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[elpa] externals/denote 5b959af6ae 4/4: Reword the manual's introduction
From: |
ELPA Syncer |
Subject: |
[elpa] externals/denote 5b959af6ae 4/4: Reword the manual's introduction to denote-org-extras-extract-org-subtree |
Date: |
Sat, 20 Jan 2024 06:57:47 -0500 (EST) |
branch: externals/denote
commit 5b959af6ae034f2917df7c08b59b087de2a71583
Author: Protesilaos Stavrou <info@protesilaos.com>
Commit: Protesilaos Stavrou <info@protesilaos.com>
Reword the manual's introduction to denote-org-extras-extract-org-subtree
---
README.org | 12 +++++-------
1 file changed, 5 insertions(+), 7 deletions(-)
diff --git a/README.org b/README.org
index faf4607721..63ac74d983 100644
--- a/README.org
+++ b/README.org
@@ -534,13 +534,11 @@ accordingly.
[ Rewritten as part of {{{development-version}}}. ]
-With Org files in particular, it is common to have nested headings
-which could be split off into their own standalone notes. One such
-workflow is to collect lots of thoughts into a single file and create
-longer standalone notes out of them upon review. In Org parlance, an
-entry with all its subheadings is a "subtree". Denote can operate on
-the subtree to extract it from the current file and create a new file
-out of it.
+In Org parlance, an entry with all its subheadings is a "subtree".
+Denote can operate on the subtree to extract it from the current file
+and create a new file out of it. One such workflow is to collect
+thoughts in a single file and produce longer standalone notes out of
+them upon review.
#+findex: denote-org-extras-extract-org-subtree
The command ~denote-org-extras-extract-org-subtree~ (part of the