require more + than one argument, such as =qbordermatrix=. + +LaTeX table attributes help formatting tables for a wide range of +situations, such as matrix product or spanning multiple pages: + +#+begin_example +,#+ATTR_LATEX: :environment longtable :align l|lp{3cm}r|l +| ... | ... | +| ... | ... | + +,#+ATTR_LATEX: :mode math :environment bmatrix :math-suffix \times +| a | b | +| c | d | +,#+ATTR_LATEX: :mode math :environment bmatrix +| 1 | 2 | +| 3 | 4 | +#+end_example + +Set the caption with the LaTeX command +=\bicaption{HeadingA}{HeadingB}=: + +#+begin_example +,#+ATTR_LATEX: :caption \bicaption{HeadingA}{HeadingB} +| ... | ... | +| ... | ... | +#+end_example + +*** Images in LaTeX export +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: How to insert figures into @LaTeX{} output. +:END: +#+cindex: images, inline in LaTeX +#+cindex: inlining images in LaTeX +#+cindex: @samp{ATTR_LATEX}, keyword + +The LaTeX export back-end processes image links in Org files that do +not have descriptions, such as these links =[[file:img.jpg]]= or +=[[./img.jpg]]=, as direct image insertions in the final PDF output. In +the PDF, they are no longer links but actual images embedded on the +page. The LaTeX export back-end uses =\includegraphics= macro to +insert the image. But for TikZ (http://sourceforge.net/projects/pgf/) +images, the back-end uses an ~\input~ macro wrapped within +a ~tikzpicture~ environment. + +For specifying image =:width=, =:height=, =:scale= and other =:options=, +use this syntax: + +#+begin_example +,#+ATTR_LATEX: :width 5cm :options angle=90 +[[./img/sed-hr4049.pdf]] +#+end_example + +A =:scale= attribute overrides both =:width= and =:height= attributes. + +For custom commands for captions, use the =:caption= attribute. It +overrides the default =#+CAPTION= value: + +#+begin_example +,#+ATTR_LATEX: :caption \bicaption{HeadingA}{HeadingB} +[[./img/sed-hr4049.pdf]] +#+end_example + +When captions follow the method as described in [[*Captions]], the LaTeX +export back-end wraps the picture in a floating =figure= environment. +To float an image without specifying a caption, set the =:float= +attribute to one of the following: + +- =t= :: + + For a standard =figure= environment; used by default whenever an + image has a caption. + +- =multicolumn= :: + + To span the image across multiple columns of a page; the back-end + wraps the image in a =figure*= environment. + +- =wrap= :: + + For text to flow around the image on the right; the figure occupies + the left half of the page. + +- =sideways= :: + + For a new page with the image sideways, rotated ninety degrees, in + a =sidewaysfigure= environment; overrides =:placement= setting. + +- =nil= :: + + To avoid a =:float= even if using a caption. + +Use the =placement= attribute to modify a floating environment's +placement. + +#+begin_example +,#+ATTR_LATEX: :float wrap :width 0.38\textwidth :placement {r}{0.4\textwidth} +[[./img/hst.png]] +#+end_example + +#+vindex: org-latex-images-centered +#+cindex: center image in LaTeX export +#+cindex: image, centering in LaTeX export +The LaTeX export back-end centers all images by default. Setting +=:center= to =nil= disables centering. To disable centering globally, +set ~org-latex-images-centered~ to =nil=. + +Set the =:comment-include= attribute to non-~nil~ value for the LaTeX +export back-end to comment out the =\includegraphics= macro. + +*** Plain lists in LaTeX export +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: Attributes specific to lists. +:END: + +#+cindex: plain lists, in @LaTeX{} export +#+cindex: @samp{ATTR_LATEX}, keyword +The LaTeX export back-end accepts the =environment= and =options= +attributes for plain lists. Both attributes work together for +customizing lists, as shown in the examples: + +#+begin_example +,#+LATEX_HEADER: \usepackage[inline]{enumitem} +Some ways to say "Hello": +,#+ATTR_LATEX: :environment itemize* +,#+ATTR_LATEX: :options [label={}, itemjoin={,}, itemjoin*={, and}] +- Hola +- Bonjour +- Guten Tag. +#+end_example + +Since LaTeX supports only four levels of nesting for lists, use an +external package, such as =enumitem= in LaTeX, for levels deeper than +four: + +#+begin_example +,#+LATEX_HEADER: \usepackage{enumitem} +,#+LATEX_HEADER: \renewlist{itemize}{itemize}{9} +,#+LATEX_HEADER: \setlist[itemize]{label=$\circ$} +- One + - Two + - Three + - Four + - Five +#+end_example + +*** Source blocks in LaTeX export +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: Attributes specific to source code blocks. +:END: +#+cindex: source blocks, in @LaTeX{} export +#+cindex: @samp{ATTR_LATEX}, keyword + +The LaTeX export back-end can make source code blocks into floating +objects through the attributes =:float= and =:options=. For =:float=: + +- =t= :: + + Makes a source block float; by default floats any source block with + a caption. + +- =multicolumn= :: + + Spans the source block across multiple columns of a page. + +- =nil= :: + + Avoids a =:float= even if using a caption; useful for source code + blocks that may not fit on a page. + +#+begin_example +,#+ATTR_LATEX: :float nil +,#+BEGIN_SRC emacs-lisp + Lisp code that may not fit in a single page. +,#+END_SRC +#+end_example + +#+vindex: org-latex-listings-options +#+vindex: org-latex-minted-options +The LaTeX export back-end passes string values in =:options= to LaTeX +packages for customization of that specific source block. In the +example below, the =:options= are set for Minted. Minted is a source +code highlighting LaTeX package with many configurable options[fn:134]. + +#+begin_example +,#+ATTR_LATEX: :options commentstyle=\bfseries +,#+BEGIN_SRC emacs-lisp + (defun Fib (n) + (if (< n 2) n (+ (Fib (- n 1)) (Fib (- n 2))))) +,#+END_SRC +#+end_example + +To apply similar configuration options for all source blocks in +a file, use the ~org-latex-listings-options~ and +~org-latex-minted-options~ variables. + +*** Example blocks in LaTeX export +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: Attributes specific to example blocks. +:END: +#+cindex: example blocks, in @LaTeX{} export +#+cindex: verbatim blocks, in @LaTeX{} export +#+cindex: @samp{ATTR_LATEX}, keyword + +The LaTeX export back-end wraps the contents of example blocks in +a =verbatim= environment. To change this behavior to use another +environment globally, specify an appropriate export filter (see +[[*Advanced Export Configuration]]). To change this behavior to use +another environment for each block, use the =:environment= parameter +to specify a custom environment. + +#+begin_example +,#+ATTR_LATEX: :environment myverbatim +,#+BEGIN_EXAMPLE + This sentence is false. +,#+END_EXAMPLE +#+end_example + +*** Special blocks in LaTeX export +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: Attributes specific to special blocks. +:END: + +#+cindex: special blocks, in @LaTeX{} export +#+cindex: abstract, in @LaTeX{} export +#+cindex: proof, in @LaTeX{} export +#+cindex: @samp{ATTR_LATEX}, keyword + +For other special blocks in the Org file, the LaTeX export back-end +makes a special environment of the same name. The back-end also takes +=:options=, if any, and appends as-is to that environment's opening +string. For example: + +#+begin_example +,#+BEGIN_abstract + We demonstrate how to solve the Syracuse problem. +,#+END_abstract + +,#+ATTR_LATEX: :options [Proof of important theorem] +,#+BEGIN_proof + ... + Therefore, any even number greater than 2 is the sum of two primes. +,#+END_proof +#+end_example + +#+texinfo: @noindent +exports to + +#+begin_example +\begin{abstract} + We demonstrate how to solve the Syracuse problem. +\end{abstract} + +\begin{proof}[Proof of important theorem] + ... + Therefore, any even number greater than 2 is the sum of two primes. +\end{proof} +#+end_example + +If you need to insert a specific caption command, use =:caption= +attribute. It overrides standard =CAPTION= value, if any. For +example: + +#+begin_example +,#+ATTR_LATEX: :caption \MyCaption{HeadingA} +,#+BEGIN_proof + ... +,#+END_proof +#+end_example + +*** Horizontal rules in LaTeX export +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: Attributes specific to horizontal rules. +:END: +#+cindex: horizontal rules, in @LaTeX{} export +#+cindex: @samp{ATTR_LATEX}, keyword + +The LaTeX export back-end converts horizontal rules by the specified +=:width= and =:thickness= attributes. For example: + +#+begin_example +,#+ATTR_LATEX: :width .6\textwidth :thickness 0.8pt +----- +#+end_example + +*** Verse blocks in LaTeX export +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: Attributes specific to special blocks. +:END: + +#+cindex: verse blocks, in @LaTeX{} export +#+cindex: @samp{ATTR_LATEX}, keyword + +The LaTeX export back-end accepts four attributes for verse blocks: +=:lines=, =:center=, =:versewidth= and =:latexcode=. The three first +require the external LaTeX package =verse.sty=, which is an extension +of the standard LaTeX environment. + +- =:lines= :: To add marginal verse numbering. Its value is an + integer, the sequence in which the verses should be numbered. +- =:center= :: With value =t= all the verses on the page are optically + centered (a typographic convention for poetry), taking as a + reference the longest verse, which must be indicated by the + attribute =:versewidth=. +- =:versewidth= :: Its value is a literal text string with the longest + verse. +- =:latexcode= :: It accepts any arbitrary LaTeX code that can be + included within a LaTeX =verse= environment. + +A complete example with Shakespeare's first sonnet: + +#+begin_src org +,#+ATTR_LATEX: :center t :latexcode \color{red} :lines 5 +,#+ATTR_LATEX: :versewidth Feed’st thy light’s flame with self-substantial fuel, +,#+BEGIN_VERSE +From fairest creatures we desire increase, +That thereby beauty’s rose might never die, +But as the riper should by time decease +His tender heir might bear his memory +But thou, contracted to thine own bright eyes, +Feed’st thy light’s flame with self-substantial fuel, +Making a famine where abundance lies, +Thyself thy foe, to thy sweet self too cruel. +Thou that art now the world’s fresh ornament, +And only herald to the gaudy spring, +Within thine own bud buriest thy content, +And, tender churl, mak’st waste in niggardly. +Pity the world, or else this glutton be, +To eat the world’s due, by the grave and thee. +,#+END_VERSE +#+end_src + +*** Quote blocks in LaTeX export +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: Attributes specific to quote blocks. +:END: + +#+cindex: quote blocks, in @LaTeX{} export +#+cindex: @samp{ATTR_LATEX}, keyword +#+cindex: org-latex-default-quote-environment + +The LaTeX export back-end accepts two attributes for quote blocks: +=:environment=, for an arbitrary quoting environment (the default +value is that of ~org-latex-default-quote-environment~: ~"quote"~) and +=:options=. For example, to choose the environment =quotation=, +included as an alternative to =quote= in standard LaTeX classes: + +#+begin_example +,#+ATTR_LATEX: :environment quotation +,#+BEGIN_QUOTE +some text... +,#+END_QUOTE +#+end_example + +To choose the =foreigndisplayquote= environment, included in the LaTeX +package =csquotes=, with the =german= option, use this syntax: + +#+begin_example +,#+LATEX_HEADER:\usepackage[autostyle=true]{csquotes} +,#+ATTR_LATEX: :environment foreigndisplayquote :options {german} +,#+BEGIN_QUOTE +some text in German... +,#+END_QUOTE +#+end_example + +#+texinfo: @noindent +which is exported to LaTeX as + +#+begin_example +\begin{foreigndisplayquote}{german} +some text in German... +\end{foreigndisplayquote} +#+end_example + +** Markdown Export +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: Exporting to Markdown. +:END: +#+cindex: Markdown export + +The Markdown export back-end, "md", converts an Org file to Markdown +format, as defined at http://daringfireball.net/projects/markdown/. + +Since it is built on top of the HTML back-end (see [[*HTML Export]]), it +converts every Org construct not defined in Markdown syntax, such as +tables, to HTML. + +*** Markdown export commands +:PROPERTIES: +:UNNUMBERED: notoc +:END: + +- {{{kbd(C-c C-e m m)}}} (~org-md-export-to-markdown~) :: + + #+kindex: C-c C-c m m + #+findex: org-md-export-to-markdown + Export to a text file with Markdown syntax. For =myfile.org=, Org + exports to =myfile.md=, overwritten without warning. + +- {{{kbd(C-c C-e m M)}}} (~org-md-export-as-markdown~) :: + + #+kindex: C-c C-c m M + #+findex: org-md-export-as-markdown + Export to a temporary buffer. Does not create a file. + +- {{{kbd(C-c C-e m o)}}} :: + + #+kindex: C-c C-e m o + Export as a text file with Markdown syntax, then open it. + +*** Header and sectioning structure +:PROPERTIES: +:UNNUMBERED: notoc +:END: + +#+vindex: org-md-headline-style +Based on ~org-md-headline-style~, Markdown export can generate +headlines of both /atx/ and /setext/ types. /atx/ limits headline +levels to two whereas /setext/ limits headline levels to six. Beyond +these limits, the export back-end converts headlines to lists. To set +a limit to a level before the absolute limit (see [[*Export Settings]]). + +** OpenDocument Text Export +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: Exporting to OpenDocument Text. +:END: +#+cindex: ODT +#+cindex: OpenDocument +#+cindex: export, OpenDocument +#+cindex: LibreOffice + +The ODT export back-end handles creating of OpenDocument Text (ODT) +format. Documents created by this exporter use the +{{{cite(OpenDocument-v1.2 specification)}}}[fn:135] and are compatible +with LibreOffice 3.4. + +*** Pre-requisites for ODT export +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: Required packages. +:END: +#+cindex: zip + +The ODT export back-end relies on the zip program to create the final +compressed ODT output. Check if =zip= is locally available and +executable. Without it, export cannot finish. + +*** ODT export commands +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: Invoking export. +:END: + +- {{{kbd(C-c C-e o o)}}} (~org-export-to-odt~) :: + + #+kindex: C-c C-e o o + #+findex: org-export-to-odt + Export as OpenDocument Text file. + + #+cindex: @samp{EXPORT_FILE_NAME}, property + #+vindex: org-odt-preferred-output-format + + If ~org-odt-preferred-output-format~ is specified, the ODT export + back-end automatically converts the exported file to that format. + + For =myfile.org=, Org exports to =myfile.odt=, overwriting without + warning. The ODT export back-end exports a region only if a region + was active. + + If the selected region is a single tree, the ODT export back-end + makes the tree head the document title. Incidentally, {{{kbd(C-c + @)}}} selects the current sub-tree. If the tree head entry has, or + inherits, an =EXPORT_FILE_NAME= property, the ODT export back-end + uses that for file name. + +- {{{kbd(C-c C-e o O)}}} :: + + #+kindex: C-c C-e o O + Export as an OpenDocument Text file and open the resulting file. + + #+vindex: org-export-odt-preferred-output-format + If ~org-export-odt-preferred-output-format~ is specified, open the + converted file instead. See [[*Automatically exporting to other + formats]]. + +*** ODT specific export settings +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: Configuration options. +:END: + +The ODT export back-end has several additional keywords for +customizing ODT output. Setting these keywords works similar to the +general options (see [[*Export Settings]]). + +- =DESCRIPTION= :: + + #+cindex: @samp{DESCRIPTION}, keyword + This is the document's description, which the ODT export back-end + inserts as document metadata. For long descriptions, use multiple + lines, prefixed with =DESCRIPTION=. + +- =KEYWORDS= :: + + #+cindex: @samp{KEYWORDS}, keyword + The keywords for the document. The ODT export back-end inserts the + description along with author name, keywords, and related file + metadata as metadata in the output file. Use multiple =KEYWORDS= if + necessary. + +- =ODT_STYLES_FILE= :: + + #+cindex: @samp{ODT_STYLES_FILE}, keyword + #+vindex: org-odt-styles-file + The ODT export back-end uses the ~org-odt-styles-file~ by default. + See [[*Applying custom styles]] for details. + +- =SUBTITLE= :: + + #+cindex: @samp{SUBTITLE}, keyword + The document subtitle. + +*** Extending ODT export +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: Producing DOC, PDF files. +:END: + +The ODT export back-end can produce documents in other formats besides +ODT using a specialized ODT converter process. Its common interface +works with popular converters to produce formats such as =doc=, or +convert a document from one format, say =csv=, to another format, say +=xls=. + +#+cindex: @file{unoconv} +#+vindex: org-odt-convert-process +Customize ~org-odt-convert-process~ variable to point to =unoconv=, +which is the ODT's preferred converter. Working installations of +LibreOffice would already have =unoconv= installed. Alternatively, +other converters may be substituted here. See [[*Configuring +a document converter]]. + +**** Automatically exporting to other formats +:PROPERTIES: +:UNNUMBERED: notoc +:END: + +#+vindex: org-odt-preferred-output-format +If ODT format is just an intermediate step to get to other formats, +such as =doc=, =docx=, =rtf=, or =pdf=, etc., then extend the ODT +export back-end to directly produce that format. Specify the final +format in the ~org-odt-preferred-output-format~ variable. This is one +way to extend (see [[*ODT export commands]]). + +**** Converting between document formats +:PROPERTIES: +:UNNUMBERED: notoc +:END: + +The Org export back-end is made to be inter-operable with a wide range +of text document format converters. Newer generation converters, such +as LibreOffice and Pandoc, can handle hundreds of formats at once. +Org provides a consistent interaction with whatever converter is +installed. Here are some generic commands: + +- {{{kbd(M-x org-odt-convert)}}} :: + + #+findex: org-odt-convert + Convert an existing document from one format to another. With + a prefix argument, opens the newly produced file. + +*** Applying custom styles +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: Styling the output. +:END: +#+cindex: styles, custom +#+cindex: template, custom + +The ODT export back-end comes with many OpenDocument styles (see +[[*Working with OpenDocument style files]]). To expand or further +customize these built-in style sheets, either edit the style sheets +directly or generate them using an application such as LibreOffice. +The example here shows creating a style using LibreOffice. + +**** Applying custom styles: the easy way +:PROPERTIES: +:UNNUMBERED: notoc +:END: + +1. Create a sample =example.org= file with settings as shown below, + and export it to ODT format. + + : #+OPTIONS: H:10 num:t + +2. Open the above =example.odt= using LibreOffice. Use the /Stylist/ + to locate the target styles, which typically have the "Org" prefix. + Open one, modify, and save as either OpenDocument Text (ODT) or + OpenDocument Template (OTT) file. + +3. + #+vindex: org-odt-styles-file + Customize the variable ~org-odt-styles-file~ and point it to the + newly created file. For additional configuration options, see + [[x-overriding-factory-styles][Overriding factory styles]]. + + #+cindex: @samp{ODT_STYLES_FILE}, keyword + To apply an ODT style to a particular file, use the + =ODT_STYLES_FILE= keyword as shown in the example below: + + : #+ODT_STYLES_FILE: "/path/to/example.ott" + + #+texinfo: @noindent + or + + : #+ODT_STYLES_FILE: ("/path/to/file.ott" ("styles.xml" "image/hdr.png")) + +**** Using third-party styles and templates +:PROPERTIES: +:UNNUMBERED: notoc +:END: + +The ODT export back-end relies on many templates and style names. +Using third-party styles and templates can lead to mismatches. +Templates derived from built in ODT templates and styles seem to have +fewer problems. + +*** Links in ODT export +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: Handling and formatting links. +:END: +#+cindex: links, in ODT export + +ODT exporter creates native cross-references for internal links. It +creates Internet-style links for all other links. + +A link with no description and pointing to a regular, un-itemized, +outline heading is replaced with a cross-reference and section number +of the heading. + +A =\ref{label}=-style reference to an image, table etc., is replaced +with a cross-reference and sequence number of the labeled entity. See +[[*Labels and captions in ODT export]]. + +*** Tables in ODT export +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: Org tables conversions. +:END: + +#+cindex: tables, in ODT export + +The ODT export back-end handles native Org mode tables (see [[*Tables]]) +and simple =table.el= tables. Complex =table.el= tables having column +or row spans are not supported. Such tables are stripped from the +exported document. + +By default, the ODT export back-end exports a table with top and +bottom frames and with ruled lines separating row and column groups +(see [[*Column Groups]]). All tables are typeset to occupy the same +width. The ODT export back-end honors any table alignments and +relative widths for columns (see [[*Column Width and Alignment]]). + +Note that the ODT export back-end interprets column widths as weighted +ratios, the default weight being 1. + +#+cindex: @samp{ATTR_ODT}, keyword +Specifying =:rel-width= property on an =ATTR_ODT= line controls the +width of the table. For example: + +#+begin_example +,#+ATTR_ODT: :rel-width 50 +| Area/Month | Jan | Feb | Mar | Sum | +|---------------+-------+-------+-------+-------| +| / | < | | | < | +| | | | | | +| North America | 1 | 21 | 926 | 948 | +| Middle East | 6 | 75 | 844 | 925 | +| Asia Pacific | 9 | 27 | 790 | 826 | +|---------------+-------+-------+-------+-------| +| Sum | 16 | 123 | 2560 | 2699 | +#+end_example + +On export, the above table takes 50% of text width area. The exporter +sizes the columns in the ratio: 13:5:5:5:6. The first column is +left-aligned and rest of the columns, right-aligned. Vertical rules +separate the header and the last column. Horizontal rules separate +the header and the last row. + +For even more customization, create custom table styles and associate +them with a table using the =ATTR_ODT= keyword. See [[*Customizing +tables in ODT export]]. + +*** Images in ODT export +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: Inserting images. +:END: +#+cindex: images, embedding in ODT +#+cindex: embedding images in ODT + +**** Embedding images +:PROPERTIES: +:UNNUMBERED: notoc +:END: + +The ODT export back-end processes image links in Org files that do not +have descriptions, such as these links =[[file:img.jpg]]= or =[[./img.jpg]]=, +as direct image insertions in the final output. Either of these +examples works: + +: [[file:img.png]] + +: [[./img.png]] + +**** Embedding clickable images +:PROPERTIES: +:UNNUMBERED: notoc +:END: + +For clickable images, provide a link whose description is another link +to an image file. For example, to embed an image +=org-mode-unicorn.png= which when clicked jumps to https://orgmode.org +website, do the following + +: [[https://orgmode.org][./org-mode-unicorn.png]] + +**** Sizing and scaling of embedded images +:PROPERTIES: +:UNNUMBERED: notoc +:END: + +#+cindex: @samp{ATTR_ODT}, keyword + +Control the size and scale of the embedded images with the =ATTR_ODT= +attribute. + +#+cindex: identify, ImageMagick +#+vindex: org-odt-pixels-per-inch +The ODT export back-end starts with establishing the size of the image +in the final document. The dimensions of this size are measured in +centimeters. The back-end then queries the image file for its +dimensions measured in pixels. For this measurement, the back-end +relies on ImageMagick's identify program or Emacs ~create-image~ and +~image-size~ API. ImageMagick is the preferred choice for large file +sizes or frequent batch operations. The back-end then converts the +pixel dimensions using ~org-odt-pixels-per-inch~ into the familiar 72 +dpi or 96 dpi. The default value for this is in +~display-pixels-per-inch~, which can be tweaked for better results +based on the capabilities of the output device. Here are some common +image scaling operations: + +- Explicitly size the image :: + + To embed =img.png= as a 10 cm x 10 cm image, do the following: + + #+begin_example + ,#+ATTR_ODT: :width 10 :height 10 + [[./img.png]] + #+end_example + +- Scale the image :: + + To embed =img.png= at half its size, do the following: + + #+begin_example + ,#+ATTR_ODT: :scale 0.5 + [[./img.png]] + #+end_example + +- Scale the image to a specific width :: + + To embed =img.png= with a width of 10 cm while retaining the + original height:width ratio, do the following: + + #+begin_example + ,#+ATTR_ODT: :width 10 + [[./img.png]] + #+end_example + +- Scale the image to a specific height :: + + To embed =img.png= with a height of 10 cm while retaining the + original height:width ratio, do the following: + + #+begin_example + ,#+ATTR_ODT: :height 10 + [[./img.png]] + #+end_example + +**** Anchoring of images +:PROPERTIES: +:UNNUMBERED: notoc +:END: + +#+cindex: @samp{ATTR_ODT}, keyword +The ODT export back-end can anchor images to =as-char=, =paragraph=, +or =page=. Set the preferred anchor using the =:anchor= property of +the =ATTR_ODT= line. + +To create an image that is anchored to a page: + +#+begin_example +,#+ATTR_ODT: :anchor page +[[./img.png]] +#+end_example + +*** Math formatting in ODT export +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: Formatting @LaTeX{} fragments. +:END: + +The ODT exporter has special support for handling math. + +**** LaTeX math snippets +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: Embedding in @LaTeX{} format. +:END: + +LaTeX math snippets (see [[*LaTeX fragments]]) can be embedded in the ODT +document in one of the following ways: + +- MathML :: + + #+cindex: MathML + Add this line to the Org file. This option is activated on + a per-file basis. + + : #+OPTIONS: tex:t + + With this option, LaTeX fragments are first converted into MathML + fragments using an external LaTeX-to-MathML converter program. The + resulting MathML fragments are then embedded as an OpenDocument + Formula in the exported document. + + #+vindex: org-latex-to-mathml-convert-command + #+vindex: org-latex-to-mathml-jar-file + You can specify the LaTeX-to-MathML converter by customizing the + variables ~org-latex-to-mathml-convert-command~ and + ~org-latex-to-mathml-jar-file~. + + If you prefer to use MathToWeb[fn:136] as your converter, you can + configure the above variables as shown below. + + #+begin_src emacs-lisp + (setq org-latex-to-mathml-convert-command + "java -jar %j -unicode -force -df %o %I" + org-latex-to-mathml-jar-file + "/path/to/mathtoweb.jar") + #+end_src + + #+texinfo: @noindent + or, to use LaTeX​ML[fn:137] instead, + + #+begin_src emacs-lisp + (setq org-latex-to-mathml-convert-command + "latexmlmath \"%i\" --presentationmathml=%o") + #+end_src + + To quickly verify the reliability of the LaTeX-to-MathML + converter, use the following commands: + + - {{{kbd(M-x org-export-as-odf)}}} :: + + Convert a LaTeX math snippet to an OpenDocument formula (=.odf=) + file. + + - {{{kbd(M-x org-export-as-odf-and-open)}}} :: + + Convert a LaTeX math snippet to an OpenDocument formula (=.odf=) + file and open the formula file with the system-registered + application. + +- PNG images :: + + #+cindex: dvipng + #+cindex: dvisvgm + #+cindex: ImageMagick + Add this line to the Org file. This option is activated on + a per-file basis. + + : #+OPTIONS: tex:dvipng + + : #+OPTIONS: tex:dvisvgm + + #+texinfo: @noindent + or + + : #+OPTIONS: tex:imagemagick + + Under this option, LaTeX fragments are processed into PNG or SVG + images and the resulting images are embedded in the exported + document. This method requires dvipng program, dvisvgm or + ImageMagick programs. + +**** MathML and OpenDocument formula files +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: Embedding in native format. +:END: + +When embedding LaTeX math snippets in ODT documents is not reliable, +there is one more option to try. Embed an equation by linking to its +MathML (=.mml=) source or its OpenDocument formula (=.odf=) file as +shown below: + +: [[./equation.mml]] + +#+texinfo: @noindent +or + +: [[./equation.odf]] + +*** Labels and captions in ODT export +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: Rendering objects. +:END: + +ODT format handles labeling and captioning of objects based on their +types. Inline images, tables, LaTeX fragments, and Math formulas are +numbered and captioned separately. Each object also gets a unique +sequence number based on its order of first appearance in the Org +file. Each category has its own sequence. A caption is just a label +applied to these objects. + +#+begin_example +,#+CAPTION: Bell curve +,#+NAME: fig:SED-HR4049 +[[./img/a.png]] +#+end_example + +When rendered, it may show as follows in the exported document: + +: Figure 2: Bell curve + +#+vindex: org-odt-category-map-alist +To modify the category component of the caption, customize the option +~org-odt-category-map-alist~. For example, to tag embedded images +with the string "Illustration" instead of the default string "Figure", +use the following setting: + +#+begin_src emacs-lisp +(setq org-odt-category-map-alist + '(("__Figure__" "Illustration" "value" "Figure" org-odt--enumerable-image-p))) +#+end_src + +With the above modification, the previous example changes to: + +: Illustration 2: Bell curve + +*** Literal examples in ODT export +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: For source code and example blocks. +:END: + +The ODT export back-end supports literal examples (see [[*Literal +Examples]]) with full fontification. Internally, the ODT export +back-end relies on =htmlfontify.el= to generate the style definitions +needed for fancy listings. The auto-generated styles get =OrgSrc= +prefix and inherit colors from the faces used by Emacs Font Lock +library for that source language. + +#+vindex: org-odt-fontify-srcblocks +For custom fontification styles, customize the +~org-odt-create-custom-styles-for-srcblocks~ option. + +#+vindex: org-odt-create-custom-styles-for-srcblocks +To turn off fontification of literal examples, customize the +~org-odt-fontify-srcblocks~ option. + +*** Advanced topics in ODT export +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: For power users. +:END: + +The ODT export back-end has extensive features useful for power users +and frequent uses of ODT formats. + +**** Configuring a document converter +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: Registering a document converter. +:UNNUMBERED: notoc +:END: +#+cindex: convert +#+cindex: doc, docx, rtf +#+cindex: converter + +The ODT export back-end works with popular converters with little or +no extra configuration. See [[*Extending ODT export]]. The following is +for unsupported converters or tweaking existing defaults. + +- Register the converter :: + + #+vindex: org-export-odt-convert-processes + Add the name of the converter to the ~org-odt-convert-processes~ + variable. Note that it also requires how the converter is invoked + on the command line. See the variable's docstring for details. + +- Configure its capabilities :: + + #+vindex: org-export-odt-convert-capabilities + Specify which formats the converter can handle by customizing the + variable ~org-odt-convert-capabilities~. Use the entry for the + default values in this variable for configuring the new converter. + Also see its docstring for details. + +- Choose the converter :: + + #+vindex: org-export-odt-convert-process + Select the newly added converter as the preferred one by customizing + the option ~org-odt-convert-process~. + +**** Working with OpenDocument style files +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: Exploring internals. +:UNNUMBERED: notoc +:END: +#+cindex: styles, custom +#+cindex: template, custom + +This section explores the internals of the ODT exporter; the means by which +it produces styled documents; the use of automatic and custom OpenDocument +styles. + +The ODT exporter relies on two files for generating its output. These +files are bundled with the distribution under the directory pointed to +by the variable ~org-odt-styles-dir~. The two files are: + +- =OrgOdtStyles.xml= <> :: + + This file contributes to the =styles.xml= file of the final ODT + document. This file gets modified for the following purposes: + + 1. To control outline numbering based on user settings; + + 2. To add styles generated by =htmlfontify.el= for fontification of + code blocks. + +- =OrgOdtContentTemplate.xml= <> :: + + This file contributes to the =content.xml= file of the final ODT + document. The contents of the Org outline are inserted between the + == ... == elements of this file. + + Apart from serving as a template file for the final =content.xml=, + the file serves the following purposes: + + 1. It contains automatic styles for formatting of tables which are + referenced by the exporter; + + 2. It contains == ... == + elements that control numbering of tables, images, equations, and + similar entities. + +<> The following two variables control +the location from where the ODT exporter picks up the custom styles +and content template files. Customize these variables to override the +factory styles used by the exporter. + +- ~org-odt-styles-file~ :: + + The ODT export back-end uses the file pointed to by this variable, + such as =styles.xml=, for the final output. It can take one of the + following values: + + - =FILE.xml= :: + + Use this file instead of the default =styles.xml= + + - =FILE.odt= or =FILE.ott= :: + + Use the =styles.xml= contained in the specified OpenDocument + Text or Template file + + - =FILE.odt= or =FILE.ott= and a subset of included files :: + + Use the =styles.xml= contained in the specified OpenDocument Text + or Template file. Additionally extract the specified member files + and embed those within the final ODT document. + + Use this option if the =styles.xml= file references additional + files like header and footer images. + + - ~nil~ :: + + Use the default =styles.xml=. + +- ~org-odt-content-template-file~ :: + + Use this variable to specify the blank =content.xml= used in the + final output. + +**** Creating one-off styles +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: Customizing styles, highlighting... +:UNNUMBERED: notoc +:END: + +The ODT export back-end can read embedded raw OpenDocument XML from +the Org file. Such direct formatting is useful for one-off instances. + +- Embedding ODT tags as part of regular text :: + + Enclose OpenDocument syntax in =@@odt:...