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Re: [Orgmode] Re: Org-mode Code Blocks Manuscript: Request For Comments


From: Thomas S. Dye
Subject: Re: [Orgmode] Re: Org-mode Code Blocks Manuscript: Request For Comments
Date: Wed, 8 Dec 2010 06:33:29 -1000

Aloha Seb,

Thanks for your detailed and thorough review. Your comments will help us revise the paper. Much appreciated.

All the best,
Tom

On Dec 7, 2010, at 12:55 PM, Sébastien Vauban wrote:

Hi Eric,

Let's see if I'm a good proof-reader. Here are my comments, looking at things
not already said by others:

Page 1 -- "... desirable to mix prose, (add input data?,) code, and
computational results."

Page 3 -- It'd be better not to have commas in front of the Org-mode block in
Figure 1.

Page 9 -- You say that "tags and properties of a node are inherited by its sub-nodes". I agree for tags, not for properties (at least, by default).

Page 10 -- "Active code blocks are marked with a source line, followed by a name unique within the document". Why don't you call such "named code blocks"
as in Babel's code base?

BTW, what happens if there is a name clash with other code blocks (in the same
document, or in the LOB)?  Though, this is not for your paper...

Page 12 -- When results is set to output, what do you mean by "collected from STDOUT incrementally"? Not sure about the added value of incrementally...

Page 16 -- I find the name of the code block "ps-to-dot" very badly chosen. PS
makes me think of PostScript, while you mean here Pascal's triangle...

Page 17 -- In the LaTeX ATTR, better use linewidth instead of textwidth. This
is a more secure setting.

Page 18 -- Is the default value of var (1 2 1) compliant with the "pass" table
beneath it?

Side comment -- Wouldn't you use a standard way of handling the acronyms in LaTeX, so that they're expanded when required, and listed at the end of the
document?  Example of such acro: ESS.

For the rest, an excellent document, but not that good (IMHO) for publishing to a statistics journal. For doing so, I find you'd have to only include R examples, and show that you can do everything Sweave can do, and even much
more. But I would focus on stats a lot more than it is here.

But, the way it is written, it is much more general, and offers a much widen
view. So, this is excellent, but for another audience.

Best regards,
 Seb

--
Sébastien Vauban


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