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Re: existing work on TODO items
From: |
Dave Love |
Subject: |
Re: existing work on TODO items |
Date: |
Mon, 09 Jan 2006 00:25:59 +0000 |
User-agent: |
Gnus/5.11 (Gnus v5.11) Emacs/21.4 (gnu/linux) |
Ken Manheimer <address@hidden> writes:
> perhaps you're referring to my initial allout topic encryption
> changes, which used facilities from crypt++ and mailcrypt?
Yes, sorry.
> someone suggested using pgg instead, and started some changes there
> (to implement symmetric-key encryption) which would enable me to do
> so. i refined their pgg changes, added some general pgg fixes, and
> switched over allout's new encryption to use the modified pgg. it's
> all checked in to the gnu repository, and comes with the head emacs
> 22 checkout.
I found some time to try, and it does run now, but I still can't see
how it works (or, really, why). I managed to get a section encrypted,
but it failed to decrypt, even when it didn't request a passphrase
(cached from the original entry?), so I lost data. Also setting
`allout-passphrase-verifier-handling' didn't seem to allow me to use
my private key. There's no coding conversion done, so this can lose
with non-ASCII, potentially also causing data loss, though I don't
know what's actually done.
> as far as i can see, outline.el provides only for navigating
> outlines.
I don't understand what you mean, and I doubt others will. Outline at
least does revealing of hidden items and subtree movement in some
sense, though I don't know how they actually compare with allout and
the manual doesn't document everything. Exactly what behaviour do you
mean? Major modes should support Outline minor mode where reasonable,
and a number do.
> the reverse is not the case - outline.el cannot handle most common
> formatted outlines, much less custom ones,
I don't know what that means but, for instance, my Python mode
supports block-wise outlining with outline-minor-mode and Allout
doesn't appear to support the outline variables that major modes set.
> outline.el lacks some of allout's navigation features (eg, hotspot
> navigation),
If I understand correctly, outline.el could easily do that, but I'm
not convinced I'd want to be prevented from typing a letter into a
Python block heading. (outline.el should have had mouse-based tree
manipulation like XEmacs', but as far as I remember it requires
redisplay changes as for mouse-sensitive marginal icons, which I lost
interest in pursuing.)
There's clearly at least a documentation problem here if I'm confused
even after a glance at the code and can't tell what it does for me.
Of course allout isn't unique in that, and I don't mean to criticize
it particularly. It definitely should address the potential data
loss, though.
- Re: existing work on TODO items, (continued)
Re: existing work on TODO items, Ken Manheimer, 2006/01/09
Re: existing work on TODO items,
Dave Love <=
- Re: existing work on TODO items, Ken Manheimer, 2006/01/08
- Key sequences reserved for users used in allout.el (was: existing work on TODO items), Reiner Steib, 2006/01/09
- Re: existing work on TODO items, Dave Love, 2006/01/09
- Re: existing work on TODO items, Ken Manheimer, 2006/01/12
- Re: existing work on TODO items, Stefan Monnier, 2006/01/12
- Re: existing work on TODO items, Dave Love, 2006/01/15