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Re: [RFC] Rewrite org-(forward|backward)-paragraph
From: |
Nicolas Goaziou |
Subject: |
Re: [RFC] Rewrite org-(forward|backward)-paragraph |
Date: |
Mon, 08 Jun 2020 19:24:05 +0200 |
User-agent: |
Gnus/5.13 (Gnus v5.13) Emacs/26.3 (gnu/linux) |
Hello,
KĆ©vin Le Gouguec <kevin.legouguec@gmail.com> writes:
> I don't know how useful my feedback will be, since I'm not a heavy user
> of paragraph-based movement[1], but here goes!
Thank you!
> I've danced around ORG-NEWS to assess the changes; what I observed does
> feel closer to text-mode (point moves to the blank lines between
> paragraphs instead of to the paragraph starts), the other changes I
> could spot do not strike me as deal-breaking:
>
> - point now jumps over tight lists[2] instead of stopping at each
> item,
The idea is to avoid some trivial moves where C-n would be sufficient,
e.g., in tables, properties drawers. Also Text mode skip those, since it
doesn't understand such structures.
> - point stops a few more times within code blocks, acting like
> #+begin_src and #+end_src are paragraphs of their own, instead of
> jumping over the whole block; also, forward and backward movements are
> now symmetric š
>
> Are there other situations where you think your changes could be
> controversial?
I don't think it's much controversial, but stop points are necessarily
opinionated. I hope they make sense.
Also, testing could unveil some bugs.
>> WDYT?e Also, what should be done with M-{ and M-}?
>
> FWIW, I think that reducing the distance between Org mode and The Rest
> of Emacsā¢ is a commendable goal, so I would vote for binding paragraph
> functions to M-{ and M-}, and moving element functions to C-<UP> and
> C-<DOWN>. I realize that this might be too big a change for the sake of
> conformity though.
Honestly, I don't know if Sexp-based navigation is useful at all. Does
anyone use such navigationĀ ?
> (And again: I don't use these functions very often, so my vote probably
> shouldn't carry too much weight.)
I don't either. I didn't notice there was a difference until recently.
Regards,
--
Nicolas Goaziou