@@= for inline markup. For + example, to highlight a region of text do the following: + + #+begin_example + @@odt:This is highlighted + text@@. But this is regular text. + #+end_example + + *Hint:* To see the above example in action, edit the =styles.xml= + (see [[x-orgodtstyles-xml][Factory styles]]) and add a custom /Highlight/ style as shown + below: + + #+begin_example + + + + #+end_example + +- Embedding a one-line OpenDocument XML :: + + #+cindex: @samp{ODT}, keyword + The ODT export back-end can read one-liner options with =#+ODT:= in + the Org file. For example, to force a page break: + + #+begin_example + ,#+ODT: + #+end_example + + *Hint:* To see the above example in action, edit your + =styles.xml= (see [[x-orgodtstyles-xml][Factory styles]]) and add a custom =PageBreak= + style as shown below. + + #+begin_example + + + + #+end_example + +- Embedding a block of OpenDocument XML :: + + The ODT export back-end can also read ODT export blocks for + OpenDocument XML. Such blocks use the =#+BEGIN_EXPORT odt= + ... =#+END_EXPORT= constructs. + + For example, to create a one-off paragraph that uses bold text, do + the following: + + #+begin_example + ,#+BEGIN_EXPORT odt + + This paragraph is specially formatted and uses bold text. + + ,#+END_EXPORT + #+end_example + +**** Customizing tables in ODT export +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: Defining table templates. +:UNNUMBERED: notoc +:END: +#+cindex: tables, in ODT export +#+cindex: @samp{ATTR_ODT}, keyword + +Override the default table format by specifying a custom table style +with the =#+ATTR_ODT= line. For a discussion on default formatting of +tables, see [[*Tables in ODT export]]. + +This feature closely mimics the way table templates are defined in the +OpenDocument-v1.2 specification[fn:138]. + +#+vindex: org-odt-table-styles +For quick preview of this feature, install the settings below and export the +table that follows: + +#+begin_src emacs-lisp +(setq org-export-odt-table-styles + (append org-export-odt-table-styles + '(("TableWithHeaderRowAndColumn" "Custom" + ((use-first-row-styles . t) + (use-first-column-styles . t))) + ("TableWithFirstRowandLastRow" "Custom" + ((use-first-row-styles . t) + (use-last-row-styles . t)))))) +#+end_src + +#+begin_example +,#+ATTR_ODT: :style TableWithHeaderRowAndColumn +| Name | Phone | Age | +| Peter | 1234 | 17 | +| Anna | 4321 | 25 | +#+end_example + +The example above used =Custom= template and installed two table +styles =TableWithHeaderRowAndColumn= and +=TableWithFirstRowandLastRow=. *Important:* The OpenDocument styles +needed for producing the above template were pre-defined. They are +available in the section marked =Custom Table Template= in +=OrgOdtContentTemplate.xml= (see [[x-orgodtcontenttemplate-xml][Factory styles]]). For adding new +templates, define new styles there. + +To use this feature proceed as follows: + +1. Create a table template[fn:139]. + + A table template is set of =table-cell= and =paragraph= styles for + each of the following table cell categories: + + - Body + - First column + - Last column + - First row + - Last row + - Even row + - Odd row + - Even column + - Odd Column + + The names for the above styles must be chosen based on the name of + the table template using a well-defined convention. + + The naming convention is better illustrated with an example. For + a table template with the name =Custom=, the needed style names are + listed in the following table. + + | Cell type | Cell style | Paragraph style | + |--------------+------------------------------+-----------------------------------| + | Body | =CustomTableCell= | =CustomTableParagraph= | + | First column | =CustomFirstColumnTableCell= | =CustomFirstColumnTableParagraph= | + | Last column | =CustomLastColumnTableCell= | =CustomLastColumnTableParagraph= | + | First row | =CustomFirstRowTableCell= | =CustomFirstRowTableParagraph= | + | Last row | =CustomLastRowTableCell= | =CustomLastRowTableParagraph= | + | Even row | =CustomEvenRowTableCell= | =CustomEvenRowTableParagraph= | + | Odd row | =CustomOddRowTableCell= | =CustomOddRowTableParagraph= | + | Even column | =CustomEvenColumnTableCell= | =CustomEvenColumnTableParagraph= | + | Odd column | =CustomOddColumnTableCell= | =CustomOddColumnTableParagraph= | + + To create a table template with the name =Custom=, define the above + styles in the == ... + == element of the content template file + (see [[x-orgodtcontenttemplate-xml][Factory styles]]). + +2. Define a table style[fn:140]. + + #+vindex: org-odt-table-styles + To define a table style, create an entry for the style in the + variable ~org-odt-table-styles~ and specify the following: + + - the name of the table template created in step (1), + - the set of cell styles in that template that are to be activated. + + For example, the entry below defines two different table styles + =TableWithHeaderRowAndColumn= and =TableWithFirstRowandLastRow= + based on the same template =Custom=. The styles achieve their + intended effect by selectively activating the individual cell + styles in that template. + + #+begin_src emacs-lisp + (setq org-export-odt-table-styles + (append org-export-odt-table-styles + '(("TableWithHeaderRowAndColumn" "Custom" + ((use-first-row-styles . t) + (use-first-column-styles . t))) + ("TableWithFirstRowandLastRow" "Custom" + ((use-first-row-styles . t) + (use-last-row-styles . t)))))) + #+end_src + +3. Associate a table with the table style. + + To do this, specify the table style created in step (2) as part of + the =ATTR_ODT= line as shown below. + + #+begin_example + ,#+ATTR_ODT: :style TableWithHeaderRowAndColumn + | Name | Phone | Age | + | Peter | 1234 | 17 | + | Anna | 4321 | 25 | + #+end_example + +**** Validating OpenDocument XML +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: Debugging corrupted OpenDocument files. +:UNNUMBERED: notoc +:END: + +Sometimes ODT format files may not open due to =.odt= file corruption. +To verify if such a file is corrupt, validate it against the +OpenDocument Relax NG Compact (RNC) syntax schema. But first the +=.odt= files have to be decompressed using =zip=. Note that =.odt= +files are ZIP archives: [[info:emacs::File Archives]]. The contents of +ODT files are in XML. For general help with validation---and +schema-sensitive editing---of XML files: [[info:nxml-mode::Introduction]]. + +#+vindex: org-export-odt-schema-dir +Customize ~org-odt-schema-dir~ to point to a directory with +OpenDocument RNC files and the needed schema-locating rules. The ODT +export back-end takes care of updating the +~rng-schema-locating-files~. + +** Org Export +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: Exporting to Org. +:END: + +#+cindex: Org export +/org/ export back-end creates a normalized version of the Org document +in current buffer. The exporter evaluates Babel code (see [[*Evaluating +Code Blocks]]) and removes content specific to other back-ends. + +*** Org export commands +:PROPERTIES: +:UNNUMBERED: notoc +:END: + +- {{{kbd(C-c C-e O o)}}} (~org-org-export-to-org~) :: + + #+kindex: C-c C-e O o + #+findex: org-org-export-to-org + Export as an Org file with a =.org= extension. For =myfile.org=, + Org exports to =myfile.org.org=, overwriting without warning. + +- {{{kbd(C-c C-e O v)}}} (~~) :: + + #+kindex: C-c C-e O v + Export to an Org file, then open it. + +** Texinfo Export +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: Exporting to Texinfo. +:END: + +*** Texinfo export commands +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: Invoking commands. +:END: + +- {{{kbd(C-c C-e i t)}}} (~org-texinfo-export-to-texinfo~) :: + + #+kindex: C-c C-e i t + #+findex: org-texinfo-export-to-texinfo + Export as a Texinfo file with =.texi= extension. For =myfile.org=, + Org exports to =myfile.texi=, overwriting without warning. + +- {{{kbd(C-c C-e i i)}}} (~org-texinfo-export-to-info~) :: + + #+kindex: C-c C-e i i + #+findex: org-texinfo-export-to-info + #+vindex: org-texinfo-info-process + Export to Texinfo format first and then process it to make an Info + file. To generate other formats, such as DocBook, customize the + ~org-texinfo-info-process~ variable. + +*** Texinfo specific export settings +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: Setting the environment. +:END: + +The Texinfo export back-end has several additional keywords for +customizing Texinfo output. Setting these keywords works similar to +the general options (see [[*Export Settings]]). + +- =SUBTITLE= :: + + #+cindex: @samp{SUBTITLE}, keyword + The document subtitle. + +- =SUBAUTHOR= :: + + #+cindex: @samp{SUBAUTHOR}, keyword + Additional authors for the document. + +- =TEXINFO_FILENAME= :: + + #+cindex: @samp{TEXINFO_FILENAME}, keyword + The Texinfo filename. + +- =TEXINFO_CLASS= :: + + #+cindex: @samp{TEXINFO_CLASS}, keyword + #+vindex: org-texinfo-default-class + The default document class (~org-texinfo-default-class~), which must + be a member of ~org-texinfo-classes~. + +- =TEXINFO_HEADER= :: + + #+cindex: @samp{TEXINFO_HEADER}, keyword + Arbitrary lines inserted at the end of the header. + +- =TEXINFO_POST_HEADER= :: + + #+cindex: @samp{TEXINFO_POST_HEADER}, keyword + Arbitrary lines inserted after the end of the header. + +- =TEXINFO_DIR_CATEGORY= :: + + #+cindex: @samp{TEXINFO_DIR_CATEGORY}, keyword + The directory category of the document. + +- =TEXINFO_DIR_TITLE= :: + + #+cindex: @samp{TEXINFO_DIR_TITLE}, keyword + The directory title of the document. + +- =TEXINFO_DIR_DESC= :: + + #+cindex: @samp{TEXINFO_DIR_DESC}, keyword + The directory description of the document. + +- =TEXINFO_PRINTED_TITLE= :: + + #+cindex: @samp{TEXINFO_PRINTED_TITLE}, keyword + The printed title of the document. + +*** Texinfo file header +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: Generating the header. +:END: + +#+cindex: @samp{TEXINFO_FILENAME}, keyword +After creating the header for a Texinfo file, the Texinfo back-end +automatically generates a name and destination path for the Info file. +To override this default with a more sensible path and name, specify +the =TEXINFO_FILENAME= keyword. + +#+vindex: org-texinfo-coding-system +#+cindex: @samp{TEXINFO_HEADER}, keyword +Along with the output's file name, the Texinfo header also contains +language details (see [[*Export Settings]]) and encoding system as set in +the ~org-texinfo-coding-system~ variable. Insert =TEXINFO_HEADER= +keywords for each additional command in the header, for example: + +: #+TEXINFO_HEADER: @synindex + +#+cindex: @samp{TEXINFO_CLASS}, keyword +#+vindex: org-texinfo-classes +Instead of repeatedly installing the same set of commands, define +a class in ~org-texinfo-classes~ once, and then activate it in the +document by setting the =TEXINFO_CLASS= keyword to that class. + +*** Texinfo title and copyright page +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: Creating preamble pages. +:END: + +#+cindex: @samp{TEXINFO_PRINTED_TITLE}, keyword +The default template for hard copy output has a title page with +=TITLE= and =AUTHOR= keywords (see [[*Export Settings]]). To replace the +regular title with something different for the printed version, use +the =TEXINFO_PRINTED_TITLE= and =SUBTITLE= keywords. Both expect raw +Texinfo code for setting their values. + +#+cindex: @samp{SUBAUTHOR}, keyword +If one =AUTHOR= line is not sufficient, add multiple =SUBAUTHOR= +keywords. They have to be set in raw Texinfo code. + +#+begin_example +,#+AUTHOR: Jane Smith +,#+SUBAUTHOR: John Doe +,#+TEXINFO_PRINTED_TITLE: This Long Title@@inlinefmt{tex,@*} Is Broken in @TeX{} +#+end_example + +#+cindex: @samp{COPYING}, property +Copying material is defined in a dedicated headline with a non-~nil~ +=COPYING= property. The back-end inserts the contents within +a =@copying= command at the beginning of the document. The heading +itself does not appear in the structure of the document. + +Copyright information is printed on the back of the title page. + +#+begin_example +,* Legalese + :PROPERTIES: + :COPYING: t + :END: + + This is a short example of a complete Texinfo file, version 1.0. + + Copyright \copy 2016 Free Software Foundation, Inc. +#+end_example + +*** Info directory file +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: Installing a manual in Info file hierarchy. +:END: + +#+cindex: @samp{dir} file, in Texinfo export +#+cindex: Info directory file, in Texinfo export +#+cindex: @code{install-info}, in Texinfo export + +#+cindex: @samp{TEXINFO_DIR_CATEGORY}, keyword +#+cindex: @samp{TEXINFO_DIR_TITLE}, keyword +#+cindex: @samp{TEXINFO_DIR_DESC}, keyword +The end result of the Texinfo export process is the creation of an +Info file. This Info file's metadata has variables for category, +title, and description: =TEXINFO_DIR_CATEGORY=, =TEXINFO_DIR_TITLE=, +and =TEXINFO_DIR_DESC= keywords that establish where in the Info +hierarchy the file fits. + +Here is an example that writes to the Info directory file: + +#+begin_example +,#+TEXINFO_DIR_CATEGORY: Emacs +,#+TEXINFO_DIR_TITLE: Org Mode: (org) +,#+TEXINFO_DIR_DESC: Outline-based notes management and organizer +#+end_example + +*** Headings and sectioning structure +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: Building document structure. +:END: + +#+vindex: org-texinfo-classes +#+vindex: org-texinfo-default-class +#+cindex: @samp{TEXINFO_CLASS}, keyword +The Texinfo export back-end uses a pre-defined scheme to convert Org +headlines to equivalent Texinfo structuring commands. A scheme like +this maps top-level headlines to numbered chapters tagged as +~@chapter~ and lower-level headlines to unnumbered chapters tagged as +~@unnumbered~. To override such mappings to introduce ~@part~ or +other Texinfo structuring commands, define a new class in +~org-texinfo-classes~. Activate the new class with the +=TEXINFO_CLASS= keyword. When no new class is defined and activated, +the Texinfo export back-end defaults to the +~org-texinfo-default-class~. + +If an Org headline's level has no associated Texinfo structuring +command, or is below a certain threshold (see [[*Export Settings]]), then +the Texinfo export back-end makes it into a list item. + +#+cindex: @samp{APPENDIX}, property +The Texinfo export back-end makes any headline with a non-~nil~ +=APPENDIX= property into an appendix. This happens independent of the +Org headline level or the =TEXINFO_CLASS= keyword. + +#+cindex: @samp{ALT_TITLE}, property +#+cindex: @samp{DESCRIPTION}, property +The Texinfo export back-end creates a menu entry after the Org +headline for each regular sectioning structure. To override this with +a shorter menu entry, use the =ALT_TITLE= property (see [[*Table of +Contents]]). Texinfo menu entries also have an option for a longer +=DESCRIPTION= property. Here's an example that uses both to override +the default menu entry: + +#+begin_example +,* Controlling Screen Display + :PROPERTIES: + :ALT_TITLE: Display + :DESCRIPTION: Controlling Screen Display + :END: +#+end_example + +#+cindex: Top node, in Texinfo export +The text before the first headline belongs to the /Top/ node, i.e., +the node in which a reader enters an Info manual. As such, it is +expected not to appear in printed output generated from the =.texi= +file. See [[info:texinfo::The Top Node]], for more information. + +*** Indices +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: Creating indices. +:END: + +#+cindex: @samp{CINDEX}, keyword +#+cindex: concept index, in Texinfo export +#+cindex: @samp{FINDEX}, keyword +#+cindex: function index, in Texinfo export +#+cindex: @samp{KINDEX}, keyword +#+cindex: keystroke index, in Texinfo export +#+cindex: @samp{PINDEX}, keyword +#+cindex: program index, in Texinfo export +#+cindex: @samp{TINDEX}, keyword +#+cindex: data type index, in Texinfo export +#+cindex: @samp{VINDEX}, keyword +#+cindex: variable index, in Texinfo export +The Texinfo export back-end recognizes these indexing keywords if used +in the Org file: =CINDEX=, =FINDEX=, =KINDEX=, =PINDEX=, =TINDEX= and +=VINDEX=. Write their value as verbatim Texinfo code; in particular, +={=, =}= and =@= characters need to be escaped with =@= if they do not +belong to a Texinfo command. + +: #+CINDEX: Defining indexing entries + +#+cindex: @samp{INDEX}, property +For the back-end to generate an index entry for a headline, set the +=INDEX= property to =cp= or =vr=. These abbreviations come from +Texinfo that stand for concept index and variable index. The Texinfo +manual has abbreviations for all other kinds of indexes. The back-end +exports the headline as an unnumbered chapter or section command, and +then inserts the index after its contents. + +#+begin_example +,* Concept Index + :PROPERTIES: + :INDEX: cp + :END: +#+end_example + +*** Quoting Texinfo code +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: Incorporating literal Texinfo code. +:END: + +Use any of the following three methods to insert or escape raw Texinfo +code: + +#+cindex: @samp{TEXINFO}, keyword +#+cindex: @samp{BEGIN_EXPORT texinfo} +#+begin_example +Richard @@texinfo:@sc{@@Stallman@@texinfo:}@@ commence' GNU. + +,#+TEXINFO: @need800 +This paragraph is preceded by... + +,#+BEGIN_EXPORT texinfo + @auindex Johnson, Mark + @auindex Lakoff, George +,#+END_EXPORT +#+end_example + +*** Plain lists in Texinfo export +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: List attributes. +:END: + +#+cindex: @samp{ATTR_TEXINFO}, keyword +#+cindex: two-column tables, in Texinfo export +#+cindex: table-type, Texinfo attribute +The Texinfo export back-end by default converts description lists in +the Org file using the default command =@table=, which results in +a table with two columns. To change this behavior, set =:table-type= +attribute to either =ftable= or =vtable= value. For more information, +see [[info:texinfo::Two-column Tables]]. + +#+vindex: org-texinfo-table-default-markup +#+cindex: indic, Texinfo attribute +The Texinfo export back-end by default also applies a text highlight +based on the defaults stored in ~org-texinfo-table-default-markup~. +To override the default highlight command, specify another one with +the =:indic= attribute. + +#+cindex: multiple items in Texinfo lists +#+cindex: sep, Texinfo attribute +Org syntax is limited to one entry per list item. Nevertheless, the +Texinfo export back-end can split that entry according to any text +provided through the =:sep= attribute. Each part then becomes a new +entry in the first column of the table. + +The following example illustrates all the attributes above: + +#+begin_example +,#+ATTR_TEXINFO: :table-type vtable :sep , :indic asis +- foo, bar :: This is the common text for variables foo and bar. +#+end_example + +#+texinfo: @noindent +becomes + +#+begin_example +@vtable @asis +@item foo +@itemx bar +This is the common text for variables foo and bar. +@end table +#+end_example + +#+cindex: lettered lists, in Texinfo export +#+cindex: enum, Texinfo attribute +Ordered lists are numbered when exported to Texinfo format. Such +numbering obeys any counter (see [[*Plain Lists]]) in the first item of +the list. The =:enum= attribute also let you start the list at +a specific number, or switch to a lettered list, as illustrated here + +#+begin_example +#+ATTR_TEXINFO: :enum A +1. Alpha +2. Bravo +3. Charlie +#+end_example + +*** Tables in Texinfo export +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: Table attributes. +:END: + +#+cindex: @samp{ATTR_TEXINFO}, keyword +When exporting tables, the Texinfo export back-end uses the widest +cell width in each column. To override this and instead specify as +fractions of line length, use the =:columns= attribute. See example +below. + +#+begin_example +,#+ATTR_TEXINFO: :columns .5 .5 +| a cell | another cell | +#+end_example + +*** Images in Texinfo export +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: Image attributes. +:END: + +#+cindex: @samp{ATTR_TEXINFO}, keyword +Insert a file link to the image in the Org file, and the Texinfo +export back-end inserts the image. These links must have the usual +supported image extensions and no descriptions. To scale the image, +use =:width= and =:height= attributes. For alternate text, use =:alt= +and specify the text using Texinfo code, as shown in the example: + +#+begin_example +,#+ATTR_TEXINFO: :width 1in :alt Alternate @i{text} +[[ridt.pdf]] +#+end_example + +*** Quotations in Texinfo export +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: Quote block attributes. +:END: + +#+cindex: @samp{ATTR_TEXINFO}, keyword +You can write the text of a quotation within a quote block (see +[[*Paragraphs]]). You may also emphasize some text at the beginning of +the quotation with the =:tag= attribute. + +#+begin_example +,#+ATTR_TEXINFO: :tag Warning +,#+BEGIN_QUOTE +Striking your thumb with a hammer may cause severe pain and discomfort. +,#+END_QUOTE +#+end_example + +To specify the author of the quotation, use the =:author= attribute. + +#+begin_example +,#+ATTR_TEXINFO: :author King Arthur +,#+BEGIN_QUOTE +The Lady of the Lake, her arm clad in the purest shimmering samite, +held aloft Excalibur from the bosom of the water, signifying by divine +providence that I, Arthur, was to carry Excalibur. That is why I am +your king. +,#+END_QUOTE +#+end_example + +*** Special blocks in Texinfo export +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: Special block attributes. +:END: + +#+cindex: @samp{ATTR_TEXINFO}, keyword + +The Texinfo export back-end converts special blocks to commands with +the same name. It also adds any =:options= attributes to the end of +the command, as shown in this example: + +#+begin_example +,#+ATTR_TEXINFO: :options org-org-export-to-org ... +,#+BEGIN_defun + A somewhat obsessive function name. +,#+END_defun +#+end_example + +#+texinfo: @noindent +becomes + +#+begin_example +@defun org-org-export-to-org ... + A somewhat obsessive function name. +@end defun +#+end_example + +*** A Texinfo example +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: Processing Org to Texinfo. +:END: + +Here is a more detailed example Org file. See +[[info:texinfo::GNU Sample Texts]] for an equivalent example using +Texinfo code. + +#+begin_example +,#+TITLE: GNU Sample {{{version}}} +,#+SUBTITLE: for version {{{version}}}, {{{updated}}} +,#+AUTHOR: A.U. Thor +,#+EMAIL: bug-sample@gnu.org + +,#+OPTIONS: ':t toc:t author:t email:t +,#+LANGUAGE: en + +,#+MACRO: version 2.0 +,#+MACRO: updated last updated 4 March 2014 + +,#+TEXINFO_FILENAME: sample.info +,#+TEXINFO_HEADER: @syncodeindex pg cp + +,#+TEXINFO_DIR_CATEGORY: Texinfo documentation system +,#+TEXINFO_DIR_TITLE: sample: (sample) +,#+TEXINFO_DIR_DESC: Invoking sample + +,#+TEXINFO_PRINTED_TITLE: GNU Sample + +This manual is for GNU Sample (version {{{version}}}, +{{{updated}}}). + +,* Copying + :PROPERTIES: + :COPYING: t + :END: + + This manual is for GNU Sample (version {{{version}}}, + {{{updated}}}), which is an example in the Texinfo documentation. + + Copyright \copy 2016 Free Software Foundation, Inc. + + ,#+BEGIN_QUOTE + Permission is granted to copy, distribute and/or modify this + document under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License, + Version 1.3 or any later version published by the Free Software + Foundation; with no Invariant Sections, with no Front-Cover Texts, + and with no Back-Cover Texts. A copy of the license is included in + the section entitled "GNU Free Documentation License". + ,#+END_QUOTE + +,* Invoking sample + + ,#+PINDEX: sample + ,#+CINDEX: invoking @command{sample} + + This is a sample manual. There is no sample program to invoke, but + if there were, you could see its basic usage and command line + options here. + +,* GNU Free Documentation License + :PROPERTIES: + :APPENDIX: t + :END: + + ,#+INCLUDE: fdl.org + +,* Index + :PROPERTIES: + :INDEX: cp + :END: +#+end_example + +** iCalendar Export +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: Exporting to iCalendar. +:END: +#+cindex: iCalendar export + +A large part of Org mode's interoperability success is its ability to +easily export to or import from external applications. The iCalendar +export back-end takes calendar data from Org files and exports to the +standard iCalendar format. + +#+vindex: org-icalendar-include-todo +#+vindex: org-icalendar-use-deadline +#+vindex: org-icalendar-use-scheduled +The iCalendar export back-end can also incorporate TODO entries based +on the configuration of the ~org-icalendar-include-todo~ variable. +The back-end exports plain timestamps as =VEVENT=, TODO items as +=VTODO=, and also create events from deadlines that are in non-TODO +items. The back-end uses the deadlines and scheduling dates in Org +TODO items for setting the start and due dates for the iCalendar TODO +entry. Consult the ~org-icalendar-use-deadline~ and +~org-icalendar-use-scheduled~ variables for more details. + +#+vindex: org-icalendar-categories +#+vindex: org-icalendar-alarm-time +For tags on the headline, the iCalendar export back-end makes them +into iCalendar categories. To tweak the inheritance of tags and TODO +states, configure the variable ~org-icalendar-categories~. To assign +clock alarms based on time, configure the ~org-icalendar-alarm-time~ +variable. + +#+vindex: org-icalendar-store-UID +#+cindex: @samp{ID}, property +The iCalendar format standard requires globally unique identifier---or +UID---for each entry. The iCalendar export back-end creates UIDs +during export. To save a copy of the UID in the Org file set the +variable ~org-icalendar-store-UID~. The back-end looks for the =ID= +property of the entry for re-using the same UID for subsequent +exports. + +Since a single Org entry can result in multiple iCalendar +entries---timestamp, deadline, scheduled item, or TODO item---Org adds +prefixes to the UID, depending on which part of the Org entry +triggered the creation of the iCalendar entry. Prefixing ensures UIDs +remains unique, yet enable synchronization programs trace the +connections. + +- {{{kbd(C-c C-e c f)}}} (~org-icalendar-export-to-ics~) :: + + #+kindex: C-c C-e c f + #+findex: org-icalendar-export-to-ics + Create iCalendar entries from the current Org buffer and store them + in the same directory, using a file extension =.ics=. + +- {{{kbd(C-c C-e c a)}}} (~org-icalendar-export-agenda-files~) :: + + #+kindex: C-c C-e c a + #+findex: org-icalendar-export-agenda-files + Create iCalendar entries from Org files in ~org-agenda-files~ and + store in a separate iCalendar file for each Org file. + +- {{{kbd(C-c C-e c c)}}} (~org-icalendar-combine-agenda-files~) :: + + #+kindex: C-c C-e c c + #+findex: org-icalendar-combine-agenda-files + #+vindex: org-icalendar-combined-agenda-file + Create a combined iCalendar file from Org files in + ~org-agenda-files~ and write it to + ~org-icalendar-combined-agenda-file~ file name. + +#+cindex: @samp{SUMMARY}, property +#+cindex: @samp{DESCRIPTION}, property +#+cindex: @samp{LOCATION}, property +#+cindex: @samp{TIMEZONE}, property +#+cindex: @samp{CLASS}, property +The iCalendar export back-end includes =SUMMARY=, =DESCRIPTION=, +=LOCATION=, =TIMEZONE= and =CLASS= properties from the Org entries +when exporting. To force the back-end to inherit the =LOCATION=, +=TIMEZONE= and =CLASS= properties, configure the +~org-use-property-inheritance~ variable. + +#+vindex: org-icalendar-include-body +When Org entries do not have =SUMMARY=, =DESCRIPTION=, =LOCATION= and +=CLASS= properties, the iCalendar export back-end derives the summary +from the headline, and derives the description from the body of the +Org item. The ~org-icalendar-include-body~ variable limits the +maximum number of characters of the content are turned into its +description. + +The =TIMEZONE= property can be used to specify a per-entry time zone, +and is applied to any entry with timestamp information. Time zones +should be specified as per the IANA time zone database format, e.g., +=Asia/Almaty=. Alternately, the property value can be =UTC=, to force +UTC time for this entry only. + +The =CLASS= property can be used to specify a per-entry visibility +class or access restrictions, and is applied to any entry with class +information. The iCalendar standard defines three visibility classes: +- =PUBLIC= :: The entry is publicly visible (this is the default). +- =CONFIDENTIAL= :: Only a limited group of clients get access to the + event. +- =PRIVATE= :: The entry can be retrieved only by its owner. +The server should treat unknown class properties the same as +=PRIVATE=. + +Exporting to iCalendar format depends in large part on the +capabilities of the destination application. Some are more lenient +than others. Consult the Org mode FAQ for advice on specific +applications. + +** Other Built-in Back-ends +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: Exporting to a man page. +:END: + +Other export back-ends included with Org are: + +- =ox-man.el=: Export to a man page. + +To activate such back-ends, either customize ~org-export-backends~ or +load directly with =(require 'ox-man)=. On successful load, the +back-end adds new keys in the export dispatcher (see [[*The Export +Dispatcher]]). + +Follow the comment section of such files, for example, =ox-man.el=, +for usage and configuration details. + +** Advanced Export Configuration +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: Fine-tuning the export output. +:END: + +*** Export hooks +:PROPERTIES: +:UNNUMBERED: notoc +:END: + +#+vindex: org-export-before-processing-hook +#+vindex: org-export-before-parsing-hook +The export process executes two hooks before the actual exporting +begins. The first hook, ~org-export-before-processing-hook~, runs +before any expansions of macros, Babel code, and include keywords in +the buffer. The second hook, ~org-export-before-parsing-hook~, runs +before the buffer is parsed. + +Functions added to these hooks are called with a single argument: the +export back-end actually used, as a symbol. You may use them for +heavy duty structural modifications of the document. For example, you +can remove every headline in the buffer during export like this: + +#+begin_src emacs-lisp +(defun my-headline-removal (backend) + "Remove all headlines in the current buffer. +BACKEND is the export back-end being used, as a symbol." + (org-map-entries + (lambda () (delete-region (point) (line-beginning-position 2))))) + +(add-hook 'org-export-before-parsing-hook #'my-headline-removal) +#+end_src + +*** Filters +:PROPERTIES: +:UNNUMBERED: notoc +:END: + +#+cindex: Filters, exporting +Filters are lists of functions to be applied to certain parts for +a given back-end. The output from the first function in the filter is +passed on to the next function in the filter. The final output is the +output from the final function in the filter. + +The Org export process has many filter sets applicable to different +types of objects, plain text, parse trees, export options, and final +output formats. The filters are named after the element type or +object type: ~org-export-filter-TYPE-functions~, where {{{var(TYPE)}}} +is the type targeted by the filter. Valid types are: + +#+attr_texinfo: :columns 0.33 0.33 0.33 +| body | bold | babel-call | +| center-block | clock | code | +| diary-sexp | drawer | dynamic-block | +| entity | example-block | export-block | +| export-snippet | final-output | fixed-width | +| footnote-definition | footnote-reference | headline | +| horizontal-rule | inline-babel-call | inline-src-block | +| inlinetask | italic | item | +| keyword | latex-environment | latex-fragment | +| line-break | link | node-property | +| options | paragraph | parse-tree | +| plain-list | plain-text | planning | +| property-drawer | quote-block | radio-target | +| section | special-block | src-block | +| statistics-cookie | strike-through | subscript | +| superscript | table | table-cell | +| table-row | target | timestamp | +| underline | verbatim | verse-block | + +Here is an example filter that replaces non-breaking spaces ~ ~ in the +Org buffer with =~= for the LaTeX back-end. + +#+begin_src emacs-lisp +(defun my-latex-filter-nobreaks (text backend info) + "Ensure \" \" are properly handled in LaTeX export." + (when (org-export-derived-backend-p backend 'latex) + (replace-regexp-in-string " " "~" text))) + +(add-to-list 'org-export-filter-plain-text-functions + 'my-latex-filter-nobreaks) +#+end_src + +A filter requires three arguments: the code to be transformed, the +name of the back-end, and some optional information about the export +process. The third argument can be safely ignored. Note the use of +~org-export-derived-backend-p~ predicate that tests for /latex/ +back-end or any other back-end, such as /beamer/, derived from +/latex/. + +*** Defining filters for individual files +:PROPERTIES: +:UNNUMBERED: notoc +:END: + +The Org export can filter not just for back-ends, but also for +specific files through the =BIND= keyword. Here is an example with +two filters; one removes brackets from time stamps, and the other +removes strike-through text. The filter functions are defined in +a code block in the same Org file, which is a handy location for +debugging. + +#+begin_example +,#+BIND: org-export-filter-timestamp-functions (tmp-f-timestamp) +,#+BIND: org-export-filter-strike-through-functions (tmp-f-strike-through) +,#+BEGIN_SRC emacs-lisp :exports results :results none + (defun tmp-f-timestamp (s backend info) + (replace-regexp-in-string "&[lg]t;\\|[][]" "" s)) + (defun tmp-f-strike-through (s backend info) "") +,#+END_SRC +#+end_example + +*** Extending an existing back-end +:PROPERTIES: +:UNNUMBERED: notoc +:END: + +Some parts of the conversion process can be extended for certain +elements so as to introduce a new or revised translation. That is how +the HTML export back-end was extended to handle Markdown format. The +extensions work seamlessly so any aspect of filtering not done by the +extended back-end is handled by the original back-end. Of all the +export customization in Org, extending is very powerful as it operates +at the parser level. + +For this example, make the /ascii/ back-end display the language used +in a source code block. Also make it display only when some attribute +is non-~nil~, like the following: + +: #+ATTR_ASCII: :language t + +Then extend ASCII back-end with a custom "my-ascii" back-end. + +#+begin_src emacs-lisp +(defun my-ascii-src-block (src-block contents info) + "Transcode a SRC-BLOCK element from Org to ASCII. +CONTENTS is nil. INFO is a plist used as a communication +channel." + (if (not (org-export-read-attribute :attr_ascii src-block :language)) + (org-export-with-backend 'ascii src-block contents info) + (concat + (format ",--[ %s ]--\n%s`----" + (org-element-property :language src-block) + (replace-regexp-in-string + "^" "| " + (org-element-normalize-string + (org-export-format-code-default src-block info))))))) + +(org-export-define-derived-backend 'my-ascii 'ascii + :translate-alist '((src-block . my-ascii-src-block))) +#+end_src + +The ~my-ascii-src-block~ function looks at the attribute above the +current element. If not true, hands over to /ascii/ back-end. If +true, which it is in this example, it creates a box around the code +and leaves room for the inserting a string for language. The last +form creates the new back-end that springs to action only when +translating ~src-block~ type elements. + +To use the newly defined back-end, evaluate the following from an Org +buffer: + +#+begin_src emacs-lisp +(org-export-to-buffer 'my-ascii "*Org MY-ASCII Export*") +#+end_src + +Further steps to consider would be an interactive function, +self-installing an item in the export dispatcher menu, and other +user-friendly improvements. + +** Export in Foreign Buffers +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: Author tables and lists in Org syntax. +:END: + +The export back-ends in Org often include commands to convert selected +regions. A convenient feature of this in-place conversion is that the +exported output replaces the original source. Here are such +functions: + +- ~org-ascii-convert-region-to-ascii~ :: + + #+findex: org-ascii-convert-region-to-ascii + Convert the selected region into ASCII. + +- ~org-ascii-convert-region-to-utf8~ :: + + #+findex: org-ascii-convert-region-to-utf8 + Convert the selected region into UTF-8. + +- ~org-html-convert-region-to-html~ :: + + #+findex: org-html-convert-region-to-html + Convert the selected region into HTML. + +- ~org-latex-convert-region-to-latex~ :: + + #+findex: org-latex-convert-region-to-latex + Convert the selected region into LaTeX. + +- ~org-texinfo-convert-region-to-texinfo~ :: + + #+findex: org-texinfo-convert-region-to-texinfo + Convert the selected region into Texinfo. + +- ~org-md-convert-region-to-md~ :: + + #+findex: org-md-convert-region-to-md + Convert the selected region into Markdown. + +In-place conversions are particularly handy for quick conversion of +tables and lists in foreign buffers. For example, in an HTML buffer, +write a list in Org syntax, select it, and convert it to HTML with +{{{kbd(M-x org-html-convert-region-to-html)}}}. + +*** Exporting to minimal HTML +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: Exporting HTML without CSS, Javascript, etc. +:ALT_TITLE: Bare HTML +:END: + +If you want to output a minimal HTML file, with no CSS, no Javascript, +no preamble or postamble, here are the variable you would need to set: + +#+vindex: org-html-head +#+vindex: org-html-head-extra +#+vindex: org-html-head-include-default-style +#+vindex: org-html-head-include-scripts +#+vindex: org-html-preamble +#+vindex: org-html-postamble +#+vindex: org-html-use-infojs +#+begin_src emacs-lisp +(setq org-html-head "" + org-html-head-extra "" + org-html-head-include-default-style nil + org-html-head-include-scripts nil + org-html-preamble nil + org-html-postamble nil + org-html-use-infojs nil) +#+end_src + +* Publishing +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: Create a web site of linked Org files. +:END: +#+cindex: publishing + +Org includes a publishing management system that allows you to +configure automatic HTML conversion of /projects/ composed of +interlinked Org files. You can also configure Org to automatically +upload your exported HTML pages and related attachments, such as +images and source code files, to a web server. + +You can also use Org to convert files into PDF, or even combine HTML +and PDF conversion so that files are available in both formats on the +server. + +Publishing has been contributed to Org by David O'Toole. + +** Configuration +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: Defining projects. +:END: +Publishing needs significant configuration to specify files, +destination and many other properties of a project. + +*** The variable ~org-publish-project-alist~ +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: The central configuration variable. +:ALT_TITLE: Project alist +:END: +#+cindex: projects, for publishing + +#+vindex: org-publish-project-alist +Publishing is configured almost entirely through setting the value of +one variable, called ~org-publish-project-alist~. Each element of the +list configures one project, and may be in one of the two following +forms: + +#+begin_src emacs-lisp +("project-name" :property value :property value ...) +#+end_src + +#+texinfo: @noindent +i.e., a well-formed property list with alternating keys and values, +or: + +#+begin_src emacs-lisp +("project-name" :components ("project-name" "project-name" ...)) +#+end_src + +In both cases, projects are configured by specifying property values. +A project defines the set of files that are to be published, as well +as the publishing configuration to use when publishing those files. +When a project takes the second form listed above, the individual +members of the ~:components~ property are taken to be sub-projects, +which group together files requiring different publishing options. +When you publish such a "meta-project", all the components are also +published, in the sequence given. + +*** Sources and destinations for files +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: From here to there. +:ALT_TITLE: Sources and destinations +:END: +#+cindex: directories, for publishing + +Most properties are optional, but some should always be set. In +particular, Org needs to know where to look for source files, and +where to put published files. + +- ~:base-directory~ :: + + Directory containing publishing source files. + +- ~:publishing-directory~ :: + + Directory where output files are published. You can directly + publish to a webserver using a file name syntax appropriate for the + Emacs tramp package. Or you can publish to a local directory and + use external tools to upload your website (see [[*Uploading Files]]). + +- ~:preparation-function~ :: + + Function or list of functions to be called before starting the + publishing process, for example, to run =make= for updating files to + be published. Each preparation function is called with a single + argument, the project property list. + +- ~:completion-function~ :: + + Function or list of functions called after finishing the publishing + process, for example, to change permissions of the resulting files. + Each completion function is called with a single argument, the + project property list. + +*** Selecting files +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: What files are part of the project? +:END: +#+cindex: files, selecting for publishing + +By default, all files with extension =.org= in the base directory are +considered part of the project. This can be modified by setting the +following properties + +- ~:base-extension~ :: + + Extension---without the dot---of source files. This actually is + a regular expression. Set this to the symbol ~any~ if you want to + get all files in ~:base-directory~, even without extension. + +- ~:exclude~ :: + + Regular expression to match file names that should not be published, + even though they have been selected on the basis of their extension. + +- ~:include~ :: + + List of files to be included regardless of ~:base-extension~ and + ~:exclude~. + +- ~:recursive~ :: + + Non-~nil~ means, check base-directory recursively for files to + publish. + +*** Publishing action +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: Setting the function doing the publishing. +:END: +#+cindex: action, for publishing + +Publishing means that a file is copied to the destination directory +and possibly transformed in the process. The default transformation +is to export Org files as HTML files, and this is done by the function +~org-html-publish-to-html~ which calls the HTML exporter (see [[*HTML +Export]]). But you can also publish your content as PDF files using +~org-latex-publish-to-pdf~, or as ASCII, Texinfo, etc., using the +corresponding functions. + +If you want to publish the Org file as an =.org= file but with +/archived/, /commented/, and /tag-excluded/ trees removed, use +~org-org-publish-to-org~. This produces =file.org= and puts it in the +publishing directory. If you want a htmlized version of this file, +set the parameter ~:htmlized-source~ to ~t~. It produces +=file.org.html= in the publishing directory[fn:141]. + +Other files like images only need to be copied to the publishing +destination; for this you can use ~org-publish-attachment~. For +non-Org files, you always need to specify the publishing function: + +- ~:publishing-function~ :: + + Function executing the publication of a file. This may also be + a list of functions, which are all called in turn. + +- ~:htmlized-source~ :: + + Non-~nil~ means, publish htmlized source. + +The function must accept three arguments: a property list containing +at least a ~:publishing-directory~ property, the name of the file to +be published, and the path to the publishing directory of the output +file. It should take the specified file, make the necessary +transformation, if any, and place the result into the destination +folder. + +*** Options for the exporters +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: Tweaking HTML/@LaTeX{} export. +:ALT_TITLE: Publishing options +:END: +#+cindex: options, for publishing +#+cindex: publishing options + +The property list can be used to set many export options for the HTML +and LaTeX exporters. In most cases, these properties correspond to +user variables in Org. The table below lists these properties along +with the variable they belong to. See the documentation string for +the respective variable for details. + +#+vindex: org-publish-project-alist +When a property is given a value in ~org-publish-project-alist~, its +setting overrides the value of the corresponding user variable, if +any, during publishing. Options set within a file (see [[*Export +Settings]]), however, override everything. + +**** Generic properties +:PROPERTIES: +:UNNUMBERED: notoc +:END: + +| ~:archived-trees~ | ~org-export-with-archived-trees~ | +| ~:exclude-tags~ | ~org-export-exclude-tags~ | +| ~:headline-levels~ | ~org-export-headline-levels~ | +| ~:language~ | ~org-export-default-language~ | +| ~:preserve-breaks~ | ~org-export-preserve-breaks~ | +| ~:section-numbers~ | ~org-export-with-section-numbers~ | +| ~:select-tags~ | ~org-export-select-tags~ | +| ~:with-author~ | ~org-export-with-author~ | +| ~:with-broken-links~ | ~org-export-with-broken-links~ | +| ~:with-clocks~ | ~org-export-with-clocks~ | +| ~:with-creator~ | ~org-export-with-creator~ | +| ~:with-date~ | ~org-export-with-date~ | +| ~:with-drawers~ | ~org-export-with-drawers~ | +| ~:with-email~ | ~org-export-with-email~ | +| ~:with-emphasize~ | ~org-export-with-emphasize~ | +| ~:with-fixed-width~ | ~org-export-with-fixed-width~ | +| ~:with-footnotes~ | ~org-export-with-footnotes~ | +| ~:with-latex~ | ~org-export-with-latex~ | +| ~:with-planning~ | ~org-export-with-planning~ | +| ~:with-priority~ | ~org-export-with-priority~ | +| ~:with-properties~ | ~org-export-with-properties~ | +| ~:with-special-strings~ | ~org-export-with-special-strings~ | +| ~:with-sub-superscript~ | ~org-export-with-sub-superscripts~ | +| ~:with-tables~ | ~org-export-with-tables~ | +| ~:with-tags~ | ~org-export-with-tags~ | +| ~:with-tasks~ | ~org-export-with-tasks~ | +| ~:with-timestamps~ | ~org-export-with-timestamps~ | +| ~:with-title~ | ~org-export-with-title~ | +| ~:with-toc~ | ~org-export-with-toc~ | +| ~:with-todo-keywords~ | ~org-export-with-todo-keywords~ | + +**** ASCII specific properties +:PROPERTIES: +:UNNUMBERED: notoc +:END: + +| ~:ascii-bullets~ | ~org-ascii-bullets~ | +| ~:ascii-caption-above~ | ~org-ascii-caption-above~ | +| ~:ascii-charset~ | ~org-ascii-charset~ | +| ~:ascii-global-margin~ | ~org-ascii-global-margin~ | +| ~:ascii-format-drawer-function~ | ~org-ascii-format-drawer-function~ | +| ~:ascii-format-inlinetask-function~ | ~org-ascii-format-inlinetask-function~ | +| ~:ascii-headline-spacing~ | ~org-ascii-headline-spacing~ | +| ~:ascii-indented-line-width~ | ~org-ascii-indented-line-width~ | +| ~:ascii-inlinetask-width~ | ~org-ascii-inlinetask-width~ | +| ~:ascii-inner-margin~ | ~org-ascii-inner-margin~ | +| ~:ascii-links-to-notes~ | ~org-ascii-links-to-notes~ | +| ~:ascii-list-margin~ | ~org-ascii-list-margin~ | +| ~:ascii-paragraph-spacing~ | ~org-ascii-paragraph-spacing~ | +| ~:ascii-quote-margin~ | ~org-ascii-quote-margin~ | +| ~:ascii-table-keep-all-vertical-lines~ | ~org-ascii-table-keep-all-vertical-lines~ | +| ~:ascii-table-use-ascii-art~ | ~org-ascii-table-use-ascii-art~ | +| ~:ascii-table-widen-columns~ | ~org-ascii-table-widen-columns~ | +| ~:ascii-text-width~ | ~org-ascii-text-width~ | +| ~:ascii-underline~ | ~org-ascii-underline~ | +| ~:ascii-verbatim-format~ | ~org-ascii-verbatim-format~ | + +**** Beamer specific properties +:PROPERTIES: +:UNNUMBERED: notoc +:END: + +| ~:beamer-theme~ | ~org-beamer-theme~ | +| ~:beamer-column-view-format~ | ~org-beamer-column-view-format~ | +| ~:beamer-environments-extra~ | ~org-beamer-environments-extra~ | +| ~:beamer-frame-default-options~ | ~org-beamer-frame-default-options~ | +| ~:beamer-outline-frame-options~ | ~org-beamer-outline-frame-options~ | +| ~:beamer-outline-frame-title~ | ~org-beamer-outline-frame-title~ | +| ~:beamer-subtitle-format~ | ~org-beamer-subtitle-format~ | + +**** HTML specific properties +:PROPERTIES: +:UNNUMBERED: notoc +:END: + +| ~:html-allow-name-attribute-in-anchors~ | ~org-html-allow-name-attribute-in-anchors~ | +| ~:html-checkbox-type~ | ~org-html-checkbox-type~ | +| ~:html-container~ | ~org-html-container-element~ | +| ~:html-divs~ | ~org-html-divs~ | +| ~:html-doctype~ | ~org-html-doctype~ | +| ~:html-extension~ | ~org-html-extension~ | +| ~:html-footnote-format~ | ~org-html-footnote-format~ | +| ~:html-footnote-separator~ | ~org-html-footnote-separator~ | +| ~:html-footnotes-section~ | ~org-html-footnotes-section~ | +| ~:html-format-drawer-function~ | ~org-html-format-drawer-function~ | +| ~:html-format-headline-function~ | ~org-html-format-headline-function~ | +| ~:html-format-inlinetask-function~ | ~org-html-format-inlinetask-function~ | +| ~:html-head-extra~ | ~org-html-head-extra~ | +| ~:html-head-include-default-style~ | ~org-html-head-include-default-style~ | +| ~:html-head-include-scripts~ | ~org-html-head-include-scripts~ | +| ~:html-head~ | ~org-html-head~ | +| ~:html-home/up-format~ | ~org-html-home/up-format~ | +| ~:html-html5-fancy~ | ~org-html-html5-fancy~ | +| ~:html-indent~ | ~org-html-indent~ | +| ~:html-infojs-options~ | ~org-html-infojs-options~ | +| ~:html-infojs-template~ | ~org-html-infojs-template~ | +| ~:html-inline-image-rules~ | ~org-html-inline-image-rules~ | +| ~:html-inline-images~ | ~org-html-inline-images~ | +| ~:html-link-home~ | ~org-html-link-home~ | +| ~:html-link-org-files-as-html~ | ~org-html-link-org-files-as-html~ | +| ~:html-link-up~ | ~org-html-link-up~ | +| ~:html-link-use-abs-url~ | ~org-html-link-use-abs-url~ | +| ~:html-mathjax-options~ | ~org-html-mathjax-options~ | +| ~:html-mathjax-template~ | ~org-html-mathjax-template~ | +| ~:html-equation-reference-format~ | ~org-html-equation-reference-format~ | +| ~:html-metadata-timestamp-format~ | ~org-html-metadata-timestamp-format~ | +| ~:html-postamble-format~ | ~org-html-postamble-format~ | +| ~:html-postamble~ | ~org-html-postamble~ | +| ~:html-preamble-format~ | ~org-html-preamble-format~ | +| ~:html-preamble~ | ~org-html-preamble~ | +| ~:html-self-link-headlines~ | ~org-html-self-link-headlines~ | +| ~:html-table-align-individual-field~ | ~de{org-html-table-align-individual-fields~ | +| ~:html-table-attributes~ | ~org-html-table-default-attributes~ | +| ~:html-table-caption-above~ | ~org-html-table-caption-above~ | +| ~:html-table-data-tags~ | ~org-html-table-data-tags~ | +| ~:html-table-header-tags~ | ~org-html-table-header-tags~ | +| ~:html-table-row-tags~ | ~org-html-table-row-tags~ | +| ~:html-table-use-header-tags-for-first-column~ | ~org-html-table-use-header-tags-for-first-column~ | +| ~:html-tag-class-prefix~ | ~org-html-tag-class-prefix~ | +| ~:html-text-markup-alist~ | ~org-html-text-markup-alist~ | +| ~:html-todo-kwd-class-prefix~ | ~org-html-todo-kwd-class-prefix~ | +| ~:html-toplevel-hlevel~ | ~org-html-toplevel-hlevel~ | +| ~:html-use-infojs~ | ~org-html-use-infojs~ | +| ~:html-validation-link~ | ~org-html-validation-link~ | +| ~:html-viewport~ | ~org-html-viewport~ | +| ~:html-wrap-src-lines~ | ~org-html-wrap-src-lines~ | +| ~:html-xml-declaration~ | ~org-html-xml-declaration~ | + +**** LaTeX specific properties +:PROPERTIES: +:UNNUMBERED: notoc +:END: + +| ~:latex-active-timestamp-format~ | ~org-latex-active-timestamp-format~ | +| ~:latex-caption-above~ | ~org-latex-caption-above~ | +| ~:latex-classes~ | ~org-latex-classes~ | +| ~:latex-class~ | ~org-latex-default-class~ | +| ~:latex-compiler~ | ~org-latex-compiler~ | +| ~:latex-default-figure-position~ | ~org-latex-default-figure-position~ | +| ~:latex-default-table-environment~ | ~org-latex-default-table-environment~ | +| ~:latex-default-table-mode~ | ~org-latex-default-table-mode~ | +| ~:latex-diary-timestamp-format~ | ~org-latex-diary-timestamp-format~ | +| ~:latex-footnote-defined-format~ | ~org-latex-footnote-defined-format~ | +| ~:latex-footnote-separator~ | ~org-latex-footnote-separator~ | +| ~:latex-format-drawer-function~ | ~org-latex-format-drawer-function~ | +| ~:latex-format-headline-function~ | ~org-latex-format-headline-function~ | +| ~:latex-format-inlinetask-function~ | ~org-latex-format-inlinetask-function~ | +| ~:latex-hyperref-template~ | ~org-latex-hyperref-template~ | +| ~:latex-image-default-height~ | ~org-latex-image-default-height~ | +| ~:latex-image-default-option~ | ~org-latex-image-default-option~ | +| ~:latex-image-default-width~ | ~org-latex-image-default-width~ | +| ~:latex-images-centered~ | ~org-latex-images-centered~ | +| ~:latex-inactive-timestamp-format~ | ~org-latex-inactive-timestamp-format~ | +| ~:latex-inline-image-rules~ | ~org-latex-inline-image-rules~ | +| ~:latex-link-with-unknown-path-format~ | ~org-latex-link-with-unknown-path-format~ | +| ~:latex-listings-langs~ | ~org-latex-listings-langs~ | +| ~:latex-listings-options~ | ~org-latex-listings-options~ | +| ~:latex-listings~ | ~org-latex-listings~ | +| ~:latex-minted-langs~ | ~org-latex-minted-langs~ | +| ~:latex-minted-options~ | ~org-latex-minted-options~ | +| ~:latex-prefer-user-labels~ | ~org-latex-prefer-user-labels~ | +| ~:latex-subtitle-format~ | ~org-latex-subtitle-format~ | +| ~:latex-subtitle-separate~ | ~org-latex-subtitle-separate~ | +| ~:latex-table-scientific-notation~ | ~org-latex-table-scientific-notation~ | +| ~:latex-tables-booktabs~ | ~org-latex-tables-booktabs~ | +| ~:latex-tables-centered~ | ~org-latex-tables-centered~ | +| ~:latex-text-markup-alist~ | ~org-latex-text-markup-alist~ | +| ~:latex-title-command~ | ~org-latex-title-command~ | +| ~:latex-toc-command~ | ~org-latex-toc-command~ | + +**** Markdown specific properties +:PROPERTIES: +:UNNUMBERED: notoc +:END: + +| ~:md-footnote-format~ | ~org-md-footnote-format~ | +| ~:md-footnotes-section~ | ~org-md-footnotes-section~ | +| ~:md-headline-style~ | ~org-md-headline-style~ | + +**** ODT specific properties +:PROPERTIES: +:UNNUMBERED: notoc +:END: + +| ~:odt-content-template-file~ | ~org-odt-content-template-file~ | +| ~:odt-display-outline-level~ | ~org-odt-display-outline-level~ | +| ~:odt-fontify-srcblocks~ | ~org-odt-fontify-srcblocks~ | +| ~:odt-format-drawer-function~ | ~org-odt-format-drawer-function~ | +| ~:odt-format-headline-function~ | ~org-odt-format-headline-function~ | +| ~:odt-format-inlinetask-function~ | ~org-odt-format-inlinetask-function~ | +| ~:odt-inline-formula-rules~ | ~org-odt-inline-formula-rules~ | +| ~:odt-inline-image-rules~ | ~org-odt-inline-image-rules~ | +| ~:odt-pixels-per-inch~ | ~org-odt-pixels-per-inch~ | +| ~:odt-styles-file~ | ~org-odt-styles-file~ | +| ~:odt-table-styles~ | ~org-odt-table-styles~ | +| ~:odt-use-date-fields~ | ~org-odt-use-date-fields~ | + +**** Texinfo specific properties +:PROPERTIES: +:UNNUMBERED: notoc +:END: + +| ~:texinfo-active-timestamp-format~ | ~org-texinfo-active-timestamp-format~ | +| ~:texinfo-classes~ | ~org-texinfo-classes~ | +| ~:texinfo-class~ | ~org-texinfo-default-class~ | +| ~:texinfo-table-default-markup~ | ~org-texinfo-table-default-markup~ | +| ~:texinfo-diary-timestamp-format~ | ~org-texinfo-diary-timestamp-format~ | +| ~:texinfo-filename~ | ~org-texinfo-filename~ | +| ~:texinfo-format-drawer-function~ | ~org-texinfo-format-drawer-function~ | +| ~:texinfo-format-headline-function~ | ~org-texinfo-format-headline-function~ | +| ~:texinfo-format-inlinetask-function~ | ~org-texinfo-format-inlinetask-function~ | +| ~:texinfo-inactive-timestamp-format~ | ~org-texinfo-inactive-timestamp-format~ | +| ~:texinfo-link-with-unknown-path-format~ | ~org-texinfo-link-with-unknown-path-format~ | +| ~:texinfo-node-description-column~ | ~org-texinfo-node-description-column~ | +| ~:texinfo-table-scientific-notation~ | ~org-texinfo-table-scientific-notation~ | +| ~:texinfo-tables-verbatim~ | ~org-texinfo-tables-verbatim~ | +| ~:texinfo-text-markup-alist~ | ~org-texinfo-text-markup-alist~ | + +*** Publishing links +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: Which links keep working after publishing? +:END: +#+cindex: links, publishing + +To create a link from one Org file to another, you would use something +like =[[file:foo.org][The foo]]= or simply =[[file:foo.org]]= (see [[*External Links]]). When +published, this link becomes a link to =foo.html=. You can thus +interlink the pages of your "Org web" project and the links will work +as expected when you publish them to HTML. If you also publish the +Org source file and want to link to it, use an =http= link instead of +a =file:= link, because =file= links are converted to link to the +corresponding =.html= file. + +You may also link to related files, such as images. Provided you are +careful with relative file names, and provided you have also +configured Org to upload the related files, these links will work too. +See [[*Example: complex publishing configuration]], for an example of this +usage. + +Eventually, links between published documents can contain some search +options (see [[*Search Options in File Links]]), which will be resolved to +the appropriate location in the linked file. For example, once +published to HTML, the following links all point to a dedicated anchor +in =foo.html=. + +#+begin_example +[[file:foo.org::*heading]] +[[file:foo.org::#custom-id]] +[[file:foo.org::target]] +#+end_example + +*** Generating a sitemap +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: Generating a list of all pages. +:ALT_TITLE: Site map +:END: +#+cindex: sitemap, of published pages + +The following properties may be used to control publishing of +a map of files for a given project. + +- ~:auto-sitemap~ :: + + When non-~nil~, publish a sitemap during + ~org-publish-current-project~ or ~org-publish-all~. + +- ~:sitemap-filename~ :: + + Filename for output of sitemap. Defaults to =sitemap.org=, which + becomes =sitemap.html=. + +- ~:sitemap-title~ :: + + Title of sitemap page. Defaults to name of file. + +- ~:sitemap-format-entry~ :: + + #+findex: org-publish-find-date + #+findex: org-publish-find-property + #+findex: org-publish-find-title + With this option one can tell how a site-map entry is formatted in + the site-map. It is a function called with three arguments: the + file or directory name relative to base directory of the project, + the site-map style and the current project. It is expected to + return a string. Default value turns file names into links and use + document titles as descriptions. For specific formatting needs, one + can use ~org-publish-find-date~, ~org-publish-find-title~ and + ~org-publish-find-property~, to retrieve additional information + about published documents. + +- ~:sitemap-function~ :: + + Plug-in function to use for generation of the sitemap. It is called + with two arguments: the title of the site-map and a representation + of the files and directories involved in the project as a nested + list, which can further be transformed using ~org-list-to-generic~, + ~org-list-to-subtree~ and alike. Default value generates a plain + list of links to all files in the project. + +- ~:sitemap-sort-folders~ :: + + Where folders should appear in the sitemap. Set this to ~first~ + (default) or ~last~ to display folders first or last, respectively. + When set to ~ignore~, folders are ignored altogether. Any other + value mixes files and folders. This variable has no effect when + site-map style is ~tree~. + +- ~:sitemap-sort-files~ :: + + How the files are sorted in the site map. Set this to + ~alphabetically~ (default), ~chronologically~ or + ~anti-chronologically~. ~chronologically~ sorts the files with + older date first while ~anti-chronologically~ sorts the files with + newer date first. ~alphabetically~ sorts the files alphabetically. + The date of a file is retrieved with ~org-publish-find-date~. + +- ~:sitemap-ignore-case~ :: + + Should sorting be case-sensitive? Default ~nil~. + +- ~:sitemap-file-entry-format~ :: + + With this option one can tell how a sitemap's entry is formatted in + the sitemap. This is a format string with some escape sequences: + ~%t~ stands for the title of the file, ~%a~ stands for the author of + the file and ~%d~ stands for the date of the file. The date is + retrieved with the ~org-publish-find-date~ function and formatted + with ~org-publish-sitemap-date-format~. Default ~%t~. + +- ~:sitemap-date-format~ :: + + Format string for the ~format-time-string~ function that tells how + a sitemap entry's date is to be formatted. This property bypasses + ~org-publish-sitemap-date-format~ which defaults to ~%Y-%m-%d~. + +*** Generating an index +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: An index that reaches across pages. +:END: +#+cindex: index, in a publishing project + +Org mode can generate an index across the files of a publishing project. + +- ~:makeindex~ :: + + When non-~nil~, generate in index in the file =theindex.org= and + publish it as =theindex.html=. + +The file is created when first publishing a project with the +~:makeindex~ set. The file only contains a statement =#+INCLUDE: +"theindex.inc"=. You can then build around this include statement by +adding a title, style information, etc. + +#+cindex: @samp{INDEX}, keyword +Index entries are specified with =INDEX= keyword. An entry that +contains an exclamation mark creates a sub item. + +#+begin_example +,*** Curriculum Vitae +,#+INDEX: CV +,#+INDEX: Application!CV +#+end_example + +** Uploading Files +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: How to get files up on the server. +:END: +#+cindex: rsync +#+cindex: unison + +For those people already utilizing third party sync tools such as +Rsync or Unison, it might be preferable not to use the built-in remote +publishing facilities of Org mode which rely heavily on Tramp. Tramp, +while very useful and powerful, tends not to be so efficient for +multiple file transfer and has been known to cause problems under +heavy usage. + +Specialized synchronization utilities offer several advantages. In +addition to timestamp comparison, they also do content and +permissions/attribute checks. For this reason you might prefer to +publish your web to a local directory---possibly even /in place/ with +your Org files---and then use Unison or Rsync to do the +synchronization with the remote host. + +Since Unison, for example, can be configured as to which files to +transfer to a certain remote destination, it can greatly simplify the +project publishing definition. Simply keep all files in the correct +location, process your Org files with ~org-publish~ and let the +synchronization tool do the rest. You do not need, in this scenario, +to include attachments such as JPG, CSS or PNG files in the project +definition since the third-party tool syncs them. + +Publishing to a local directory is also much faster than to a remote +one, so that you can afford more easily to republish entire projects. +If you set ~org-publish-use-timestamps-flag~ to ~nil~, you gain the +main benefit of re-including any changed external files such as source +example files you might include with =INCLUDE= keyword. The timestamp +mechanism in Org is not smart enough to detect if included files have +been modified. + +** Sample Configuration +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: Example projects. +:END: + +Below we provide two example configurations. The first one is +a simple project publishing only a set of Org files. The second +example is more complex, with a multi-component project. + +*** Example: simple publishing configuration +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: One-component publishing. +:ALT_TITLE: Simple example +:END: + +This example publishes a set of Org files to the =public_html= +directory on the local machine. + +#+begin_src emacs-lisp +(setq org-publish-project-alist + '(("org" + :base-directory "~/org/" + :publishing-function org-html-publish-to-html + :publishing-directory "~/public_html" + :section-numbers nil + :with-toc nil + :html-head ""))) +#+end_src + +*** Example: complex publishing configuration +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: A multi-component publishing example. +:ALT_TITLE: Complex example +:END: + +This more complicated example publishes an entire website, including +Org files converted to HTML, image files, Emacs Lisp source code, and +style sheets. The publishing directory is remote and private files +are excluded. + +To ensure that links are preserved, care should be taken to replicate +your directory structure on the web server, and to use relative file +paths. For example, if your Org files are kept in =~/org/= and your +publishable images in =~/images/=, you would link to an image with + +: file:../images/myimage.png + +On the web server, the relative path to the image should be the same. +You can accomplish this by setting up an =images/= folder in the right +place on the web server, and publishing images to it. + +#+begin_src emacs-lisp +(setq org-publish-project-alist + '(("orgfiles" + :base-directory "~/org/" + :base-extension "org" + :publishing-directory "/ssh:user@host:~/html/notebook/" + :publishing-function org-html-publish-to-html + :exclude "PrivatePage.org" ;; regexp + :headline-levels 3 + :section-numbers nil + :with-toc nil + :html-head "" + :html-preamble t) + + ("images" + :base-directory "~/images/" + :base-extension "jpg\\|gif\\|png" + :publishing-directory "/ssh:user@host:~/html/images/" + :publishing-function org-publish-attachment) + + ("other" + :base-directory "~/other/" + :base-extension "css\\|el" + :publishing-directory "/ssh:user@host:~/html/other/" + :publishing-function org-publish-attachment) + ("website" :components ("orgfiles" "images" "other")))) +#+end_src + +** Triggering Publication +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: Publication commands. +:END: + +Once properly configured, Org can publish with the following commands: + +- {{{kbd(C-c C-e P x)}}} (~org-publish~) :: + + #+kindex: C-c C-e P x + #+findex: org-publish + Prompt for a specific project and publish all files that belong to + it. + +- {{{kbd(C-c C-e P p)}}} (~org-publish-current-project~) :: + + #+kindex: C-c C-e P p + #+findex: org-publish-current-project + Publish the project containing the current file. + +- {{{kbd(C-c C-e P f)}}} (~org-publish-current-file~) :: + + #+kindex: C-c C-e P f + #+findex: org-publish-current-file + Publish only the current file. + +- {{{kbd(C-c C-e P a)}}} (~org-publish-all~) :: + + #+kindex: C-c C-e P a + #+findex: org-publish-all + Publish every project. + +#+vindex: org-publish-use-timestamps-flag +Org uses timestamps to track when a file has changed. The above +functions normally only publish changed files. You can override this +and force publishing of all files by giving a prefix argument to any +of the commands above, or by customizing the variable +~org-publish-use-timestamps-flag~. This may be necessary in +particular if files include other files via =SETUPFILE= or =INCLUDE= +keywords. + +* Citation handling +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: create, follow and export citations. +:END: +#+cindex: citation + +The =oc.el= library provides tooling to handle citations in Org via +"citation processors" that offer some or all of the following +capabilities: + +- activate :: Fontification, tooltip preview, etc. +- follow :: At-point actions on citations via ~org-open-at-point~. +- insert :: Add and edit citations via ~org-cite-insert~. +- export :: Via different libraries for different target formats. + +The user can configure these with ~org-cite-activate-processor~, +~org-cite-follow-processor~, ~org-cite-insert-processor~, and +~org-cite-export-processors~ respectively. + +The included "basic" processor provides all four capabilities. + +** Citations + +Before adding citations, first set one-or-more bibliographies, either +globally with ~org-cite-global-bibliography~, or locally using one or +more "bibliography" keywords. + +#+begin_example +#+bibliography: SomeFile.bib +#+bibliography: /some/other/file.json +#+bibliography: "/some/file/with spaces/in its name.bib" +#+end_example + +#+kindex: C-c C-x @@ +#+findex: org-cite-insert +One can then insert and edit citations using ~org-cite-insert~, called +with {{{kbd(C-c C-x @)}}}. + +A /citation/ requires one or more citation /key(s)/, elements +identifying a reference in the bibliography. + +- Each citation is surrounded by brackets and uses the =cite= type. + +- Each key starts with the character =@=. + +- Each key can be qualified by a /prefix/ (e.g.\nbsp{}"see ") and/or + a /suffix/ (e.g.\nbsp{}"p.\nbsp{}123"), giving information useful or necessary + fo the comprehension of the citation but not included in the + reference. + +- A single citation can cite more than one reference ; the keys are + separated by semicolons ; the formatting of such citation groups is + specified by the style. + +- One can also specify a stylistic variation for the citations by + inserting a =/= and a style name between the =cite= keyword and the + colon; this usually makes sense only for the author-year styles. + +: [cite/style:common prefix ;prefix @key suffix; ... ; common suffix] + +The only mandatory elements are: + +- The =cite= keyword and the colon. +- The =@= character immediately preceding each key. +- The brackets surrounding the citation(s) (group). + +** Citation export processors + +Org currently includes the following export processors: + +- Two processors can export to a variety of formats, including =latex= + (and therefore =pdf=), =html=, =odt= and plain (UTF8) text: + + - basic :: a basic export processor, well adapted to situations + where backward compatibility is not a requirement and formatting + needs are minimal; + + - csl :: this export processor uses format files written in [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Citation_Style_Language][Citation + Style Language]] via [[https://github.com/andras-simonyi/citeproc-el][citeproc-el]]; + +- In contrast, two other processors target LaTeX and LaTeX-derived + formats exclusively: + + - natbib :: this export processor uses BibTeX, the historical + bibliographic processor used with LaTeX, thus allowing the use of + data and style files compatible with this processor (including + a large number of publishers' styles). It uses citation commands + implemented in the LaTeX package =natbib=, allowing more stylistic + variants that LaTeX's =\cite= command. + + - biblatex :: this backend allows the use of data and formats + prepared for BibLaTeX, an alternate bibliographic processor used + with LaTeX, which overcomes some serious BibTeX limitations, but + has not (yet?)\nbsp{}been widely adopted by publishers. + +The =CITE_EXPORT= keyword specifies the export processor and the +citation (and possibly reference) style(s); for example (all arguments +are optional) + +: #+cite_export: basic author author-year + +#+texinfo: @noindent +specifies the "basic" export processor with citations inserted as +author's name and references indexed by author's names and year; + +: #+cite_export: csl /some/path/to/vancouver-brackets.csl + +#+texinfo: @noindent +specifies the "csl" processor and CSL style, which in this case +defines numeric citations and numeric references according to the +=Vancouver= specification (as style used in many medical journals), +following a typesetting variation putting citations between brackets; + +: #+cite_export: natbib kluwer + +#+texinfo: @noindent +specifies the =natbib= export processor with a label citation style +conformant to the Harvard style and the specification of the +Wolkers-Kluwer publisher; since it relies on the ~bibtex~ processor of +your LaTeX installation, it won't export to anything but PDF. + +* Working with Source Code +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: Export, evaluate, and tangle code blocks. +:END: +#+cindex: source code, working with + +Source code here refers to any plain text collection of computer +instructions, possibly with comments, written using a human-readable +programming language. Org can manage source code in an Org document +when the source code is identified with begin and end markers. +Working with source code begins with identifying source code blocks. +A source code block can be placed almost anywhere in an Org document; +it is not restricted to the preamble or the end of the document. +However, Org cannot manage a source code block if it is placed inside +an Org comment or within a fixed width section. + +Here is an example source code block in the Emacs Lisp language: + +#+begin_example +,#+BEGIN_SRC emacs-lisp + (defun org-xor (a b) + "Exclusive or." + (if a (not b) b)) +,#+END_SRC +#+end_example + +Source code blocks are one of many Org block types, which also include +"center", "comment", "dynamic", "example", "export", "quote", +"special", and "verse". This section pertains to blocks between +=#+BEGIN_SRC= and =#+END_SRC=. + +Details of Org's facilities for working with source code are described +in the following sections. + +** Features Overview +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: Enjoy the versatility of source blocks. +:END: + +Org can manage the source code in the block delimited by =#+BEGIN_SRC= +... =#+END_SRC= in several ways that can simplify housekeeping tasks +essential to modern source code maintenance. Org can edit, format, +extract, export, and publish source code blocks. Org can also compile +and execute a source code block, then capture the results. The Org +mode literature sometimes refers to source code blocks as /live code/ +blocks because they can alter the content of the Org document or the +material that it exports. Users can control the "liveliness" of each +source code block by tweaking the header arguments (see [[*Using Header +Arguments]]) for compiling, execution, extraction, and exporting. + +For editing and formatting a source code block, Org uses an +appropriate Emacs major mode that includes features specifically +designed for source code in that language. + +Org can extract one or more source code blocks and write them to one +or more source files---a process known as /tangling/ in literate +programming terminology. + +For exporting and publishing, Org's back-ends can format a source code +block appropriately, often with native syntax highlighting. + +For executing and compiling a source code block, the user can +configure Org to select the appropriate compiler. Org provides +facilities to collect the result of the execution or compiler output, +insert it into the Org document, and/or export it. In addition to +text results, Org can insert links to other data types, including +audio, video, and graphics. Org can also link a compiler error +message to the appropriate line in the source code block. + +An important feature of Org's management of source code blocks is the +ability to pass variables, functions, and results to one another using +a common syntax for source code blocks in any language. Although most +literate programming facilities are restricted to one language or +another, Org's language-agnostic approach lets the literate programmer +match each programming task with the appropriate computer language and +to mix them all together in a single Org document. This +interoperability among languages explains why Org's source code +management facility was named /Org Babel/ by its originators, Eric +Schulte and Dan Davison. + +Org mode fulfills the promise of easy verification and maintenance of +publishing reproducible research by keeping text, data, code, +configuration settings of the execution environment, the results of +the execution, and associated narratives, claims, references, and +internal and external links in a single Org document. + +** Structure of Code Blocks +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: Code block syntax described. +:END: +#+cindex: code block, structure +#+cindex: source code, block structure +#+cindex: @samp{NAME} keyword, in source blocks +#+cindex: @samp{BEGIN_SRC} + +Org offers two ways to structure source code in Org documents: in +a source code block, and directly inline. Both specifications are +shown below. + +A source code block conforms to this structure: + +#+begin_example +,#+NAME: +,#+BEGIN_SRC
+ +,#+END_SRC +#+end_example + +Do not be put-off by having to remember the source block syntax. Org +mode offers a command for wrapping existing text in a block (see +[[*Structure Templates]]). Org also works with other completion systems +in Emacs, some of which predate Org and have custom domain-specific +languages for defining templates. Regular use of templates reduces +errors, increases accuracy, and maintains consistency. + +#+cindex: source code, inline +An inline code block conforms to this structure: + +: src_{} + +#+texinfo: @noindent +or + +: src_[
]{} + +- =#+NAME: = :: + + Optional. Names the source block so it can be called, like + a function, from other source blocks or inline code to evaluate or + to capture the results. Code from other blocks, other files, and + from table formulas (see [[*The Spreadsheet]]) can use the name to + reference a source block. This naming serves the same purpose as + naming Org tables. Org mode requires unique names. For duplicate + names, Org mode's behavior is undefined. + +- =#+BEGIN_SRC= ... =#+END_SRC= :: + + Mandatory. They mark the start and end of a block that Org + requires. The =#+BEGIN_SRC= line takes additional arguments, as + described next. + +- == :: + + #+cindex: language, in code blocks + Mandatory. It is the identifier of the source code language in the + block. See [[*Languages]], for identifiers of supported languages. + +- == :: + + #+cindex: switches, in code blocks + Optional. Switches provide finer control of the code execution, + export, and format (see the discussion of switches in [[*Literal + Examples]]). + +- =
