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Re: Cycling first N heading levels in outline
From: |
Ihor Radchenko |
Subject: |
Re: Cycling first N heading levels in outline |
Date: |
Sun, 23 May 2021 17:46:06 +0800 |
Christopher Dimech <dimech@gmx.com> writes:
> It is useful for mathematical and scientific classification work.
>
> I attach a texinfo file, where @usec, @usubsec, @usubsubsec are defined as
> headings.
>
> You can use "Show Branches", "Show Children", and "Show Subtree". But they
> all force
> the user to move point to a specific heading, i.e. there are no operations
> which are global
> across the buffer.
Hmm. Have you tried org-shifttab (bound to S-<TAB>)? It operates
globally across the buffer.
Also, there is outline-hide-sublevels. When called with prefix argument,
it will display sublevels from level 1 up until the level equal to the
prefix argument.
Best,
Ihor
- Cycling first N heading levels in outline, Christopher Dimech, 2021/05/22
- Re: Cycling first N heading levels in outline, Ihor Radchenko, 2021/05/23
- Cycling first N heading levels in outline, Christopher Dimech, 2021/05/23
- Re: Cycling first N heading levels in outline,
Ihor Radchenko <=
- Cycling first N heading levels in outline, Christopher Dimech, 2021/05/23
- Re: Cycling first N heading levels in outline, Ihor Radchenko, 2021/05/23
- Re: Cycling first N heading levels in outline, Ihor Radchenko, 2021/05/23
- Cycling first N heading levels in outline, Christopher Dimech, 2021/05/23
- Re: Cycling first N heading levels in outline, Ihor Radchenko, 2021/05/23
- Re: Cycling first N heading levels in outline, Jean Louis, 2021/05/23
- Cycling first N heading levels in outline, Christopher Dimech, 2021/05/23
- Re: Cycling first N heading levels in outline, Jean Louis, 2021/05/23
- Re: Cycling first N heading levels in outline, Jean Louis, 2021/05/23
- Re: Cycling first N heading levels in outline, Ihor Radchenko, 2021/05/23