README – Org-transclusion
Org-transclusion lets you insert a copy of text content via a file link or ID link within an Org file. It lets you have the same content present in different buffers at the same time without copy-and-pasting it. Edit the source of the content, and you can refresh the transcluded copies to the up-to-date state. Org-transclusion keeps your files clear of the transcluded copies, leaving only the links to the original content.<<whatis>>
A complete user manual is available online or Emacs in-system as an Info node `(org-transclusion)’: (C-h i
and find the Org-transclusion
node).
For installation and minimum configuration, refer to Installation below or the user manual: online or Info node `(org-transclusion)Installation’
Getting Started in the user manual will get you started in 5 minutes: online or Info node `(org-transclusion)Getting Started’.
For customization, refer to the customization group `org-transclusion’ or user manual: online or Info node `(org-transclusion)Customizing’.
Screen Shots and Videos
Below are images and videos demonstrating some of the key features of Org-transclusion.
Figure 1. Animation to show creation of a transclusion from an ID link
Figure 2. Animation to show live sync from transclusion to source
Figure 3. Video demo on v0.2.1 on YouTube demonstrating new features to transclude a source file into a src-block and function to specify a range of text/source line
- Older videos
- Video demo on v0.2.0 on YouTube featuring minor breaking changes and new transclusion filters
- Video demo on v0.1.1 on YouTube featuring basic syntax and live-sync edit
Example Use Cases & Main Features
Here are some real use cases that users have shared with the author, including his own.
- Book writing
-
You have a collection of notes. You can quickly transclude paragraphs and sections from your notes and put together a draft. As transclusions are links, it’s easy to re-organize them into different sequences to see which way works the best.
- Academic writing
-
You have a collection of quotes and notes from your research and literature review. Transclude relevant elements of quotes and notes into different papers. You can keep your collection as the central repository of your research.
- Technical writing
-
You write technical documents for software. Transclude relevant lines of code into the document. As the code is only transcluded, you can keep the document up-to-date as the code evolves.
- Project status reports
-
You work on multiple projects at the same time and need to report to different project managers. Transclude relevant parts of your work notes and logs into respective project reports. You can keep a single collection of your work notes and logs.
Main Features:
- Insert a copy of text content via a file link or ID link into an Org file
- Work with any text file such as program source code, plain text, Markdown, or other Org files
- Keep the file system clear of the copies of text content – Org-transclusion tries hard to save only the links to the file system
- For Org files, use different headline levels from the source Org file
- For Org files, use filters to include only relevant elements (e.g. filter out properties in the transclusions)
- For program source and plain text files, transclude a certain lines or dynamically specify the from/to lines to keep the transclusion always up-to-date with the evolving source files
- For program source files, transclude parts or whole code directly into Org’s source block to leverage the rich Org features including noweb style syntax
- Extend Org-transclusion with its extension framework
Installation
This package is available on:
- GNU ELPA (releases only; equivalent to MELPA-Stable)
- GNU-devel ELPA (unreleased development branch; equivalent to MELPA)
GNU ELPA should be already set up in your Emacs by default. If you wish to add GNU-devel ELPA, simply add its URL to package-archives
like this:
(add-to-list 'package-archives
'("gnu-devel" . "https://elpa.gnu.org/devel/") :append)
Refresh the archive with M-x package-refresh-contents RET
and you can do M-x package-install RET org-transclusion
to install it. Alternatively, you can use package-list-packages
.
After installation, you can start using Org-transclusion with no additional configuration. Below are some example keybindings that can be put into your Emacs configuration.
(define-key global-map (kbd "<f12>") #'org-transclusion-add)
(define-key global-map (kbd "C-n t") #'org-transclusion-mode)
For Doom users, you would need to do something like this below to install the package and configure the keybindings.
;; ~/.doom.d/package.el
(package! org-transclusion)
;; ~/.doom.d/config.el
(use-package! org-transclusion
:after org
:init
(map!
:map global-map "<f12>" #'org-transclusion-add
:leader
:prefix "n"
:desc "Org Transclusion Mode" "t" #'org-transclusion-mode))
Contributing
- Get involved in a discussion in Org-roam forum (the package is originally aimed for its users, the author included)
- Create issues, discussion, and/or pull requests. All welcome.
Org-transclusion is part of GNU ELPA and thus copyrighted by the Free Software Foundation (FSF). This means that anyone who is making a substantive code contribution will need to “assign the copyright for your contributions to the FSF so that they can be included in GNU Emacs” (Org Mode website).
Thank you.
License
Org-transclusion is licensed under a GPLv3 license. For a full copy of the license, refer to LICENSE.