* Using babel to generate org syntax for export
@ 2014-01-14 3:24 James Harkins
2014-01-14 3:39 ` Eric Schulte
0 siblings, 1 reply; 3+ messages in thread
From: James Harkins @ 2014-01-14 3:24 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: orgmode
Hi,
Got a question that's not easy to search online.
I want to use an org table to define glossary entries for LaTeX. I have my
table[1], and I have a src block[2] that reads the table and produces the
right syntax[3]. This is already pretty helpful -- I can C-c C-c the source
block and manually copy/paste the generated syntax into the org file that I
will then export.
But... I want babel to do that for me automatically. I'm almost there, but:
The resulting string is put into a verbatim environment -- which is not
right for this case. I need the string to be inserted as if it were org
syntax ("#+LATEX_HEADER" and all) that I typed by hand, and then ox-latex
would process it like any other LaTeX header.
I've tried both ":results value" and ": results output" but the verbatim
environment is always there.
A quick glance at ob-core.el seems to indicate that this behavior is
hardcoded. That's... frustrating: spend 2-3 hours to get this far and then
find that babel says, "No, you can't do that, actually."
So, I'm at the end of the energy I have left to test various approaches.
What's the best approach? I'm guessing, apply a filter to remove the
begin/end verbatim lines. But maybe there's a magic switch in babel?
For reference:
[1] input file, nearly minimal example
[2] actual result of C-c C-e l L (removing preamble)
[3] desired result
hjh
[1]
* UGens :noexport:
#+name: ugens01
| Type | Term | Description | Arguments |
|------+----------+---------------------+-------------|
| Osc | SinOsc | Sinewave oscillator | freq, phase |
#+name: makegloss
#+begin_src emacs-lisp :var tbl=ugens01 :exports results :results value
(let ((str ""))
(pop tbl)
(pop tbl)
(while tbl
(let ((item (car tbl)))
(pop item)
(setq str (concat str (format
"\\newglossaryentry{%s}{type=ugen,name={%s},description={%s. Inputs:
(%s)}}\n"
(car item)
(pop item)
(pop item)
(car item))))
(setq tbl (cdr tbl))))
str)
#+end_src
* Test
#+call: makegloss
#+results: makegloss
[2]
\section{Test}
\label{sec-1}
\begin{verbatim}
\newglossaryentry{SinOsc}{type=ugen,name={SinOsc},description={Sinewave
oscillator. Inputs: (freq, phase)}}
\end{verbatim}
[3]
\section{Test}
\label{sec-1}
\newglossaryentry{SinOsc}{type=ugen,name={SinOsc},description={Sinewave
oscillator. Inputs: (freq, phase)}}
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 3+ messages in thread
* Re: Using babel to generate org syntax for export
2014-01-14 3:24 Using babel to generate org syntax for export James Harkins
@ 2014-01-14 3:39 ` Eric Schulte
2014-01-14 7:05 ` James Harkins
0 siblings, 1 reply; 3+ messages in thread
From: Eric Schulte @ 2014-01-14 3:39 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: James Harkins; +Cc: orgmode
James Harkins <jamshark70@gmail.com> writes:
> Hi,
>
> Got a question that's not easy to search online.
>
> I want to use an org table to define glossary entries for LaTeX. I have my
> table[1], and I have a src block[2] that reads the table and produces the
> right syntax[3]. This is already pretty helpful -- I can C-c C-c the source
> block and manually copy/paste the generated syntax into the org file that I
> will then export.
>
> But... I want babel to do that for me automatically. I'm almost there, but:
>
> The resulting string is put into a verbatim environment -- which is not
> right for this case. I need the string to be inserted as if it were org
> syntax ("#+LATEX_HEADER" and all) that I typed by hand, and then ox-latex
> would process it like any other LaTeX header.
>
> I've tried both ":results value" and ": results output" but the verbatim
> environment is always there.
>
Have you tried ":results raw" or ":results org", take a look at the
manual page on the results header argument.
Best,
>
> A quick glance at ob-core.el seems to indicate that this behavior is
> hardcoded. That's... frustrating: spend 2-3 hours to get this far and then
> find that babel says, "No, you can't do that, actually."
>
> So, I'm at the end of the energy I have left to test various approaches.
> What's the best approach? I'm guessing, apply a filter to remove the
> begin/end verbatim lines. But maybe there's a magic switch in babel?
>
> For reference:
>
> [1] input file, nearly minimal example
> [2] actual result of C-c C-e l L (removing preamble)
> [3] desired result
>
> hjh
>
> [1]
> * UGens :noexport:
> #+name: ugens01
> | Type | Term | Description | Arguments |
> |------+----------+---------------------+-------------|
> | Osc | SinOsc | Sinewave oscillator | freq, phase |
>
> #+name: makegloss
> #+begin_src emacs-lisp :var tbl=ugens01 :exports results :results value
> (let ((str ""))
> (pop tbl)
> (pop tbl)
> (while tbl
> (let ((item (car tbl)))
> (pop item)
> (setq str (concat str (format
> "\\newglossaryentry{%s}{type=ugen,name={%s},description={%s. Inputs:
> (%s)}}\n"
> (car item)
> (pop item)
> (pop item)
> (car item))))
> (setq tbl (cdr tbl))))
> str)
> #+end_src
>
> * Test
> #+call: makegloss
> #+results: makegloss
>
> [2]
> \section{Test}
> \label{sec-1}
> \begin{verbatim}
> \newglossaryentry{SinOsc}{type=ugen,name={SinOsc},description={Sinewave
> oscillator. Inputs: (freq, phase)}}
> \end{verbatim}
>
> [3]
> \section{Test}
> \label{sec-1}
> \newglossaryentry{SinOsc}{type=ugen,name={SinOsc},description={Sinewave
> oscillator. Inputs: (freq, phase)}}
>
>
--
Eric Schulte
https://cs.unm.edu/~eschulte
PGP: 0x614CA05D
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