Hi Dmitri,
before I look deeper into your patch, please try the
following and tell us if this does the trick:
On May 16, 2007, at 11:43, Dmitri Minaev wrote:
> Hello,
>
> I'd like to know the opinion of the community (and Carsten's in
> particular, of course) on the following idea -- do you think it would
> be useful to have in-buffer settings to customize priorities?
>
> The background story (sorry if it's verbose) is like this. I keep my
> reading list in org-mode (quite naturally). Normally, the entries are
> stored in the chronological order, but sometimes I would like to see
> the best or the worst read books. I started by using tags like
> :score2:, :score8:, etc., so I could search for tags using regexps
> like {score[7-9]}. Unfortunately, the entries were not sorted.
You can influence the sorting strategy, The following should work:
(setq org-agenda-custom-commands
'(("P" tags "{^score[0-9]}"
((org-agenda-files '("~/org/books.org"))
(org-agenda-sorting-strategy '(tag-down))
(org-agenda-prefix-format " %T: ")))))
This sets up the command `C-c a P' to select books with a
score tag, and to sort the list by score.
The parameters make sure that only the file
~/org/books.org is checked, set up the sorting strategy
to only look at the tag, and change the prefix to only
show the score tag.
The one complication/limitation is that the setup above
will require that the score tag is the last tag in the
list of tags, because only that tag will be used for
sorting. A good way to do this is to make the score
tags the last in your tags setup, for example:
#+TAGS: xxx yyy zzz
#+TAGS: { score0(0) score1(1) score2(2) score3(3) score4(4)
#+TAGS: score5(5) score6(6) score7(7) score8(8) score9(9) }
As you see, the score tags are set up as mutually exclusive
(they are grouped in {...}), and all other tags are listed
before them. So after changing tags with C-c C-c, tags
will always be sorted to have the score last.
- Carsten