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The Org Manual. Outlining Your Notes with Org sacha chua :: living an awesome life. Large documents are almost impossible to write without outlines. There’s just too much to fit in your head. Outlines help you work with a structure, so that you can see the big picture and how sections fit together. Outlines are also surprisingly useful when brainstorming. You can work with varying levels of detail, starting with a high-level overview and successively refining it, or starting with the details and then letting the structure emerge as you organize those details into groups. Emacs has one of the most powerful outline editors I’ve come across.

In this section, you’ll learn how to outline a document using Org. Understanding Org Org is primarily a personal information manager that keeps track of your tasks and schedule, and you’ll learn more about those features in chapters 8 and 9. The structure of an Org file is simple: a plain text file with headlines, text, and some additional information such as tags and timestamps. GNU Emacs 22 includes Org. -*- mode: org -*- Hyperlinks. David O'Toole Org tutorial. First I entered a headline called "Tasks" to keep tasks under. This isn't necessary but is often convenient, especially when you want to keep tasks separate from the body of a document you're writing. First-level headlines begin with one star; second-level headlines begin with two stars, and so on. In org-mode, TODO items are always headlines. I entered a TODO item for "Start new org file for tutorial. " This is a bit silly, because we've already started a new file.

So, let's mark the TODO item DONE by moving the cursor onto that line and hitting C-c C-t, which runs the command org-todo. Here is the result: Notice how org-mode uses a timestamp to record when a TODO item was closed. Let's add some more TODO items. Org-Mode: Your Life in Plain Text. Getting Things Done et org-mode d'Emacs - Mad's blog. Getting Things Done (GTD) est une démarche d'organisation permettant d'atteindre un état de « productivité sans stress » selon le titre même du livre « Getting Things Done: The Art of Stress-Free Productivity » (la version française « S'organiser pour réussir) de David Allen. Cela faisait quelques temps que je voulais tester cette démarche mais si possible sans avoir à changer d'outil. J'utilise depuis quelques années le module org-mode d'Emacs pour la gestion de mes tâches. J'ai donc commencé à implémenter GTD via le module org-mode et d'autres modules (comme le module remember).

Pour cela j'ai notamment lu l'article de Charles Cave « How I use Emacs and Org-mode to implement GTD »quelques articles de Sacha Chuala liste Emacs-orgmode J'en suis encore aux débuts mais j'essayerai de faire un article expliquant ce que j'ai mis en place. Quelques liens sur GTD : GTD Organisé... et Branché (document PDF)GTD L'efficacité sans le stress3 étapes pour un bureau clair en permanence. WikiMode. PlannerMode. Planner is a PersonalInformationManager (PIM) by JohnWiegley.

You can use it to manage your tasks, schedule, notes, and anything else you want to store in a free-text richly-hyperlinked personal information manager integrated into Emacs. Because it’s in Emacs, it can easily be tweaked to support your particular way of planning, and it can draw upon the data and functions you already have in Emacs. It puts all of the Emacs PIM pieces together: BbdbMode (addresses), EmacsMuse (linking of notes and publishing), etc. This allows you to easily write notes, link to other notes, link to dates, link to addresses, link to – everything. If you’re new to Planner, here’s a good way to get started: There is a good intro on how to use the PlannerMode in the planner.el file.

Getting Planner The current version is at You can get the latest development snapshot at Older version is at. PlanDuSite. Emacs Vs Vi. Mapping function keys discussion moved to bottom of pageLast edit on 11/13/13GreatEmacsFeatures vs GreatVimFeatures (see also EmacsAndVi) - One of the first big HolyWars to take place on the internet. HEATHENS! EdIsTheStandardTextEditor! Vim Vim evolved from the original visual mode for the ed editor, BillJoy's Vi, and maintains full backward-compatibility with it. But it's scripted in any scripting language you like, it runs on any operating system you like, it has every text-editing feature known to man, it's clean, reliable, easy to use, symmetrical, and low on bullshit. Emacs I use emacs, which might be thought of as a thermonuclear word processor.

From Neal Stephenson's "In the beginning was the command line" What makes Emacs so much better for writers? Just for those who would prefer something less drastic than editing pure LaTeX (nothing against those who love it), I would recommend LyX (LyEks) vi is cute. Emacs Is Superman. Once, there was a civilization (the Lisp Machine world) a lot like ours, but more advanced, with greater powers (like symbolic computation, automated learning, and LISP). Then, in one tragic moment (er, decade - the 1980's), it was destroyed. But because of the wisdom of Jor-El (Stall-Man), because he realized that the human race had the capacity for good, he sent us his only son (editor). His name is Kal-El (elisp). He will call himself Clark Kent (Editor MACroS), but the world will know him as... Superman (Emacs). So Xemacs is the Fork-tress of Solitude? This page is a candidate for some Kryptonite...or at least for deletion You are a candidate for a sense of humor transplant.

If Emacs could stop bullets with his chest, why did he always duck when the bad guys threw their guns at him? So what is Emacs's kryptonite? In EmacsAsOperatingSystem and UnixCulture there is the comment that "Emacs is a refugee from the long dead culture of LispMachines. Zoli Memento. PlanDuSite. OrgTutorial. Org-Mode Homepage.