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Re: [O] Org-element once again


From: Eric Abrahamsen
Subject: Re: [O] Org-element once again
Date: Wed, 08 Oct 2014 15:31:40 +0800
User-agent: Gnus/5.130012 (Ma Gnus v0.12) Emacs/25.0.50 (gnu/linux)

Thorsten Jolitz <address@hidden> writes:

> Eric Abrahamsen <address@hidden> writes:
>
>> Marcin Borkowski <address@hidden> writes:
>>
>>> Hi list,
>>>
>>> does there exist any place I could find the specs of the org-element
>>> data structure?  From what I can see, it is a list whose car is the type
>>> of the element, then a (somewhat mysterious or me) plist follows, and
>>> then the children.  Where could I find more info?  If the answer is
>>> "read the source, Luke" ;-) , which functions should I start with?
>>>
>>> Best,
>>
>> Have you looked at this page?
>>
>> http://orgmode.org/worg/dev/org-element-api.html
>>
>> That and the pages linked from it seem to cover most of what's going on.
>>
>> The mysterious plist holds all the properties for a given element. Most
>> are generated by the parsing process (eg :contents-begin and
>> :contents-end, see the link above for all the different properties the
>> various elements/objects might get), while headlines will also have
>> their actual property-drawer properties put into the list.
>>
>> The only thing that remains a little opaque to me is the "section"
>> element, which apparently gets wrapped around a heading's subtree. I
>> don't know what it does, but it's never gotten in my way so I haven't
>> worried about it.
>
> in simple terms, the data structure is just:
>
> ,----
> | (element-typ (plist) (section))
> `----
>
> i.e. the plist describes the element itself, the section is its
> content. 
>
>
> * TODO Test :@home:
>   DEADLINE: <2014-10-09 Do>
>   :PROPERTIES:
>   :ARCHIVE:  foo
>   :END:
>
>
> org-element-at-point does not parse the contents of an element, it
> thus simply returns
>
> ,----
> | (element-typ (plist))
> `----
>
> #+NAME: foo
> #+BEGIN_SRC emacs-lisp
>
>  (save-excursion
>  (outline-previous-heading)
>  (org-element-at-point))
> #+END_SRC
>
> # [:results pp]
> #+results:
> : (headline
> :  (:raw-value "Test" :begin 1432 :end 2214 :pre-blank 0 :contents-begin 1452 
> :contents-end 2214 :level 1 :priority nil :tags
> :          ("@home")
> :          :todo-keyword "TODO" :todo-type todo :post-blank 0 
> :footnote-section-p nil :archivedp nil :commentedp nil :post-affiliated 1432 
> :deadline
> :          (timestamp
> : (:type active :raw-value "<2014-10-09 Do>" :year-start 2014
> :month-start 10 :day-start 9 :hour-start nil :minute-start nil
> :year-end 2014 :month-end 10 :day-end 9 :hour-end nil :minute-end nil
> :begin 1464 :end 1479 :post-blank 0))
> :          :ARCHIVE "foo" :title "Test"))
>
> #+NAME: bar
> #+BEGIN_SRC emacs-lisp :var x=foo 
>
>  (org-element-interpret-data x) 
> #+END_SRC
>
> #+results: bar
> : * TODO Test :@home:
>
>
> so this is (just) the element (headline) as specified by its plist.
>
> You can get the contents e.g. with 
>
> #+BEGIN_SRC emacs-lisp :results wrap
> (require 'org-dp-lib)
>  (save-excursion
>  (outline-previous-heading)
>  (org-dp-contents nil t)))
> #+END_SRC
>
> #+results:
> :RESULTS:
> DEADLINE: <2014-10-09 Do>
> :PROPERTIES:
> :ARCHIVE:  foo
> :END:
>
> [...]
> :END:
>
> but the default org-element-parse-buffer parses everything (when specified), 
> the
> contents too, so it would give you 
>
> ,----
> | (element-typ (plist) (section))
> `----
>
> with section recursively containing other elements with the same
> structure -> a nested list.

Interesting! I didn't realize that all elements came with a section when
you parsed the buffer, thanks for pointing that out.

E




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