Actually the documentation does say what {{{time}}} does; I just didn't read it all this time. {{{date}}}{{{date(FORMAT)}}}{{{time(FORMAT)}}}{{{modification-time(FORMAT )}}} "These macros refer to the #+DATE keyword, *the current date*, and the modification time of the file being exported, respectively." Apologies. And thanks to everyone for giving their time to reply to this. -- Kaushal Modi On Thu, Aug 6, 2015 at 3:25 PM, Kaushal wrote: > @Nick That works! Thank you! > > I used the below instead (learned that I needed to escape that comma). > > #+DATE: {{{time(%b %d %Y\, %a)}}} > > I had read about {{{date}}} but assumed that {{{time}}} does the same > thing as {{{date}}} because they are put together with the same > description. The documentation actually doesn't tell what {{{time}}} does: > http://orgmode.org/manual/Macro-replacement.html > > > @John: Looks like I will not need any elisp hacks :) > > > > -- > Kaushal Modi > > On Thu, Aug 6, 2015 at 2:18 PM, John Kitchin > wrote: > >> I use a function like that here: >> https://github.com/jkitchin/jmax/blob/master/techela/techela-grade.el#L182 >> >> and to set the filetag as you suggest you would call it like this: >> >> #+BEGIN_SRC emacs-lisp >> (gb-set-filetag "DATE" (format-time-string "%b %d %Y, %a" (current-time))) >> #+END_SRC >> >> You could put that in some hook function if you like. >> >> Kaushal writes: >> >> >> Why don't you just use a timestamp? >> > >> > But that would need me to insert the timestamp manually each time before >> > exports >> > >> >> You can update whenever you want or using >> >> (org-insert-time-stamp (current-time)) >> >> at the right spot. >> > >> > Wouldn't that too need manual navigation to #+date: and then eval that >> > elisp form? >> >> -- >> 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 >> > >