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Within an entry of the outline tree, hand-formatted lists can provide additional structure. They also provide a way to create lists of checkboxes (see Checkboxes). Org supports editing such lists, and every exporter (see Exporting) can parse and format them.
Org knows ordered lists, unordered lists, and description lists.
[@20]17. Those constructs can be used in any
item of the list in order to enforce a particular
numbering.Items belonging to the same list must have the same indentation on the first line. In particular, if an ordered list reaches number ‘10.’, then the 2–digit numbers must be written left-aligned with the other numbers in the list. An item ends before the next line that is less or equally indented than its bullet/number.
A list ends whenever every item has ended, which means before any line less or equally indented than items at top level. It also ends before two blank lines18. In that case, all items are closed. Here is an example:
** Lord of the Rings
My favorite scenes are (in this order)
1. The attack of the Rohirrim
2. Eowyn's fight with the witch king
+ this was already my favorite scene in the book
+ I really like Miranda Otto.
3. Peter Jackson being shot by Legolas
- on DVD only
He makes a really funny face when it happens.
But in the end, no individual scenes matter but the film as a whole.
Important actors in this film are:
- Elijah Wood :: He plays Frodo
- Sean Austin :: He plays Sam, Frodo's friend. I still remember
him very well from his role as Mikey Walsh in The Goonies.
Org supports these lists by tuning filling and wrapping
commands to deal with them correctly19, and by exporting them
properly (see Exporting).
Since indentation is what governs the structure of these lists,
many structural constructs like #+BEGIN_... blocks
can be indented to signal that they belong to a particular
item.
If you find that using a different bullet for a sub-list (than
that used for the current list-level) improves readability,
customize the variable
org-list-demote-modify-bullet. To get a greater
difference of indentation between items and theirs sub-items,
customize org-list-indent-offset.
The following commands act on items when the cursor is in the
first line of an item (the line with the bullet or number). Some
of them imply the application of automatic rules to keep list
structure intact. If some of these actions get in your way,
configure org-list-automatic-rules to disable them
individually.
org-cycle)Items can be folded just like headline levels. Normally
this works only if the cursor is on a plain list item. For
more details, see the variable
org-cycle-include-plain-lists. If this variable
is set to integrate, plain list items will be
treated like low-level headlines. The level of an item is
then given by the indentation of the bullet/number. Items are
always subordinate to real headlines, however; the
hierarchies remain completely separated. In a new item with
no text yet, the first TAB demotes the
item to become a child of the previous one. Subsequent
TABs move the item to meaningful levels
in the list and eventually get it back to its initial
position.
org-insert-heading)Insert new item at current level. With a prefix argument, force a new heading (see Structure editing). If this command is used in the middle of an item, that item is split in two, and the second part becomes the new item20. If this command is executed before item’s body, the new item is created before the current one.
Insert a new item with a checkbox (see Checkboxes).
Jump to the previous/next item in the current list21, but
only if org-support-shift-select is off. If not,
you can still use paragraph jumping commands like
C-up and
C-down to quite similar
effect.
Move the item including subitems up/down22 (swap with previous/next item of same indentation). If the list is ordered, renumbering is automatic.
Decrease/increase the indentation of an item, leaving children alone.
Decrease/increase the indentation of the item, including subitems. Initially, the item tree is selected based on current indentation. When these commands are executed several times in direct succession, the initially selected region is used, even if the new indentation would imply a different hierarchy. To use the new hierarchy, break the command chain with a cursor motion or so.
As a special case, using this command on the very first
item of a list will move the whole list. This behavior can be
disabled by configuring
org-list-automatic-rules. The global indentation
of a list has no influence on the text after the
list.
If there is a checkbox (see Checkboxes) in the item line, toggle the state of the checkbox. In any case, verify bullets and indentation consistency in the whole list.
Cycle the entire list level through the different
itemize/enumerate bullets (‘-’,
‘+’, ‘*’,
‘1.’, ‘1)’)
or a subset of them, depending on
org-plain-list-ordered-item-terminator, the type
of list, and its indentation. With a numeric prefix argument
N, select the Nth bullet from this list. If there is an
active region when calling this, selected text will be
changed into an item. With a prefix argument, all lines will
be converted to list items. If the first line already was a
list item, any item marker will be removed from the list.
Finally, even without an active region, a normal line will be
converted into a list item.
Turn a plain list item into a headline (so that it becomes a subheading at its location). See Structure editing, for a detailed explanation.
Turn the whole plain list into a subtree of the current heading. Checkboxes (see Checkboxes) will become TODO (resp. DONE) keywords when unchecked (resp. checked).
This command also cycles bullet styles when the cursor in
on the bullet or anywhere in an item line, details depending
on org-support-shift-select.
Sort the plain list. You will be prompted for the sorting method: numerically, alphabetically, by time, by checked status for check lists, or by a custom function.
When using ‘*’ as a bullet, lines must be indented or they will be seen as top-level headlines. Also, when you are hiding leading stars to get a clean outline view, plain list items starting with a star may be hard to distinguish from true headlines. In short: even though ‘*’ is supported, it may be better to not use it for plain list items.
You can filter out any of them by configuring
org-plain-list-ordered-item-terminator.
You can also get ‘a.’,
‘A.’, ‘a)’
and ‘A)’ by configuring
org-list-allow-alphabetical. To minimize confusion
with normal text, those are limited to one character only.
Beyond that limit, bullets will automatically fallback to
numbers.
If there’s a checkbox in the item, the cookie must be
put before the checkbox. If you have activated
alphabetical lists, you can also use counters like
[@b].
See also
org-list-empty-line-terminates-plain-lists.
Org only changes the filling settings for Emacs. For XEmacs,
you should use Kyle E. Jones’ filladapt.el.
To turn this on, put into .emacs: (require
'filladapt)
If you do not want the item to be split, customize the
variable org-M-RET-may-split-line.
If you want to cycle around items that way, you may
customize org-list-use-circular-motion.
See org-list-use-circular-motion for a cyclic
behavior.
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