doc/org-manual.org: Reference org-cyclic and org-block

* doc/org-manual.org (Footnotes): Add `org-cyclic' and `org-block' to
note about org diary functions.  Add function indices for `org-date',
`org-anniversary', `org-cyclic', and `org-block'.
This commit is contained in:
Robert Pluim 2022-06-10 17:53:12 +02:00 committed by Ihor Radchenko
parent 3825ca6ccb
commit a8b32247d9
No known key found for this signature in database
GPG Key ID: 6470762A7DA11D8B
1 changed files with 9 additions and 4 deletions

View File

@ -22046,6 +22046,10 @@ format]]. The day name is optional when you type the date yourself.
However, any date inserted or modified by Org adds that day name, for
reading convenience.
#+findex: org-date
#+findex: org-anniversary
#+findex: org-cyclic
#+findex: org-block
[fn:60] When working with the standard diary expression functions, you
need to be very careful with the order of the arguments. That order
depends evilly on the variable ~calendar-date-style~. For example, to
@ -22053,10 +22057,11 @@ specify a date December 12, 2005, the call might look like
=(diary-date 12 1 2005)= or =(diary-date 1 12 2005)= or =(diary-date
2005 12 1)=, depending on the settings. This has been the source of
much confusion. Org mode users can resort to special versions of
these functions like ~org-date~ or ~org-anniversary~. These work just
like the corresponding ~diary-~ functions, but with stable ISO order
of arguments (year, month, day) wherever applicable, independent of
the value of ~calendar-date-style~.
these functions, namely ~org-date~, ~org-anniversary~, ~org-cyclic, and
~org-block~. These work just like the corresponding ~diary-~
functions, but with stable ISO order of arguments (year, month, day)
wherever applicable, independent of the value of
~calendar-date-style~.
[fn:61] See the variable ~org-read-date-prefer-future~. You may set
that variable to the symbol ~time~ to even make a time before now