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412 lines
14 KiB
Plaintext
412 lines
14 KiB
Plaintext
\input texinfo @c -*-texinfo-*-
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@c %**start of header
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@setfilename ../../info/remember
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@settitle Remember Manual
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@c %**end of header
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@dircategory Emacs
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@direntry
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* Remember: (remember). Simple information manager for Emacs
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@end direntry
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@syncodeindex fn cp
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@copying
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This manual is for Remember Mode, version 1.9
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Copyright @copyright{} 2001, 2004, 2005, 2007, 2008
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Free Software Foundation, Inc.
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@quotation
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Permission is granted to copy, distribute and/or modify this document
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under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License, Version 1.2
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or any later version published by the Free Software Foundation; with no
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Invariant Sections, with the Front-Cover texts being ``A GNU Manual'',
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and with the Back-Cover Texts as in (a) below. A copy of the license
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is included in the section entitled ``GNU Free Documentation License''.
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(a) The FSF's Back-Cover Text is: ``You have the freedom to copy and
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modify this GNU manual. Buying copies from the FSF supports it in
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developing GNU and promoting software freedom.''
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@end quotation
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@end copying
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@titlepage
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@title Guide to Remember Mode
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@subtitle a simple information manager
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@subtitle for Emacs and XEmacs
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@c The following two commands
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@c start the copyright page.
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@page
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@vskip 0pt plus 1filll
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@insertcopying
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@end titlepage
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@c So the toc is printed at the start
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@contents
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@ifnottex
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@node Top, Preface, (dir), (dir)
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@comment node-name, next, previous, up
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@top Remember
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@insertcopying
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@end ifnottex
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@menu
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* Preface:: About the documentation.
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* Introduction:: What is Remember Mode?
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* Installation:: How to install Remember.
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* Implementation:: How Remember came into existence.
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* Quick Start:: Get started using Remember.
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* Function Reference:: Interactive functions in remember.el.
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* Keystrokes:: Keystrokes bound in Remember Mode.
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* Backends:: Backends for saving notes.
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* GNU Free Documentation License:: The license for this documentation.
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* Concept Index:: Search for terms.
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@detailmenu
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--- The Detailed Node Listing ---
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Backends
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* Text File:: Saving to a text file.
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* Diary:: Saving to a Diary file.
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* Mailbox:: Saving to a mailbox.
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* Org:: Saving to an Org Mode file.
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@end detailmenu
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@end menu
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@node Preface, Introduction, Top, Top
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@comment node-name, next, previous, up
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@chapter Preface
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This document describes remember-el, which was written by John Wiegley,
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was once maintained by Sacha Chua, and is now maintained by the Emacs
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developers.
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This document is a work in progress, and your contribution will be
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greatly appreciated.
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@node Introduction, Installation, Preface, Top
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@comment node-name, next, previous, up
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@chapter Introduction
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Todo lists, schedules, phone databases... everything we use databases
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for is really just a way to extend the power of our memory, to be able
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to remember what our conscious mind may not currently have access to.
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There are many different databases out there---and good ones---which
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this mode is not trying to replace. Rather, it's how that data gets
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there that's the question. Most of the time, we just want to say
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"Remember so-and-so's phone number, or that I have to buy dinner for the
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cats tonight." That's the FACT. How it's stored is really the
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computer's problem. But at this point in time, it's most definitely
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also the user's problem, and sometimes so laboriously so that people
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just let data slip, rather than expend the effort to record it.
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``Remember'' is a mode for remembering data. It uses whatever
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back-end is appropriate to record and correlate the data, but its main
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intention is to allow you to express as @emph{little} structure as
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possible up front. If you later want to express more powerful
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relationships between your data, or state assumptions that were at
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first too implicit to be recognized, you can ``study'' the data later
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and rearrange it. But the initial ``just remember this'' impulse
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should be as close to simply throwing the data at Emacs as possible.
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Have you ever noticed that having a laptop to write on doesn't
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@emph{actually} increase the amount of quality material that you turn
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out, in the long run? Perhaps it's because the time we save
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electronically in one way, we're losing electronically in another; the
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tool should never dominate one's focus. As the mystic Faridu'd-Din
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`Attar wrote: ``Be occupied as little as possible with things of the
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outer world but much with things of the inner world; then right action
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will overcome inaction.''
