Hello,
Derek Feichtinger <dfeich@gmail.com> writes:
> A longer time ago, hitting RET on an agenda clock log line brought up the
> respective org buffer with the cursor positioned on the clock line. At some
> point this stopped to work cleanly, at least when using clock drawers. The
> clock drawer would always be closed (even when it was opened in the org
> buffer before jumping.) with the cursor being in the hidden drawer. So, it
> became impossible to find the target clock line for e.g. modifying it.
This is fixed. Thank you.
> ;; when jumping to the agenda from a log message, the point ends up at
> ;; a CLOCK item in a LOGBOOK drawer, but the drawer gets closed, even
> ;; if the drawer was open before. I add a drawer opening function to
> ;; the respective agenda hook
> (defun org-open-if-in-drawer ()
> (let ((element (org-element-at-point)))
> (while (and element
> (not (memq (org-element-type element)
> '(drawer property-drawer))))
> (setq element (org-element-property :parent element)))
See `org-element-lineage'.
> (when element
> (let ((pos (point)))
> (goto-char (org-element-property :begin element))
> (org-flag-drawer nil)
> (goto-char pos)))))
>
> (add-hook 'org-agenda-after-show-hook #'org-open-if-in-drawer)
Hooks are for user convenience, as you used it; I don't think any core feature should be
implemented through hooks.
Note that you can also call `org-flag-drawer' on a specific drawer using
optional argument.
Regards,
--
Nicolas Goaziou