= :: + + #+cindex: header arguments, in code blocks + Optional. Heading arguments control many aspects of evaluation, + export and tangling of code blocks (see [[*Using Header Arguments]]). + Using Org's properties feature, header arguments can be selectively + applied to the entire buffer or specific sub-trees of the Org + document. + +- == :: + + Source code in the dialect of the specified language identifier. + +** Using Header Arguments +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: Different ways to set header arguments. +:END: + +Org comes with many header arguments common to all languages. New +header arguments are added for specific languages as they become +available for use in source code blocks. A header argument is +specified with an initial colon followed by the argument's name in +lowercase. + +Since header arguments can be set in several ways, Org prioritizes +them in case of overlaps or conflicts by giving local settings +a higher priority. Header values in function calls, for example, +override header values from global defaults. + +*** System-wide header arguments +:PROPERTIES: +:UNNUMBERED: notoc +:END: +#+vindex: org-babel-default-header-args + +#+vindex: org-babel-default-header-args +System-wide values of header arguments can be specified by customizing +the ~org-babel-default-header-args~ variable, which defaults to the +following values: + +#+begin_example +:session => "none" +:results => "replace" +:exports => "code" +:cache => "no" +:noweb => "no" +#+end_example + +The example below sets =:noweb= header arguments to =yes=, which makes +Org expand =:noweb= references by default. + +#+begin_src emacs-lisp +(setq org-babel-default-header-args + (cons '(:noweb . "yes") + (assq-delete-all :noweb org-babel-default-header-args))) +#+end_src + +#+cindex: language specific default header arguments +#+cindex: default header arguments per language +Each language can have separate default header arguments by +customizing the variable ~org-babel-default-header-args:~, where +{{{var()}}} is the name of the language. For details, see the +language-specific online documentation at +https://orgmode.org/worg/org-contrib/babel/. + +*** Header arguments in Org mode properties +:PROPERTIES: +:UNNUMBERED: notoc +:END: + +For header arguments applicable to the buffer, use =PROPERTY= keyword +anywhere in the Org file (see [[*Property Syntax]]). + +The following example makes all the R code blocks execute in the same +session. Setting =:results= to =silent= ignores the results of +executions for all blocks, not just R code blocks; no results inserted +for any block. + +#+begin_example +,#+PROPERTY: header-args:R :session *R* +,#+PROPERTY: header-args :results silent +#+end_example + +#+vindex: org-use-property-inheritance +Header arguments set through Org's property drawers (see [[*Property +Syntax]]) apply at the sub-tree level on down. Since these property +drawers can appear anywhere in the file hierarchy, Org uses outermost +call or source block to resolve the values. Org ignores +~org-use-property-inheritance~ setting. + +In this example, =:cache= defaults to =yes= for all code blocks in the +sub-tree. + +#+begin_example +,* sample header + :PROPERTIES: + :header-args: :cache yes + :END: +#+end_example + +#+kindex: C-c C-x p +#+findex: org-set-property +Properties defined through ~org-set-property~ function, bound to +{{{kbd(C-c C-x p)}}}, apply to all active languages. They override +properties set in ~org-babel-default-header-args~. + +#+cindex: language specific header arguments properties +#+cindex: header arguments per language +Language-specific header arguments are also read from properties +=header-args:= where {{{var()}}} is the language +identifier. For example, + +#+begin_example +,* Heading + :PROPERTIES: + :header-args:clojure: :session *clojure-1* + :header-args:R: :session *R* + :END: +,** Subheading + :PROPERTIES: + :header-args:clojure: :session *clojure-2* + :END: +#+end_example + +#+texinfo: @noindent +would force separate sessions for Clojure blocks in =Heading= and +=Subheading=, but use the same session for all R blocks. Blocks in +=Subheading= inherit settings from =Heading=. + +*** Code block specific header arguments +:PROPERTIES: +:UNNUMBERED: notoc +:END: + +Header arguments are most commonly set at the source code block level, +on the =#+BEGIN_SRC= line. Arguments set at this level take +precedence over those set in the ~org-babel-default-header-args~ +variable, and also those set as header properties. + +In the following example, setting =:results= to =silent= makes it +ignore results of the code execution. Setting =:exports= to =code= +exports only the body of the code block to HTML or LaTeX. + +#+begin_example +,#+NAME: factorial +,#+BEGIN_SRC haskell :results silent :exports code :var n=0 + fac 0 = 1 + fac n = n * fac (n-1) +,#+END_SRC +#+end_example + +The same header arguments in an inline code block: + +: src_haskell[:exports both]{fac 5} + +#+cindex: @samp{HEADER}, keyword +Code block header arguments can span multiple lines using =#+HEADER:= +on each line. Note that Org currently accepts the plural spelling of +=#+HEADER:= only as a convenience for backward-compatibility. It may +be removed at some point. + +Multi-line header arguments on an unnamed code block: + +#+begin_example +,#+HEADER: :var data1=1 +,#+BEGIN_SRC emacs-lisp :var data2=2 + (message "data1:%S, data2:%S" data1 data2) +,#+END_SRC + +,#+RESULTS: +: data1:1, data2:2 +#+end_example + +Multi-line header arguments on a named code block: + +#+begin_example +,#+NAME: named-block +,#+HEADER: :var data=2 +,#+BEGIN_SRC emacs-lisp + (message "data:%S" data) +,#+END_SRC + +,#+RESULTS: named-block + : data:2 +#+end_example + +*** Header arguments in function calls +:PROPERTIES: +:UNNUMBERED: notoc +:END: + +Header arguments in function calls are the most specific and override +all other settings in case of an overlap. They get the highest +priority. Two =#+CALL:= examples are shown below. For the complete +syntax of =CALL= keyword, see [[*Evaluating Code Blocks]]. + +In this example, =:exports results= header argument is applied to the +evaluation of the =#+CALL:= line. + +: #+CALL: factorial(n=5) :exports results + +In this example, =:session special= header argument is applied to the +evaluation of =factorial= code block. + +: #+CALL: factorial[:session special](n=5) + +** Environment of a Code Block +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: Arguments, sessions, working directory... +:END: + +*** Passing arguments +:PROPERTIES: +:UNNUMBERED: notoc +:END: + +#+cindex: passing arguments to code blocks +#+cindex: arguments, in code blocks +#+cindex: @samp{var}, header argument +Use =var= for passing arguments to source code blocks. The specifics +of variables in code blocks vary by the source language and are +covered in the language-specific documentation. The syntax for =var=, +however, is the same for all languages. This includes declaring +a variable, and assigning a default value. + +The following syntax is used to pass arguments to code blocks using +the =var= header argument. + +: :var NAME=ASSIGN + +#+texinfo: @noindent +{{{var(NAME)}}} is the name of the variable bound in the code block +body. {{{var(ASSIGN)}}} is a literal value, such as a string, +a number, a reference to a table, a list, a literal example, another +code block---with or without arguments---or the results of evaluating +a code block. {{{var(ASSIGN)}}} may specify a filename for references +to elements in a different file, using a =:= to separate the filename +from the reference. + +: :var NAME=FILE:REFERENCE + +Here are examples of passing values by reference: + +- table :: + + A table named with a =NAME= keyword. + + #+begin_example + ,#+NAME: example-table + | 1 | + | 2 | + | 3 | + | 4 | + + ,#+NAME: table-length + ,#+BEGIN_SRC emacs-lisp :var table=example-table + (length table) + ,#+END_SRC + + ,#+RESULTS: table-length + : 4 + #+end_example + + When passing a table, you can treat specially the row, or the + column, containing labels for the columns, or the rows, in the + table. + + #+cindex: @samp{colnames}, header argument + The =colnames= header argument accepts =yes=, =no=, or =nil= values. + The default value is =nil=: if an input table has column + names---because the second row is a horizontal rule---then Org + removes the column names, processes the table, puts back the column + names, and then writes the table to the results block. Using =yes=, + Org does the same to the first row, even if the initial table does + not contain any horizontal rule. When set to =no=, Org does not + pre-process column names at all. + + #+begin_example + ,#+NAME: less-cols + | a | + |---| + | b | + | c | + + ,#+BEGIN_SRC python :var tab=less-cols :colnames nil + return [[val + '*' for val in row] for row in tab] + ,#+END_SRC + + ,#+RESULTS: + | a | + |----| + | b* | + | c* | + #+end_example + + #+cindex: @samp{rownames}, header argument + Similarly, the =rownames= header argument can take two values: =yes= + or =no=. When set to =yes=, Org removes the first column, processes + the table, puts back the first column, and then writes the table to + the results block. The default is =no=, which means Org does not + pre-process the first column. Note that Emacs Lisp code blocks + ignore =rownames= header argument because of the ease of + table-handling in Emacs. + + #+begin_example + ,#+NAME: with-rownames + | one | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | + | two | 6 | 7 | 8 | 9 | 10 | + + ,#+BEGIN_SRC python :var tab=with-rownames :rownames yes + return [[val + 10 for val in row] for row in tab] + ,#+END_SRC + + ,#+RESULTS: + | one | 11 | 12 | 13 | 14 | 15 | + | two | 16 | 17 | 18 | 19 | 20 | + #+end_example + +To refer to a table in another file, join the filename and table name with +a colon, for example: =:var table=other-file.org:example-table=. + +- list :: + + A simple named list. + + #+begin_example + ,#+NAME: example-list + - simple + - not + - nested + - list + + ,#+BEGIN_SRC emacs-lisp :var x=example-list + (print x) + ,#+END_SRC + + ,#+RESULTS: + | simple | list | + #+end_example + + Note that only the top level list items are passed along. Nested + list items are ignored. + +- code block without arguments :: + + A code block name, as assigned by =NAME= keyword from the example + above, optionally followed by parentheses. + + #+begin_example + ,#+BEGIN_SRC emacs-lisp :var length=table-length() + (* 2 length) + ,#+END_SRC + + ,#+RESULTS: + : 8 + #+end_example + +- code block with arguments :: + + A code block name, as assigned by =NAME= keyword, followed by + parentheses and optional arguments passed within the parentheses. + + #+begin_example + ,#+NAME: double + ,#+BEGIN_SRC emacs-lisp :var input=8 + (* 2 input) + ,#+END_SRC + + ,#+RESULTS: double + : 16 + + ,#+NAME: squared + ,#+BEGIN_SRC emacs-lisp :var input=double(input=1) + (* input input) + ,#+END_SRC + + ,#+RESULTS: squared + : 4 + #+end_example + +- literal example :: + + A literal example block named with a =NAME= keyword. + + #+begin_example + ,#+NAME: literal-example + ,#+BEGIN_EXAMPLE + A literal example + on two lines + ,#+END_EXAMPLE + + ,#+NAME: read-literal-example + ,#+BEGIN_SRC emacs-lisp :var x=literal-example + (concatenate #'string x " for you.") + ,#+END_SRC + + ,#+RESULTS: read-literal-example + : A literal example + : on two lines for you. + #+end_example + +Indexing variable values enables referencing portions of a variable. +Indexes are 0 based with negative values counting backwards from the +end. If an index is separated by commas then each subsequent section +indexes as the next dimension. Note that this indexing occurs +/before/ other table-related header arguments are applied, such as +=hlines=, =colnames= and =rownames=. The following example assigns +the last cell of the first row the table =example-table= to the +variable =data=: + +#+begin_example +,#+NAME: example-table +| 1 | a | +| 2 | b | +| 3 | c | +| 4 | d | + +,#+BEGIN_SRC emacs-lisp :var data=example-table[0,-1] + data +,#+END_SRC + +,#+RESULTS: +: a +#+end_example + +Two integers separated by a colon reference a range of variable +values. In that case the entire inclusive range is referenced. For +example the following assigns the middle three rows of =example-table= +to =data=. + +#+begin_example +,#+NAME: example-table +| 1 | a | +| 2 | b | +| 3 | c | +| 4 | d | +| 5 | 3 | + +,#+BEGIN_SRC emacs-lisp :var data=example-table[1:3] + data +,#+END_SRC + +,#+RESULTS: +| 2 | b | +| 3 | c | +| 4 | d | +#+end_example + +To pick the entire range, use an empty index, or the single character +=*=. =0:-1= does the same thing. Example below shows how to +reference the first column only. + +#+begin_example +,#+NAME: example-table +| 1 | a | +| 2 | b | +| 3 | c | +| 4 | d | + +,#+BEGIN_SRC emacs-lisp :var data=example-table[,0] + data +,#+END_SRC + +,#+RESULTS: +| 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | +#+end_example + +Index referencing can be used for tables and code blocks. Index +referencing can handle any number of dimensions. Commas delimit +multiple dimensions, as shown below. + +#+begin_example +,#+NAME: 3D +,#+BEGIN_SRC emacs-lisp + '(((1 2 3) (4 5 6) (7 8 9)) + ((10 11 12) (13 14 15) (16 17 18)) + ((19 20 21) (22 23 24) (25 26 27))) +,#+END_SRC + +,#+BEGIN_SRC emacs-lisp :var data=3D[1,,1] + data +,#+END_SRC + +,#+RESULTS: +| 11 | 14 | 17 | +#+end_example + +Note that row names and column names are not removed prior to variable +indexing. You need to take them into account, even when =colnames= or +=rownames= header arguments remove them. + +Emacs lisp code can also set the values for variables. To +differentiate a value from Lisp code, Org interprets any value +starting with =(=, =[=, ='= or =`= as Emacs Lisp code. The result of +evaluating that code is then assigned to the value of that variable. +The following example shows how to reliably query and pass the file +name of the Org mode buffer to a code block using headers. We need +reliability here because the file's name could change once the code in +the block starts executing. + +#+begin_example +,#+BEGIN_SRC sh :var filename=(buffer-file-name) :exports both + wc -w $filename +,#+END_SRC +#+end_example + +Note that values read from tables and lists are not mistakenly +evaluated as Emacs Lisp code, as illustrated in the following example. + +#+begin_example +,#+NAME: table +| (a b c) | + +,#+HEADER: :var data=table[0,0] +,#+BEGIN_SRC perl + $data +,#+END_SRC + +,#+RESULTS: +: (a b c) +#+end_example + +*** Using sessions +:PROPERTIES: +:UNNUMBERED: notoc +:END: + +#+cindex: using sessions in code blocks +#+cindex: @samp{session}, header argument +Two code blocks can share the same environment. The =session= header +argument is for running multiple source code blocks under one session. +Org runs code blocks with the same session name in the same +interpreter process. + +- =none= :: + + Default. Each code block gets a new interpreter process to execute. + The process terminates once the block is evaluated. + +- {{{var(STRING)}}} :: + + Any string besides =none= turns that string into the name of that + session. For example, =:session STRING= names it =STRING=. If + =session= has no value, then the session name is derived from the + source language identifier. Subsequent blocks with the same source + code language use the same session. Depending on the language, + state variables, code from other blocks, and the overall interpreted + environment may be shared. Some interpreted languages support + concurrent sessions when subsequent source code language blocks + change session names. + +Only languages that provide interactive evaluation can have session +support. Not all languages provide this support, such as C and ditaa. +Even languages, such as Python and Haskell, that do support +interactive evaluation impose limitations on allowable language +constructs that can run interactively. Org inherits those limitations +for those code blocks running in a session. + +*** Choosing a working directory +:PROPERTIES: +:UNNUMBERED: notoc +:END: + +#+cindex: working directory, in a code block +#+cindex: @samp{dir}, header argument +#+cindex: @samp{mkdirp}, header argument +The =dir= header argument specifies the default directory during code +block execution. If it is absent, then the directory associated with +the current buffer is used. In other words, supplying =:dir +DIRECTORY= temporarily has the same effect as changing the current +directory with {{{kbd(M-x cd RET DIRECTORY)}}}, and then not setting +=dir=. Under the surface, =dir= simply sets the value of the Emacs +variable ~default-directory~. Setting =mkdirp= header argument to +a non-~nil~ value creates the directory, if necessary. + +For example, to save the plot file in the =Work/= folder of the home +directory---notice tilde is expanded: + +#+begin_example +,#+BEGIN_SRC R :file myplot.png :dir ~/Work + matplot(matrix(rnorm(100), 10), type="l") +,#+END_SRC +#+end_example + +To evaluate the code block on a remote machine, supply a remote +directory name using Tramp syntax. For example: + +#+begin_example +,#+BEGIN_SRC R :file plot.png :dir /scp:dand@yakuba.princeton.edu: + plot(1:10, main=system("hostname", intern=TRUE)) +,#+END_SRC +#+end_example + +Org first captures the text results as usual for insertion in the Org +file. Then Org also inserts a link to the remote file, thanks to +Emacs Tramp. Org constructs the remote path to the file name from +=dir= and ~default-directory~, as illustrated here: + +: [[file:/scp:dand@yakuba.princeton.edu:/home/dand/plot.png][plot.png]] + +When =dir= is used with =session=, Org sets the starting directory for +a new session. But Org does not alter the directory of an already +existing session. + +Do not use =dir= with =:exports results= or with =:exports both= to +avoid Org inserting incorrect links to remote files. That is because +Org does not expand ~default directory~ to avoid some underlying +portability issues. + +*** Inserting headers and footers +:PROPERTIES: +:UNNUMBERED: notoc +:END: + +#+cindex: headers, in code blocks +#+cindex: footers, in code blocks +#+cindex: @samp{prologue}, header argument +The =prologue= header argument is for appending to the top of the code +block for execution, like a reset instruction. For example, you may +use =:prologue "reset"= in a Gnuplot code block or, for every such +block: + +#+begin_src emacs-lisp +(add-to-list 'org-babel-default-header-args:gnuplot + '((:prologue . "reset"))) + +#+end_src + +#+cindex: @samp{epilogue}, header argument +Likewise, the value of the =epilogue= header argument is for appending +to the end of the code block for execution. + +** Evaluating Code Blocks +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: Place results of evaluation in the Org buffer. +:END: +#+cindex: code block, evaluating +#+cindex: source code, evaluating +#+cindex: @samp{RESULTS}, keyword + +A note about security: With code evaluation comes the risk of harm. +Org safeguards by prompting for user's permission before executing any +code in the source block. To customize this safeguard, or disable it, +see [[*Code Evaluation and Security Issues]]. + +*** How to evaluate source code +:PROPERTIES: +:UNNUMBERED: notoc +:END: + +Org captures the results of the code block evaluation and inserts them +in the Org file, right after the code block. The insertion point is +after a newline and the =RESULTS= keyword. Org creates the =RESULTS= +keyword if one is not already there. + +By default, Org enables only Emacs Lisp code blocks for execution. +See [[*Languages]] to enable other languages. + +#+kindex: C-c C-c +#+kindex: C-c C-v e +#+findex: org-babel-execute-src-block +Org provides many ways to execute code blocks. {{{kbd(C-c C-c)}}} or +{{{kbd(C-c C-v e)}}} with the point on a code block[fn:142] calls the +~org-babel-execute-src-block~ function, which executes the code in the +block, collects the results, and inserts them in the buffer. + +#+cindex: @samp{CALL}, keyword +#+vindex: org-babel-inline-result-wrap +By calling a named code block[fn:143] from an Org mode buffer or +a table. Org can call the named code blocks from the current Org mode +buffer or from the "Library of Babel" (see [[*Library of Babel]]). + +The syntax for =CALL= keyword is: + +#+begin_example +,#+CALL: () +,#+CALL: []() +#+end_example + +The syntax for inline named code blocks is: + +#+begin_example +... call_() ... +... call_[]()[] ... +#+end_example + +When inline syntax is used, the result is wrapped based on the +variable ~org-babel-inline-result-wrap~, which by default is set to +~"=%s="~ to produce verbatim text suitable for markup. + +- == :: + + This is the name of the code block (see [[*Structure of Code Blocks]]) + to be evaluated in the current document. If the block is located in + another file, start == with the file name followed by + a colon. For example, in order to execute a block named =clear-data= + in =file.org=, you can write the following: + + : #+CALL: file.org:clear-data() + +- == :: + + Org passes arguments to the code block using standard function call + syntax. For example, a =#+CALL:= line that passes =4= to a code + block named =double=, which declares the header argument =:var n=2=, + would be written as: + + : #+CALL: double(n=4) + + #+texinfo: @noindent + Note how this function call syntax is different from the header + argument syntax. + +- == :: + + Org passes inside header arguments to the named code block using the + header argument syntax. Inside header arguments apply to code block + evaluation. For example, =[:results output]= collects results + printed to stdout during code execution of that block. Note how + this header argument syntax is different from the function call + syntax. + +- == :: + + End header arguments affect the results returned by the code block. + For example, =:results html= wraps the results in a =#+BEGIN_EXPORT + html= block before inserting the results in the Org buffer. + +*** Limit code block evaluation +:PROPERTIES: +:UNNUMBERED: notoc +:END: + +#+cindex: @samp{eval}, header argument +#+cindex: control code block evaluation +The =eval= header argument can limit evaluation of specific code +blocks and =CALL= keyword. It is useful for protection against +evaluating untrusted code blocks by prompting for a confirmation. + +- =never= or =no= :: + + Org never evaluates the source code. + +- =query= :: + + Org prompts the user for permission to evaluate the source code. + +- =never-export= or =no-export= :: + + Org does not evaluate the source code when exporting, yet the user + can evaluate it interactively. + +- =query-export= :: + + Org prompts the user for permission to evaluate the source code + during export. + +If =eval= header argument is not set, then Org determines whether to +evaluate the source code from the ~org-confirm-babel-evaluate~ +variable (see [[*Code Evaluation and Security Issues]]). + +*** Cache results of evaluation +:PROPERTIES: +:UNNUMBERED: notoc +:END: + +#+cindex: @samp{cache}, header argument +#+cindex: cache results of code evaluation +The =cache= header argument is for caching results of evaluating code +blocks. Caching results can avoid re-evaluating a code block that +have not changed since the previous run. To benefit from the cache +and avoid redundant evaluations, the source block must have a result +already present in the buffer, and neither the header +arguments---including the value of =var= references---nor the text of +the block itself has changed since the result was last computed. This +feature greatly helps avoid long-running calculations. For some edge +cases, however, the cached results may not be reliable. + +The caching feature is best for when code blocks are pure functions, +that is functions that return the same value for the same input +arguments (see [[*Environment of a Code Block]]), and that do not have +side effects, and do not rely on external variables other than the +input arguments. Functions that depend on a timer, file system +objects, and random number generators are clearly unsuitable for +caching. + +A note of warning: when =cache= is used in a session, caching may +cause unexpected results. + +When the caching mechanism tests for any source code changes, it does +not expand noweb style references (see [[*Noweb Reference Syntax]]). + +The =cache= header argument can have one of two values: =yes= or =no=. + +- =no= :: + + Default. No caching of results; code block evaluated every time. + +- =yes= :: + + Whether to run the code or return the cached results is determined + by comparing the SHA1 hash value of the combined code block and + arguments passed to it. This hash value is packed on the + =#+RESULTS:= line from previous evaluation. When hash values match, + Org does not evaluate the code block. When hash values mismatch, + Org evaluates the code block, inserts the results, recalculates the + hash value, and updates =#+RESULTS:= line. + +In this example, both functions are cached. But =caller= runs only if +the result from =random= has changed since the last run. + +#+begin_example +,#+NAME: random +,#+BEGIN_SRC R :cache yes + runif(1) +,#+END_SRC + +,#+RESULTS[a2a72cd647ad44515fab62e144796432793d68e1]: random +0.4659510825295 + +,#+NAME: caller +,#+BEGIN_SRC emacs-lisp :var x=random :cache yes + x +,#+END_SRC + +,#+RESULTS[bec9c8724e397d5df3b696502df3ed7892fc4f5f]: caller +0.254227238707244 +#+end_example + +** Results of Evaluation +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: Choosing a results type, post-processing... +:END: +#+cindex: code block, results of evaluation +#+cindex: source code, results of evaluation + +#+cindex: @samp{results}, header argument +How Org handles results of a code block execution depends on many +header arguments working together. The primary determinant, however, +is the =results= header argument. It accepts four classes of options. +Each code block can take only one option per class: + +- Collection :: + + For how the results should be collected from the code block; + +- Type :: + + For which type of result the code block will return; affects how Org + processes and inserts results in the Org buffer; + +- Format :: + + For the result; affects how Org processes results; + +- Handling :: + + For inserting results once they are properly formatted. + +*** Collection +:PROPERTIES: +:UNNUMBERED: notoc +:END: + +Collection options specify the results. Choose one of the options; +they are mutually exclusive. + +- =value= :: + + Default for most Babel libraries[fn:143]. Functional mode. Org + gets the value by wrapping the code in a function definition in the + language of the source block. That is why when using =:results + value=, code should execute like a function and return a value. For + languages like Python, an explicit ~return~ statement is mandatory + when using =:results value=. Result is the value returned by the + last statement in the code block. + + When evaluating the code block in a session (see [[*Environment of + a Code Block]]), Org passes the code to an interpreter running as an + interactive Emacs inferior process. Org gets the value from the + source code interpreter's last statement output. Org has to use + language-specific methods to obtain the value. For example, from + the variable ~_~ in Ruby, and the value of ~.Last.value~ in R. + +- =output= :: + + Scripting mode. Org passes the code to an external process running + the interpreter. Org returns the contents of the standard output + stream as text results. + + When using a session, Org passes the code to the interpreter running + as an interactive Emacs inferior process. Org concatenates any text + output from the interpreter and returns the collection as a result. + +*** Type +:PROPERTIES: +:UNNUMBERED: notoc +:END: + +Type tells what result types to expect from the execution of the code +block. Choose one of the options; they are mutually exclusive. The +default behavior is to automatically determine the result type. + +#+attr_texinfo: :sep , +- =table=, =vector= :: + + Interpret the results as an Org table. If the result is a single + value, create a table with one row and one column. Usage example: + =:results value table=. + + #+cindex: @samp{hlines}, header argument + In-between each table row or below the table headings, sometimes + results have horizontal lines, which are also known as "hlines". + The =hlines= argument with the default =no= value strips such lines + from the input table. For most code, this is desirable, or else + those =hline= symbols raise unbound variable errors. A =yes= + accepts such lines, as demonstrated in the following example. + + #+begin_example + ,#+NAME: many-cols + | a | b | c | + |---+---+---| + | d | e | f | + |---+---+---| + | g | h | i | + + ,#+NAME: no-hline + ,#+BEGIN_SRC python :var tab=many-cols :hlines no + return tab + ,#+END_SRC + + ,#+RESULTS: no-hline + | a | b | c | + | d | e | f | + | g | h | i | + + ,#+NAME: hlines + ,#+BEGIN_SRC python :var tab=many-cols :hlines yes + return tab + ,#+END_SRC + + ,#+RESULTS: hlines + | a | b | c | + |---+---+---| + | d | e | f | + |---+---+---| + | g | h | i | + #+end_example + +- =list= :: + + Interpret the results as an Org list. If the result is a single + value, create a list of one element. + +- =scalar=, =verbatim= :: + + Interpret literally and insert as quoted text. Do not create + a table. Usage example: =:results value verbatim=. + +- =file= :: + + Interpret as a filename. Save the results of execution of the code + block to that file, then insert a link to it. You can control both + the filename and the description associated to the link. + + #+cindex: @samp{file}, header argument + #+cindex: @samp{output-dir}, header argument + Org first tries to generate the filename from the value of the + =file= header argument and the directory specified using the + =output-dir= header arguments. If =output-dir= is not specified, + Org assumes it is the current directory. + + #+begin_example + ,#+BEGIN_SRC asymptote :results value file :file circle.pdf :output-dir img/ + size(2cm); + draw(unitcircle); + ,#+END_SRC + #+end_example + + #+cindex: @samp{file-ext}, header argument + If =file= header argument is missing, Org generates the base name of + the output file from the name of the code block, and its extension + from the =file-ext= header argument. In that case, both the name + and the extension are mandatory. + + #+begin_example + ,#+name: circle + ,#+BEGIN_SRC asymptote :results value file :file-ext pdf + size(2cm); + draw(unitcircle); + ,#+END_SRC + #+end_example + + #+cindex: @samp{file-desc}, header argument + The =file-desc= header argument defines the description (see [[*Link + Format]]) for the link. If =file-desc= is present but has no value, + the =file= value is used as the link description. When this + argument is not present, the description is omitted. If you want to + provide the =file-desc= argument but omit the description, you can + provide it with an empty vector (i.e., :file-desc []). + + #+cindex: @samp{sep}, header argument + By default, Org assumes that a table written to a file has + TAB-delimited output. You can choose a different separator with + the =sep= header argument. + + #+cindex: @samp{file-mode}, header argument + The =file-mode= header argument defines the file permissions. To + make it executable, use =:file-mode (identity #o755)=. + + #+begin_example + ,#+BEGIN_SRC shell :results file :file script.sh :file-mode (identity #o755) + echo "#!/bin/bash" + echo "echo Hello World" + ,#+END_SRC + #+end_example + +*** Format +:PROPERTIES: +:UNNUMBERED: notoc +:END: + +Format pertains to the type of the result returned by the code block. +Choose one of the options; they are mutually exclusive. The default +follows from the type specified above. + +#+attr_texinfo: :sep , +- =code= :: + + Result enclosed in a code block. Useful for parsing. Usage + example: =:results value code=. + +- =drawer= :: + + Result wrapped in a =RESULTS= drawer. Useful for containing =raw= + or =org= results for later scripting and automated processing. + Usage example: =:results value drawer=. + +- =html= :: + + Results enclosed in a =BEGIN_EXPORT html= block. Usage example: + =:results value html=. + +- =latex= :: + + Results enclosed in a =BEGIN_EXPORT latex= block. Usage example: + =:results value latex=. + +- =link=, =graphics= :: + + When used along with =file= type, the result is a link to the file + specified in =:file= header argument. However, unlike plain =file= + type, nothing is written to the disk. The block is used for its + side-effects only, as in the following example: + + #+begin_example + ,#+begin_src shell :results file link :file "download.tar.gz" + wget -c "https://example.com/download.tar.gz" + ,#+end_src + #+end_example + +- =org= :: + + Results enclosed in a =BEGIN_SRC org= block. For comma-escape, + either {{{kbd(TAB)}}} in the block, or export the file. Usage + example: =:results value org=. + +- =pp= :: + + Result converted to pretty-print source code. Enclosed in a code + block. Languages supported: Emacs Lisp, Python, and Ruby. Usage + example: =:results value pp=. + +- =raw= :: + + Interpreted as raw Org mode. Inserted directly into the buffer. + Aligned if it is a table. Usage example: =:results value raw=. + +#+cindex: @samp{wrap}, header argument +The =wrap= header argument unconditionally marks the results block by +appending strings to =#+BEGIN_= and =#+END_=. If no string is +specified, Org wraps the results in a =#+BEGIN_results= +... =#+END_results= block. It takes precedent over the =results= +value listed above. E.g., + +#+begin_example +,#+BEGIN_SRC emacs-lisp :results html :wrap EXPORT markdown +"Welcome back to the 90's" +,#+END_SRC + +,#+RESULTS: +,#+BEGIN_EXPORT markdown +Welcome back to the 90's +,#+END_EXPORT +#+end_example + +*** Handling +:PROPERTIES: +:UNNUMBERED: notoc +:END: + +Handling options after collecting the results. + +- =replace= :: + + Default. Insert results in the Org buffer. Remove previous + results. Usage example: =:results output replace=. + +- =silent= :: + + Do not insert results in the Org mode buffer, but echo them in the + minibuffer. Usage example: =:results output silent=. + +- =none= :: + + Do not process results at all. No inserting in the Org mode buffer + nor echo them in the minibuffer. Usage example: =:results none=. + +- =append= :: + + Append results to the Org buffer. Latest results are at the bottom. + Does not remove previous results. Usage example: =:results output + append=. + +- =prepend= :: + + Prepend results to the Org buffer. Latest results are at the top. + Does not remove previous results. Usage example: =:results output + prepend=. + +*** Post-processing +:PROPERTIES: +:UNNUMBERED: notoc +:END: + +#+cindex: @samp{post}, header argument +#+cindex: @samp{*this*}, in @samp{post} header argument +The =post= header argument is for post-processing results from block +evaluation. When =post= has any value, Org binds the results to +~*this*~ variable for easy passing to =var= header argument +specifications (see [[*Environment of a Code Block]]). That makes results +available to other code blocks, or even for direct Emacs Lisp code +execution. + +The following two examples illustrate =post= header argument in +action. The first one shows how to attach an =ATTR_LATEX= keyword +using =post=. + +#+begin_example +,#+NAME: attr_wrap +,#+BEGIN_SRC sh :var data="" :var width="\\textwidth" :results output + echo "#+ATTR_LATEX: :width $width" + echo "$data" +,#+END_SRC + +,#+HEADER: :file /tmp/it.png +,#+BEGIN_SRC dot :post attr_wrap(width="5cm", data=*this*) :results drawer + digraph{ + a -> b; + b -> c; + c -> a; + } +,#+end_src + +,#+RESULTS: +:RESULTS: +,#+ATTR_LATEX :width 5cm +[[file:/tmp/it.png]] +:END: +#+end_example + +The second example shows use of =colnames= header argument in =post= +to pass data between code blocks. + +#+begin_example +,#+NAME: round-tbl +,#+BEGIN_SRC emacs-lisp :var tbl="" fmt="%.3f" + (mapcar (lambda (row) + (mapcar (lambda (cell) + (if (numberp cell) + (format fmt cell) + cell)) + row)) + tbl) +,#+end_src + +,#+BEGIN_SRC R :colnames yes :post round-tbl[:colnames yes](*this*) + set.seed(42) + data.frame(foo=rnorm(1)) +,#+END_SRC + +,#+RESULTS: +| foo | +|-------| +| 1.371 | +#+end_example + +** Exporting Code Blocks +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: Export contents and/or results. +:END: +#+cindex: code block, exporting +#+cindex: source code, exporting + +It is possible to export the /code/ of code blocks, the /results/ of +code block evaluation, /both/ the code and the results of code block +evaluation, or /none/. Org defaults to exporting /code/ for most +languages. For some languages, such as ditaa, Org defaults to +/results/. To export just the body of code blocks, see [[*Literal +Examples]]. To selectively export sub-trees of an Org document, see +[[*Exporting]]. + +#+cindex: @samp{exports}, header argument +The =exports= header argument is to specify if that part of the Org +file is exported to, say, HTML or LaTeX formats. + +- =code= :: + + The default. The body of code is included into the exported file. + Example: =:exports code=. + +- =results= :: + + The results of evaluation of the code is included in the exported + file. Example: =:exports results=. + +- =both= :: + + Both the code and results of evaluation are included in the exported + file. Example: =:exports both=. + +- =none= :: + + Neither the code nor the results of evaluation is included in the + exported file. Whether the code is evaluated at all depends on + other options. Example: =:exports none=. + +#+vindex: org-export-use-babel +To stop Org from evaluating code blocks to speed exports, use the +header argument =:eval never-export= (see [[*Evaluating Code Blocks]]). +To stop Org from evaluating code blocks for greater security, set the +~org-export-use-babel~ variable to ~nil~, but understand that header +arguments will have no effect. + +Turning off evaluation comes in handy when batch processing. For +example, markup languages for wikis, which have a high risk of +untrusted code. Stopping code block evaluation also stops evaluation +of all header arguments of the code block. This may not be desirable +in some circumstances. So during export, to allow evaluation of just +the header arguments but not any code evaluation in the source block, +set =:eval never-export= (see [[*Evaluating Code Blocks]]). + +Org never evaluates code blocks in commented sub-trees when exporting +(see [[*Comment Lines]]). On the other hand, Org does evaluate code +blocks in sub-trees excluded from export (see [[*Export Settings]]). + +** Extracting Source Code +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: Create pure source code files. +:END: +#+cindex: tangling +#+cindex: source code, extracting +#+cindex: code block, extracting source code + +Extracting source code from code blocks is a basic task in literate +programming. Org has features to make this easy. In literate +programming parlance, documents on creation are /woven/ with code and +documentation, and on export, the code is tangled for execution by +a computer. Org facilitates weaving and tangling for producing, +maintaining, sharing, and exporting literate programming documents. +Org provides extensive customization options for extracting source +code. + +When Org tangles code blocks, it expands, merges, and transforms them. +Then Org recomposes them into one or more separate files, as +configured through the options. During this tangling process, Org +expands variables in the source code, and resolves any noweb style +references (see [[*Noweb Reference Syntax]]). + +*** Header arguments +:PROPERTIES: +:UNNUMBERED: notoc +:END: + +#+cindex: @samp{tangle}, header argument +The =tangle= header argument specifies if the code block is exported +to source file(s). + +- =yes= :: + + Export the code block to source file. The file name for the source + file is derived from the name of the Org file, and the file + extension is derived from the source code language identifier. + Example: =:tangle yes=. + +- =no= :: + + The default. Do not extract the code in a source code file. + Example: =:tangle no=. + +- {{{var(FILENAME)}}} :: + + Export the code block to source file whose file name is derived from + any string passed to the =tangle= header argument. Org derives the + file name as being relative to the directory of the Org file's + location. Example: =:tangle FILENAME=. + +#+cindex: @samp{mkdirp}, header argument +The =mkdirp= header argument creates parent directories for tangled +files if the directory does not exist. A =yes= value enables +directory creation whereas =no= inhibits it. + +#+cindex: @samp{comments}, header argument +The =comments= header argument controls inserting comments into +tangled files. These are above and beyond whatever comments may +already exist in the code block. + +- =no= :: + + The default. Do not insert any extra comments during tangling. + +- =link= :: + + Wrap the code block in comments. Include links pointing back to the + place in the Org file from where the code was tangled. + +- =yes= :: + + Kept for backward compatibility; same as =link=. + +- =org= :: + + Nearest headline text from Org file is inserted as comment. The + exact text that is inserted is picked from the leading context of + the source block. + +- =both= :: + + Includes both =link= and =org= options. + +- =noweb= :: + + Includes =link= option, expands noweb references (see [[*Noweb + Reference Syntax]]), and wraps them in link comments inside the body + of the code block. + +#+cindex: @samp{padline}, header argument +The =padline= header argument controls insertion of newlines to pad +source code in the tangled file. + +- =yes= :: + + Default. Insert a newline before and after each code block in the + tangled file. + +- =no= :: + + Do not insert newlines to pad the tangled code blocks. + +#+cindex: @samp{shebang}, header argument +The =shebang= header argument can turn results into executable script +files. By setting it to a string value---for example, =:shebang +"#!