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If Emacs could become a more intelligent data store, where brainstorming
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would focus on the @emph{ideas} involved---rather than the structuring
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and format of those ideas, or having to stop your current flow of work
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in order to record them---it would map much more closely to how the mind
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(well, at least mine) works, and hence would eliminate that very
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manual-ness which computers from the very beginning have been championed
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as being able to reduce.
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@node Installation, Implementation, Introduction, Top
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@comment node-name, next, previous, up
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@chapter Installation
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Installing Remember Mode is as simple as adding the following lines to
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your Emacs configuration file (usually @file{~/.emacs.d/init.el} or
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@file{~/.emacs}).
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@lisp
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(add-to-list 'load-path "/path/to/remember")
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(require 'remember)
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@end lisp
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@node Implementation, Quick Start, Installation, Top
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@comment node-name, next, previous, up
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@chapter Implementation
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Hyperbole, as a data presentation tool, always struck me as being very
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powerful, but it seemed to require a lot of ``front-end'' work before
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that data was really available. The problem with BBDB, or keeping up
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a Bibl-mode file, is that you have to use different functions to
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record the data, and it always takes time to stop what you're doing,
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format the data in the manner expected by that particular data
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interface, and then resume your work.
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With ``remember'', you just hit @kbd{M-x remember} (you'd probably
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want to bind this to an easily accessible keystroke, like @kbd{C-x
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M-r}), slam in your text however you like, and then hit @kbd{C-c C-c}.
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It will file the data away for later retrieval, and possibly indexing.
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Indexing is to data what ``studying'' is in the real world. What you do
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when you study (or lucubrate, for some of us) is to realize certain
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relationships implicit in the data, so that you can make use of those
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relationships. Expressing that a certain quote you remembered was a
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literary quote, and that you want the ability to pull up all quotes of a
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literary nature, is what studying does. This is a more labor intensive
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task than the original remembering of the data, and it's typical in real
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life to set aside a special period of time for doing this work.
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``Remember'' works in the same way. When you enter data, either by
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typing it into a buffer, or using the contents of the selected region,
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it will store that data---unindexed, uninterpreted---in a data pool.
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It will also try to remember as much context information as possible
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(any text properties that were set, where you copied it from, when,
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how, etc). Later, you can walk through your accumulated set of data
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(both organized, and unorganized) and easily begin moving things
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around, and making annotations that will express the full meaning of
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that data, as far as you know it.
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Obviously this latter stage is more user-interface intensive, and it
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would be nice if ``remember'' could do it as elegantly as possible,
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rather than requiring a billion keystrokes to reorganize your
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hierarchy. Well, as the future arrives, hopefully experience and user
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feedback will help to make this as intuitive a tool as possible.
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@node Quick Start, Function Reference, Implementation, Top
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@comment node-name, next, previous, up
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@chapter Quick Start
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@itemize
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@item
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Load @file{remember.el}.
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@item
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Type @kbd{M-x remember}. The @samp{*Remember*} buffer should be
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displayed.
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@item
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Type in what you want to remember. The first line will be treated as
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the headline, and the rest of the buffer will contain the body of the
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note.
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@item
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Type @kbd{C-c C-c} (@code{remember-finalize}) to save the note and close
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the @samp{*Remember*} buffer.
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@end itemize
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By default, @code{remember-finalize} saves the note in @file{~/.notes}.
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You can edit it now to see the remembered and timestamped note. You
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can edit this file however you want. New entries will always be added
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to the end.
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To remember a region of text, use the universal prefix. @kbd{C-u M-x
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remember} displays a @samp{*Remember*} buffer with the region as the
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initial contents.
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As a simple beginning, you can start by using the Text File backend,
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keeping your @file{~/.notes} file in outline-mode format, with a final
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entry called @samp{* Raw data}. Remembered data will be added to the
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end of the file. Every so often, you can move the data that gets
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appended there into other files, or reorganize your document.
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You can also store remembered data in other backends.
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(@pxref{Backends})
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Here is one way to map the remember functions in your @file{.emacs} to
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very accessible keystrokes facilities using the mode:
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@lisp
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(autoload 'remember ``remember'' nil t)
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(autoload 'remember-region ``remember'' nil t)
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(define-key global-map (kbd "<f9> r") 'remember)
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(define-key global-map (kbd "<f9> R") 'remember-region)
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@end lisp
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By default, remember uses the first annotation returned by
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@code{remember-annotation-functions}. To include all of the annotations,
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set @code{remember-run-all-annotation-functions-flag} to non-nil.
