* refontifying links @ 2015-11-25 2:12 John Kitchin 2015-12-03 19:46 ` Aaron Ecay 0 siblings, 1 reply; 3+ messages in thread From: John Kitchin @ 2015-11-25 2:12 UTC (permalink / raw) To: emacs-orgmode Hi, I am trying to find a nice way to change the color of some links. So far the only solution I have found is to create a new face, and use highlight-regexp to do it. I would prefer to just use font-lock to change the color of the link. so far I have not found a way to do that. I have found the org-activate-plain-links, and org-font-lock-keywords and the org-font-lock-hook, but so far have not figured out how to overwrite the org-link face. I am kind of looking for a general approach to fontifying here, but the specific problem I want to solve is to be able to write: [[color:Orangered1][Some text I want colored]] and have it show in my buffer in Orangered1. Any thoughts? -- Professor John Kitchin Doherty Hall A207F Department of Chemical Engineering Carnegie Mellon University Pittsburgh, PA 15213 412-268-7803 @johnkitchin http://kitchingroup.cheme.cmu.edu ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 3+ messages in thread
* Re: refontifying links 2015-11-25 2:12 refontifying links John Kitchin @ 2015-12-03 19:46 ` Aaron Ecay 2015-12-03 23:55 ` John Kitchin 0 siblings, 1 reply; 3+ messages in thread From: Aaron Ecay @ 2015-12-03 19:46 UTC (permalink / raw) To: John Kitchin, emacs-orgmode Hi John, 2015ko azaroak 25an, John Kitchin-ek idatzi zuen: > > Hi, > > I am trying to find a nice way to change the color of some links. So far > the only solution I have found is to create a new face, and use > highlight-regexp to do it. > > I would prefer to just use font-lock to change the color of the link. so > far I have not found a way to do that. > > I have found the org-activate-plain-links, and org-font-lock-keywords > and the org-font-lock-hook, but so far have not figured out how to > overwrite the org-link face. > > I am kind of looking for a general approach to fontifying here, but the > specific problem I want to solve is to be able to write: > > [[color:Orangered1][Some text I want colored]] and have it show in my > buffer in Orangered1. > > Any thoughts? Links are currently defined by an open function and an export function. It might be interesting if org added a third function to this set, a fontification function. OTOH we would have to consider if links are the best place to add this functionality. The work you have done on org-ref and other projects (which I greatly admire!) (ab)uses links as an analogue of HTML’s span element: a way to encapsulate and attach attributes to a sub-paragraph-sized chunk of text whose semantics are somewhat amorphous. Your example here pushes that further, using the link for pure formatting: it no longer “links” to anything at all (and thus probably should not have an associated open function nor be click-active in the buffer). I think “Spans” are something org should support, but not by co-opting links to do it. We ought to either make new syntax, or change the name of “links” to “spans” and say the former are a special case of the latter (preserving backwards compatibility of existing documents to the extent possible of course, but also doing our best to free ourselves of link-specific implementation details like percent-escaping). FWIW, HTH, Aaron PS I think if we had spans 2-3 years ago, then you would have used them to implement org-ref, and that code would already be in core. I think the same would be true of annotations, for which we’ve recently had a well-responded thread with several code contribtions, including from you IIRC. On the other hand I don’t think we want org to become like Latex, where almost all documents require a complicated web of third-party dependencies to “work” at all. It’s a delicate balance... -- Aaron Ecay ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 3+ messages in thread
* Re: refontifying links 2015-12-03 19:46 ` Aaron Ecay @ 2015-12-03 23:55 ` John Kitchin 0 siblings, 0 replies; 3+ messages in thread From: John Kitchin @ 2015-12-03 23:55 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Aaron Ecay; +Cc: emacs-orgmode > > Links are currently defined by an open function and an export function. > It might be interesting if org added a third function to this set, a > fontification function. > > OTOH we would have to consider if links are the best place to add this > functionality. The work you have done on org-ref and other projects > (which I greatly admire!) (ab)uses links as an analogue of HTML’s span > element: a way to encapsulate and attach attributes to a > sub-paragraph-sized chunk of text whose semantics are somewhat > amorphous. Your example here pushes that further, using the link for > pure formatting: it no longer “links” to anything at all (and thus > probably should not have an associated open function nor be click-active > in the buffer). Thanks! I have had a lot fun stretching the intended uses of the mighty link ;) you might click on it to change its color, or remove the link, maybe all red text is glossary word that you can click on to get a definition... I think there is a lot of potential advantage in changing the color of a link. org-ref does already, to differentiate cite, ref and label links, but the faces are static. > I think “Spans” are something org should support, but not by co-opting > links to do it. We ought to either make new syntax, or change the name > of “links” to “spans” and say the former are a special case of the > latter (preserving backwards compatibility of existing documents to the > extent possible of course, but also doing our best to free ourselves of > link-specific implementation details like percent-escaping). Spans sounds like a generalized link syntax to me. Something like here: http://kitchingroup.cheme.cmu.edu/blog/2015/02/05/Extending-the-org-mode-link-syntax-with-attributes/ In the end I am not sure it makes much difference if we call it a link or span. I have often wanted something different than a link, but that was "linky", and still an org-element and more like the example above. It would make a lot of things easier, like citations, annotations, etc... Wait till you see the (ab)use of the new citation syntax which looks more like a span than anything else ;) > > FWIW, HTH, > Aaron > > PS I think if we had spans 2-3 years ago, then you would have used them > to implement org-ref, and that code would already be in core. I think > the same would be true of annotations, for which we’ve recently had a > well-responded thread with several code contribtions, including from you > IIRC. On the other hand I don’t think we want org to become like Latex, > where almost all documents require a complicated web of third-party > dependencies to “work” at all. It’s a delicate balance... Agreed. The documents are still plain text in the end, and readable if you do it right. -- Professor John Kitchin Doherty Hall A207F Department of Chemical Engineering Carnegie Mellon University Pittsburgh, PA 15213 412-268-7803 @johnkitchin http://kitchingroup.cheme.cmu.edu ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 3+ messages in thread
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