Some people find it noisy and distracting that the Org headlines start with a potentially large number of stars, and that text below the headlines is not indented. While this is no problem when writing a book-like document where the outline headings are really section headings, in a more list-oriented outline, indented structure is a lot cleaner:
* Top level headline | * Top level headline
** Second level | * Second level
*** 3rd level | * 3rd level
some text | some text
*** 3rd level | * 3rd level
more text | more text
* Another top level headline | * Another top level headline
If you are using at least Emacs 23.21
and version 6.29 of Org, this kind of view can be achieved
dynamically at display time using org-indent-mode.
In this minor mode, all lines are prefixed for display with the
necessary amount of space2. Also headlines are prefixed
with additional stars, so that the amount of indentation shifts
by two3 spaces per level. All headline stars but
the last one are made invisible using the org-hide
face4 - see below under
‘2.’ for more
information on how this works. You can turn on
org-indent-mode for all files by customizing the
variable org-startup-indented, or you can turn it on
for individual files using
#+STARTUP: indent
If you want a similar effect in an earlier version of Emacs and/or Org, or if you want the indentation to be hard space characters so that the plain text file looks as similar as possible to the Emacs display, Org supports you in the following way:
*** 3rd level
more text, now indented
Org supports this with paragraph filling, line wrapping, and structure editing5, preserving or adapting the indentation as appropriate.
org-hide-leading-stars or change
this on a per-file basis with
#+STARTUP: hidestars
#+STARTUP: showstars
With hidden stars, the tree becomes:
* Top level headline
* Second level
* 3rd level
...
The
leading stars are not truly replaced by whitespace, they are
only fontified with the face org-hide that uses
the background color as font color. If you are not using
either white or black background, you may have to customize
this face to get the wanted effect. Another possibility is to
set this font such that the extra stars are almost
invisible, for example using the color grey90 on
a white background.
org-odd-levels-only, or set this on a
per-file basis with one of the following lines:
#+STARTUP: odd
#+STARTUP: oddeven
You can convert an Org file from single-star-per-level to the double-star-per-level convention with M-x org-convert-to-odd-levels RET in that file. The reverse operation is M-x org-convert-to-oddeven-levels.
[1] Emacs 23.1 can actually crash with
org-indent-mode
[2] org-indent-mode also sets
the wrap-prefix property, such that
visual-line-mode (or purely setting
word-wrap) wraps long lines (including headlines)
correctly indented.
[3] See the variable
org-indent-indentation-per-level.
[4] Turning on org-indent-mode
sets org-hide-leading-stars to t and
org-adapt-indentation to nil.
[5] See also the variable
org-adapt-indentation.
[6] When you need to specify a level for a property search or refile targets, ‘LEVEL=2’ will correspond to 3 stars, etc.