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@defopt remember-run-all-annotation-functions-flag
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Non-nil means use all annotations returned by
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@code{remember-annotation-functions}.
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@end defopt
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You can write custom functions that use a different set of
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remember-annotation-functions. For example:
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@lisp
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(defun my/remember-with-filename ()
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"Always use the filename."
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(interactive)
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(let ((remember-annotation-functions '(buffer-file-name)))
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(call-interactively 'remember)))
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@end lisp
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@node Function Reference, Keystrokes, Quick Start, Top
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@comment node-name, next, previous, up
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@chapter Function Reference
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@file{remember.el} defines the following interactive functions:
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@defun remember initial
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Remember an arbitrary piece of data. With a prefix, it will use the
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region as @var{initial}.
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@end defun
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@defun remember-region beg end
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If called from within the remember buffer, @var{beg} and @var{end} are
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ignored, and the entire buffer will be remembered. If called from any
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other buffer, that region, plus any context information specific to
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that region, will be remembered.
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@end defun
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@defun remember-clipboard
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Remember the contents of the current clipboard. This is most useful
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for remembering things from Netscape or other X Windows applications.
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@end defun
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@defun remember-finalize
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Remember the contents of the current buffer.
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@end defun
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@defun remember-mode
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This enters the major mode for output from @command{remember}. This
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buffer is used to collect data that you want remember. Just hit
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@kbd{C-c C-c} when you're done entering, and it will go ahead and file
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the data for latter retrieval, and possible indexing.
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@end defun
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@node Keystrokes, Backends, Function Reference, Top
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@comment node-name, next, previous, up
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@chapter Keystroke Reference
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@file{remember.el} defines the following keybindings by default:
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@table @kbd
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@item C-c C-c (`remember-finalize')
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Remember the contents of the current buffer.
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@item C-c C-k (`remember-destroy')
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Destroy the current *Remember* buffer.
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@item C-x C-s (`remember-finalize')
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Remember the contents of the current buffer.
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@end table
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@node Backends, GNU Free Documentation License, Keystrokes, Top
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@comment node-name, next, previous, up
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@chapter Backends
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You can save remembered notes to a variety of backends.
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@menu
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* Text File:: Saving to a text file.
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* Diary:: Saving to a Diary file.
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* Mailbox:: Saving to a mailbox.
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* Org:: Saving to an Org Mode file.
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@end menu
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@node Text File, Diary, Backends, Backends
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@comment node-name, next, previous, up
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@section Saving to a Text File
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@cindex text file, saving to
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@subheading Insinuation
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@lisp
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(setq remember-handler-functions '(remember-append-to-file))
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@end lisp
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@subheading Options
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@defopt remember-data-file
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The file in which to store unprocessed data.
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@end defopt
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@defopt remember-leader-text
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The text used to begin each remember item.
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@end defopt
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@node Diary, Mailbox, Text File, Backends
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@comment node-name, next, previous, up
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@section Saving to a Diary file
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@cindex diary, integration
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@subheading Insinuation
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@lisp
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(add-to-list 'remember-handler-functions 'remember-diary-extract-entries)
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@end lisp
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@subheading Options
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@defopt remember-diary-file
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File for extracted diary entries.
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If this is nil, then @code{diary-file} will be used instead."
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@end defopt
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@node Mailbox, Org, Diary, Backends
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@comment node-name, next, previous, up
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@section Saving to a Mailbox
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@cindex mailbox, saving to
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@subheading Insinuation
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@lisp
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(add-to-list 'remember-handler-functions 'remember-store-in-mailbox)
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@end lisp
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@subheading Options
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@defopt remember-mailbox
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The file in which to store remember data as mail.
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@end defopt
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@defopt remember-default-priority
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The default priority for remembered mail messages.
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@end defopt
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@node Org, , Mailbox, Backends
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@comment node-name, next, previous, up
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@section Saving to an Org Mode file
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@cindex org mode, integration
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For instructions on how to integrate Remember with Org Mode,
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consult @ref{Remember, , , org}.
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@node GNU Free Documentation License, Concept Index, Backends, Top
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@appendix GNU Free Documentation License
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@include doclicense.texi
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@node Concept Index, , GNU Free Documentation License, Top
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@comment node-name, next, previous, up
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@unnumbered Index
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@printindex cp
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@bye
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@ignore
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arch-tag: 5b980db0-20cc-4167-b845-52dc11d53b9f
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@end ignore
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