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Re: [O] org-annotate/collaboration?
From: |
Uwe Brauer |
Subject: |
Re: [O] org-annotate/collaboration? |
Date: |
Sat, 11 Feb 2017 18:07:33 +0000 |
User-agent: |
Gnus/5.13 (Gnus v5.13) Emacs/25.1.50 (gnu/linux) |
>>> "Eric" == Eric Abrahamsen <address@hidden> writes:
> Matt Price <address@hidden> writes:
>> Does anyone use org-annotate actively? I'm wondering what your
>> workflow is, how you incorporate comments, etc.
> I wrote it, and I don't use it that much. I do use it for quick
> notes-to-self when writing, but footnotes do the job just as well.
>> I'm hoping to embark on a book project with a colleague. I would like
>> to use org-mode if I can, but I need to get a sense of the
>> collaboration workflow. When you work on projects together, do you use
>> annotations? Or git pull requests? If the latter, od you use any
>> filters, or any magit tricks, to approve or modify suggested changes
>> chunk by chunk?
> It's a huge problem, and one that org-annotate isn't going to solve. I
> do a lot of manuscript editing, and passing files around, and have only
> barely gotten some people to accept my "weird" workflow, which is to
> send them a clean version of an edited file, and along with that an HTML
> file containing htmlized word-diff output, where the insertions and
> deletions are colorized. They make further edits on the clean copy, and
> I do another go-around. It's a huge pain.
I did (and still do) the same, using latex and latexdiff, but found out
that a better solution is to use mercurial and bitbucket (I presume git
should be fine as well), since one of my collaborators agree to use it
as well. This is quite a relief to the former method relying on external
tools and email.
- Usually instead of comments I use issuesin bitbucket.
- hg diff is not perfect but a good first approximation.
Re: [O] org-annotate/collaboration?,
Uwe Brauer <=
Re: [O] org-annotate/collaboration?, Eduardo Mercovich, 2017/02/17