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Re: [O] not-quite-literal blocks
From: |
Thomas Lord |
Subject: |
Re: [O] not-quite-literal blocks |
Date: |
Tue, 03 Apr 2012 19:11:29 -0700 |
Thanks Eric, that was helpful.
As you said, customizing org-babel-exp-code-template
was what I was looking for to name code blocks
the way I had in mind -- I have it wrapping them
in a custom div now.
To locally hack together links from within code
blocks, I found out I was able to do it in a few lines using
htmlize-after-hook.
-t
On Mon, 2012-04-02 at 20:26 -0400, Eric Schulte wrote:
> Thomas Lord <address@hidden> writes:
>
> > I am trying to piece together a simple
> > literate programming system that takes
> > HTML as input and spews out source files.
> > The program that "tangles" code fragments
> > in the HTML into source text will be in XSLT.
> >
> > Org mode is almost but not quite perfect for
> > generating the HTML I'd like.
> >
> > I'm writing to ask if I'm overlooking features that
> > are close to what I want to do, or advice about
> > whether it makes sense to extend org this way
> > and, if so, what work is entailed. (I'm aware
> > of the existing literate programming features
> > in org but they are pretty far from what I'm
> > looking for, I think.)
> >
> > Right now, I can write something like this:
> >
> > #+BEGIN_SRC C
> > printf ("hello world\n");
> > #+END_SRC
> >
> > and, via HTML export, get:
> >
> > <pre class="src src-C">printf("hello world\n");
> > </pre>
> >
> > What I'd really like is the ability to do this:
> >
> > #+BEGIN_SRC C name="Say goodnight, Gracey."
> > printf ("Goodnight, Gracey\n");
> > #+END_SRC
> > #+BEGIN_SRC C name="main routine" file="burns.c"
> > #include <stdio.h>
> > int main (int argc, char * argv[])
> > {
> > //{{say goodnight, gracey}}
> > return 0;
> > }
> > #+END_SRC
> >
> > and get:
> >
> > <i>Say goodnight, Gracey.</i>:
> > <pre class="src src-C" id="say_goodnight_gracey">
> > printf ("Goodnight Gracey\n");
> > </pre>
> >
> > <i>main routine</i>:
> > <pre class="src src-C" id="main_routine" file="burns.c">
> > #include <stdio.h>
> > int main (int argc, char * argv[])
> > {
> > <a href="#say_goodnight_gracey"><i>//{say goodnight,
> > gracey}}</i></a>
> > return 0;
> > }
> > </pre>
> >
>
> This behavior should be fairly easily implemented through customizing
> the `org-babel-exp-code-template' variable, you can put any arbitrary
> Org-mode text into this template including literal HTML. See its
> documentation string for more information.
>
> >
> >
> > You can probably see how if I could get those mangled
> > "id" attributes in there, along with the hyperlinks,
> > it's pretty easy to tangle the result to produce a
> > source file like:
> >
> > #include <stdio.h>
> > int main (int argc, char * argv[])
> > {
> > printf ("Goodnight, Gracey\n");
> > return 0;
> > }
> >
> > Any suggestions on what I would need to do
> > to get code blocks like this? The precise details of
> > the particular HTML mark-up are a little bit
> > flexible.
> >
> > Huge "bonus points" if I can specify arbitrary
> > attributes (not just "id" and "file") *and*
> > introduce spans with a specific "id" in code.
> > Like:
> >
> > #+BEGIN_SRC C id="print something" params="thing rest"
> > printf (/*{thing}*/, /*{rest}*/);
> > #+END_SRC
> >
> > for
> > <pre ... id="print_something" params="thing rest">
> > printf (<span ... name="thing">/*thing*/</span>, ...);
> > </pre>
> >
> > and
> >
> > #+BEGIN_SRC id="main routine" ...
> > ...
> > int main (int argc, char * argv[])
> > {
> > //{{print something}thing={"argc is %d\n"}rest={argc}}
> > return 0;
> > }
> > #+END_SRC
> >
> > for the obvious HTML expansion, all to ultimately generate
> > (through the XSLT code):
> >
> > ...
> > int main (...)
> > {
> > printf ("argc is %d\n", argc);
> > ...
> > }
> >
>
> If you're willing to hack ob-exp.el locally you could add specific
> header arguments to the `org-babel-exp-code-template' template. I'm not
> clear on a good way to do this for *any* header argument which would be
> general enough to push up to the main Org-mode trunk.
>
> Cheers,
>
> >
> > Thanks,
> > -t
> >
> >
> >
>