/bin/bash"=---Org inserts that string as the first line of the +tangled file that the code block is extracted to. Org then turns on +the tangled file's executable permission. + +#+cindex: @samp{tangle-mode}, header argument +The =tangle-mode= header argument specifies what permissions to set +for tangled files by ~set-file-modes~. For example, to make +a read-only tangled file, use =:tangle-mode (identity #o444)=. To +make it executable, use =:tangle-mode (identity #o755)=. It also +overrides executable permission granted by =shebang=. When multiple +source code blocks tangle to a single file with different and +conflicting =tangle-mode= header arguments, Org's behavior is +undefined. + +#+cindex: @samp{no-expand}, header argument +By default Org expands code blocks during tangling. The =no-expand= +header argument turns off such expansions. Note that one side-effect +of expansion by ~org-babel-expand-src-block~ also assigns values (see +[[*Environment of a Code Block]]) to variables. Expansions also replace +noweb references with their targets (see [[*Noweb Reference Syntax]]). +Some of these expansions may cause premature assignment, hence this +option. This option makes a difference only for tangling. It has no +effect when exporting since code blocks for execution have to be +expanded anyway. + +*** Functions +:PROPERTIES: +:UNNUMBERED: notoc +:END: + +- ~org-babel-tangle~ :: + + #+findex: org-babel-tangle + #+kindex: C-c C-v t + Tangle the current file. Bound to {{{kbd(C-c C-v t)}}}. + + With prefix argument only tangle the current code block. + +- ~org-babel-tangle-file~ :: + + #+findex: org-babel-tangle-file + #+kindex: C-c C-v f + Choose a file to tangle. Bound to {{{kbd(C-c C-v f)}}}. + +*** Tangle hooks +:PROPERTIES: +:UNNUMBERED: notoc +:END: + +- ~org-babel-post-tangle-hook~ :: + + #+vindex: org-babel-post-tangle-hook + This hook is run from within code files tangled by + ~org-babel-tangle~, making it suitable for post-processing, + compilation, and evaluation of code in the tangled files. + +*** Jumping between code and Org +:PROPERTIES: +:UNNUMBERED: notoc +:END: + +#+findex: org-babel-tangle-jump-to-org +Debuggers normally link errors and messages back to the source code. +But for tangled files, we want to link back to the Org file, not to +the tangled source file. To make this extra jump, Org uses +~org-babel-tangle-jump-to-org~ function with two additional source +code block header arguments: + +1. Set =padline= to true---this is the default setting. +2. Set =comments= to =link=, which makes Org insert links to the Org + file. + +** Languages +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: List of supported code block languages. +:END: +#+cindex: babel, languages +#+cindex: source code, languages +#+cindex: code block, languages + +Code blocks in dozens of languages are supported. See Worg for +[[https://orgmode.org/worg/org-contrib/babel/languages/index.html][language specific documentation]]. + +#+vindex: org-babel-load-languages +By default, only Emacs Lisp is enabled for evaluation. To enable or +disable other languages, customize the ~org-babel-load-languages~ +variable either through the Emacs customization interface, or by +adding code to the init file as shown next. + +In this example, evaluation is disabled for Emacs Lisp, and enabled +for R. + +#+begin_src emacs-lisp +(org-babel-do-load-languages + 'org-babel-load-languages + '((emacs-lisp . nil) + (R . t))) +#+end_src + +Note that this is not the only way to enable a language. Org also +enables languages when loaded with ~require~ statement. For example, +the following enables execution of Clojure code blocks: + +#+begin_src emacs-lisp +(require 'ob-clojure) +#+end_src + +** Editing Source Code +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: Language major-mode editing. +:END: +#+cindex: code block, editing +#+cindex: source code, editing + +#+kindex: C-c ' +Use {{{kbd(C-c ')}}} to edit the current code block. It opens a new +major mode edit buffer containing the body of the source code block, +ready for any edits. Use {{{kbd(C-c ')}}} again to close the buffer +and return to the Org buffer. + +#+kindex: C-x C-s +#+vindex: org-edit-src-auto-save-idle-delay +#+cindex: auto-save, in code block editing +{{{kbd(C-x C-s)}}} saves the buffer and updates the contents of the +Org buffer. Set ~org-edit-src-auto-save-idle-delay~ to save the base +buffer after a certain idle delay time. Set +~org-edit-src-turn-on-auto-save~ to auto-save this buffer into +a separate file using Auto-save mode. + +While editing the source code in the major mode, the Org Src minor +mode remains active. It provides these customization variables as +described below. For even more variables, look in the customization +group ~org-edit-structure~. + +- ~org-src-lang-modes~ :: + + #+vindex: org-src-lang-modes + If an Emacs major-mode named ~-mode~ exists, where + {{{var()}}} is the language identifier from code block's + header line, then the edit buffer uses that major mode. Use this + variable to arbitrarily map language identifiers to major modes. + +- ~org-src-window-setup~ :: + + #+vindex: org-src-window-setup + For specifying Emacs window arrangement when the new edit buffer is + created. + +- ~org-src-preserve-indentation~ :: + + #+cindex: indentation, in code blocks + #+vindex: org-src-preserve-indentation + Default is ~nil~. Source code is indented. This indentation + applies during export or tangling, and depending on the context, may + alter leading spaces and tabs. When non-~nil~, source code is + aligned with the leftmost column. No lines are modified during + export or tangling, which is very useful for white-space sensitive + languages, such as Python. + +- ~org-src-ask-before-returning-to-edit-buffer~ :: + + #+vindex: org-src-ask-before-returning-to-edit-buffer + When ~nil~, Org returns to the edit buffer without further prompts. + The default prompts for a confirmation. + +#+vindex: org-src-fontify-natively +#+vindex: org-src-block-faces +Set ~org-src-fontify-natively~ to non-~nil~ to turn on native code +fontification in the /Org/ buffer. Fontification of code blocks can +give visual separation of text and code on the display page. To +further customize the appearance of ~org-block~ for specific +languages, customize ~org-src-block-faces~. The following example +shades the background of regular blocks, and colors source blocks only +for Python and Emacs Lisp languages. + +#+begin_src emacs-lisp +(require 'color) +(set-face-attribute 'org-block nil :background + (color-darken-name + (face-attribute 'default :background) 3)) + +(setq org-src-block-faces '(("emacs-lisp" (:background "#EEE2FF")) + ("python" (:background "#E5FFB8")))) +#+end_src + +** Noweb Reference Syntax +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: Literate programming in Org mode. +:END: +#+cindex: code block, noweb reference +#+cindex: syntax, noweb +#+cindex: source code, noweb reference + +#+cindex: @samp{noweb-ref}, header argument +Source code blocks can include references to other source code blocks, +using a noweb[fn:144] style syntax: + +: <> + +#+texinfo: @noindent +where {{{var(CODE-BLOCK-ID)}}} refers to either the =NAME= of a single +source code block, or a collection of one or more source code blocks +sharing the same =noweb-ref= header argument (see [[*Using Header +Arguments]]). Org can replace such references with the source code of +the block or blocks being referenced, or, in the case of a single +source code block named with =NAME=, with the results of an evaluation +of that block. + +#+cindex: @samp{noweb}, header argument +The =noweb= header argument controls expansion of noweb syntax +references. Expansions occur when source code blocks are evaluated, +tangled, or exported. + +- =no= :: + + Default. No expansion of noweb syntax references in the body of the + code when evaluating, tangling, or exporting. + +- =yes= :: + + Expansion of noweb syntax references in the body of the code block + when evaluating, tangling, or exporting. + +- =tangle= :: + + Expansion of noweb syntax references in the body of the code block + when tangling. No expansion when evaluating or exporting. + +- =no-export= :: + + Expansion of noweb syntax references in the body of the code block + when evaluating or tangling. No expansion when exporting. + +- =strip-export= :: + + Expansion of noweb syntax references in the body of the code block + when expanding prior to evaluating or tangling. Removes noweb + syntax references when exporting. + +- =eval= :: + + Expansion of noweb syntax references in the body of the code block + only before evaluating. + +In the most simple case, the contents of a single source block is +inserted within other blocks. Thus, in following example, + +#+begin_example +,#+NAME: initialization +,#+BEGIN_SRC emacs-lisp + (setq sentence "Never a foot too far, even.") +,#+END_SRC + +,#+BEGIN_SRC emacs-lisp :noweb yes + <> + (reverse sentence) +,#+END_SRC +#+end_example + +#+texinfo: @noindent +the second code block is expanded as + +#+begin_example +,#+BEGIN_SRC emacs-lisp :noweb yes + (setq sentence "Never a foot too far, even.") + (reverse sentence) +,#+END_SRC +#+end_example + +You may also include the contents of multiple blocks sharing a common +=noweb-ref= header argument, which can be set at the file, sub-tree, +or code block level. In the example Org file shown next, the body of +the source code in each block is extracted for concatenation to a pure +code file when tangled. + +#+begin_example +,#+BEGIN_SRC sh :tangle yes :noweb yes :shebang #!/bin/sh + <> +,#+END_SRC +,* the mount point of the fullest disk + :PROPERTIES: + :header-args: :noweb-ref fullest-disk + :END: + +,** query all mounted disks +,#+BEGIN_SRC sh + df \ +,#+END_SRC + +,** strip the header row +,#+BEGIN_SRC sh + |sed '1d' \ +,#+END_SRC + +,** output mount point of fullest disk +,#+BEGIN_SRC sh + |awk '{if (u < +$5) {u = +$5; m = $6}} END {print m}' +,#+END_SRC +#+end_example + +#+cindex: @samp{noweb-sep}, header argument +By default a newline separates each noweb reference concatenation. To +use a different separator, edit the =noweb-sep= header argument. + +Alternatively, Org can include the results of evaluation of a single +code block rather than its body. Evaluation occurs when parentheses, +possibly including arguments, are appended to the code block name, as +shown below. + +: <> + +Note that in this case, a code block name set by =NAME= keyword is +required; the reference set by =noweb-ref= will not work when +evaluation is desired. + +Here is an example that demonstrates how the exported content changes +when noweb style references are used with parentheses versus without. +Given: + +#+begin_example +,#+NAME: some-code +,#+BEGIN_SRC python :var num=0 :results output :exports none + print(num*10) +,#+END_SRC +#+end_example + +#+texinfo: @noindent +this code block: + +#+begin_example +,#+BEGIN_SRC text :noweb yes + <> +,#+END_SRC +#+end_example + +#+texinfo: @noindent +expands to: + +: print(num*10) + +Below, a similar noweb style reference is used, but with parentheses, +while setting a variable =num= to 10: + +#+begin_example +,#+BEGIN_SRC text :noweb yes + <> +,#+END_SRC +#+end_example + +#+texinfo: @noindent +Note that the expansion now contains the results of the code block +=some-code=, not the code block itself: + +: 100 + +Noweb insertions honor prefix characters that appear before the noweb +syntax reference. This behavior is illustrated in the following +example. Because the =<>= noweb reference appears behind the +SQL comment syntax, each line of the expanded noweb reference is +commented. With: + +#+begin_example +,#+NAME: example +,#+BEGIN_SRC text + this is the + multi-line body of example +,#+END_SRC +#+end_example + +#+texinfo: @noindent +this code block: + +#+begin_example +,#+BEGIN_SRC sql :noweb yes + ---<> +,#+END_SRC +#+end_example + +#+texinfo: @noindent +expands to: + +#+begin_example +,#+BEGIN_SRC sql :noweb yes + ---this is the + ---multi-line body of example +,#+END_SRC +#+end_example + +Since this change does not affect noweb replacement text without +newlines in them, inline noweb references are acceptable. + +This feature can also be used for management of indentation in +exported code snippets. With: + +#+begin_example +,#+NAME: if-true +,#+BEGIN_SRC python :exports none + print('do things when true') +,#+end_src + +,#+name: if-false +,#+begin_src python :exports none + print('do things when false') +,#+end_src +#+end_example + +#+texinfo: @noindent +this code block: + +#+begin_example +,#+begin_src python :noweb yes :results output + if true: + <> + else: + <> +,#+end_src +#+end_example + +#+texinfo: @noindent +expands to: + +#+begin_example +if true: + print('do things when true') +else: + print('do things when false') +#+end_example + +When in doubt about the outcome of a source code block expansion, you +can preview the results with the following command: + +- {{{kbd(C-c C-v v)}}} or {{{kbd(C-c C-v C-v)}}} (~org-babel-expand-src-block~) :: + + #+findex: org-babel-expand-src-block + #+kindex: C-c C-v v + #+kindex: C-c C-v C-v + Expand the current source code block according to its header + arguments and pop open the results in a preview buffer. + +** Library of Babel +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: Use and contribute to a library of useful code blocks. +:END: +#+cindex: babel, library of +#+cindex: source code, library +#+cindex: code block, library + +The "Library of Babel" is a collection of code blocks. Like +a function library, these code blocks can be called from other Org +files. A collection of useful code blocks is available on [[https://orgmode.org/worg/library-of-babel.html][Worg]]. For +remote code block evaluation syntax, see [[*Evaluating Code Blocks]]. + +#+kindex: C-c C-v i +#+findex: org-babel-lob-ingest +For any user to add code to the library, first save the code in +regular code blocks of an Org file, and then load the Org file with +~org-babel-lob-ingest~, which is bound to {{{kbd(C-c C-v i)}}}. + +** Key bindings and Useful Functions +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: Work quickly with code blocks. +:END: +#+cindex: code block, key bindings + +Many common Org mode key sequences are re-bound depending on +the context. + +Active key bindings in code blocks: + +#+kindex: C-c C-c +#+findex: org-babel-execute-src-block +#+kindex: C-c C-o +#+findex: org-babel-open-src-block-result +#+kindex: M-UP +#+findex: org-babel-load-in-session +#+kindex: M-DOWN +#+findex: org-babel-pop-to-session +#+attr_texinfo: :columns 0.2 0.55 +| Key binding | Function | +|--------------------+-----------------------------------| +| {{{kbd(C-c C-c)}}} | ~org-babel-execute-src-block~ | +| {{{kbd(C-c C-o)}}} | ~org-babel-open-src-block-result~ | +| {{{kbd(M-UP)}}} | ~org-babel-load-in-session~ | +| {{{kbd(M-DOWN)}}} | ~org-babel-pop-to-session~ | + +Active key bindings in Org mode buffer: + +#+kindex: C-c C-v p +#+kindex: C-c C-v C-p +#+kindex: C-c C-v n +#+kindex: C-c C-v C-n +#+kindex: C-c C-v e +#+kindex: C-c C-v C-e +#+kindex: C-c C-v o +#+kindex: C-c C-v C-o +#+kindex: C-c C-v v +#+kindex: C-c C-v C-v +#+kindex: C-c C-v u +#+kindex: C-c C-v C-u +#+kindex: C-c C-v g +#+kindex: C-c C-v C-g +#+kindex: C-c C-v r +#+kindex: C-c C-v C-r +#+kindex: C-c C-v b +#+kindex: C-c C-v C-b +#+kindex: C-c C-v s +#+kindex: C-c C-v C-s +#+kindex: C-c C-v d +#+kindex: C-c C-v C-d +#+kindex: C-c C-v t +#+kindex: C-c C-v C-t +#+kindex: C-c C-v f +#+kindex: C-c C-v C-f +#+kindex: C-c C-v c +#+kindex: C-c C-v C-c +#+kindex: C-c C-v j +#+kindex: C-c C-v C-j +#+kindex: C-c C-v l +#+kindex: C-c C-v C-l +#+kindex: C-c C-v i +#+kindex: C-c C-v C-i +#+kindex: C-c C-v I +#+kindex: C-c C-v C-I +#+kindex: C-c C-v z +#+kindex: C-c C-v C-z +#+kindex: C-c C-v a +#+kindex: C-c C-v C-a +#+kindex: C-c C-v h +#+kindex: C-c C-v C-h +#+kindex: C-c C-v x +#+kindex: C-c C-v C-x +#+findex: org-babel-previous-src-block +#+findex: org-babel-next-src-block +#+findex: org-babel-execute-maybe +#+findex: org-babel-open-src-block-result +#+findex: org-babel-expand-src-block +#+findex: org-babel-goto-src-block-head +#+findex: org-babel-goto-named-src-block +#+findex: org-babel-goto-named-result +#+findex: org-babel-execute-buffer +#+findex: org-babel-execute-subtree +#+findex: org-babel-demarcate-block +#+findex: org-babel-tangle +#+findex: org-babel-tangle-file +#+findex: org-babel-check-src-block +#+findex: org-babel-insert-header-arg +#+findex: org-babel-load-in-session +#+findex: org-babel-lob-ingest +#+findex: org-babel-view-src-block-info +#+findex: org-babel-switch-to-session-with-code +#+findex: org-babel-sha1-hash +#+findex: org-babel-describe-bindings +#+findex: org-babel-do-key-sequence-in-edit-buffer +#+attr_texinfo: :columns 0.45 0.55 +| Key binding | Function | +|------------------------------------------------+--------------------------------------------| +| {{{kbd(C-c C-v p)}}} or {{{kbd(C-c C-v C-p)}}} | ~org-babel-previous-src-block~ | +| {{{kbd(C-c C-v n)}}} or {{{kbd(C-c C-v C-n)}}} | ~org-babel-next-src-block~ | +| {{{kbd(C-c C-v e)}}} or {{{kbd(C-c C-v C-e)}}} | ~org-babel-execute-maybe~ | +| {{{kbd(C-c C-v o)}}} or {{{kbd(C-c C-v C-o)}}} | ~org-babel-open-src-block-result~ | +| {{{kbd(C-c C-v v)}}} or {{{kbd(C-c C-v C-v)}}} | ~org-babel-expand-src-block~ | +| {{{kbd(C-c C-v u)}}} or {{{kbd(C-c C-v C-u)}}} | ~org-babel-goto-src-block-head~ | +| {{{kbd(C-c C-v g)}}} or {{{kbd(C-c C-v C-g)}}} | ~org-babel-goto-named-src-block~ | +| {{{kbd(C-c C-v r)}}} or {{{kbd(C-c C-v C-r)}}} | ~org-babel-goto-named-result~ | +| {{{kbd(C-c C-v b)}}} or {{{kbd(C-c C-v C-b)}}} | ~org-babel-execute-buffer~ | +| {{{kbd(C-c C-v s)}}} or {{{kbd(C-c C-v C-s)}}} | ~org-babel-execute-subtree~ | +| {{{kbd(C-c C-v d)}}} or {{{kbd(C-c C-v C-d)}}} | ~org-babel-demarcate-block~ | +| {{{kbd(C-c C-v t)}}} or {{{kbd(C-c C-v C-t)}}} | ~org-babel-tangle~ | +| {{{kbd(C-c C-v f)}}} or {{{kbd(C-c C-v C-f)}}} | ~org-babel-tangle-file~ | +| {{{kbd(C-c C-v c)}}} or {{{kbd(C-c C-v C-c)}}} | ~org-babel-check-src-block~ | +| {{{kbd(C-c C-v j)}}} or {{{kbd(C-c C-v C-j)}}} | ~org-babel-insert-header-arg~ | +| {{{kbd(C-c C-v l)}}} or {{{kbd(C-c C-v C-l)}}} | ~org-babel-load-in-session~ | +| {{{kbd(C-c C-v i)}}} or {{{kbd(C-c C-v C-i)}}} | ~org-babel-lob-ingest~ | +| {{{kbd(C-c C-v I)}}} or {{{kbd(C-c C-v C-I)}}} | ~org-babel-view-src-block-info~ | +| {{{kbd(C-c C-v z)}}} or {{{kbd(C-c C-v C-z)}}} | ~org-babel-switch-to-session-with-code~ | +| {{{kbd(C-c C-v a)}}} or {{{kbd(C-c C-v C-a)}}} | ~org-babel-sha1-hash~ | +| {{{kbd(C-c C-v h)}}} or {{{kbd(C-c C-v C-h)}}} | ~org-babel-describe-bindings~ | +| {{{kbd(C-c C-v x)}}} or {{{kbd(C-c C-v C-x)}}} | ~org-babel-do-key-sequence-in-edit-buffer~ | + +** Batch Execution +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: Call functions from the command line. +:END: +#+cindex: code block, batch execution +#+cindex: source code, batch execution + +Org mode features, including working with source code facilities can +be invoked from the command line. This enables building shell scripts +for batch processing, running automated system tasks, and expanding +Org mode's usefulness. + +The sample script shows batch processing of multiple files using +~org-babel-tangle~. + +#+begin_example +#!/bin/sh +# Tangle files with Org mode +# +emacs -Q --batch --eval " + (progn + (require 'ob-tangle) + (dolist (file command-line-args-left) + (with-current-buffer (find-file-noselect file) + (org-babel-tangle)))) + " "$@" +#+end_example + +* Miscellaneous +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: All the rest which did not fit elsewhere. +:END: + +** Completion +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: @kbd{M-@key{TAB}} guesses completions. +:END: +#+cindex: completion, of @TeX{} symbols +#+cindex: completion, of TODO keywords +#+cindex: completion, of dictionary words +#+cindex: completion, of option keywords +#+cindex: completion, of tags +#+cindex: completion, of property keys +#+cindex: completion, of link abbreviations +#+cindex: @TeX{} symbol completion +#+cindex: TODO keywords completion +#+cindex: dictionary word completion +#+cindex: option keyword completion +#+cindex: tag completion +#+cindex: link abbreviations, completion of + +Org has in-buffer completions. Unlike minibuffer completions, which +are useful for quick command interactions, Org's in-buffer completions +are more suitable for content creation in Org documents. Type one or +more letters and invoke the hot key to complete the text in-place. +Depending on the context and the keys, Org offers different types of +completions. No minibuffer is involved. Such mode-specific hot keys +have become an integral part of Emacs and Org provides several +shortcuts. + +- {{{kbd(M-TAB)}}} :: + #+kindex: M-TAB + + Complete word at point. + + - At the beginning of an empty headline, complete TODO keywords. + + - After =\=, complete TeX symbols supported by the exporter. + + - After =:= in a headline, complete tags. Org deduces the list of + tags from the =TAGS= in-buffer option (see [[*Setting Tags]]), the + variable ~org-tag-alist~, or from all tags used in the current + buffer. + + - After =:= and not in a headline, complete property keys. The list + of keys is constructed dynamically from all keys used in the + current buffer. + + - After =[[=, complete link abbreviations (see [[*Link Abbreviations]]). + + - After =[[*=, complete headlines in the current buffer so that they + can be used in search links like: =[[*find this headline]]= + + - After =#+=, complete the special keywords like =TYP_TODO= or + file-specific =OPTIONS=. After option keyword is complete, + pressing {{{kbd(M-TAB)}}} again inserts example settings for this + keyword. + + - After =STARTUP= keyword, complete startup items. + + - When point is anywhere else, complete dictionary words using + Ispell. + +** Structure Templates +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: Quick insertion of structural elements. +:END: +#+cindex: template insertion +#+cindex: insertion, of templates + +With just a few keystrokes, it is possible to insert empty structural +blocks, such as =#+BEGIN_SRC= ... =#+END_SRC=, or to wrap existing +text in such a block. + +- {{{kbd(C-c C-\,)}}} (~org-insert-structure-template~) :: + + #+findex: org-insert-structure-template + #+kindex: C-c C-, + Prompt for a type of block structure, and insert the block at point. + If the region is active, it is wrapped in the block. First prompts + the user for keys, which are used to look up a structure type from + the variable below. If the key is {{{kbd(TAB)}}}, {{{kbd(RET)}}}, + or {{{kbd(SPC)}}}, the user is prompted to enter a block type. + +#+vindex: org-structure-template-alist +Available structure types are defined in +~org-structure-template-alist~, see the docstring for adding or +changing values. + +#+cindex: Tempo +#+cindex: template expansion +#+cindex: insertion, of templates +#+vindex: org-tempo-keywords-alist +Org Tempo expands snippets to structures defined in +~org-structure-template-alist~ and ~org-tempo-keywords-alist~. For +example, {{{kbd(< s TAB)}}} creates a code block. Enable it by +customizing ~org-modules~ or add =(require 'org-tempo)= to your Emacs +init file[fn:145]. + +#+attr_texinfo: :columns 0.1 0.9 +| {{{kbd(a)}}} | =#+BEGIN_EXPORT ascii= ... =#+END_EXPORT= | +| {{{kbd(c)}}} | =#+BEGIN_CENTER= ... =#+END_CENTER= | +| {{{kbd(C)}}} | =#+BEGIN_COMMENT= ... =#+END_COMMENT= | +| {{{kbd(e)}}} | =#+BEGIN_EXAMPLE= ... =#+END_EXAMPLE= | +| {{{kbd(E)}}} | =#+BEGIN_EXPORT= ... =#+END_EXPORT= | +| {{{kbd(h)}}} | =#+BEGIN_EXPORT html= ... =#+END_EXPORT= | +| {{{kbd(l)}}} | =#+BEGIN_EXPORT latex= ... =#+END_EXPORT= | +| {{{kbd(q)}}} | =#+BEGIN_QUOTE= ... =#+END_QUOTE= | +| {{{kbd(s)}}} | =#+BEGIN_SRC= ... =#+END_SRC= | +| {{{kbd(v)}}} | =#+BEGIN_VERSE= ... =#+END_VERSE= | + +** Speed Keys +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: Electric commands at the beginning of a headline. +:END: +#+cindex: speed keys + +Single keystrokes can execute custom commands in an Org file when +point is on a headline. Without the extra burden of a meta or +modifier key, Speed Keys can speed navigation or execute custom +commands. Besides faster navigation, Speed Keys may come in handy on +small mobile devices that do not have full keyboards. Speed Keys may +also work on TTY devices known for their problems when entering Emacs +key chords. + +#+vindex: org-use-speed-commands +By default, Org has Speed Keys disabled. To activate Speed Keys, set +the variable ~org-use-speed-commands~ to a non-~nil~ value. To +trigger a Speed Key, point must be at the beginning of an Org +headline, before any of the stars. + +#+vindex: org-speed-commands +#+findex: org-speed-command-help +Org comes with a pre-defined list of Speed Keys. To add or modify +Speed Keys, customize the option ~org-speed-commands~. For more +details, see the variable's docstring. With Speed Keys activated, +{{{kbd(M-x org-speed-command-help)}}}, or {{{kbd(?)}}} when point is at the +beginning of an Org headline, shows currently active Speed Keys, +including the user-defined ones. + +** A Cleaner Outline View +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: Getting rid of leading stars in the outline. +:ALT_TITLE: Clean View +:END: +#+cindex: hiding leading stars +#+cindex: dynamic indentation +#+cindex: odd-levels-only outlines +#+cindex: clean outline view + +Org's outline with stars and no indents can look cluttered for short +documents. For /book-like/ long documents, the effect is not as +noticeable. Org provides an alternate stars and indentation scheme, +as shown on the right in the following table. It displays only one +star and indents text to line up with the heading: + +#+begin_example +,* Top level headline | * Top level headline +,** Second level | * Second level +,*** Third level | * Third level +some text | some text +,*** Third level | * Third level +more text | more text +,* Another top level headline | * Another top level headline +#+end_example + +Org can achieve this in two ways, (1) by just displaying the buffer in +this way without changing it, or (2) by actually indenting every line +in the desired amount with hard spaces and hiding leading stars. + +*** Org Indent Mode + +#+cindex: Indent mode +#+findex: org-indent-mode +To display the buffer in the indented view, activate Org Indent minor +mode, using {{{kbd(M-x org-indent-mode)}}}. Text lines that are not +headlines are prefixed with virtual spaces to vertically align with +the headline text[fn:146]. + +#+vindex: org-indent-indentation-per-level +To make more horizontal space, the headlines are shifted by two +characters. Configure ~org-indent-indentation-per-level~ variable for +a different number. + +#+vindex: org-indent-mode-turns-on-hiding-stars +#+vindex: org-indent-mode-turns-off-org-adapt-indentation +By default, Org Indent mode turns off ~org-adapt-indentation~ and does +hide leading stars by locally setting ~org-hide-leading-stars~ to ~t~: +only one star on each headline is visible, the rest are masked with +the same font color as the background. If you want to customize this +default behavior, see ~org-indent-mode-turns-on-hiding-stars~ and +~org-indent-mode-turns-off-org-adapt-indentation~. + +#+vindex: org-startup-indented +To globally turn on Org Indent mode for all files, customize the +variable ~org-startup-indented~. To control it for individual files, +use =STARTUP= keyword as follows: + +: #+STARTUP: indent +: #+STARTUP: noindent + +*** Hard indentation + +It is possible to use hard spaces to achieve the indentation instead, +if the bare ASCII file should have the indented look also outside +Emacs[fn:147]. With Org's support, you have to indent all lines to +line up with the outline headers. You would use these +settings[fn:148]: + +#+begin_src emacs-lisp +(setq org-adapt-indentation t + org-hide-leading-stars t + org-odd-levels-only t) +#+end_src + +- /Indentation of text below headlines/ (~org-adapt-indentation~) :: + + #+vindex: org-adapt-indentation + The first setting modifies paragraph filling, line wrapping, and + structure editing commands to preserving or adapting the indentation + as appropriate. + +- /Hiding leading stars/ (~org-hide-leading-stars~) :: + + #+vindex: org-hide-leading-stars + #+vindex: org-hide, face + The second setting makes leading stars invisible by applying the + face ~org-hide~ to them. For per-file preference, use these file + =STARTUP= options: + + #+begin_example + ,#+STARTUP: hidestars + ,#+STARTUP: showstars + #+end_example + +- /Odd levels/ (~org-odd-levels-only~) :: + + #+vindex: org-odd-levels-only + The third setting makes Org use only odd levels, 1, 3, 5, ..., in + the outline to create more indentation. On a per-file level, + control this with: + + #+begin_example + ,#+STARTUP: odd + ,#+STARTUP: oddeven + #+end_example + + To convert a file between single and double stars layouts, use + {{{kbd(M-x org-convert-to-odd-levels)}}} and {{{kbd(M-x + org-convert-to-oddeven-levels)}}}. + +** Execute commands in the active region +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: Execute commands on multiple items in Org or agenda view. +:END: + +#+vindex: org-loop-over-headlines-in-active-region +When in an Org buffer and the region is active, some commands will +apply to all the subtrees in the active region. For example, hitting +{{{kbd(C-c C-s)}}} when multiple headlines are within the active region will +successively prompt you for a new schedule date and time. To disable +this, set the option ~org-loop-over-headlines-in-active-region~ to +non-~t~, activate the region and run the command normally. + +#+vindex: org-agenda-loop-over-headlines-in-active-region +~org-agenda-loop-over-headlines-in-active-region~ is the equivalent +option of the agenda buffer, where you can also use [[*Bulk remote editing selected entries][bulk editing of +selected entries]]. + +Not all commands can loop in the active region and what subtrees or +headlines are considered can be refined: see the docstrings of these +options for more details. + +** Dynamic Headline Numbering +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: Display and update outline numbering. +:END: + +#+cindex: Org Num mode +#+cindex: number headlines +The Org Num minor mode, toggled with {{{kbd(M-x org-num-mode)}}}, +displays outline numbering on top of headlines. It also updates it +automatically upon changes to the structure of the document. + +#+vindex: org-num-max-level +#+vindex: org-num-skip-tags +#+vindex: org-num-skip-commented +#+vindex: org-num-skip-unnumbered +By default, all headlines are numbered. You can limit numbering to +specific headlines according to their level, tags, =COMMENT= keyword, +or =UNNUMBERED= property. Set ~org-num-max-level~, +~org-num-skip-tags~, ~org-num-skip-commented~, +~org-num-skip-unnumbered~, or ~org-num-skip-footnotes~ accordingly. + +#+vindex: org-num-skip-footnotes +If ~org-num-skip-footnotes~ is non-~nil~, footnotes sections (see +[[*Creating Footnotes]]) are not numbered either. + +#+vindex: org-num-face +#+vindex: org-num-format-function +You can control how the numbering is displayed by setting +~org-num-face~ and ~org-num-format-function~. + +#+vindex: org-startup-numerated +You can also turn this mode globally for all Org files by setting the +option ~org-startup-numerated~ to =t=, or locally on a file by using +=#+startup: num=. + +** The Very Busy {{{kbd(C-c C-c)}}} Key +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: When in doubt, press @kbd{C-c C-c}. +:END: +#+kindex: C-c C-c +#+cindex: @kbd{C-c C-c}, overview + +The {{{kbd(C-c C-c)}}} key in Org serves many purposes depending on +the context. It is probably the most over-worked, multi-purpose key +combination in Org. Its uses are well documented throughout this +manual, but here is a consolidated list for easy reference. + +- If column view (see [[*Column View]]) is on, exit column view. + +- If any highlights shown in the buffer from the creation of a sparse + tree, or from clock display, remove such highlights. + +- If point is in one of the special =KEYWORD= lines, scan the buffer + for these lines and update the information. Also reset the Org file + cache used to temporary store the contents of URLs used as values + for keywords like =SETUPFILE=. + +- If point is inside a table, realign the table. + +- If point is on a =TBLFM= keyword, re-apply the formulas to the + entire table. + +- If the current buffer is a capture buffer, close the note and file + it. With a prefix argument, also jump to the target location after + saving the note. + +- If point is on a =<<>>=, update radio targets and + corresponding links in this buffer. + +- If point is on a property line or at the start or end of a property + drawer, offer property commands. + +- If point is at a footnote reference, go to the corresponding + definition, and /vice versa/. + +- If point is on a statistics cookie, update it. + +- If point is in a plain list item with a checkbox, toggle the status + of the checkbox. + +- If point is on a numbered item in a plain list, renumber the ordered + list. + +- If point is on the =#+BEGIN= line of a dynamic block, the block is + updated. + +- If point is at a timestamp, fix the day name in the timestamp. + +** Summary of In-Buffer Settings +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: Overview of keywords. +:ALT_TITLE: In-buffer Settings +:END: +#+cindex: in-buffer settings +#+cindex: special keywords + +In-buffer settings start with =#+=, followed by a keyword, a colon, +and then a word for each setting. Org accepts multiple settings on +the same line. Org also accepts multiple lines for a keyword. This +manual describes these settings throughout. A summary follows here. + +#+cindex: refresh set-up +{{{kbd(C-c C-c)}}} activates any changes to the in-buffer settings. +Closing and reopening the Org file in Emacs also activates the +changes. + +#+attr_texinfo: :sep , +- =#+ARCHIVE: %s_done::= :: + + #+cindex: @samp{ARCHIVE}, keyword + #+vindex: org-archive-location + Sets the archive location of the agenda file. The corresponding + variable is ~org-archive-location~. + +- =#+CATEGORY= :: + + #+cindex: @samp{CATEGORY}, keyword + Sets the category of the agenda file, which applies to the entire + document. + +- =#+COLUMNS: %25ITEM ...= :: + + #+cindex: @samp{COLUMNS}, property + Set the default format for columns view. This format applies when + columns view is invoked in locations where no =COLUMNS= property + applies. + +- =#+CONSTANTS: name1=value1 ...