list-org-headlines - List all headlines in all Org files
This document describes version 0.42 of list-org-headlines (from Perl distribution App-OrgUtils), released on 2016-04-30.
# list all headlines in all Org files $ list-org-headlines ~/*.org # instead of only listing its title, list details about each headline $ list-org-headlines --detail FILES ... # list all todo items in all Org files $ list-org-headlines --todo FILES ... # list headlines that are not todo items in all Org files $ list-org-headlines --notodo FILES ... # list up to level 2 only $ list-org-headlines --tolevel 2 FILES ... # list *only* level 3 $ list-org-headlines --from-level 3 --to-level 3 FILES ...
This is a simple application to list headlines in Org files, first created as a demo for Org::Parser.
* marks required options.
*
Set path to configuration file.
Can be specified multiple times.
Set configuration profile to use.
Do not use any configuration file.
Do not read environment for default options.
Choose output format, e.g. json, text.
Default value:
undef
Set output format to json.
When outputing as JSON, strip result envelope.
0
By default, when outputing as JSON, the full enveloped result is returned, e.g.:
[200,"OK",[1,2,3],{"func.extra"=>4}]
The reason is so you can get the status (1st element), status message (2nd element) as well as result metadata/extra result (4th element) instead of just the result (3rd element). However, sometimes you want just the result, e.g. when you want to pipe the result for more post-processing. In this case you can use `--naked-res` so you just get:
[1,2,3]
Whether to allow headline to be listed more than once.
This is only relevant when `group_by_tags` is on. Normally when a headline has several tags, it will only be listed under its first tag. But when this option is turned on, the headline will be listed under each of its tag (which mean a single headline will be listed several times).
Show details instead of just titles.
Only show todo items that are done.
Only show todo items that are (nearing|passed) due.
If value is not set, then will use todo item's warning period (or, if todo item does not have due date or warning period in its due date, will use the default 14 days).
If value is set to something smaller than the warning period, the todo item will still be considered nearing due when the warning period is passed. For example, if today is 2011-06-30 and due_in is set to 7, then todo item with due date <2011-07-10 > won't pass the filter (it's still 10 days in the future, larger than 7) but <2011-07-10 Sun +1y -14d> will (warning period 14 days is already passed by that time).
See --file.
--file
Only show headlines having this level as the minimum.
1
Whether to group result by tags.
If set to true, instead of returning a list, this function will return a hash of lists, keyed by tag: {tag1: [hl1, hl2, ...], tag2: [...]}. Note that a headline that has several tags will only be listed under its first tag, unless when `allow_duplicates` is set to true, in which case the headline will be listed under each of its tag.
Only show headlines that have the specified tags (JSON-encoded).
See --has-tags.
--has-tags
Only show headlines that have the specified tags.
Display help message and exit.
Only show headlines that don't have the specified tags (JSON-encoded).
See --lacks-tags.
--lacks-tags
Only show headlines that don't have the specified tags.
Only show todo items that have at most this priority.
Note that the default priority list is [A, B, C] (A being the highest) and it can be customized using the `#+PRIORITIES` setting.
Only show todo items that have at least this priority.
Only show todo items that have this priority.
Specify sorting (JSON-encoded).
See --sort.
--sort
Specify sorting.
"due_date"
If string, must be one of 'due_date', '-due_date' (descending).
If code, sorting code will get [REC, DUE_DATE, HL] as the items to compare, where REC is the final record that will be returned as final result (can be a string or a hash, if 'detail' is enabled), DUE_DATE is the DateTime object (if any), and HL is the Org::Headline object.
Only show todo items that have this state.
Will be passed to parser's options.
If not set, TZ environment variable will be picked as default.
Only show headlines having this level as the maximum.
Assume today's date (JSON-encoded).
See --today.
--today
Assume today's date.
You can provide Unix timestamp or DateTime object. If you provide a DateTime object, remember to set the correct time zone.
Only show headlines that are todos.
Display program's version and exit.
Also show items with no/unknown priority.
Relevant only when used with `minimum_priority` and/or `maximum_priority`.
If this option is turned on, todo items that does not have any priority or have unknown priorities will *still* be included. Otherwise they will not be included.
