[-- Attachment #1: Type: text/plain, Size: 430 bytes --] Is this the expected behavior? 1. Create an empty org file 2. Insert * Test * Test 2 3. With the cursor at Test, hit C-x n s to narrow the view to the Test subtree 4. Hit C-c C-s to schedule the line at any date. As a result, the SCHEDULED keyword is _not_ included in the narrow view, and inserting things after the Test heading moves the SCHEDULED keyword away from its second-line position. Cheers, Michaël [-- Attachment #2: Type: text/html, Size: 568 bytes --]
On Mon, Sep 09 2019, Michaël Cadilhac wrote: > Is this the expected behavior? > > 1. Create an empty org file > 2. Insert > * Test > * Test 2 > 3. With the cursor at Test, hit C-x n s to narrow the view to the Test subtree > 4. Hit C-c C-s to schedule the line at any date. > > As a result, the SCHEDULED keyword is _not_ included in the narrow view, and inserting things after the Test heading > moves the SCHEDULED keyword away from its second-line position. This is likely related to https://lists.gnu.org/archive/html/emacs-orgmode/2019-07/msg00087.html Regards, Gustavo.
On Monday, 9 Sep 2019 at 15:17, Michaël Cadilhac wrote: > Is this the expected behavior? > > 1. Create an empty org file > 2. Insert > * Test > * Test 2 > 3. With the cursor at Test, hit C-x n s to narrow the view to the Test > subtree > 4. Hit C-c C-s to schedule the line at any date. > > As a result, the SCHEDULED keyword is _not_ included in the narrow view, > and inserting things after the Test heading moves the SCHEDULED keyword > away from its second-line position. I can confirm this. However, normally, I do not use narrowing to subtree but instead use a function based on the code originally from http://endlessparentheses.com/emacs-narrow-or-widen-dwim.html My code looks like this: #+begin_src org (defun narrow-or-widen-dwim (p) "Widen if buffer is narrowed, narrow-dwim otherwise. Dwim means: region, org-src-block, org-subtree, or defun, whichever applies first. Narrowing to org-src-block actually calls `org-edit-src-code'. With prefix P, don't widen, just narrow even if buffer is already narrowed." (interactive "P") (declare (interactive-only)) (cond ((and (buffer-narrowed-p) (not p)) (widen)) ((region-active-p) (narrow-to-region (region-beginning) (region-end))) ((derived-mode-p 'org-mode) ;; `org-edit-src-code' is not a real narrowing ;; command. Remove this first conditional if you ;; don't want it. (cond ((ignore-errors (org-edit-src-code)) (delete-other-windows)) ((ignore-errors (org-narrow-to-block) t)) ((ignore-errors (org-narrow-to-element) t)) (t (org-narrow-to-subtree)))) ((derived-mode-p 'latex-mode) (LaTeX-narrow-to-environment)) (t (narrow-to-defun)))) #+end_src This tries a number of different narrowing functions first. Using this, everything works fine. -- Eric S Fraga via Emacs 27.0.50, Org release_9.2.4-401-gfabd6d
On Mon, Sep 09 2019, Michaël Cadilhac wrote: > Is this the expected behavior? > > 1. Create an empty org file > 2. Insert > * Test > * Test 2 > 3. With the cursor at Test, hit C-x n s to narrow the view to the Test subtree > 4. Hit C-c C-s to schedule the line at any date. > > As a result, the SCHEDULED keyword is _not_ included in the narrow view, and inserting things after the Test heading > moves the SCHEDULED keyword away from its second-line position. > > Cheers, > Michaël This is likely related to https://lists.gnu.org/archive/html/emacs-orgmode/2019-07/msg00087.html Regards, Gustavo. PS: I had tried to send this yesterday, but I think I have screwed up the sending then. If this is gets to you in duplicity, my apologies for the noise.
Hello,
Michaël Cadilhac <michael@cadilhac.name> writes:
> Is this the expected behavior?
>
> 1. Create an empty org file
> 2. Insert
> * Test
> * Test 2
> 3. With the cursor at Test, hit C-x n s to narrow the view to the Test
> subtree
> 4. Hit C-c C-s to schedule the line at any date.
>
> As a result, the SCHEDULED keyword is _not_ included in the narrow view,
> and inserting things after the Test heading moves the SCHEDULED keyword
> away from its second-line position.
Fixed. Thank you.
Regards,
--
Nicolas Goaziou