= :: + + #+cindex: @samp{CONSTANTS}, keyword + #+vindex: org-table-formula-constants + #+vindex: org-table-formula + Set file-local values for constants that table formulas can use. + This line sets the local variable + ~org-table-formula-constants-local~. The global version of this + variable is ~org-table-formula-constants~. + +- =#+FILETAGS: :tag1:tag2:tag3:= :: + + #+cindex: @samp{FILETAGS}, keyword + Set tags that all entries in the file inherit from, including the + top-level entries. + +- =#+LINK: linkword replace= :: + + #+cindex: @samp{LINK}, keyword + #+vindex: org-link-abbrev-alist + Each line specifies one abbreviation for one link. Use multiple + =LINK= keywords for more, see [[*Link Abbreviations]]. The + corresponding variable is ~org-link-abbrev-alist~. + +- =#+PRIORITIES: highest lowest default= :: + + #+cindex: @samp{PRIORITIES}, keyword + #+vindex: org-priority-highest + #+vindex: org-priority-lowest + #+vindex: org-priority-default + This line sets the limits and the default for the priorities. All + three must be either letters A--Z or numbers 0--9. The highest + priority must have a lower ASCII number than the lowest priority. + +- =#+PROPERTY: Property_Name Value= :: + + #+cindex: @samp{PROPERTY}, keyword + This line sets a default inheritance value for entries in the + current buffer, most useful for specifying the allowed values of + a property. + +- =#+SETUPFILE: file= :: + + #+cindex: @samp{SETUPFILE}, keyword + The setup file or a URL pointing to such file is for additional + in-buffer settings. Org loads this file and parses it for any + settings in it only when Org opens the main file. If URL is + specified, the contents are downloaded and stored in a temporary + file cache. {{{kbd(C-c C-c)}}} on the settings line parses and + loads the file, and also resets the temporary file cache. Org also + parses and loads the document during normal exporting process. Org + parses the contents of this document as if it was included in the + buffer. It can be another Org file. To visit the file---not + a URL---use {{{kbd(C-c ')}}} while point is on the line with the + file name. + +- =#+STARTUP:= :: + + #+cindex: @samp{STARTUP}, keyword + Startup options Org uses when first visiting a file. + + #+vindex: org-startup-folded + The first set of options deals with the initial visibility of the + outline tree. The corresponding variable for global default + settings is ~org-startup-folded~ with a default value of + ~showeverything~. + + | =overview= | Top-level headlines only. | + | =content= | All headlines. | + | =showall= | No folding on any entry. | + | =show2levels= | Headline levels 1-2. | + | =show3levels= | Headline levels 1-3. | + | =show4levels= | Headline levels 1-4. | + | =show5levels= | Headline levels 1-5. | + | =showeverything= | Show even drawer contents. | + + #+vindex: org-startup-indented + Dynamic virtual indentation is controlled by the variable + ~org-startup-indented~[fn:149]. + + | =indent= | Start with Org Indent mode turned on. | + | =noindent= | Start with Org Indent mode turned off. | + + #+vindex: org-startup-numerated + Dynamic virtual numeration of headlines is controlled by the variable + ~org-startup-numerated~. + + | =num= | Start with Org num mode turned on. | + | =nonum= | Start with Org num mode turned off. | + + #+vindex: org-startup-align-all-tables + Aligns tables consistently upon visiting a file. The + corresponding variable is ~org-startup-align-all-tables~ with + ~nil~ as default value. + + | =align= | Align all tables. | + | =noalign= | Do not align tables on startup. | + + #+vindex: org-startup-shrink-all-tables + Shrink table columns with a width cookie. The corresponding + variable is ~org-startup-shrink-all-tables~ with ~nil~ as + default value. + + #+vindex: org-startup-with-inline-images + When visiting a file, inline images can be automatically + displayed. The corresponding variable is + ~org-startup-with-inline-images~, with a default value ~nil~ to + avoid delays when visiting a file. + + | =inlineimages= | Show inline images. | + | =noinlineimages= | Do not show inline images on startup. | + + #+vindex: org-log-done + #+vindex: org-log-note-clock-out + #+vindex: org-log-repeat + Logging the closing and reopening of TODO items and clock + intervals can be configured using these options (see variables + ~org-log-done~, ~org-log-note-clock-out~, and ~org-log-repeat~). + + | =logdone= | Record a timestamp when an item is marked as done. | + | =lognotedone= | Record timestamp and a note when DONE. | + | =nologdone= | Do not record when items are marked as done. | + | =logrepeat= | Record a time when reinstating a repeating item. | + | =lognoterepeat= | Record a note when reinstating a repeating item. | + | =nologrepeat= | Do not record when reinstating repeating item. | + | =lognoteclock-out= | Record a note when clocking out. | + | =nolognoteclock-out= | Do not record a note when clocking out. | + | =logreschedule= | Record a timestamp when scheduling time changes. | + | =lognotereschedule= | Record a note when scheduling time changes. | + | =nologreschedule= | Do not record when a scheduling date changes. | + | =logredeadline= | Record a timestamp when deadline changes. | + | =lognoteredeadline= | Record a note when deadline changes. | + | =nologredeadline= | Do not record when a deadline date changes. | + | =logrefile= | Record a timestamp when refiling. | + | =lognoterefile= | Record a note when refiling. | + | =nologrefile= | Do not record when refiling. | + + #+vindex: org-hide-leading-stars + #+vindex: org-odd-levels-only + Here are the options for hiding leading stars in outline + headings, and for indenting outlines. The corresponding + variables are ~org-hide-leading-stars~ and + ~org-odd-levels-only~, both with a default setting ~nil~ + (meaning =showstars= and =oddeven=). + + | =hidestars= | Make all but one of the stars starting a headline invisible. | + | =showstars= | Show all stars starting a headline. | + | =indent= | Virtual indentation according to outline level. | + | =noindent= | No virtual indentation according to outline level. | + | =odd= | Allow only odd outline levels (1, 3, ...). | + | =oddeven= | Allow all outline levels. | + + #+vindex: org-put-time-stamp-overlays + #+vindex: org-time-stamp-overlay-formats + To turn on custom format overlays over timestamps (variables + ~org-put-time-stamp-overlays~ and + ~org-time-stamp-overlay-formats~), use: + + | =customtime= | Overlay custom time format. | + + #+vindex: constants-unit-system + The following options influence the table spreadsheet (variable + ~constants-unit-system~). + + | =constcgs= | =constants.el= should use the c-g-s unit system. | + | =constSI= | =constants.el= should use the SI unit system. | + + #+vindex: org-footnote-define-inline + #+vindex: org-footnote-auto-label + #+vindex: org-footnote-auto-adjust + To influence footnote settings, use the following keywords. The + corresponding variables are ~org-footnote-define-inline~, + ~org-footnote-auto-label~, and ~org-footnote-auto-adjust~. + + | =fninline= | Define footnotes inline. | + | =fnnoinline= | Define footnotes in separate section. | + | =fnlocal= | Define footnotes near first reference, but not inline. | + | =fnprompt= | Prompt for footnote labels. | + | =fnauto= | Create =[fn:1]=-like labels automatically (default). | + | =fnconfirm= | Offer automatic label for editing or confirmation. | + | =fnadjust= | Automatically renumber and sort footnotes. | + | =nofnadjust= | Do not renumber and sort automatically. | + + #+vindex: org-hide-block-startup + To hide blocks on startup, use these keywords. The + corresponding variable is ~org-hide-block-startup~. + + | =hideblocks= | Hide all begin/end blocks on startup. | + | =nohideblocks= | Do not hide blocks on startup. | + + #+vindex: org-pretty-entities + The display of entities as UTF-8 characters is governed by the + variable ~org-pretty-entities~ and the keywords + + | =entitiespretty= | Show entities as UTF-8 characters where possible. | + | =entitiesplain= | Leave entities plain. | + +- =#+TAGS: TAG1(c1) TAG2(c2)= :: + + #+cindex: @samp{TAGS}, keyword + #+vindex: org-tag-alist + These lines (several such lines are allowed) specify the valid tags + in this file, and (potentially) the corresponding /fast tag + selection/ keys. The corresponding variable is ~org-tag-alist~. + +- =#+TODO:=, =#+SEQ_TODO:=, =#+TYP_TODO:= :: + + #+cindex: @samp{SEQ_TODO}, keyword + #+cindex: @samp{TODO}, keyword + #+cindex: @samp{TYP_TODO}, keyword + #+vindex: org-todo-keywords + These lines set the TODO keywords and their interpretation in the + current file. The corresponding variable is ~org-todo-keywords~. + +** Regular Expressions +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: Elisp regular expressions. +:END: +#+cindex: regular expressions syntax +#+cindex: regular expressions, in searches + +Org, as an Emacs mode, makes use of Elisp regular expressions for +searching, matching and filtering. Elisp regular expressions have a +somewhat different syntax then some common standards. Most notably, +alternation is indicated using =\|= and matching groups are denoted by +=\(...\)=. For example the string =home\|work= matches either =home= +or =work=. + +For more information, see [[info:emacs::Regexps][Regular Expressions in Emacs]]. + +** Org Syntax +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: Formal description of Org's syntax. +:END: + +A reference document providing a formal description of Org's syntax is +available as [[https://orgmode.org/worg/dev/org-syntax.html][a draft on Worg]], written and maintained by Nicolas +Goaziou. It defines Org's core internal concepts such as "headlines", +"sections", "affiliated keywords", "(greater) elements" and "objects". +Each part of an Org document belongs to one of the previous +categories. + +To explore the abstract structure of an Org buffer, run this in +a buffer: + +: M-: (org-element-parse-buffer) + +#+texinfo: @noindent +It outputs a list containing the buffer's content represented as an +abstract structure. The export engine relies on the information +stored in this list. Most interactive commands---e.g., for structure +editing---also rely on the syntactic meaning of the surrounding +context. + +#+cindex: syntax checker +#+cindex: linter +#+findex: org-lint +You can probe the syntax of your documents with the command + +: M-x org-lint + +#+texinfo: @noindent +It runs a number of checks to find common mistakes. It then displays +their location in a dedicated buffer, along with a description and +a "trust level", since false-positive are possible. From there, you +can operate on the reports with the following keys: + +#+attr_texinfo: :columns 0.22 0.78 +| {{{kbd(C-j)}}}, {{{kbd(TAB)}}} | Display the offending line | +| {{{kbd(RET)}}} | Move point to the offending line | +| {{{kbd(g)}}} | Check the document again | +| {{{kbd(h)}}} | Hide all reports from the same checker | +| {{{kbd(i)}}} | Also remove them from all subsequent checks | +| {{{kbd(S)}}} | Sort reports by the column at point | + +** Context Dependent Documentation +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: Read documentation about current syntax. +:ALT_TITLE: Documentation Access +:END: +#+cindex: documentation +#+cindex: Info + +#+findex: org-info-find-node +#+kindex: C-c C-x I +{{{kbd(C-c C-x I)}}} in an Org file tries to open a suitable section +of the Org manual depending on the syntax at point. For example, +using it on a headline displays "Document Structure" section. + +{{{kbd(q)}}} closes the Info window. + +** Escape Character +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: Prevent Org from interpreting your writing. +:END: + +#+cindex: escape character +#+cindex: zero width space +You may sometimes want to write text that looks like Org syntax, but +should really read as plain text. Org may use a specific escape +character in some situations, i.e., a backslash in macros (see [[*Macro +Replacement]]) and links (see [[*Link Format]]), or a comma in source and +example blocks (see [[*Literal Examples]]). In the general case, however, +we suggest to use the zero width space. You can insert one with any +of the following: + +: C-x 8 zero width space +: C-x 8 200B + +For example, in order to write =[[1,2]]= as-is in your document, you +may write instead + +: [X[1,2]] + +where =X= denotes the zero width space character. + +** Code Evaluation and Security Issues +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: Org files evaluate in-line code. +:ALT_TITLE: Code Evaluation Security +:END: + +Unlike plain text, running code comes with risk. Each source code +block, in terms of risk, is equivalent to an executable file. Org +therefore puts a few confirmation prompts by default. This is to +alert the casual user from accidentally running untrusted code. + +For users who do not run code blocks or write code regularly, Org's +default settings should suffice. However, some users may want to +tweak the prompts for fewer interruptions. To weigh the risks of +automatic execution of code blocks, here are some details about code +evaluation. + +Org evaluates code in the following circumstances: + +- /Source code blocks/ :: + + Org evaluates source code blocks in an Org file during export. Org + also evaluates a source code block with the {{{kbd(C-c C-c)}}} key + chord. Users exporting or running code blocks must load files only + from trusted sources. Be wary of customizing variables that remove + or alter default security measures. + + #+attr_texinfo: :options org-confirm-babel-evaluate + #+begin_defopt + When ~t~, Org prompts the user for confirmation before executing + each code block. When ~nil~, Org executes code blocks without + prompting the user for confirmation. When this option is set to + a custom function, Org invokes the function with these two + arguments: the source code language and the body of the code block. + The custom function must return either a ~t~ or ~nil~, which + determines if the user is prompted. Each source code language can + be handled separately through this function argument. + #+end_defopt + + For example, here is how to execute ditaa code blocks without + prompting: + + #+begin_src emacs-lisp + (defun my-org-confirm-babel-evaluate (lang body) + (not (string= lang "ditaa"))) ;don't ask for ditaa + (setq org-confirm-babel-evaluate #'my-org-confirm-babel-evaluate) + #+end_src + +- /Following =shell= and =elisp= links/ :: + + Org has two link types that can directly evaluate code (see + [[*External Links]]). Because such code is not visible, these links + have a potential risk. Org therefore prompts the user when it + encounters such links. The customization variables are: + + #+attr_texinfo: :options org-link-shell-confirm-function + #+begin_defopt + Function that prompts the user before executing a shell link. + #+end_defopt + + #+attr_texinfo: :options org-link-elisp-confirm-function + #+begin_defopt + Function that prompts the user before executing an Emacs Lisp link. + #+end_defopt + +- /Formulas in tables/ :: + + Formulas in tables (see [[*The Spreadsheet]]) are code that is evaluated + either by the Calc interpreter, or by the Emacs Lisp interpreter. + +** Interaction with Other Packages +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: With other Emacs packages. +:ALT_TITLE: Interaction +:END: +#+cindex: packages, interaction with other + +Org's compatibility and the level of interaction with other Emacs +packages are documented here. + +*** Packages that Org cooperates with +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: Packages Org cooperates with. +:ALT_TITLE: Cooperation +:END: + +- =calc.el= by Dave Gillespie :: + #+cindex: @file{calc.el} + + Org uses the Calc package for implementing spreadsheet functionality + in its tables (see [[*The Spreadsheet]]). Org also uses Calc for + embedded calculations. See [[info:calc::Embedded Mode][GNU Emacs Calc Manual]]. + +- =constants.el= by Carsten Dominik :: + #+cindex: @file{constants.el} + #+vindex: org-table-formula-constants + + Org can use names for constants in formulas in tables. Org can also + use calculation suffixes for units, such as =M= for =Mega=. For + a standard collection of such constants, install the =constants= + package. Install version 2.0 of this package, available at + [[http://www.astro.uva.nl/~dominik/Tools]]. Org checks if the function + ~constants-get~ has been autoloaded. Installation instructions are + in the file =constants.el=. + +- =cdlatex.el= by Carsten Dominik :: + #+cindex: @file{cdlatex.el} + + Org mode can make use of the CDLaTeX package to efficiently enter + LaTeX fragments into Org files. See [[*Using CDLaTeX to enter math]]. + +- =imenu.el= by Ake Stenhoff and Lars Lindberg :: + #+cindex: @file{imenu.el} + + Imenu creates dynamic menus based on an index of items in a file. + Org mode supports Imenu menus. Enable it with a mode hook as + follows: + + #+begin_src emacs-lisp + (add-hook 'org-mode-hook + (lambda () (imenu-add-to-menubar "Imenu"))) + #+end_src + + #+vindex: org-imenu-depth + By default the index is two levels deep---you can modify the + depth using the option ~org-imenu-depth~. + +- =speedbar.el= by Eric\nbsp{}M.\nbsp{}Ludlam :: + #+cindex: @file{speedbar.el} + + Speedbar package creates a special Emacs frame for displaying files + and index items in files. Org mode supports Speedbar; users can + drill into Org files directly from the Speedbar. The {{{kbd(<)}}} + in the Speedbar frame tweaks the agenda commands to that file or to + a subtree. + +- =table.el= by Takaaki Ota :: + #+cindex: table editor, @file{table.el} + #+cindex: @file{table.el} + + Complex ASCII tables with automatic line wrapping, column- and + row-spanning, and alignment can be created using the Emacs table + package by Takaaki Ota. Org mode recognizes such tables and exports + them properly. {{{kbd(C-c ')}}} to edit these tables in a special + buffer, much like Org's code blocks. Because of interference with + other Org mode functionality, Takaaki Ota tables cannot be edited + directly in the Org buffer. + + - {{{kbd(C-c ')}}} (~org-edit-special~) :: + + #+kindex: C-c ' + #+findex: org-edit-special + Edit a =table.el= table. Works when point is in a =table.el= + table. + + - {{{kbd(C-c ~​)}}} (~org-table-create-with-table.el~) :: + + #+kindex: C-c ~ + #+findex: org-table-create-with-table.el + Insert a =table.el= table. If there is already a table at point, + this command converts it between the =table.el= format and the Org + mode format. See the documentation string of the command + ~org-convert-table~ for the restrictions under which this is + possible. + +*** Packages that conflict with Org mode +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: Packages that lead to conflicts. +:ALT_TITLE: Conflicts +:END: + +#+cindex: shift-selection +#+vindex: org-support-shift-select +In Emacs, shift-selection combines motions of point with shift key to +enlarge regions. Emacs sets this mode by default. This conflicts +with Org's use of {{{kbd(S-)}}} commands to change timestamps, +TODO keywords, priorities, and item bullet types, etc. Since +{{{kbd(S-)}}} commands outside of specific contexts do not do +anything, Org offers the variable ~org-support-shift-select~ for +customization. Org mode accommodates shift selection by (i) making it +available outside of the special contexts where special commands +apply, and (ii) extending an existing active region even if point +moves across a special context. + +- =cua.el= by Kim\nbsp{}F.\nbsp{}Storm :: + + #+cindex: @file{cua.el} + #+vindex: org-replace-disputed-keys + Org key bindings conflict with {{{kbd(S-)}}} keys used by + CUA mode. For Org to relinquish these bindings to CUA mode, + configure the variable ~org-replace-disputed-keys~. When set, Org + moves the following key bindings in Org files, and in the agenda + buffer---but not during date selection. + + #+attr_texinfo: :columns 0.4 0.4 + | {{{kbd(S-UP)}}} \rArr{} {{{kbd(M-p)}}} | {{{kbd(S-DOWN)}}} \rArr{} {{{kbd(M-n)}}} | + | {{{kbd(S-LEFT)}}} \rArr{} {{{kbd(M--)}}} | {{{kbd(S-RIGHT)}}} \rArr{} {{{kbd(M-+)}}} | + | {{{kbd(C-S-LEFT)}}} \rArr{} {{{kbd(M-S--)}}} | {{{kbd(C-S-RIGHT)}}} \rArr{} {{{kbd(M-S-+)}}} | + + #+vindex: org-disputed-keys + Yes, these are unfortunately more difficult to remember. If you + want to have other replacement keys, look at the variable + ~org-disputed-keys~. + +- =ecomplete.el= by Lars Magne Ingebrigtsen :: + + #+cindex: @file{ecomplete.el} + Ecomplete provides "electric" address completion in address header + lines in message buffers. Sadly Orgtbl mode cuts Ecomplete's power + supply: no completion happens when Orgtbl mode is enabled in message + buffers while entering text in address header lines. If one wants + to use ecomplete one should /not/ follow the advice to automagically + turn on Orgtbl mode in message buffers (see [[*The Orgtbl Minor Mode]]), + but instead---after filling in the message headers---turn on Orgtbl + mode manually when needed in the messages body. + +- =filladapt.el= by Kyle Jones :: + + #+cindex: @file{filladapt.el} + Org mode tries to do the right thing when filling paragraphs, list + items and other elements. Many users reported problems using both + =filladapt.el= and Org mode, so a safe thing to do is to disable + filladapt like this: + + #+begin_src emacs-lisp + (add-hook 'org-mode-hook 'turn-off-filladapt-mode) + #+end_src + +- =viper.el= by Michael Kifer :: + #+cindex: @file{viper.el} + #+kindex: C-c / + + Viper uses {{{kbd(C-c /)}}} and therefore makes this key not access + the corresponding Org mode command ~org-sparse-tree~. You need to + find another key for this command, or override the key in + ~viper-vi-global-user-map~ with + + #+begin_src emacs-lisp + (define-key viper-vi-global-user-map "C-c /" 'org-sparse-tree) + #+end_src + +- =windmove.el= by Hovav Shacham :: + #+cindex: @file{windmove.el} + + This package also uses the {{{kbd(S-)}}} keys, so everything + written in the paragraph above about CUA mode also applies here. If + you want to make the windmove function active in locations where Org + mode does not have special functionality on {{{kbd(S-)}}}, + add this to your configuration: + + #+begin_src emacs-lisp + ;; Make windmove work in Org mode: + (add-hook 'org-shiftup-final-hook 'windmove-up) + (add-hook 'org-shiftleft-final-hook 'windmove-left) + (add-hook 'org-shiftdown-final-hook 'windmove-down) + (add-hook 'org-shiftright-final-hook 'windmove-right) + #+end_src + +- =yasnippet.el= :: + + #+cindex: @file{yasnippet.el} + The way Org mode binds the {{{kbd(TAB)}}} key (binding to ~[tab]~ + instead of ~"\t"~) overrules YASnippet's access to this key. The + following code fixed this problem: + + #+begin_src emacs-lisp + (add-hook 'org-mode-hook + (lambda () + (setq-local yas/trigger-key [tab]) + (define-key yas/keymap [tab] 'yas/next-field-or-maybe-expand))) + #+end_src + + The latest version of YASnippet does not play well with Org mode. + If the above code does not fix the conflict, start by defining + the following function: + + #+begin_src emacs-lisp + (defun yas/org-very-safe-expand () + (let ((yas/fallback-behavior 'return-nil)) (yas/expand))) + #+end_src + + Then, tell Org mode to use that function: + + #+begin_src emacs-lisp + (add-hook 'org-mode-hook + (lambda () + (make-variable-buffer-local 'yas/trigger-key) + (setq yas/trigger-key [tab]) + (add-to-list 'org-tab-first-hook 'yas/org-very-safe-expand) + (define-key yas/keymap [tab] 'yas/next-field))) + #+end_src +** Using Org on a TTY +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: Using Org on a tty. +:ALT_TITLE: TTY Keys +:END: +#+cindex: tty key bindings + +Org provides alternative key bindings for TTY and modern mobile +devices that cannot perform movement commands on point and key +bindings with modifier keys. Some of these workarounds may be more +cumbersome than necessary. Users should look into customizing these +further based on their usage needs. For example, the normal +{{{kbd(S-)}}} for editing timestamp might be better with +{{{kbd(C-c .)}}} chord. + +#+attr_texinfo: :columns 0.2 0.28 0.15 0.21 +| Default | Alternative 1 | Speed key | Alternative 2 | +|----------------------+--------------------------+--------------+----------------------| +| {{{kbd(S-TAB)}}} | {{{kbd(C-u TAB)}}} | {{{kbd(C)}}} | | +| {{{kbd(M-LEFT)}}} | {{{kbd(C-c C-x l)}}} | {{{kbd(l)}}} | {{{kbd(Esc LEFT)}}} | +| {{{kbd(M-S-LEFT)}}} | {{{kbd(C-c C-x L)}}} | {{{kbd(L)}}} | | +| {{{kbd(M-RIGHT)}}} | {{{kbd(C-c C-x r)}}} | {{{kbd(r)}}} | {{{kbd(Esc RIGHT)}}} | +| {{{kbd(M-S-RIGHT)}}} | {{{kbd(C-c C-x R)}}} | {{{kbd(R)}}} | | +| {{{kbd(M-UP)}}} | {{{kbd(C-c C-x u)}}} | | {{{kbd(Esc UP)}}} | +| {{{kbd(M-S-UP)}}} | {{{kbd(C-c C-x U)}}} | {{{kbd(U)}}} | | +| {{{kbd(M-DOWN)}}} | {{{kbd(C-c C-x d)}}} | | {{{kbd(Esc DOWN)}}} | +| {{{kbd(M-S-DOWN)}}} | {{{kbd(C-c C-x D)}}} | {{{kbd(D)}}} | | +| {{{kbd(S-RET)}}} | {{{kbd(C-c C-x c)}}} | | | +| {{{kbd(M-RET)}}} | {{{kbd(C-c C-x m)}}} | | {{{kbd(Esc RET)}}} | +| {{{kbd(M-S-RET)}}} | {{{kbd(C-c C-x M)}}} | | | +| {{{kbd(S-LEFT)}}} | {{{kbd(C-c LEFT)}}} | | | +| {{{kbd(S-RIGHT)}}} | {{{kbd(C-c RIGHT)}}} | | | +| {{{kbd(S-UP)}}} | {{{kbd(C-c UP)}}} | | | +| {{{kbd(S-DOWN)}}} | {{{kbd(C-c DOWN)}}} | | | +| {{{kbd(C-S-LEFT)}}} | {{{kbd(C-c C-x LEFT)}}} | | | +| {{{kbd(C-S-RIGHT)}}} | {{{kbd(C-c C-x RIGHT)}}} | | | + +** Protocols for External Access +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: External access to Emacs and Org. +:ALT_TITLE: Protocols +:END: +#+cindex: protocols, for external access + +Org protocol is a tool to trigger custom actions in Emacs from +external applications. Any application that supports calling external +programs with an URL as argument may be used with this functionality. +For example, you can configure bookmarks in your web browser to send a +link to the current page to Org and create a note from it using +capture (see [[*Capture]]). You can also create a bookmark that tells +Emacs to open the local source file of a remote website you are +browsing. + +#+cindex: Org protocol, set-up +#+cindex: Installing Org protocol +In order to use Org protocol from an application, you need to register +=org-protocol://= as a valid scheme-handler. External calls are +passed to Emacs through the =emacsclient= command, so you also need to +ensure an Emacs server is running. More precisely, when the +application calls + +: emacsclient "org-protocol://PROTOCOL?key1=val1&key2=val2" + +#+texinfo: @noindent +Emacs calls the handler associated to {{{var(PROTOCOL)}}} with +argument =(:key1 val1 :key2 val2)=. + +#+cindex: protocol, new protocol +#+cindex: defining new protocols +Org protocol comes with three predefined protocols, detailed in the +following sections. Configure ~org-protocol-protocol-alist~ to define +your own. + +*** The ~store-link~ protocol +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: Store a link, push URL to kill-ring. +:END: +#+cindex: store-link protocol +#+cindex: protocol, store-link + +Using the ~store-link~ handler, you can copy links, to that they can +be inserted using {{{kbd(M-x org-insert-link)}}} or yanking. More +precisely, the command + +: emacsclient "org-protocol://store-link?url=URL&title=TITLE" + +#+texinfo: @noindent +stores the following link: + +: [[URL][TITLE]] + +In addition, {{{var(URL)}}} is pushed on the kill-ring for yanking. +You need to encode {{{var(URL)}}} and {{{var(TITLE)}}} if they contain +slashes, and probably quote those for the shell. + +To use this feature from a browser, add a bookmark with an arbitrary +name, e.g., =Org: store-link= and enter this as /Location/: + +#+begin_example +javascript:location.href='org-protocol://store-link?' + + new URLSearchParams({url:location.href, title:document.title}); +#+end_example + +Title is an optional parameter. Another expression was recommended earlier: + +#+begin_example +javascript:location.href='org-protocol://store-link?url='+ + encodeURIComponent(location.href); +#+end_example + +The latter form is compatible with older Org versions from 9.0 to 9.4. + +*** The ~capture~ protocol +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: Fill a buffer with external information. +:END: +#+cindex: capture protocol +#+cindex: protocol, capture + +Activating the "capture" handler pops up a =Capture= buffer in Emacs, +using acapture template. + +: emacsclient "org-protocol://capture?template=X&url=URL&title=TITLE&body=BODY" + +To use this feature, add a bookmark with an arbitrary name, e.g., +=Org: capture=, and enter this as =Location=: + +#+begin_example +javascript:location.href='org-protocol://capture?' + + new URLSearchParams({ + template: 'x', url: window.location.href, + title: document.title, body: window.getSelection()}); +#+end_example + +You might have seen another expression: + +#+begin_example +javascript:location.href='org-protocol://capture?template=x'+ + '&url='+encodeURIComponent(window.location.href)+ + '&title='+encodeURIComponent(document.title)+ + '&body='+encodeURIComponent(window.getSelection()); +#+end_example + +It is a bit more cluttered than the former one, but it is compatible +with previous Org versions 9.0-9.4. In these versions encoding of +space as "+" character was not supported by URI decoder. + +#+vindex: org-protocol-default-template-key +The capture template to be used can be specified in the bookmark (like +=X= above). If unspecified, the template key is set in the variable +~org-protocol-default-template-key~. The following template +placeholders are available: + +#+begin_example +%:link The URL +%:description The webpage title +%:annotation Equivalent to [[%:link][%:description]] +%i The selected text +#+end_example + +*** The ~open-source~ protocol +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: Edit published contents. +:END: +#+cindex: open-source protocol +#+cindex: protocol, open-source + +The ~open-source~ handler is designed to help with editing local +sources when reading a document. To that effect, you can use +a bookmark with the following location: + +#+begin_example +javascript:location.href='org-protocol://open-source?&url='+ + encodeURIComponent(location.href) +#+end_example + +#+vindex: org-protocol-project-alist +The variable ~org-protocol-project-alist~ maps URLs to local file +names, by stripping URL parameters from the end and replacing the +~:base-url~ with ~:working-directory~ and ~:online-suffix~ with +~:working-suffix~. For example, assuming you own a local copy of +=https://orgmode.org/worg/= contents at =/home/user/worg=, you can set +~org-protocol-project-alist~ to the following + +#+begin_src emacs-lisp +(setq org-protocol-project-alist + '(("Worg" + :base-url "https://orgmode.org/worg/" + :working-directory "/home/user/worg/" + :online-suffix ".html" + :working-suffix ".org"))) +#+end_src + +#+texinfo: @noindent +If you are now browsing +=https://orgmode.org/worg/org-contrib/org-protocol.html= and find +a typo or have an idea about how to enhance the documentation, simply +click the bookmark and start editing. + +#+cindex: rewritten URL in open-source protocol +#+cindex: protocol, open-source rewritten URL +However, such mapping may not always yield the desired results. +Suppose you maintain an online store located at =https://example.com/=. +The local sources reside in =/home/user/example/=. It is common +practice to serve all products in such a store through one file and +rewrite URLs that do not match an existing file on the server. That +way, a request to =https://example.com/print/posters.html= might be +rewritten on the server to something like +=https://example.com/shop/products.php/posters.html.php=. The +~open-source~ handler probably cannot find a file named +=/home/user/example/print/posters.html.php= and fails. + +Such an entry in ~org-protocol-project-alist~ may hold an additional +property ~:rewrites~. This property is a list of cons cells, each of +which maps a regular expression to a path relative to the +~:working-directory~. + +Now map the URL to the path =/home/user/example/products.php= by +adding ~:rewrites~ rules like this: + +#+begin_src emacs-lisp +(setq org-protocol-project-alist + '(("example.com" + :base-url "https://example.com/" + :working-directory "/home/user/example/" + :online-suffix ".php" + :working-suffix ".php" + :rewrites (("example.com/print/" . "products.php") + ("example.com/$" . "index.php"))))) +#+end_src + +#+texinfo: @noindent +Since =example.com/$= is used as a regular expression, it maps +=http://example.com/=, =https://example.com=, +=http://www.example.com/= and similar to +=/home/user/example/index.php=. + +The ~:rewrites~ rules are searched as a last resort if and only if no +existing file name is matched. + +#+cindex: protocol, open-source, set-up mapping +#+cindex: mappings in open-source protocol +#+findex: org-protocol-create +#+findex: org-protocol-create-for-org +Two functions can help you filling ~org-protocol-project-alist~ with +valid contents: ~org-protocol-create~ and +~org-protocol-create-for-org~. The latter is of use if you're editing +an Org file that is part of a publishing project. +** Org Crypt +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: Encrypting Org files. +:END: + +Org Crypt encrypts the text of an entry, but not the headline, or +properties. Behind the scene, it uses the [[info:epa][Emacs EasyPG Library]] to +encrypt and decrypt files, and EasyPG needs a correct [[info:gnupg][GnuPG]] setup. + +#+vindex: org-crypt-tag-matcher +Any text below a headline that has a =crypt= tag is automatically +encrypted when the file is saved. To use a different tag, customize +the ~org-crypt-tag-matcher~ setting. + +Here is a suggestion for Org Crypt settings in Emacs init file: + +#+begin_src emacs-lisp +(require 'org-crypt) +(org-crypt-use-before-save-magic) +(setq org-tags-exclude-from-inheritance '("crypt")) + +(setq org-crypt-key nil) +;; GPG key to use for encryption +;; Either the Key ID or set to nil to use symmetric encryption. + +(setq auto-save-default nil) +;; Auto-saving does not cooperate with org-crypt.el: so you need to +;; turn it off if you plan to use org-crypt.el quite often. Otherwise, +;; you'll get an (annoying) message each time you start Org. + +;; To turn it off only locally, you can insert this: +;; +;; # -*- buffer-auto-save-file-name: nil; -*- +#+end_src + +It's possible to use different keys for different headings by +specifying the respective key as property =CRYPTKEY=, e.g.: + +#+begin_example +,* Totally secret :crypt: + :PROPERTIES: + :CRYPTKEY: 0x0123456789012345678901234567890123456789 + :END: +#+end_example + +Excluding the =crypt= tag from inheritance prevents already encrypted +text from being encrypted again. + +** Org Mobile +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: Viewing and capture on a mobile device. +:END: +#+cindex: smartphone + +Org Mobile is a protocol for synchronizing Org files between Emacs and +other applications, e.g., on mobile devices. It enables offline-views +and capture support for an Org mode system that is rooted on a "real" +computer. The external application can also record changes to +existing entries. + +This appendix describes Org's support for agenda view formats +compatible with Org Mobile. It also describes synchronizing changes, +such as to notes, between the mobile application and the computer. + +To change tags and TODO states in the mobile application, first +customize the variables ~org-todo-keywords~, ~org-tag-alist~ and +~org-tag-persistent-alist~. These should cover all the important tags +and TODO keywords, even if Org files use only some of them. Though +the mobile application is expected to support in-buffer settings, it +is required to understand TODO states /sets/ (see [[*Setting up keywords +for individual files]]) and /mutually exclusive/ tags (see [[*Setting +Tags]]) only for those set in these variables. + +*** Setting up the staging area +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: For the mobile device. +:END: + +#+vindex: org-mobile-directory +The mobile application needs access to a file directory on +a server[fn:150] to interact with Emacs. Pass its location through +the ~org-mobile-directory~ variable. If you can mount that directory +locally just set the variable to point to that directory: + +#+begin_src emacs-lisp +(setq org-mobile-directory "~/orgmobile/") +#+end_src + +Alternatively, by using TRAMP (see [[info:tramp][TRAMP User Manual]]), +~org-mobile-directory~ may point to a remote directory accessible +through, for example, SSH, SCP, or DAVS: + +#+begin_src emacs-lisp +(setq org-mobile-directory "/davs:user@remote.host:/org/webdav/") +#+end_src + +#+vindex: org-mobile-encryption +With a public server, consider encrypting the files. Org also +requires OpenSSL installed on the local computer. To turn on +encryption, set the same password in the mobile application and in +Emacs. Set the password in the variable +~org-mobile-use-encryption~[fn:151]. Note that even after the mobile +application encrypts the file contents, the file name remains visible +on the file systems of the local computer, the server, and the mobile +device. + +*** Pushing to the mobile application +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: Uploading Org files and agendas. +:END: + +#+findex: org-mobile-push +#+vindex: org-mobile-files +The command ~org-mobile-push~ copies files listed in +~org-mobile-files~ into the staging area. Files include agenda files +(as listed in ~org-agenda-files~). Customize ~org-mobile-files~ to +add other files. File names are staged with paths relative to +~org-directory~, so all files should be inside this directory[fn:152]. + +Push creates a special Org file =agendas.org= with custom agenda views +defined by the user[fn:153]. + +Finally, Org writes the file =index.org=, containing links to other +files. The mobile application reads this file first from the server +to determine what other files to download for agendas. For faster +downloads, it is expected to only read files whose checksums[fn:154] +have changed. + +*** Pulling from the mobile application +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: Integrating captured and flagged items. +:END: + +#+findex: org-mobile-pull +The command ~org-mobile-pull~ synchronizes changes with the server. +More specifically, it first pulls the Org files for viewing. It then +appends captured entries and pointers to flagged or changed entries to +the file =mobileorg.org= on the server. Org ultimately integrates its +data in an inbox file format, through the following steps: + +1. + #+vindex: org-mobile-inbox-for-pull + Org moves all entries found in =mobileorg.org=[fn:155] and appends + them to the file pointed to by the variable + ~org-mobile-inbox-for-pull~. It should reside neither in the + staging area nor on the server. Each captured entry and each + editing event is a top-level entry in the inbox file. + +2. + #+cindex: @samp{FLAGGED}, tag + After moving the entries, Org processes changes to the shared + files. Some of them are applied directly and without user + interaction. Examples include changes to tags, TODO state, + headline and body text. Entries requiring further action are + tagged as =FLAGGED=. Org marks entries with problems with an error + message in the inbox. They have to be resolved manually. + +3. Org generates an agenda view for flagged entries for user + intervention to clean up. For notes stored in flagged entries, Org + displays them in the echo area when point is on the corresponding + agenda item. + + - {{{kbd(?)}}} :: + + Pressing {{{kbd(?)}}} displays the entire flagged note in another + window. Org also pushes it to the kill ring. To store flagged + note as a normal note, use {{{kbd(? z C-y C-c C-c)}}}. Pressing + {{{kbd(?)}}} twice does these things: first it removes the + =FLAGGED= tag; second, it removes the flagged note from the + property drawer; third, it signals that manual editing of the + flagged entry is now finished. + +#+kindex: ? @r{(Agenda dispatcher)} +From the agenda dispatcher, {{{kbd(?)