This script has shell tab completion capability with support for several shells.
To activate bash completion for this script, put:
complete -C list-org-headlines list-org-headlines
in your bash startup (e.g. ~/.bashrc). Your next shell session will then recognize tab completion for the command. Or, you can also directly execute the line above in your shell to activate immediately.
~/.bashrc
It is recommended, however, that you install shcompgen which allows you to activate completion scripts for several kinds of scripts on multiple shells. Some CPAN distributions (those that are built with Dist::Zilla::Plugin::GenShellCompletion) will even automatically enable shell completion for their included scripts (using shcompgen) at installation time, so you can immadiately have tab completion.
shcompgen
To activate tcsh completion for this script, put:
complete list-org-headlines 'p/*/`list-org-headlines`/'
in your tcsh startup (e.g. ~/.tcshrc). Your next shell session will then recognize tab completion for the command. Or, you can also directly execute the line above in your shell to activate immediately.
~/.tcshrc
It is also recommended to install shcompgen (see above).
For fish and zsh, install shcompgen as described above.
This script can read configuration file, which by default is searched at ~/.config/list-org-headlines.conf, ~/list-org-headlines.conf or /etc/list-org-headlines.conf (can be changed by specifying --config-path). All found files will be read and merged.
--config-path
To disable searching for configuration files, pass --no-config.
--no-config
Configuration file is in the format of IOD, which is basically INI with some extra features.
You can put multiple profiles in a single file by using section names like [profile=SOMENAME] (filter by profile). Those sections will only be read if you specify the matching --config-profile SOMENAME.
[profile=SOMENAME]
--config-profile SOMENAME
You can also put configuration for multiple programs inside a single file, and use filter program=NAME in section names, e.g. [program=foo ...]. The section will then only be used when the reading program matches.
program=NAME
[program=foo ...]
Finally, you can filter a section by environment variable using the filter env=CONDITION in section names. For example if you only want a section to be read if a certain environment variable is true: [env=SOMEVAR ...]. If you only want a section to be read when the value of an environment variable has value equals something: [env=HOSTNAME=blink ...]. If you only want a section to be read when the value of an environment variable does not equal something: [env=HOSTNAME!=blink ...]. If you only want a section to be read when an environment variable contains something: [env=HOSTNAME*=server ...]. Note that currently due to simplistic parsing, there must not be any whitespace in the value being compared because it marks the beginning of a new section filter or section name.
env=CONDITION
[env=SOMEVAR ...]
[env=HOSTNAME=blink ...]
[env=HOSTNAME!=blink ...]
[env=HOSTNAME*=server ...]
List of available configuration parameters:
allow_duplicates (see --allow-duplicates) detail (see --detail) done (see --done) due_in (see --due-in) files (see --file) format (see --format) from_level (see --from-level) group_by_tags (see --group-by-tags) has_tags (see --has-tags) lacks_tags (see --lacks-tags) maximum_priority (see --maximum-priority) minimum_priority (see --minimum-priority) naked_res (see --naked-res) priority (see --priority) sort (see --sort) state (see --state) time_zone (see --time-zone) to_level (see --to-level) today (see --today) todo (see --todo) with_unknown_priority (see --with-unknown-priority)
Specify additional command-line options
~/.config/list-org-headlines.conf
~/list-org-headlines.conf
/etc/list-org-headlines.conf
Please visit the project's homepage at https://metacpan.org/release/App-OrgUtils.
Source repository is at https://github.com/sharyanto/perl-App-OrgUtils.
Please report any bugs or feature requests on the bugtracker website https://rt.cpan.org/Public/Dist/Display.html?Name=App-OrgUtils
When submitting a bug or request, please include a test-file or a patch to an existing test-file that illustrates the bug or desired feature.
list-org-todos
perlancar <perlancar@cpan.org>
This software is copyright (c) 2016 by perlancar@cpan.org.
This is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as the Perl 5 programming language system itself.
To install App::OrgUtils, copy and paste the appropriate command in to your terminal.
cpanm
cpanm App::OrgUtils
CPAN shell
perl -MCPAN -e shell install App::OrgUtils
For more information on module installation, please visit the detailed CPAN module installation guide.