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Re: [O] markup text with leading, trailing spaces
From: |
hymie! |
Subject: |
Re: [O] markup text with leading, trailing spaces |
Date: |
Sat, 14 Feb 2015 04:08:09 +0000 (UTC) |
In our last episode, the evil Dr. Lacto had captured our hero,
address@hidden (Jorge A. Alfaro-Murillo), who said:
>hymie! writes:
>
>> I'd like to be able to have a series of commands in my raw org
>> file that I can copy-n-paste into my shell window. But I also
>> like to export my org files to HTML so that I can make ePubs and
>> keep them in my iPad.
>
>> And this
>>
>> #+BEGIN_SRC
>> command1
>> command2
>> command3
>> #+END_SRC
>>
>> is just IMO ugly.
>
>It shouldn't be. Try adding the word "shell" after BEGIN_SRC, so
>that it fontifies the code correctly (the variable
>org-src-fontify-natively should be set to t, but that has been
>default for a while)
It's not that the font is ugly. It's that
* (in the epub) the source code appears in a box
* (in the html/epub) it's impossible to tell the difference between two
different commands and a single command that was too long and word wrapped
to fit in the box
* (in the html/epub) I can't have non-monospace comments between/attached
to/within the code without drawing four or five separate boxes around my code
* (in the org file) For whatever reason, monospace code appears as a
light-gray font, which is hard to read against a white background. I'm
sure that can be changed, but I haven't had time to figure it out yet.
>Also, add shell to the loaded babel
>languages, so that you can execute the code and get the results
>right away in org:
>
>No need for "copy-n-paste", just do C-c C-c where you have your
>commands.
I think you are making the incorrect assumption that the machine on
which I maintain my Org files is the same machine that I wish to execute
commands on.
>Try copying this example into an org file, it should fontify it
>nicely, both in the org file and in the html exported.
If my commnds were all 8 characters long or less, it would be fine.
Some of my commands look like this:
adduser username -d /data/chroot/home/username -s /usr/bin/rssh -m -k /dev/null
-g rssh
useradd -U -G wheel -p
'$6$wcMRrkcdGeNHLT5c$0s4qezb00ISmGZSsILOyV/WJn3RnuZPkSEknwoSZ22HvbgkBTe4TQwCz/mpG.3zby.1Jwnmtsq1B.uCbyg5l./'
username
pssh -x '-q -t -t' -I -i --hosts hosts_linux_rhel6 'sudo -S wget
puppet/puppet/pub/system_patch.pl -O /usr/local/bin/system_patch.pl' <
hostnamefile
While I admit that the "useradd" command is an extreme example,
this becomes horribly ambiguous:
adduser username -d /data/chroot/home/username -s
/usr/bin/rssh -m -k /dev/null -g rssh
pssh -x '-q -t -t' -I -i --hosts hosts_linux_rhel6
'sudo -S wget puppet/puppet/pub/system_patch.pl -O
/usr/local/bin/system_patch.pl' < hostnamefile
--hymie! http://lactose.homelinux.net/~hymie address@hidden