}}} returns to the view to finish +processing flagged entries. Note that these entries may not be the +most recent since the mobile application searches files that were last +pulled. To get an updated agenda view with changes since the last +pull, pull again. + +* Hacking +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: How to hack your way around. +:APPENDIX: t +:END: +#+cindex: hacking + +This appendix describes some ways a user can extend the functionality +of Org. + +** Hooks +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: How to reach into Org's internals. +:END: +#+cindex: hooks + +Org has a large number of hook variables for adding functionality. +This appendix illustrates using a few. A complete list of hooks with +documentation is maintained by the Worg project at +https://orgmode.org/worg/doc.html#hooks. + +** Add-on Packages +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: Available extensions. +:END: +#+cindex: add-on packages + +Various authors wrote a large number of add-on packages for Org. Some +of these packages used to be part of the =org-mode= repository but are +now hosted in a separate =org-contrib= repository +[[https://git.sr.ht/~bzg/org-contrib][here]]. A Worg page with more +information is at: https://orgmode.org/worg/org-contrib/. + +** Adding Hyperlink Types +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: New custom link types. +:END: +#+cindex: hyperlinks, adding new types + +Org has many built-in hyperlink types (see [[*Hyperlinks]]), and an +interface for adding new link types. The following example shows the +process of adding Org links to Unix man pages, which look like this + +: [[man:printf][The printf manual]] + +#+texinfo: @noindent +The following =ol-man.el= file implements it + +#+begin_src emacs-lisp +;;; ol-man.el - Support for links to man pages in Org mode +(require 'ol) + +(org-link-set-parameters "man" + :follow #'org-man-open + :export #'org-man-export + :store #'org-man-store-link) + +(defcustom org-man-command 'man + "The Emacs command to be used to display a man page." + :group 'org-link + :type '(choice (const man) (const woman))) + +(defun org-man-open (path _) + "Visit the manpage on PATH. +PATH should be a topic that can be thrown at the man command." + (funcall org-man-command path)) + +(defun org-man-store-link () + "Store a link to a man page." + (when (memq major-mode '(Man-mode woman-mode)) + ;; This is a man page, we do make this link. + (let* ((page (org-man-get-page-name)) + (link (concat "man:" page)) + (description (format "Man page for %s" page))) + (org-link-store-props + :type "man" + :link link + :description description)))) + +(defun org-man-get-page-name () + "Extract the page name from the buffer name." + ;; This works for both `Man-mode' and `woman-mode'. + (if (string-match " \\(\\S-+\\)\\*" (buffer-name)) + (match-string 1 (buffer-name)) + (error "Cannot create link to this man page"))) + +(defun org-man-export (link description format _) + "Export a man page link from Org files." + (let ((path (format "http://man.he.net/?topic=%s§ion=all" link)) + (desc (or description link))) + (pcase format + (`html (format "%s" path desc)) + (`latex (format "\\href{%s}{%s}" path desc)) + (`texinfo (format "@uref{%s,%s}" path desc)) + (`ascii (format "%s (%s)" desc path)) + (t path)))) + +(provide ol-man) +;;; ol-man.el ends here +#+end_src + +#+texinfo: @noindent +To activate links to man pages in Org, enter this in the Emacs init +file: + +#+begin_src emacs-lisp +(require 'ol-man) +#+end_src + +#+texinfo: @noindent +A review of =ol-man.el=: + +1. First, =(require 'ol)= ensures that =ol.el= is loaded. + +2. + + #+findex: org-link-set-parameters + #+vindex: org-link-parameters + Then ~org-link-set-parameters~ defines a new link type with =man= + prefix and associates functions for following, exporting and + storing such links. See the variable ~org-link-parameters~ for + a complete list of possible associations. + +3. The rest of the file implements necessary variables and functions. + + For example, ~org-man-store-link~ is responsible for storing a link + when ~org-store-link~ (see [[*Handling Links]]) is called from a buffer + displaying a man page. It first checks if the major mode is + appropriate. If check fails, the function returns ~nil~, which + means it isn't responsible for creating a link to the current + buffer. Otherwise the function makes a link string by combining + the =man:= prefix with the man topic. It also provides a default + description. The function ~org-insert-link~ can insert it back + into an Org buffer later on. + +** Adding Export Back-ends +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: How to write new export back-ends. +:END: +#+cindex: Export, writing back-ends + +Org's export engine makes it easy for writing new back-ends. The +framework on which the engine was built makes it easy to derive new +back-ends from existing ones. + +#+findex: org-export-define-backend +#+findex: org-export-define-derived-backend +The two main entry points to the export engine are: +~org-export-define-backend~ and ~org-export-define-derived-backend~. +To grok these functions, see =ox-latex.el= for an example of defining +a new back-end from scratch, and =ox-beamer.el= for an example of +deriving from an existing engine. + +For creating a new back-end from scratch, first set its name as +a symbol in an alist consisting of elements and export functions. To +make the back-end visible to the export dispatcher, set ~:menu-entry~ +keyword. For export options specific to this back-end, set the +~:options-alist~. + +For creating a new back-end from an existing one, set +~:translate-alist~ to an alist of export functions. This alist +replaces the parent back-end functions. + +For complete documentation, see [[https://orgmode.org/worg/dev/org-export-reference.html][the Org Export Reference on Worg]]. + +** Tables in Arbitrary Syntax +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: Orgtbl for LaTeX and other programs. +:END: +#+cindex: tables, in other modes +#+cindex: lists, in other modes +#+cindex: Orgtbl mode + +Due to Org's success in handling tables with Orgtbl, a frequently +requested feature is the use of Org's table functions in other modes, +e.g., LaTeX. This would be hard to do in a general way without +complicated customization nightmares. Moreover, that would take Org +away from its simplicity roots that Orgtbl has proven. There is, +however, an alternate approach to accomplishing the same. + +This approach involves implementing a custom /translate/ function that +operates on a native Org /source table/ to produce a table in another +format. This strategy would keep the excellently working Orgtbl +simple and isolate complications, if any, confined to the translate +function. To add more alien table formats, we just add more translate +functions. Also the burden of developing custom translate functions +for new table formats is in the hands of those who know those formats +best. + +*** Radio tables +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: Sending and receiving radio tables. +:END: +#+cindex: radio tables + +Radio tables are target locations for translated tables that are not near +their source. Org finds the target location and inserts the translated +table. + +The key to finding the target location is the magic words =BEGIN/END +RECEIVE ORGTBL=. They have to appear as comments in the current mode. +If the mode is C, then: + +#+begin_example +/* BEGIN RECEIVE ORGTBL table_name */ +/* END RECEIVE ORGTBL table_name */ +#+end_example + +At the location of source, Org needs a special line to direct Orgtbl +to translate and to find the target for inserting the translated +table. For example: + +#+cindex: @samp{ORGTBL}, keyword +: #+ORGTBL: SEND table_name translation_function arguments ... + +#+texinfo: @noindent +=table_name= is the table's reference name, which is also used in the +receiver lines, and the =translation_function= is the Lisp function +that translates. This line, in addition, may also contain alternating +key and value arguments at the end. The translation function gets +these values as a property list. A few standard parameters are +already recognized and acted upon before the translation function is +called: + +- =:skip N= :: + + Skip the first N lines of the table. Hlines do count; include them + if they are to be skipped. + +- =:skipcols (n1 n2 ...)= :: + + List of columns to be skipped. First Org automatically discards + columns with calculation marks and then sends the table to the + translator function, which then skips columns as specified in + =skipcols=. + +To keep the source table intact in the buffer without being disturbed +when the source file is compiled or otherwise being worked on, use one +of these strategies: + +- Place the table in a block comment. For example, in C mode you + could wrap the table between =/*= and =*/= lines. + +- Put the table after an "end" statement. For example ~\bye~ in TeX + and ~\end{document}~ in LaTeX. + +- Comment and un-comment each line of the table during edits. The + {{{kbd(M-x orgtbl-toggle-comment)}}} command makes toggling easy. + +*** A LaTeX example of radio tables +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: Step by step, almost a tutorial. +:ALT_TITLE: A LaTeX example +:END: +#+cindex: @LaTeX{}, and Orgtbl mode + +To wrap a source table in LaTeX, use the =comment= environment +provided by =comment.sty=[fn:156]. To activate it, put +~\usepackage{comment}~ in the document header. Orgtbl mode inserts +a radio table skeleton[fn:157] with the command {{{kbd(M-x +orgtbl-insert-radio-table)}}}, which prompts for a table name. For +example, if =salesfigures= is the name, the template inserts: + +#+begin_example +% BEGIN RECEIVE ORGTBL salesfigures +% END RECEIVE ORGTBL salesfigures +\begin{comment} +,#+ORGTBL: SEND salesfigures orgtbl-to-latex +| | | +\end{comment} +#+end_example + +#+vindex: LaTeX-verbatim-environments +#+texinfo: @noindent +The line =#+ORGTBL: SEND= tells Orgtbl mode to use the function +~orgtbl-to-latex~ to convert the table to LaTeX format, then insert +the table at the target (receive) location named =salesfigures=. Now +the table is ready for data entry. It can even use spreadsheet +features[fn:158]: + +#+begin_example +% BEGIN RECEIVE ORGTBL salesfigures +% END RECEIVE ORGTBL salesfigures +\begin{comment} +,#+ORGTBL: SEND salesfigures orgtbl-to-latex +| Month | Days | Nr sold | per day | +|-------+------+---------+---------| +| Jan | 23 | 55 | 2.4 | +| Feb | 21 | 16 | 0.8 | +| March | 22 | 278 | 12.6 | +,#+TBLFM: $4=$3/$2;%.1f +% $ (optional extra dollar to keep Font Lock happy, see footnote) +\end{comment} +#+end_example + +After editing, {{{kbd(C-c C-c)}}} inserts the translated table at the +target location, between the two marker lines. + +For hand-made custom tables, note that the translator needs to skip +the first two lines of the source table. Also the command has to +/splice/ out the target table without the header and footer. + +#+begin_example +\begin{tabular}{lrrr} +Month & \multicolumn{1}{c}{Days} & Nr.\ sold & per day\\ +% BEGIN RECEIVE ORGTBL salesfigures +% END RECEIVE ORGTBL salesfigures +\end{tabular} +% +\begin{comment} +,#+ORGTBL: SEND salesfigures orgtbl-to-latex :splice t :skip 2 +| Month | Days | Nr sold | per day | +|-------+------+---------+---------| +| Jan | 23 | 55 | 2.4 | +| Feb | 21 | 16 | 0.8 | +| March | 22 | 278 | 12.6 | +,#+TBLFM: $4=$3/$2;%.1f +\end{comment} +#+end_example + +The LaTeX translator function ~orgtbl-to-latex~ is already part of +Orgtbl mode and uses a =tabular= environment to typeset the table and +marks horizontal lines with ~\hline~. For additional parameters to +control output, see [[*Translator functions]]: + +- =:splice BOOLEAN= :: + + When {{{var(BOOLEAN}}} is non-~nil~, return only table body lines; + i.e., not wrapped in =tabular= environment. Default is ~nil~. + +- =:fmt FMT= :: + + Format string to warp each field. It should contain =%s= for the + original field value. For example, to wrap each field value in + dollar symbol, you could use =:fmt "$%s$"=. Format can also wrap + a property list with column numbers and formats, for example =:fmt + (2 "$%s$" 4 "%s\\%%")=. In place of a string, a function of one + argument can be used; the function must return a formatted string. + +- =:efmt EFMT= :: + + Format numbers as exponentials. The spec should have =%s= twice for + inserting mantissa and exponent, for example ="%s\\times10^{%s}"=. This + may also be a property list with column numbers and formats, for + example =:efmt (2 "$%s\\times10^{%s}$" 4 "$%s\\cdot10^{%s}$")=. After + {{{var(EFMT)}}} has been applied to a value, {{{var(FMT)}}}---see + above---is also applied. Functions with two arguments can be + supplied instead of strings. By default, no special formatting is + applied. + +*** Translator functions +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: Copy and modify. +:END: +#+cindex: HTML, and Orgtbl mode +#+cindex: translator function + +#+findex: orgtbl-to-csv +#+findex: orgtbl-to-tsv +#+findex: orgtbl-to-latex +#+findex: orgtbl-to-html +#+findex: orgtbl-to-texinfo +#+findex: orgtbl-to-unicode +#+findex: orgtbl-to-orgtbl +#+findex: orgtbl-to-generic +Orgtbl mode has built-in translator functions: ~orgtbl-to-csv~ +(comma-separated values), ~orgtbl-to-tsv~ (TAB-separated values), +~orgtbl-to-latex~, ~orgtbl-to-html~, ~orgtbl-to-texinfo~, +~orgtbl-to-unicode~ and ~orgtbl-to-orgtbl~. They use the generic +translator, ~orgtbl-to-generic~, which delegates translations to +various export back-ends. + +Properties passed to the function through the =ORGTBL SEND= line take +precedence over properties defined inside the function. For example, +this overrides the default LaTeX line endings, ~\\~, with ~\\[2mm]~: + +: #+ORGTBL: SEND test orgtbl-to-latex :lend " \\\\[2mm]" + +For a new language translator, define a converter function. It can be +a generic function, such as shown in this example. It marks +a beginning and ending of a table with =!BTBL!= and =!ETBL!=; +a beginning and ending of lines with =!BL!= and =!EL!=; and uses a TAB +for a field separator: + +#+begin_src emacs-lisp +(defun orgtbl-to-language (table params) + "Convert the orgtbl-mode TABLE to language." + (orgtbl-to-generic + table + (org-combine-plists + '(:tstart "!BTBL!" :tend "!ETBL!" :lstart "!BL!" :lend "!EL!" :sep "\t") + params))) +#+end_src + +#+texinfo: @noindent +The documentation for the ~orgtbl-to-generic~ function shows +a complete list of parameters, each of which can be passed through to +~orgtbl-to-latex~, ~orgtbl-to-texinfo~, and any other function using +that generic function. + +For complicated translations the generic translator function could be +replaced by a custom translator function. Such a custom function must +take two arguments and return a single string containing the formatted +table. The first argument is the table whose lines are a list of +fields or the symbol ~hline~. The second argument is the property +list consisting of parameters specified in the =#+ORGTBL: SEND= line. +Please share your translator functions by posting them to the Org +users mailing list, at mailto:emacs-orgmode@gnu.org. + +** Dynamic Blocks +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: Automatically filled blocks. +:END: +#+cindex: dynamic blocks + +Org supports /dynamic blocks/ in Org documents. They are inserted +with begin and end markers like any other code block, but the contents +are updated automatically by a user function. + +#+kindex: C-c C-x x +#+findex: org-dynamic-block-insert-dblock +You can insert a dynamic block with ~org-dynamic-block-insert-dblock~, +which is bound to {{{kbd(C-c C-x x)}}} by default. For example, +{{{kbd(C-c C-x x c l o c k t a b l e RET)}}} inserts a table that +updates the work time (see [[*Clocking Work Time]]). + +Dynamic blocks can have names and function parameters. The syntax is +similar to source code block specifications: + +#+begin_example +,#+BEGIN: myblock :parameter1 value1 :parameter2 value2 ... + ... +,#+END: +#+end_example + +These commands update dynamic blocks: + +- {{{kbd(C-c C-x C-u)}}} (~org-dblock-update~) :: + + #+kindex: C-c C-x C-u + #+findex: org-dblock-update + Update dynamic block at point. + +- {{{kbd(C-u C-c C-x C-u)}}} :: + + #+kindex: C-u C-c C-x C-u + Update all dynamic blocks in the current file. + +Before updating a dynamic block, Org removes content between the +=BEGIN= and =END= markers. Org then reads the parameters on the +=BEGIN= line for passing to the writer function as a plist. The +previous content of the dynamic block becomes erased from the buffer +and appended to the plist under ~:content~. + +The syntax for naming a writer function with a dynamic block labeled +=myblock= is: ~org-dblock-write:myblock~. + +The following is an example of a dynamic block and a block writer function +that updates the time when the function was last run: + +#+begin_example +,#+BEGIN: block-update-time :format "on %m/%d/%Y at %H:%M" + ... +,#+END: +#+end_example + +#+texinfo: @noindent +The dynamic block's writer function: + +#+begin_src emacs-lisp +(defun org-dblock-write:block-update-time (params) + (let ((fmt (or (plist-get params :format) "%d. %m. %Y"))) + (insert "Last block update at: " + (format-time-string fmt)))) +#+end_src + +To keep dynamic blocks up-to-date in an Org file, use the function, +~org-update-all-dblocks~ in hook, such as ~before-save-hook~. The +~org-update-all-dblocks~ function does not run if the file is not in +Org mode. + +#+findex: org-narrow-to-block +Dynamic blocks, like any other block, can be narrowed with +~org-narrow-to-block~. + +** Special Agenda Views +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: Customized views. +:END: +#+cindex: agenda views, user-defined + +#+vindex: org-agenda-skip-function +#+vindex: org-agenda-skip-function-global +Org provides a special hook to further limit items in agenda views: +~agenda~, ~agenda*~[fn:159], ~todo~, ~alltodo~, ~tags~, ~tags-todo~, +~tags-tree~. Specify a custom function that tests inclusion of every +matched item in the view. This function can also skip as much as is +needed. + +For a global condition applicable to agenda views, use the +~org-agenda-skip-function-global~ variable. Org uses a global +condition with ~org-agenda-skip-function~ for custom searching. + +This example defines a function for a custom view showing TODO items +with =waiting= status. Manually this is a multi-step search process, +but with a custom view, this can be automated as follows: + +The custom function searches the subtree for the =waiting= tag and +returns ~nil~ on match. Otherwise it gives the location from where +the search continues. + +#+begin_src emacs-lisp +(defun my-skip-unless-waiting () + "Skip trees that are not waiting" + (let ((subtree-end (save-excursion (org-end-of-subtree t)))) + (if (re-search-forward ":waiting:" subtree-end t) + nil ; tag found, do not skip + subtree-end))) ; tag not found, continue after end of subtree +#+end_src + +To use this custom function in a custom agenda command: + +#+begin_src emacs-lisp +(org-add-agenda-custom-command + '("b" todo "PROJECT" + ((org-agenda-skip-function 'my-skip-unless-waiting) + (org-agenda-overriding-header "Projects waiting for something: ")))) +#+end_src + +#+vindex: org-agenda-overriding-header +Note that this also binds ~org-agenda-overriding-header~ to a more +meaningful string suitable for the agenda view. + +#+vindex: org-odd-levels-only +#+vindex: org-agenda-skip-function +Search for entries with a limit set on levels for the custom search. +This is a general approach to creating custom searches in Org. To +include all levels, use =LEVEL>0=[fn:160]. Then to selectively pick +the matched entries, use ~org-agenda-skip-function~, which also +accepts Lisp forms, such as ~org-agenda-skip-entry-if~ and +~org-agenda-skip-subtree-if~. For example: + +- =(org-agenda-skip-entry-if 'scheduled)= :: + + Skip current entry if it has been scheduled. + +- =(org-agenda-skip-entry-if 'notscheduled)= :: + + Skip current entry if it has not been scheduled. + +- =(org-agenda-skip-entry-if 'deadline)= :: + + Skip current entry if it has a deadline. + +- =(org-agenda-skip-entry-if 'scheduled 'deadline)= :: + + Skip current entry if it has a deadline, or if it is scheduled. + +- =(org-agenda-skip-entry-if 'todo '("TODO" "WAITING"))= :: + + Skip current entry if the TODO keyword is TODO or WAITING. + +- =(org-agenda-skip-entry-if 'todo 'done)= :: + + Skip current entry if the TODO keyword marks a DONE state. + +- =(org-agenda-skip-entry-if 'timestamp)= :: + + Skip current entry if it has any timestamp, may also be deadline or + scheduled. + +- =(org-agenda-skip-entry-if 'regexp "regular expression")= :: + + Skip current entry if the regular expression matches in the entry. + +- =(org-agenda-skip-entry-if 'notregexp "regular expression")= :: + + Skip current entry unless the regular expression matches. + +- =(org-agenda-skip-subtree-if 'regexp "regular expression")= :: + + Same as above, but check and skip the entire subtree. + +The following is an example of a search for =waiting= without the +special function: + +#+begin_src emacs-lisp +(org-add-agenda-custom-command + '("b" todo "PROJECT" + ((org-agenda-skip-function '(org-agenda-skip-subtree-if + 'regexp ":waiting:")) + (org-agenda-overriding-header "Projects waiting for something: ")))) +#+end_src + +** Speeding Up Your Agendas +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: Tips on how to speed up your agendas. +:END: +#+cindex: agenda views, optimization + +Some agenda commands slow down when the Org files grow in size or +number. Here are tips to speed up: + +- Reduce the number of Org agenda files to avoid slowdowns due to hard drive + accesses. + +- Reduce the number of DONE and archived headlines so agenda + operations that skip over these can finish faster. + +- Do not dim blocked tasks: + #+vindex: org-agenda-dim-blocked-tasks + + #+begin_src emacs-lisp + (setq org-agenda-dim-blocked-tasks nil) + #+end_src + +- Stop preparing agenda buffers on startup: + #+vindex: org-startup-folded + #+vindex: org-agenda-inhibit-startup + + #+begin_src emacs-lisp + (setq org-agenda-inhibit-startup t) + #+end_src + +- Disable tag inheritance for agendas: + #+vindex: org-agenda-show-inherited-tags + #+vindex: org-agenda-use-tag-inheritance + + #+begin_src emacs-lisp + (setq org-agenda-use-tag-inheritance nil) + #+end_src + +These options can be applied to selected agenda views. For more +details about generation of agenda views, see the docstrings for the +relevant variables, and this [[https://orgmode.org/worg/agenda-optimization.html][dedicated Worg page]] for agenda +optimization. + +** Extracting Agenda Information +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: Post-processing agenda information. +:END: +#+cindex: agenda, pipe +#+cindex: scripts, for agenda processing + +Org provides commands to access agendas through Emacs batch mode. +Through this command-line interface, agendas are automated for further +processing or printing. + +#+vindex: org-agenda-custom-commands +#+findex: org-batch-agenda +~org-batch-agenda~ creates an agenda view in ASCII and outputs to +standard output. This command takes one string parameter. When +string consists of a single character, Org uses it as a key to +~org-agenda-custom-commands~. These are the same ones available +through the agenda dispatcher (see [[*The Agenda Dispatcher]]). + +This example command line directly prints the TODO list to the printer: + +: emacs -batch -l ~/.emacs -eval '(org-batch-agenda "t")' | lpr + +When the string parameter length is two or more characters, Org +matches it with tags/TODO strings. For example, this example command +line prints items tagged with =shop=, but excludes items tagged with +=NewYork=: + +#+begin_example +emacs -batch -l ~/.emacs \ + -eval '(org-batch-agenda "+shop-NewYork")' | lpr +#+end_example + +#+texinfo: @noindent +An example showing on-the-fly parameter modifications: + +#+begin_example +emacs -batch -l ~/.emacs \ + -eval '(org-batch-agenda "a" \ + org-agenda-span (quote month) \ + org-agenda-include-diary nil \ + org-agenda-files (quote ("~/org/project.org")))' \ + | lpr +#+end_example + +#+texinfo: @noindent +which produces an agenda for the next 30 days from just the +=~/org/projects.org= file. + +#+findex: org-batch-agenda-csv +For structured processing of agenda output, use ~org-batch-agenda-csv~ +with the following fields: + +- category :: The category of the item +- head :: The headline, without TODO keyword, TAGS and PRIORITY +- type :: The type of the agenda entry, can be + + | ~todo~ | selected in TODO match | + | ~tagsmatch~ | selected in tags match | + | ~diary~ | imported from diary | + | ~deadline~ | a deadline | + | ~scheduled~ | scheduled | + | ~timestamp~ | appointment, selected by timestamp | + | ~closed~ | entry was closed on date | + | ~upcoming-deadline~ | warning about nearing deadline | + | ~past-scheduled~ | forwarded scheduled item | + | ~block~ | entry has date block including date | + +- todo :: The TODO keyword, if any +- tags :: All tags including inherited ones, separated by colons +- date :: The relevant date, like =2007-2-14= +- time :: The time, like =15:00-16:50= +- extra :: String with extra planning info +- priority-l :: The priority letter if any was given +- priority-n :: The computed numerical priority + +If the selection of the agenda item was based on a timestamp, +including those items with =DEADLINE= and =SCHEDULED= keywords, then +Org includes date and time in the output. + +If the selection of the agenda item was based on a timestamp (or +deadline/scheduled), then Org includes date and time in the output. + +Here is an example of a post-processing script in Perl. It takes the +CSV output from Emacs and prints with a checkbox: + +#+begin_src perl +#!/usr/bin/perl + +# define the Emacs command to run +$cmd = "emacs -batch -l ~/.emacs -eval '(org-batch-agenda-csv \"t\")'"; + +# run it and capture the output +$agenda = qx{$cmd 2>/dev/null}; + +# loop over all lines +foreach $line (split(/\n/,$agenda)) { + # get the individual values + ($category,$head,$type,$todo,$tags,$date,$time,$extra, + $priority_l,$priority_n) = split(/,/,$line); + # process and print + print "[ ] $head\n"; +} +#+end_src + +** Using the Property API +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: Writing programs that use entry properties. +:END: +#+cindex: API, for properties +#+cindex: properties, API + +Here is a description of the functions that can be used to work with +properties. + +#+attr_texinfo: :options org-entry-properties &optional pom which +#+begin_defun +Get all properties of the entry at point-or-marker {{{var(POM)}}}. +This includes the TODO keyword, the tags, time strings for deadline, +scheduled, and clocking, and any additional properties defined in the +entry. The return value is an alist. Keys may occur multiple times +if the property key was used several times. {{{var(POM)}}} may also +be ~nil~, in which case the current entry is used. If +{{{var(WHICH)}}} is ~nil~ or ~all~, get all properties. If +{{{var(WHICH)}}} is ~special~ or ~standard~, only get that subclass. +#+end_defun + +#+vindex: org-use-property-inheritance +#+findex: org-insert-property-drawer +#+attr_texinfo: :options org-entry-get pom property &optional inherit +#+begin_defun +Get value of {{{var(PROPERTY)}}} for entry at point-or-marker +{{{var(POM)}}}. By default, this only looks at properties defined +locally in the entry. If {{{var(INHERIT)}}} is non-~nil~ and the +entry does not have the property, then also check higher levels of the +hierarchy. If {{{var(INHERIT)}}} is the symbol ~selective~, use +inheritance if and only if the setting of +~org-use-property-inheritance~ selects {{{var(PROPERTY)}}} for +inheritance. +#+end_defun + +#+attr_texinfo: :options org-entry-delete pom property +#+begin_defun +Delete the property {{{var(PROPERTY)}}} from entry at point-or-marker +{{{var(POM)}}}. +#+end_defun + +#+attr_texinfo: :options org-entry-put pom property value +#+begin_defun +Set {{{var(PROPERTY)}}} to {{{var(VALUES)}}} for entry at +point-or-marker POM. +#+end_defun + +#+attr_texinfo: :options org-buffer-property-keys &optional include-specials +#+begin_defun +Get all property keys in the current buffer. +#+end_defun + +#+attr_texinfo: :options org-insert-property-drawer +#+begin_defun +Insert a property drawer for the current entry. Also +#+end_defun + +#+attr_texinfo: :options org-entry-put-multivalued-property pom property &rest values +#+begin_defun +Set {{{var(PROPERTY)}}} at point-or-marker {{{var(POM)}}} to +{{{var(VALUES)}}}. {{{var(VALUES)}}} should be a list of strings. +They are concatenated, with spaces as separators. +#+end_defun + +#+attr_texinfo: :options org-entry-get-multivalued-property pom property +#+begin_defun +Treat the value of the property {{{var(PROPERTY)}}} as +a whitespace-separated list of values and return the values as a list +of strings. +#+end_defun + +#+attr_texinfo: :options org-entry-add-to-multivalued-property pom property value +#+begin_defun +Treat the value of the property {{{var(PROPERTY)}}} as +a whitespace-separated list of values and make sure that +{{{var(VALUE)}}} is in this list. +#+end_defun + +#+attr_texinfo: :options org-entry-remove-from-multivalued-property pom property value +#+begin_defun +Treat the value of the property {{{var(PROPERTY)}}} as +a whitespace-separated list of values and make sure that +{{{var(VALUE)}}} is /not/ in this list. +#+end_defun + +#+attr_texinfo: :options org-entry-member-in-multivalued-property pom property value +#+begin_defun +Treat the value of the property {{{var(PROPERTY)}}} as +a whitespace-separated list of values and check if {{{var(VALUE)}}} is +in this list. +#+end_defun + +#+attr_texinfo: :options org-property-allowed-value-functions +#+begin_defopt +Hook for functions supplying allowed values for a specific property. +The functions must take a single argument, the name of the property, +and return a flat list of allowed values. If =:ETC= is one of the +values, use the values as completion help, but allow also other values +to be entered. The functions must return ~nil~ if they are not +responsible for this property. +#+end_defopt + +** Using the Mapping API +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: Mapping over all or selected entries. +:END: +#+cindex: API, for mapping +#+cindex: mapping entries, API + +Org has sophisticated mapping capabilities to find all entries +satisfying certain criteria. Internally, this functionality is used +to produce agenda views, but there is also an API that can be used to +execute arbitrary functions for each or selected entries. The main +entry point for this API is: + +#+attr_texinfo: :options org-map-entries func &optional match scope &rest skip +#+begin_defun +Call {{{var(FUNC)}}} at each headline selected by {{{var(MATCH)}}} in +{{{var(SCOPE)}}}. + +{{{var(FUNC)}}} is a function or a Lisp form. With point positioned +at the beginning of the headline, call the function without arguments. +Org returns an alist of return values of calls to the function. + +To avoid preserving point, Org wraps the call to {{{var(FUNC)}}} in +~save-excursion~ form. After evaluation, Org moves point to the end +of the line that was just processed. Search continues from that point +forward. This may not always work as expected under some conditions, +such as if the current sub-tree was removed by a previous archiving +operation. In such rare circumstances, Org skips the next entry +entirely when it should not. To stop Org from such skips, make +{{{var(FUNC)}}} set the variable ~org-map-continue-from~ to a specific +buffer position. + +{{{var(MATCH)}}} is a tags/property/TODO match. Org iterates only +matched headlines. Org iterates over all headlines when +{{{var(MATCH)}}} is ~nil~ or ~t~. + +{{{var(SCOPE)}}} determines the scope of this command. It can be any +of: + +- ~nil~ :: + + The current buffer, respecting the restriction, if any. + +- ~tree~ :: + + The subtree started with the entry at point. + +- ~region~ :: + + The entries within the active region, if any. + +- ~file~ :: + + The current buffer, without restriction. + +- ~file-with-archives~ :: + + The current buffer, and any archives associated with it. + +- ~agenda~ :: + + All agenda files. + +- ~agenda-with-archives~ :: + + All agenda files with any archive files associated with them. + +- list of filenames :: + + If this is a list, all files in the list are scanned. + +#+texinfo: @noindent +The remaining arguments are treated as settings for the scanner's +skipping facilities. Valid arguments are: + +- ~archive~ :: + + Skip trees with the =ARCHIVE= tag. + +- ~comment~ :: + + Skip trees with the COMMENT keyword. + +- function or Lisp form :: + + #+vindex: org-agenda-skip-function + Used as value for ~org-agenda-skip-function~, so whenever the + function returns ~t~, {{{var(FUNC)}}} is called for that entry and + search continues from the point where the function leaves it. +#+end_defun + +The mapping routine can call any arbitrary function, even functions +that change meta data or query the property API (see [[*Using the +Property API]]). Here are some handy functions: + +#+attr_texinfo: :options org-todo &optional arg +#+begin_defun +Change the TODO state of the entry. See the docstring of the +functions for the many possible values for the argument +{{{var(ARG)}}}. +#+end_defun + +#+attr_texinfo: :options org-priority &optional action +#+begin_defun +Change the priority of the entry. See the docstring of this function +for the possible values for {{{var(ACTION)}}}. +#+end_defun + +#+attr_texinfo: :options org-toggle-tag tag &optional onoff +#+begin_defun +Toggle the tag {{{var(TAG)}}} in the current entry. Setting +{{{var(ONOFF)}}} to either ~on~ or ~off~ does not toggle tag, but +ensure that it is either on or off. +#+end_defun + +#+attr_texinfo: :options org-promote +#+begin_defun +Promote the current entry. +#+end_defun + +#+attr_texinfo: :options org-demote +#+begin_defun +Demote the current entry. +#+end_defun + +This example turns all entries tagged with =TOMORROW= into TODO +entries with keyword =UPCOMING=. Org ignores entries in comment trees +and archive trees. + +#+begin_src emacs-lisp +(org-map-entries '(org-todo "UPCOMING") + "+TOMORROW" 'file 'archive 'comment) +#+end_src + +The following example counts the number of entries with TODO keyword +=WAITING=, in all agenda files. + +#+begin_src emacs-lisp +(length (org-map-entries t "/+WAITING" 'agenda)) +#+end_src + +* History and Acknowledgments +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: How Org came into being. +:APPENDIX: t +:END: + +** From Carsten +:PROPERTIES: +:UNNUMBERED: notoc +:END: + +Org was born in 2003, out of frustration over the user interface of +the Emacs Outline mode. I was trying to organize my notes and +projects, and using Emacs seemed to be the natural way to go. +However, having to remember eleven different commands with two or +three keys per command, only to hide and show parts of the outline +tree, that seemed entirely unacceptable to me. Also, when using +outlines to take notes, I constantly wanted to restructure the tree, +organizing it parallel to my thoughts and plans. /Visibility cycling/ +and /structure editing/ were originally implemented in the package +=outline-magic.el=, but quickly moved to the more general =org.el=. +As this environment became comfortable for project planning, the next +step was adding /TODO entries/, basic /timestamps/, and /table +support/. These areas highlighted the two main goals that Org still +has today: to be a new, outline-based, plain text mode with innovative +and intuitive editing features, and to incorporate project planning +functionality directly into a notes file. + +Since the first release, literally thousands of emails to me or to the +[[mailto:emacs-orgmode@gnu.org][mailing list]] have provided a constant stream of bug reports, feedback, +new ideas, and sometimes patches and add-on code. Many thanks to +everyone who has helped to improve this package. I am trying to keep +here a list of the people who had significant influence in shaping one +or more aspects of Org. The list may not be complete, if I have +forgotten someone, please accept my apologies and let me know. + +Before I get to this list, a few special mentions are in order: + +- Bastien Guerry :: + + Bastien has written a large number of extensions to Org (most of + them integrated into the core by now), including the LaTeX exporter + and the plain list parser. His support during the early days was + central to the success of this project. Bastien also invented Worg, + helped establishing the Web presence of Org, and sponsored hosting + costs for the orgmode.org website. Bastien stepped in as maintainer + of Org between 2011 and 2013, at a time when I desperately needed + a break. + +- Eric Schulte and Dan Davison :: + + Eric and Dan are jointly responsible for the Org Babel system, which + turns Org into a multi-language environment for evaluating code and + doing literate programming and reproducible research. This has + become one of Org's killer features that define what Org is today. + +- John Wiegley :: + + John has contributed a number of great ideas and patches directly to + Org, including the attachment system (=org-attach.el=), integration + with Apple Mail (=org-mac-message.el=), hierarchical dependencies of + TODO items, habit tracking (=org-habits.el=), and encryption + (=org-crypt.el=). Also, the capture system is really an extended + copy of his great =remember.el=. + +- Sebastian Rose :: + + Without Sebastian, the HTML/XHTML publishing of Org would be the + pitiful work of an ignorant amateur. Sebastian has pushed this part + of Org onto a much higher level. He also wrote =org-info.js=, + a JavaScript program for displaying webpages derived from Org using + an Info-like or a folding interface with single-key navigation. + +See below for the full list of contributions! Again, please let me +know what I am missing here! + +** From Bastien +:PROPERTIES: +:UNNUMBERED: notoc +:END: + +I (Bastien) have been maintaining Org between 2011 and 2013. This +appendix would not be complete without adding a few more +acknowledgments and thanks. + +I am first grateful to Carsten for his trust while handing me over the +maintainership of Org. His unremitting support is what really helped +me getting more confident over time, with both the community and the +code. + +When I took over maintainership, I knew I would have to make Org more +collaborative than ever, as I would have to rely on people that are +more knowledgeable than I am on many parts of the code. Here is +a list of the persons I could rely on, they should really be +considered co-maintainers, either of the code or the community: + +- Eric Schulte :: + + Eric is maintaining the Babel parts of Org. His reactivity here + kept me away from worrying about possible bugs here and let me focus + on other parts. + +- Nicolas Goaziou :: + + Nicolas is maintaining the consistency of the deepest parts of Org. + His work on =org-element.el= and =ox.el= has been outstanding, and + it opened the doors for many new ideas and features. He rewrote + many of the old exporters to use the new export engine, and helped + with documenting this major change. More importantly (if that's + possible), he has been more than reliable during all the work done + for Org 8.0, and always very reactive on the mailing list. + +- Achim Gratz :: + + Achim rewrote the building process of Org, turning some /ad hoc/ + tools into a flexible and conceptually clean process. He patiently + coped with the many hiccups that such a change can create for users. + +- Nick Dokos :: + + The Org mode mailing list would not be such a nice place without + Nick, who patiently helped users so many times. It is impossible to + overestimate such a great help, and the list would not be so active + without him. + +I received support from so many users that it is clearly impossible to +be fair when shortlisting a few of them, but Org's history would not +be complete if the ones above were not mentioned in this manual. + +** List of Contributions +:PROPERTIES: +:UNNUMBERED: notoc +:END: + +- Russell Adams came up with the idea for drawers. + +- Thomas Baumann wrote =ol-bbdb.el= and =ol-mhe.el=. + +- Christophe Bataillon created the great unicorn logo that we use on + the Org mode website. + +- Alex Bochannek provided a patch for rounding timestamps. + +- Jan Böcker wrote =ol-docview.el=. + +- Brad Bozarth showed how to pull RSS feed data into Org files. + +- Tom Breton wrote =org-choose.el=. + +- Charles Cave's suggestion sparked the implementation of templates + for Remember, which are now templates for capture. + +- Timothy E Chapman worked on a complete overhaul of the orgmode.org + website in 2020 and helped fixing various bugs. + +- Pavel Chalmoviansky influenced the agenda treatment of items with + specified time. + +- Gregory Chernov patched support for Lisp forms into table + calculations and improved XEmacs compatibility, in particular by + porting =nouline.el= to XEmacs. + +- Sacha Chua suggested copying some linking code from Planner. + +- Baoqiu Cui contributed the DocBook exporter. + +- Eddward DeVilla proposed and tested checkbox statistics. He also + came up with the idea of properties, and that there should be an API + for them. + +- Nick Dokos tracked down several nasty bugs. + +- Kees Dullemond used to edit projects lists directly in HTML and so + inspired some of the early development, including HTML export. He + also asked for a way to narrow wide table columns. + +- Thomas\nbsp{}S.