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Re: How to associate a code block to another one so that it is executed
From: |
Rodrigo Morales |
Subject: |
Re: How to associate a code block to another one so that it is executed beforehand? |
Date: |
Mon, 15 Feb 2021 21:39:59 -0500 |
User-agent: |
mu4e 1.4.14; emacs 27.1 |
John Kitchin <jkitchin@andrew.cmu.edu> writes:
> Here is one way to do it. You use a :var to "run" the other block.
Thank you very much for the suggestion. It indeed works but I think that
I don't need what I was requesting now that I've found out about the
=:post= header argument.e
After reading your answer, I remembered that there exists the =:post=
header argument and that fully changed the way I was taking notes.
This is how my notes looked like
#+begin_src org
,#+NAME: create-file-foo
,#+begin_src dash :results silent
cat << EOF > main.txt
foo first
foo second
EOF
,#+end_src
,#+NAME: create-file-bar
,#+begin_src dash :results silent
cat << EOF > main.txt
bar first
bar second
EOF
,#+end_src
The following code block prints each line the corresponding index and the
length of the specified file.
# ====================================================================
# Here I wanted to call one of the code blocks presented above so that
# before the Python code block is executed, the file is created.
# ====================================================================
,#+begin_src python
with open('main.txt') as f:
for line in f:
print(line, end='')
,#+end_src
#+end_src
Now using the =:post= header argument my notes look like
#+begin_src org
We can print each line together with its index by executing
,#+NAME: read-file-with-index
,#+begin_src python
with open('main.txt') as file:
for idx,line in enumerate(file):
print(idx, line, end='')
,#+end_src
,#+begin_src dash :post read-file-with-index()
cat << EOF > main.txt
foo first
foo second
EOF
,#+end_src
,#+RESULTS:
,#+begin_example
0 foo first
1 foo second
,#+end_example
,#+begin_src dash :post read-file-with-index()
cat << EOF > main.txt
bar first
bar second
EOF
,#+end_src
,#+RESULTS:
,#+begin_example
0 bar first
1 bar second
,#+end_example
#+end_src
Note that, in this scenario, when using the =:post= header argument it
is only necessary to name the Python code block instead of naming all
the code blocks that are meant to be processed by the Python script.
--
Rodrigo Morales.
IRC: rdrg109 (freenode)