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Re: [Orgmode] Re: Worg needs some reorganizing


From: Eric Schulte
Subject: Re: [Orgmode] Re: Worg needs some reorganizing
Date: Tue, 18 Jan 2011 09:26:43 -0700
User-agent: Gnus/5.13 (Gnus v5.13) Emacs/24.0.50 (gnu/linux)

Matt Lundin <address@hidden> writes:

> Bastien <address@hidden> writes:
>
>> Jeff Horn <address@hidden> writes:
>>
>>> Jason seems to be garnering a lot of votes, but Eric's zenburn
>>> emulation makes my eyes happy. If Jason wins out, I suppose I could
>>> always just read Worg in emacs... :D
>>
>> Or use Eric zenburn-like css by selecting it as an alternative
>> stylesheet in Firefox : View -> Page Style -> [select stylesheet].
>>
>> I don't know how to make this choice persistent from Firefox and I 
>> don't know if this feature is available for other browsers, but it
>> is certainly worth having several stylesheet available.
>
> Could we perhaps go ahead and put the new stylesheets on Worg along with
> alternate stylesheet links in the publishing preamble? That way we could
> begin to tweak the stylesheets as a community and test them "on the
> fly." (It would also save Jason the work of having to publish to tmp
> directories.) Others would then be free to add their own
> stylesheets---though I suppose that adding alternate stylesheet links
> will require access to the publishing options on the server.
>
> Once we've decided on a default, we could then adjust the preamble
> accordingly and clean up the alternates.
>

This sounds like a great approach to me.  I'm convinced that there are
other Org-mode users with much more sophisticated knowledge of CSS who
may improve our initial efforts in time.

One other alternative that comes to mind--while we're making impositions
on Jason's kindness :)--is that it would be nice to have an alternate
version of Worg published side-by-side with the original, only instead
of publishing each page using org-publish-as-html, it could publish each
page using only htmlize.  That way we could show off how nice Org-mode
syntax can be when viewed from inside of Emacs, and users could see a
side-by-side between the plain-text and html versions.  An example of
this approach done successfully is Dan's Babel example at
http://www.stats.ox.ac.uk/~davison/software/org-babel/drift.org.html

Cheers -- Eric



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