[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index]
Re: [O] org-table-align function changed, where is the old behavior?
From: |
Nicolas Goaziou |
Subject: |
Re: [O] org-table-align function changed, where is the old behavior? |
Date: |
Sat, 19 Jan 2019 17:34:32 +0100 |
User-agent: |
Gnus/5.13 (Gnus v5.13) Emacs/26.1 (gnu/linux) |
Hello,
Craig Luthy <address@hidden> writes:
> I don't know what an ECM is. Need some clarification.
Complete minimal example, in French. It's in the FAQ.
> However, regarding the first issue of TAB and RETURN opening the table. I
> explained this wrong, and suspect the release was coded up as designed. No
> error messages were displayed. But, with further analysis, the expansion
> occurs in at least these scenarios:
>
> - if you delete a row out of the table with 'kill-whole-line
That is to be expected. Any change to a shrunk cell expands the whole
column.
> - insert a row (org-shiftmetadown) then UNDO (undo)
> - it seems that 'undo opens the table in many cases
Ditto. Whenever a change happens in a shrunk cell (or a shrunk part of
it), everything is displayed.
> The release note on these changes could use additional information. I was
> able to find this page (https://orgmode.org/Changes.html#orge5c3346) which
> helped me initially, but `C-c C-c' on the STARTUP keyword and `C-u C-c
> C-TAB' mappings you explained to me were missing.
>
> - explain the new mapping of C-u C-c TAB which does the old format
> behavior.
This is in the manual, at (info "(org) Column Width and Alignment")
> - I would have never guessed to do C-c C-c on the STARTUP keyword to
> format everything in the file. Perhaps a reference to that would be
> helpful. To me it seems like an unusual thing to do, so I may have missed
> documentation on this behavior that is found elsewhere.
This also is in the manual, at (info "(org) The Very Busy C-c C-c Key")
> According to general release note (https://orgmode.org/Changes.html) it
> says that editing a column (do you mean a cell?) opens it up and displays
> everything. This does not seem to be working for me.
It definitely does here. Would you have an ECM? ;)
Regards,
--
Nicolas Goaziou