On Aug 7, 2020, at 8:39 AM, William McCoy <wdm8588@gmail.com> wrote:
This use of :prologue appeared to me to be very useful. But for some reason
when I try it out it does not work for me. I just get a message that the code
block produced no output and that 'np' is not defined. Just to check, when I
put the import statements directly within my code block it works fine.
I am running: Org mode version 9.3.7 (9.3.7-16-g521d7f-elpa
Any idea what I'm doing wrong?
It is sometimes useful to use C-c C-v C-i to see what header args org has
detected for a source block. Misspelled words sometimes wreak havoc and
invisible characters can cause real pain.
Also, it helps to use C-c C-v C-v to to see the expanded code block. When I do
this with Kens' ECM, I get
import numpy as np; import os
print(np.__version__)
in the preview buffer.
HTH,
Chuck
On 8/6/20 2:12 PM, Ken Mankoff wrote:
Actual example:
* Prologue test
:PROPERTIES:
:header-args:python+: :prologue "import numpy as np; import os"
:END:
#+BEGIN_SRC python :results output
print(np.__version__)
#+END_SRC
#+RESULTS:
: 1.18.4
On Wed, Aug 5, 2020 at 3:03 PM Ken Mankoff <mankoff@gmail.com> wrote:
What about using :pre or :prologue and setting it at the header or document
level?
Please excuse brevity. Sent from tiny pocket computer with non-haptic-feedback
keyboard.
On Wed, Aug 5, 2020, 14:22 George Mauer <gmauer@gmail.com> wrote:
Use case:
I'm using ob-racket but this would apply just as well to a few other workflows
I have with python or js.
I would like to write a helper function in a src block and then automatically
have access to it in other src blocks further down the document. I don't really
want a stateful session (nor does ob-racket support sessions) so I essentially
want the equivalent of automatically including it everywhere so I don't have to
type it out all the time (and have it screw up syntax coloring/indentation).
Is this currently possible? Does anyone have any ideas for how to extend things
so it is?