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@@ -11,12 +11,10 @@ documentation. This strategy is a great way to keep your documentation
from getting outdated, and it allows you to use all the other
wonderful features of org-mode. Watch "README-Driven Design" to see
exactly how to make your README file a powerful literate document.
-
- [Companion Blog Post](http://adamard.com/literate_programming.html)
- [Extended Version of Demo File](https://github.com/adam-ard/literate-demo)
- [Literate Static Website](https://github.com/adam-ard/static-website-literate-demo)
<!-- from the pad --->
-
- Actual start and end time (EST): Start 2020-11-28T14.15.00; End: 2020-11-28T14.34.46
@@ -31,9 +29,7 @@ You are right it would get pretty large. I haven't hit that point yet, but plan
## If a collaborator edits the tangled file(s), is reverse-tangling in org reliable? How do you integrate the reverse in a safe way?
So, I actually think this is the big unsolved problem right now. How to do reverse tangling. As far as I know, emacs doesn't do that. But it would really cool. I think it is probably a hard problem.
-
- actually it does! you have to enable comments that mark the boundaries of the code blocks. (org-babel-detangle) -> org-babel-detangle is pretty fragile right now.
-
- Oh wonderful! I will have to check that out. There is always more to discover in emacs. Thanks!
@@ -57,7 +53,6 @@ Sure, it is documented in the literate programming demo here (<https://github.co
## In Python, indentation is part of the syntax. How is this handled when <a id="orgd70b75b"></a>-syntax is used for functions or even a few lines of codes that are get re-used in multiple functions? Does the user have to define different <a id="org3552e1e"></a> snippets for different indentations but otherwise identical code?
Not the speaker, but :noweb will add the prefix characters to all lines, see <https://orgmode.org/manual/Noweb-Reference-Syntax.html>. Python identation is fine (and used as an example in the manual :))
-
- exactly, I have done a lot of python this way, it works great!
@@ -77,7 +72,6 @@ Yep! See the links below for a couple template files. An extended one from the t
# Notes
-
- Adam Ard: I'll be answering questions here in the pad or in #emacsconf (aard3)
- Companion Blog Post: <http://adamard.com/literate_programming.html>
- Extended Version of Demo File: <https://github.com/adam-ard/literate-demo>