\nbsp{}Dye contributed documentation on Worg and helped + integrating the Org Babel documentation into the manual. + +- Christian Egli converted the documentation into Texinfo format, + inspired the agenda, patched CSS formatting into the HTML exporter, + and wrote =org-taskjuggler.el=. + +- David Emery provided a patch for custom CSS support in exported HTML + agendas. + +- Nic Ferrier contributed mailcap and XOXO support. + +- Miguel\nbsp{}A.\nbsp{}Figueroa-Villanueva implemented hierarchical checkboxes. + +- John Foerch figured out how to make incremental search show context + around a match in a hidden outline tree. + +- Raimar Finken wrote =org-git-line.el=. + +- Mikael Fornius works as a mailing list moderator. + +- Austin Frank works as a mailing list moderator. + +- Eric Fraga drove the development of Beamer export with ideas and + testing. + +- Barry Gidden did proofreading the manual in preparation for the book + publication through Network Theory Ltd. + +- Niels Giesen had the idea to automatically archive DONE trees. + +- Nicolas Goaziou rewrote much of the plain list code. + +- Kai Grossjohann pointed out key-binding conflicts with other + packages. + +- Brian Gough of Network Theory Ltd publishes the Org mode manual as + a book. + +- Bernt Hansen has driven much of the support for auto-repeating + tasks, task state change logging, and the clocktable. His clear + explanations have been critical when we started to adopt the Git + version control system. + +- Manuel Hermenegildo has contributed various ideas, small fixes and + patches. + +- Phil Jackson wrote =ol-irc.el=. + +- Scott Jaderholm proposed footnotes, control over whitespace between + folded entries, and column view for properties. + +- Matt Jones wrote MobileOrg Android. + +- Tokuya Kameshima wrote =org-wl.el= and =org-mew.el=. + +- Shidai Liu ("Leo") asked for embedded LaTeX and tested it. He also + provided frequent feedback and some patches. + +- Matt Lundin has proposed last-row references for table formulas and + named invisible anchors. He has also worked a lot on the FAQ. + +- David Maus wrote =org-atom.el=, maintains the issues file for Org, + and is a prolific contributor on the mailing list with competent + replies, small fixes and patches. + +- Jason\nbsp{}F.\nbsp{}McBrayer suggested agenda export to CSV format. + +- Kyle Meyer helped setting up the [[https://public-inbox.org/][public-inbox]] archive of the [[https://orgmode.org/list/][Org + mailing list]] and has been fixing many bugs. + +- Max Mikhanosha came up with the idea of refiling. + +- Dmitri Minaev sent a patch to set priority limits on a per-file + basis. + +- Stefan Monnier provided a patch to keep the Emacs Lisp compiler + happy. + +- Richard Moreland wrote MobileOrg for the iPhone. + +- Rick Moynihan proposed allowing multiple TODO sequences in a file + and being able to quickly restrict the agenda to a subtree. + +- Todd Neal provided patches for links to Info files and Elisp forms. + +- Greg Newman refreshed the unicorn logo into its current form. + +- Tim O'Callaghan suggested in-file links, search options for general + file links, and tags. + +- Osamu Okano wrote =orgcard2ref.pl=, a Perl program to create a text + version of the reference card. + +- Takeshi Okano translated the manual and David O'Toole's tutorial + into Japanese. + +- Oliver Oppitz suggested multi-state TODO items. + +- Scott Otterson sparked the introduction of descriptive text for + links, among other things. + +- Pete Phillips helped during the development of the TAGS feature, + and provided frequent feedback. + +- Martin Pohlack provided the code snippet to bundle character + insertion into bundles of 20 for undo. + +- Ihor Radchenko helped with fixing bugs and improving the user + experience regarding Org's speed. + +- T.\nbsp{}V.\nbsp{}Raman reported bugs and suggested improvements. + +- Matthias Rempe (Oelde) provided ideas, Windows support, and quality + control. + +- Paul Rivier provided the basic implementation of named footnotes. + He also acted as mailing list moderator for some time. + +- Kevin Rogers contributed code to access VM files on remote hosts. + +- Frank Ruell solved the mystery of the =keymapp nil= bug, a conflict + with =allout.el=. + +- Jason Riedy generalized the send-receive mechanism for Orgtbl + tables with extensive patches. + +- Philip Rooke created the Org reference card, provided lots of + feedback, developed and applied standards to the Org documentation. + +- Christian Schlauer proposed angular brackets around links, among + other things. + +- Paul Sexton wrote =org-ctags.el=. + +- Tom Shannon's =organizer-mode.el= inspired linking to VM/BBDB/Gnus. + +- Ilya Shlyakhter proposed the Archive Sibling, line numbering in + literal examples, and remote highlighting for referenced code lines. + +- Stathis Sideris wrote the =ditaa.jar= ASCII to PNG converter that is + now packaged into the [[https://git.sr.ht/~bzg/org-contrib][org-contrib]] repository. + +- Daniel Sinder came up with the idea of internal archiving by locking + subtrees. + +- Dale Smith proposed link abbreviations. + +- James TD Smith has contributed a large number of patches for + useful tweaks and features. + +- Adam Spiers asked for global linking commands, inspired the link + extension system, added support for Mairix, and proposed the mapping + API. + +- Ulf Stegemann created the table to translate special symbols to + HTML, LaTeX, UTF-8, Latin-1 and ASCII. + +- Andy Stewart contributed code to =ol-w3m.el=, to copy + HTML content with links transformation to Org syntax. + +- David O'Toole wrote =org-publish.el= and drafted the + manual chapter about publishing. + +- Jambunathan\nbsp{}K.\nbsp{}contributed the ODT exporter. + +- Sebastien Vauban reported many issues with LaTeX and Beamer export + and enabled source code highlighting in Gnus. + +- Stefan Vollmar organized a video-recorded talk at the + Max-Planck-Institute for Neurology. He also inspired the creation + of a concept index for HTML export. + +- Jürgen Vollmer contributed code generating the table of contents in + HTML output. + +- Samuel Wales has provided important feedback and bug reports. + +- Chris Wallace provided a patch implementing the =QUOTE= block. + +- David Wainberg suggested archiving, and improvements to the + linking system. + +- Carsten Wimmer suggested some changes and helped fix a bug in + linking to Gnus. + +- Roland Winkler requested additional key bindings to make Org work on + a TTY. + +- Piotr Zielinski wrote =org-mouse.el=, proposed agenda + blocks and contributed various ideas and code snippets. + +- Marco Wahl wrote =ol-eww.el=. + +* GNU Free Documentation License +:PROPERTIES: +:APPENDIX: t +:DESCRIPTION: The license for this documentation. +:END: + +#+include: fdl.org + +* Main Index +:PROPERTIES: +:INDEX: cp +:DESCRIPTION: An index of Org's concepts and features. +:END: + +* Key Index +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: Key bindings and where they are described. +:INDEX: ky +:END: + +* Command and Function Index +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: Command names and some internal functions. +:INDEX: fn +:END: + +* Variable Index +:PROPERTIES: +:DESCRIPTION: Variables mentioned in the manual. +:INDEX: vr +:END: + +This is not a complete index of variables and faces, only the ones +that are mentioned in the manual. For a more complete list, use +{{{kbd(M-x org-customize)}}} and then click yourself through the tree. + +* Copying +:PROPERTIES: +:copying: t +:END: + +This manual is for Org version {{{version}}}. + +Copyright \copy 2004--2021 Free Software Foundation, Inc. + +#+begin_quote +Permission is granted to copy, distribute and/or modify this document +under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License, Version 1.3 or +any later version published by the Free Software Foundation; with no +Invariant Sections, with the Front-Cover Texts being "A GNU Manual," +and with the Back-Cover Texts as in (a) below. A copy of the license +is included in the section entitled "GNU Free Documentation License." + +(a) The FSF's Back-Cover Text is: "You have the freedom to copy and +modify this GNU manual." +#+end_quote + +* Export Setup :noexport: + +#+setupfile: doc-setup.org + +#+export_file_name: org.texi + +#+texinfo_dir_category: Emacs editing modes +#+texinfo_dir_title: Org Mode: (org) +#+texinfo_dir_desc: Outline-based notes management and organizer + +* Footnotes + +[fn:1] If you do not use Font Lock globally turn it on in Org buffer +with =(add-hook 'org-mode-hook #'turn-on-font-lock)=. + +[fn:2] Please consider subscribing to the mailing list in order to +minimize the work the mailing list moderators have to do. + +[fn:3] See the variables ~org-special-ctrl-a/e~, ~org-special-ctrl-k~, +and ~org-ctrl-k-protect-subtree~ to configure special behavior of +{{{kbd(C-a)}}}, {{{kbd(C-e)}}}, and {{{kbd(C-k)}}} in headlines. Note +also that clocking only works with headings indented less than 30 +stars. + +[fn:4] See, however, the option ~org-cycle-emulate-tab~. + +[fn:5] The indirect buffer contains the entire buffer, but is narrowed +to the current tree. Editing the indirect buffer also changes the +original buffer, but without affecting visibility in that buffer. For +more information about indirect buffers, see [[info:emacs#Indirect Buffers][GNU Emacs Manual]]. + +[fn:6] When ~org-agenda-inhibit-startup~ is non-~nil~, Org does not +honor the default visibility state when first opening a file for the +agenda (see [[*Speeding Up Your Agendas]]). + +[fn:7] See also the variable ~org-show-context-detail~ to decide how +much context is shown around each match. + +[fn:8] This depends on the option ~org-remove-highlights-with-change~. + +[fn:9] When using =*= as a bullet, lines must be indented so that they +are not interpreted as headlines. Also, when you are hiding leading +stars to get a clean outline view, plain list items starting with +a star may be hard to distinguish from true headlines. In short: even +though =*= is supported, it may be better to not use it for plain list +items. + +[fn:10] You can filter out any of them by configuring +~org-plain-list-ordered-item-terminator~. + +[fn:11] You can also get =a.=, =A.=, =a)= and =A)= by configuring +~org-list-allow-alphabetical~. To minimize confusion with normal +text, those are limited to one character only. Beyond that limit, +bullets automatically become numbers. + +[fn:12] If there's a checkbox in the item, the cookie must be put +/before/ the checkbox. If you have activated alphabetical lists, you +can also use counters like =[@b]=. + +[fn:13] If you do not want the item to be split, customize the +variable ~org-M-RET-may-split-line~. + +[fn:14] If you want to cycle around items that way, you may customize +~org-list-use-circular-motion~. + +[fn:15] See ~org-list-use-circular-motion~ for a cyclic behavior. + +[fn:16] Many desktops intercept {{{kbd(M-TAB)}}} to switch windows. +Use {{{kbd(C-M-i)}}} or {{{kbd(ESC TAB)}}} instead. + +[fn:17] To insert a vertical bar into a table field, use =\vert= or, +inside a word =abc\vert{}def=. + +[fn:18] Org understands references typed by the user as =B4=, but it +does not use this syntax when offering a formula for editing. You can +customize this behavior using the variable +~org-table-use-standard-references~. + +[fn:19] The computation time scales as O(N^2) because table +{{{var(FOO)}}} is parsed for each field to be copied. + +[fn:20] The file =constants.el= can supply the values of constants in +two different unit systems, =SI= and =cgs=. Which one is used depends +on the value of the variable ~constants-unit-system~. You can use the +=STARTUP= options =constSI= and =constcgs= to set this value for the +current buffer. + +[fn:21] The printf reformatting is limited in precision because the +value passed to it is converted into an "integer" or "double". The +"integer" is limited in size by truncating the signed value to 32 +bits. The "double" is limited in precision to 64 bits overall which +leaves approximately 16 significant decimal digits. + +[fn:22] Such names must start with an alphabetic character and use +only alphanumeric/underscore characters. + +[fn:23] Plain URIs are recognized only for a well-defined set of +schemes. See [[*External Links]]. Unlike URI syntax, they cannot contain +parenthesis or white spaces, either. URIs within angle brackets have +no such limitation. + +[fn:24] More accurately, the precise behavior depends on how point +arrived there---see [[info:elisp#Invisible Text][Invisible Text]]. + +[fn:25] To insert a link targeting a headline, in-buffer completion +can be used. Just type a star followed by a few optional letters into +the buffer and press {{{kbd(M-TAB)}}}. All headlines in the current +buffer are offered as completions. + +[fn:26] When targeting a =NAME= keyword, the =CAPTION= keyword is +mandatory in order to get proper numbering (see [[*Captions]]). + +[fn:27] The actual behavior of the search depends on the value of the +variable ~org-link-search-must-match-exact-headline~. If its value is +~nil~, then a fuzzy text search is done. If it is ~t~, then only the +exact headline is matched, ignoring spaces and statistic cookies. If +the value is ~query-to-create~, then an exact headline is searched; if +it is not found, then the user is queried to create it. + +[fn:28] If the headline contains a timestamp, it is removed from the +link, which results in a wrong link---you should avoid putting +a timestamp in the headline. + +[fn:29] The Org Id library must first be loaded, either through +~org-customize~, by enabling ~id~ in ~org-modules~, or by adding +=(require 'org-id)= in your Emacs init file. + +[fn:30] Note that you do not have to use this command to insert +a link. Links in Org are plain text, and you can type or paste them +straight into the buffer. By using this command, the links are +automatically enclosed in double brackets, and you will be asked for +the optional descriptive text. + +[fn:31] After insertion of a stored link, the link will be removed +from the list of stored links. To keep it in the list for later use, +use a triple {{{kbd(C-u)}}} prefix argument to {{{kbd(C-c C-l)}}}, or +configure the option ~org-link-keep-stored-after-insertion~. + +[fn:32] This works if a function has been defined in the ~:complete~ +property of a link in ~org-link-parameters~. + +[fn:33] See the variable ~org-link-use-indirect-buffer-for-internals~. + +[fn:34] For backward compatibility, line numbers can also follow a +single colon. + +[fn:35] Of course, you can make a document that contains only long +lists of TODO items, but this is not required. + +[fn:36] Changing the variable ~org-todo-keywords~ only becomes +effective after restarting Org mode in a buffer. + +[fn:37] This is also true for the {{{kbd(t)}}} command in the agenda +buffer. + +[fn:38] All characters are allowed except =@=, =^= and =!=, which have +a special meaning here. + +[fn:39] Check also the variable ~org-fast-tag-selection-include-todo~, +it allows you to change the TODO state through the tags interface (see +[[*Setting Tags]]), in case you like to mingle the two concepts. Note +that this means you need to come up with unique keys across both sets +of keywords. + +[fn:40] Org mode parses these lines only when Org mode is activated +after visiting a file. {{{kbd(C-c C-c)}}} with point in a line +starting with =#+= is simply restarting Org mode for the current +buffer. + +[fn:41] The corresponding in-buffer setting is: =#+STARTUP: logdone=. + +[fn:42] The corresponding in-buffer setting is: =#+STARTUP: +lognotedone=. + +[fn:43] See the variable ~org-log-states-order-reversed~. + +[fn:44] Note that the =LOGBOOK= drawer is unfolded when pressing +{{{kbd(SPC)}}} in the agenda to show an entry---use {{{kbd(C-u +SPC)}}} to keep it folded here. + +[fn:45] It is possible that Org mode records two timestamps when you +are using both ~org-log-done~ and state change logging. However, it +never prompts for two notes: if you have configured both, the state +change recording note takes precedence and cancel the closing note. + +[fn:46] See also the option ~org-priority-start-cycle-with-default~. + +[fn:47] To keep subtasks out of the global TODO list, see the option +~org-agenda-todo-list-sublevels~. + +[fn:48] With the exception of description lists. But you can allow it +by modifying ~org-list-automatic-rules~ accordingly. + +[fn:49] Set the variable ~org-hierarchical-checkbox-statistics~ if you +want such cookies to count all checkboxes below the cookie, not just +those belonging to direct children. + +[fn:50] {{{kbd(C-u C-c C-c)}}} on the /first/ item of a list with no +checkbox adds checkboxes to the rest of the list. + +[fn:51] As with all these in-buffer settings, pressing {{{kbd(C-c +C-c)}}} activates any changes in the line. + +[fn:52] This is only true if the search does not involve more complex +tests including properties (see [[*Property Searches]]). + +[fn:53] To extend this default list to all tags used in all agenda +files (see [[*Agenda Views]]), customize the variable +~org-complete-tags-always-offer-all-agenda-tags~. + +[fn:54] Keys are automatically assigned to tags that have no +configured keys. + +[fn:55] If more than one summary type applies to the same property, +the parent values are computed according to the first of them. + +[fn:56] An age can be defined as a duration, using units defined in +~org-duration-units~, e.g., =3d 1h=. If any value in the column is as +such, the summary is also expressed as a duration. + +[fn:57] Please note that the =COLUMNS= definition must be on a single +line; it is wrapped here only because of formatting constraints. + +[fn:58] Contributed packages are not part of Emacs, but are +distributed with the main distribution of Org---visit +[[https://orgmode.org]]. + +[fn:59] The Org date format is inspired by the standard ISO 8601 +date/time format. To use an alternative format, see [[*Custom time +format]]. The day name is optional when you type the date yourself. +However, any date inserted or modified by Org adds that day name, for +reading convenience. + +[fn:60] When working with the standard diary expression functions, you +need to be very careful with the order of the arguments. That order +depends evilly on the variable ~calendar-date-style~. For example, to +specify a date December 12, 2005, the call might look like +=(diary-date 12 1 2005)= or =(diary-date 1 12 2005)= or =(diary-date +2005 12 1)=, depending on the settings. This has been the source of +much confusion. Org mode users can resort to special versions of +these functions like ~org-date~ or ~org-anniversary~. These work just +like the corresponding ~diary-~ functions, but with stable ISO order +of arguments (year, month, day) wherever applicable, independent of +the value of ~calendar-date-style~. + +[fn:61] See the variable ~org-read-date-prefer-future~. You may set +that variable to the symbol ~time~ to even make a time before now +shift the date to tomorrow. + +[fn:62] If you do not need/want the calendar, configure the variable +~org-popup-calendar-for-date-prompt~. + +[fn:63] You can also use the calendar command {{{kbd(.)}}} to jump to +today's date, but if you are inserting an hour specification for your +timestamp, {{{kbd(.)}}} will then insert a dot after the hour. By contrast, +{{{kbd(C-.)}}} will always jump to today's date. + +[fn:64] If you find this distracting, turn off the display with +~org-read-date-display-live~. + +[fn:65] It will still be listed on that date after it has been marked +as done. If you do not like this, set the variable +~org-agenda-skip-scheduled-if-done~. + +[fn:66] The =SCHEDULED= and =DEADLINE= dates are inserted on the line +right below the headline. Do not put any text between this line and +the headline. + +[fn:67] Note the corresponding =STARTUP= options =logredeadline=, +=lognoteredeadline=, and =nologredeadline=. + +[fn:68] Note the corresponding =STARTUP= options =logreschedule=, +=lognotereschedule=, and =nologreschedule=. + +[fn:69] Org does not repeat inactive timestamps, however. See +[[*Timestamps]]. + +[fn:70] In fact, the target state is taken from, in this sequence, the +=REPEAT_TO_STATE= property, the variable ~org-todo-repeat-to-state~ if +it is a string, the previous TODO state if ~org-todo-repeat-to-state~ +is ~t~, or the first state of the TODO state sequence. + +[fn:71] You can change this using the option ~org-log-repeat~, or the +=STARTUP= options =logrepeat=, =lognoterepeat=, and =nologrepeat=. +With =lognoterepeat=, you will also be prompted for a note. + +[fn:72] Clocking only works if all headings are indented with less +than 30 stars. This is a hard-coded limitation of ~lmax~ in +~org-clock-sum~. + +[fn:73] To resume the clock under the assumption that you have worked +on this task while outside Emacs, use =(setq org-clock-persist t)=. + +[fn:74] To add an effort estimate "on the fly", hook a function doing +this to ~org-clock-in-prepare-hook~. + +[fn:75] The last reset of the task is recorded by the =LAST_REPEAT= +property. + +[fn:76] See also the variable ~org-clock-mode-line-total~. + +[fn:77] The corresponding in-buffer setting is: =#+STARTUP: +lognoteclock-out=. + +[fn:78] When using ~:step~, ~untilnow~ starts from the beginning of +2003, not the beginning of time. + +[fn:79] Language terms can be set through the variable +~org-clock-clocktable-language-setup~. + +[fn:80] Note that all parameters must be specified in a single +line---the line is broken here only to fit it into the manual. + +[fn:81] On computers using macOS, idleness is based on actual user +idleness, not just Emacs' idle time. For X11, you can install a +utility program =x11idle.c=, available in the =org-contrib/= +repository, or install the xprintidle package and set it to the +variable ~org-clock-x11idle-program-name~ if you are running Debian, +to get the same general treatment of idleness. On other systems, idle +time refers to Emacs idle time only. + +[fn:82] Please note the pitfalls of summing hierarchical data in +a flat list (see [[*Using Column View in the Agenda]]). + +[fn:83] Note the corresponding =STARTUP= options =logrefile=, +=lognoterefile=, and =nologrefile=. + +[fn:84] Org used to offer four different targets for date/week tree +capture. Now, Org automatically translates these to use +~file+olp+datetree~, applying the ~:time-prompt~ and ~:tree-type~ +properties. Please rewrite your date/week-tree targets using +~file+olp+datetree~ since the older targets are now deprecated. + +[fn:85] A date tree is an outline structure with years on the highest +level, months or ISO weeks as sublevels and then dates on the lowest +level. Tags are allowed in the tree structure. + +[fn:86] When the file name is not absolute, Org assumes it is relative +to ~org-directory~. + +[fn:87] If you need one of these sequences literally, escape the =%= +with a backslash. + +[fn:88] If you define your own link types (see [[*Adding Hyperlink +Types]]), any property you store with ~org-store-link-props~ can be +accessed in capture templates in a similar way. + +[fn:89] This is always the other, not the user. See the variable +~org-link-from-user-regexp~. + +[fn:90] If you move entries or Org files from one directory to +another, you may want to configure ~org-attach-id-dir~ to contain +an absolute path. + +[fn:91] If the value of that variable is not a list, but a single file +name, then the list of agenda files in maintained in that external +file. + +[fn:92] When using the dispatcher, pressing {{{kbd(<)}}} before +selecting a command actually limits the command to the current file, +and ignores ~org-agenda-files~ until the next dispatcher command. + +[fn:93] For backward compatibility, you can also press {{{kbd(1)}}} to +restrict to the current buffer. + +[fn:94] For backward compatibility, you can also press {{{kbd(0)}}} to +restrict to the current region/subtree. + +[fn:95] For backward compatibility, the universal prefix argument +{{{kbd(C-u)}}} causes all TODO entries to be listed before the agenda. +This feature is deprecated, use the dedicated TODO list, or a block +agenda instead (see [[*Block agenda]]). + +[fn:96] The variable ~org-anniversary~ used in the example is just +like ~diary-anniversary~, but the argument order is always according +to ISO and therefore independent of the value of +~calendar-date-style~. + +[fn:97] You can, however, disable this by setting +~org-agenda-search-headline-for-time~ variable to a ~nil~ value. + +[fn:98] Custom agenda commands can preset a filter by binding one of +the variables ~org-agenda-tag-filter-preset~, +~org-agenda-category-filter-preset~, ~org-agenda-effort-filter-preset~ +or ~org-agenda-regexp-filter-preset~ as an option. This filter is +then applied to the view and persists as a basic filter through +refreshes and more secondary filtering. The filter is a global +property of the entire agenda view---in a block agenda, you should +only set this in the global options section, not in the section of an +individual block. + +[fn:99] Only tags filtering is respected here, effort filtering is +ignored. + +[fn:100] You can also create persistent custom functions through +~org-agenda-bulk-custom-functions~. + +[fn:101] This file is parsed for the agenda when +~org-agenda-include-diary~ is set. + +[fn:102] You can provide a description for a prefix key by inserting +a cons cell with the prefix and the description. + +[fn:103] /Planned/ means here that these entries have some planning +information attached to them, like a time-stamp, a scheduled or +a deadline string. See ~org-agenda-entry-types~ on how to set what +planning information is taken into account. + +[fn:104] For HTML you need to install Hrvoje Nikšić's =htmlize.el= +as an Emacs package from MELPA or from [[https://github.com/hniksic/emacs-htmlize][Hrvoje Nikšić's repository]]. + +[fn:105] To create PDF output, the Ghostscript ps2pdf utility must be +installed on the system. Selecting a PDF file also creates the +postscript file. + +[fn:106] If you want to store standard views like the weekly agenda or +the global TODO list as well, you need to define custom commands for +them in order to be able to specify file names. + +[fn:107] Quoting depends on the system you use, please check the FAQ +for examples. + +[fn:108] You can turn this on by default by setting the variable +~org-pretty-entities~, or on a per-file base with the =STARTUP= option +=entitiespretty=. + +[fn:109] This behavior can be disabled with =-= export setting (see +[[*Export Settings]]). + +[fn:110] LaTeX is a macro system based on Donald\nbsp{}E.\nbsp{}Knuth's TeX +system. Many of the features described here as "LaTeX" are really +from TeX, but for simplicity I am blurring this distinction. + +[fn:111] When MathJax is used, only the environments recognized by +MathJax are processed. When dvipng, dvisvgm, or ImageMagick suite is +used to create images, any LaTeX environment is handled. + +[fn:112] These are respectively available at +[[http://sourceforge.net/projects/dvipng/]], [[http://dvisvgm.bplaced.net/]] +and from the ImageMagick suite. Choose the converter by setting the +variable ~org-preview-latex-default-process~ accordingly. + +[fn:113] Org mode has a method to test if point is inside such +a fragment, see the documentation of the function +~org-inside-LaTeX-fragment-p~. + +[fn:114] This works automatically for the HTML backend (it requires +version 1.34 of the =htmlize.el= package, which you need to install). +Fontified code chunks in LaTeX can be achieved using either the +[[https://www.ctan.org/pkg/listings][listings]] package or the [[https://www.ctan.org/pkg/minted][minted]] package. Refer to +~org-latex-listings~ for details. + +[fn:115] Source code in code blocks may also be evaluated either +interactively or on export. See [[*Working with Source Code]] for more +information on evaluating code blocks. + +[fn:116] Adding =-k= to =-n -r= /keeps/ the labels in the source code +while using line numbers for the links, which might be useful to +explain those in an Org mode example code. + +[fn:117] You may select a different mode with the variable +~org-edit-fixed-width-region-mode~. + +[fn:118] What Emacs considers to be an image depends on +~image-file-name-extensions~ and ~image-file-name-regexps~. + +[fn:119] The variable ~org-startup-with-inline-images~ can be set +within a buffer with the =STARTUP= options =inlineimages= and +=noinlineimages=. + +[fn:120] The corresponding in-buffer setting is: =#+STARTUP: fninline= +or =#+STARTUP: nofninline=. + +[fn:121] The corresponding in-buffer options are =#+STARTUP: fnadjust= +and =#+STARTUP: nofnadjust=. + +[fn:122] The variable ~org-export-date-timestamp-format~ defines how +this timestamp are exported. + +[fn:123] For export to LaTeX format---or LaTeX-related formats such as +Beamer---, the =org-latex-package-alist= variable needs further +configuration. See [[LaTeX specific export settings]]. + +[fn:124] At the moment, some export back-ends do not obey this +specification. For example, LaTeX export excludes every unnumbered +headline from the table of contents. + +[fn:125] Note that ~org-link-search-must-match-exact-headline~ is +locally bound to non-~nil~. Therefore, ~org-link-search~ only matches +headlines and named elements. + +[fn:126] Since commas separate the arguments, commas within arguments +have to be escaped with the backslash character. So only those +backslash characters before a comma need escaping with another +backslash character. + +[fn:127] For a less drastic behavior, consider using a select tag (see +[[*Export Settings]]) instead. + +[fn:128] If =BEAMER_ENV= is set, Org export adds =B_environment= tag +to make it visible. The tag serves as a visual aid and has no +semantic relevance. + +[fn:129] By default Org loads MathJax from [[https://cdnjs.com][cdnjs.com]] as recommended by +[[https://www.mathjax.org][MathJax]]. + +[fn:130] Please note that exported formulas are part of an HTML +document, and that signs such as =<=, =>=, or =&= have special +meanings. See [[http://docs.mathjax.org/en/latest/tex.html#tex-and-latex-in-html-documents][MathJax TeX and LaTeX support]]. + +[fn:131] See [[http://docs.mathjax.org/en/latest/tex.html#tex-extensions][TeX and LaTeX extensions]] in the [[http://docs.mathjax.org][MathJax manual]] to learn +about extensions. + +[fn:132] If the classes on TODO keywords and tags lead to conflicts, +use the variables ~org-html-todo-kwd-class-prefix~ and +~org-html-tag-class-prefix~ to make them unique. + +[fn:133] This does not allow setting different bibliography compilers +for different files. However, "smart" LaTeX compilation systems, such +as latexmk, can select the correct bibliography compiler. + +[fn:134] Minted uses an external Python package for code highlighting, +which requires the flag =-shell-escape= to be added to +~org-latex-pdf-process~. + +[fn:135] See [[http://docs.oasis-open.org/office/v1.2/OpenDocument-v1.2.html][Open Document Format for Office Applications +(OpenDocument) Version 1.2]]. + +[fn:136] See [[http://www.mathtoweb.com/cgi-bin/mathtoweb_home.pl][MathToWeb]]. + +[fn:137] See [[http://dlmf.nist.gov/LaTeXML/]]. + +[fn:138] [[http://docs.oasis-open.org/office/v1.2/OpenDocument-v1.2.html][OpenDocument-v1.2 Specification]] + +[fn:139] See the == element of the +OpenDocument-v1.2 specification. + +[fn:140] See the attributes =table:template-name=, +=table:use-first-row-styles=, =table:use-last-row-styles=, +=table:use-first-column-styles=, =table:use-last-column-styles=, +=table:use-banding-rows-styles=, and =table:use-banding-column-styles= +of the == element in the OpenDocument-v1.2 specification. + +[fn:141] If the publishing directory is the same as the source +directory, =file.org= is exported as =file.org.org=, so you probably +do not want to do this. + +[fn:142] The option ~org-babel-no-eval-on-ctrl-c-ctrl-c~ can be used +to remove code evaluation from the {{{kbd(C-c C-c)}}} key binding. + +[fn:143] Actually, the constructs =call_()= and =src_{}= +are not evaluated when they appear in a keyword (see [[*Summary of +In-Buffer Settings]]). + +[fn:144] For noweb literate programming details, see +http://www.cs.tufts.edu/~nr/noweb/. + +[fn:145] For more information, please refer to the commentary section +in =org-tempo.el=. + +[fn:146] Org Indent mode also sets ~wrap-prefix~ correctly for +indenting and wrapping long lines of headlines or text. This minor +mode also handles Visual Line mode and directly applied settings +through ~word-wrap~. + +[fn:147] This works, but requires extra effort. Org Indent mode is +more convenient for most applications. + +[fn:148] ~org-adapt-indentation~ can also be set to ='headline-data=, +in which case only data lines below the headline will be indented. + +[fn:149] Note that Org Indent mode also sets the ~wrap-prefix~ +property, such that Visual Line mode (or purely setting ~word-wrap~) +wraps long lines, including headlines, correctly indented. + +[fn:150] For a server to host files, consider using a WebDAV server, +such as [[https://nextcloud.com][Nextcloud]]. Additional help is at this [[https://orgmode.org/worg/org-faq.html#mobileorg_webdav][FAQ entry]]. + +[fn:151] If Emacs is configured for safe storing of passwords, then +configure the variable ~org-mobile-encryption-password~; please read +the docstring of that variable. + +[fn:152] Symbolic links in ~org-directory~ need to have the same name +as their targets. + +[fn:153] While creating the agendas, Org mode forces =ID= properties +on all referenced entries, so that these entries can be uniquely +identified if Org Mobile flags them for further action. To avoid +setting properties configure the variable +~org-mobile-force-id-on-agenda-items~ to ~nil~. Org mode then relies +on outline paths, assuming they are unique. + +[fn:154] Checksums are stored automatically in the file +=checksums.dat=. + +[fn:155] The file will be empty after this operation. + +[fn:156] https://www.ctan.org/pkg/comment + +[fn:157] By default this works only for LaTeX, HTML, and Texinfo. +Configure the variable ~orgtbl-radio-table-templates~ to install +templates for other modes. + +[fn:158] If the =TBLFM= keyword contains an odd number of dollar +characters, this may cause problems with Font Lock in LaTeX mode. As +shown in the example you can fix this by adding an extra line inside +the =comment= environment that is used to balance the dollar +expressions. If you are using AUCTeX with the font-latex library, +a much better solution is to add the =comment= environment to the +variable ~LaTeX-verbatim-environments~. + +[fn:159] The ~agenda*~ view is the same as ~agenda~ except that it +only considers /appointments/, i.e., scheduled and deadline items that +have a time specification =[h]h:mm= in their time-stamps. + +[fn:160] Note that, for ~org-odd-levels-only~, a level number +corresponds to order in the hierarchy, not to the number of stars. -- cgit v1.2.1