emacs-orgmode
[Top][All Lists]
Advanced

[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index]

Re: [Orgmode] Three questions about Org-mode API


From: Carsten Dominik
Subject: Re: [Orgmode] Three questions about Org-mode API
Date: Thu, 15 May 2008 08:58:54 +0200

Hi Dmitri,

On May 12, 2008, at 8:36 PM, Dmitri Minaev wrote:

On Mon, May 12, 2008 at 4:03 PM, Carsten Dominik <address@hidden > wrote:
If you are talking only about the standard properties (i.e. not the TODO
state or the tags, but just the properties in the drawer, the fastest
inside-org way would be

(org-entry-get nil 'standard)

No, unfortunately, it won't do. I will need tags, TODO states and
priorities, among other things.

OK.



If speed is an issue, I would write an external program in perl.
I think I could write a perl parser that is at least a factor of 10 faster
than anything in emacs lisp.

Perhaps, this is true. But this is my first program in elisp and I
would like to take the chance to learn it :)

That is certainly a good opportunity to learn this stuff.

What if I ditch the org-mode tools and write a specialized parser in
elisp? My org file has a rather regular structure, with the uniform
properties located in the same order in all entries. Do you think it
would be faster?

Yes, I think it would be faster. Maybe a factor 2-3? Not much more (I hope, or my code is really bad :-)


I think if you search for org-complex-heading-regexp and use that to extract TODO state, level, priority, heading text, this will already be more efficient than getting the special properties through calling org-entry-properties, because you get it in a single match.

One could also think of an external database, but that only would work will for a linear list of entries, and structure editing does ruin such things.

Hmm... How's that?

Well, what I'm writing is an ebooks catalog. I keep the "database" in
a list. To browse the catalog, I render it into an org-mode-compliant
text buffer and run org-mode. Here I can change tags, priorities, TODO
(toread) state, edit the description and, in some cases, the
information stored in standard properties: title, authors, genre, path
to the file. The database may be rendered in three modes: by title (1
level); by author/title (2 levels) and by genre/author/title (3
levels). When I've done with browsing and editing, I have to convert
the org-mode buffer back into the list. The number of books should be
large enough. As for now, I can deal with 1,000 of them with a
tolerable speed. But I hope to make the library work with up to 10,000
books. So, the list is not linear. And still... An external database?
How?


What I meant to say: One could keep all the stuf in a database, and then pull out individual entries to edit them. The problems with such an approach is that

- You loose structure information from an outline structure in the org file
- You only get to edit individual entries

If you like the convenience of having the whole ting in a single file to edit it, this is not a solution, I agree.




Check out Bastien's parser, I think it is in some branch in the git repo
(right Bastien???).  Although I don't know how fast this would be.

Thanks, I'll have a look at it.

3. It would be nice to mark the edited entries as `dirty' to avoid the
conversion of non-changed entries. Any ideas?

This is hard, because you don't want to put any contraints on how the entry can be edited. One could use text properties (during a single session) or Org properties, both triggered with after-change-functions, but that is a
lot of editing overhead.

Could I use some hook that would add an extra property for every changed entry?

As I said, this would have to be after-change-functions.  Check out
the Elisp documentation for this hook.

- Carsten





reply via email to

[Prev in Thread] Current Thread [Next in Thread]