Discussion:
[O] Irrelevant/misleading error message (due to bad syntax in init-file)
A***@unistra.fr
2018-05-15 11:25:45 UTC
Permalink
Hello.

I do the following.

The file ~/.emacs.debug contains:

(add-to-list 'load-path "/home/cochard/Org/Coch-git/org-mode/lisp")
(setq org-agenda-files '"/tmp/bug-agenda.org") ; <- bad syntax!
(find-file "/tmp/bug-agenda2.org") ; <- empty file

The file /tmp/bug-agenda.org contains:

* Foo :bar:

I run:

emacs -debug-init -Q -l ~/.emacs.debug

NB: there is no message caused by "-debug-init" related to the bad
syntax in the setq instruction.

When in the empty "bug-agenda2.org", if I do "M-x org-agenda m" I, get
(temporarily) in the minibuffer:

Use M-x make-directory RET RET to create the directory and its
parents

In the minibuffer, if I type "<TAB>" or "b<TAB>" or "ba<TAB>" or
"bar"<TAB>, I get "[No match]". If after either of these 4 "<TAB>" I
hit the "<Return>" key, I get:

Non-existent agenda file ~/org/* Foo :bar:. [R]emove from list or
[A]bort?

NB: I don't have an "~/org" file or directory.

I have:

Emacs : GNU Emacs 24.5.1 (x86_64-redhat-linux-gnu, GTK+ Version
3.18.9) of 2016-04-11 on buildvm-25.phx2.fedoraproject.org Package:
Org mode version 9.1.13 (release_9.1.13-755-gc46fcd @
/home/cochard/Org/Coch-git/org-mode/lisp/)

I apologize if this issue is too minor (or otherwise inappropriate) to
be reported -- please let me know if so.

Regards
--
EOST (École et Observatoire des Sciences de la Terre)
IPG (Institut de Physique du Globe) | ***@unistra.fr
5 rue René Descartes [bureau 106] | Phone: +33 (0)3 68 85 50 44
F-67084 Strasbourg Cedex, France | Fax: +33 (0)3 68 85 01 25
Nick Dokos
2018-05-15 17:50:41 UTC
Permalink
Post by A***@unistra.fr
...
(setq org-agenda-files '"/tmp/bug-agenda.org") ; <- bad syntax!
...
NB: there is no message caused by "-debug-init" related to the bad
syntax in the setq instruction.
That's because it's legal: it's not bad syntax:

'"foo" is equivalent to (quote "foo"). Now `quote' inhibits
evaluation but since strings evaluate to themselves, it does
not matter whether you evaluate or not.
--
Nick

"There are only two hard problems in computer science: cache
invalidation, naming things, and off-by-one errors." -Martin Fowler
Loading...