A Java parser for org-mode files.
Using gradle, just add this to you build.gradle:
repositories { jcenter() } dependencies { compile 'org.cowboyprogrammer:orgparser:1.3.1' }
The project builds to a jar file with gradle:
gradle jar
Run the unit tests with:
gradle test
A file is made up of one or several nodes. A node has a header and a body. A simple example would be:
* The header starts with one or more stars
The body follows...
An OrgFile is a subclass of OrgNode. As a special case, an OrgFile does not have a header but it does have a body, which is possibly empty. It’s not unusual to put comments at the top of the file with for example file-wide tags. An example of that would be:
# Anything put here will be placed in the body of the file
#+TAGS: noexport draft
* Header of a node
Body of node
Nodes are placed as subnodes of the file. A node might itself have some subnodes:
* Root node
Body of root
** Subnode 1
Body of sub1
** Subnode 2
Body of sub2
When a file is parsed a recursive structure of nodes is created. The root is always an OrgFile object. You parse a file by calling the static createFrom method of the OrgFile class, giving it the parser you wish to use (currently there is only one choice here):
OrgFile orgFile = OrgFile.createFrom(new RegexParser(), "/path/to/file.org");
A header consists of several parts and they are all available individually in the OrgNode object. A complete example is:
* TODO Title of header :tag1:tag2:
By default TODO and DONE are included as TODO-keywords and they can not be removed. There is support for adding additional TODO-keywords during parsing.
Note that a priority is currently not parsed.
A body consists of more than the raw text. Just as a file might have some commented properties, so might a subnode. It might also contain various kinds of timestamps. As a restriction, these fields may only occur before the body proper. Empty lines are ignored before the body (unless they are connected). The order of comments and timestamps (and empty lines) does not matter. The order when written back to file is: comments, timestamps, the body proper. Some examples:
* Minimal example
# A leading comment followed by a timestamp
<2013-12-24>
Body text starts here.
* Empty lines will be ignored
# Comment
<2014-12-13>
Body will include the previous empty line.
* Order of comments, timestamps and empty lines does not matter
DEADLINE: <2013-12-12>
#+TAGS: bob alice
SCHEDULED: <2013-02-12>
# Another comment
Body starts here
A lot of the code deals with handling the timestamps and their repetitions. A minimal example timestamp is:
<2014-02-28>
A maximum example timestamp is:
DEADLINE: <2014-02-28 Fri 09:00-12:00 +4w -1h>
This would define the following properties of an OrgTimestamp, where only date is mandatory.
type | DEADLINE |
date | 2014-02-28 |
time | 09:00 |
endtime | 12:00 |
repeat | +4w |
warning | -1h |
The date and time are stored as a Joda LocalDateTime. The method hasTime returns true if the time is set. If not, only the date should be used.
The majority of the code deals with the repeater part of the
timestamp. If this is set, the methods toNextRepeat, getNextRepeat
and getNextFutureRepetition can be used. toNextRepeat deals with
the three different types of repeater: ””, “+” and “.+”.
- + is just moves one step.
- ++ moves forward as many steps as required to get it into the future.
- .+ moves forward one step from today, as opposed to whatever date currently is.
A special type of timestamp (though not a subclass of OrgTimestamp) is a duration, represented by OrgTimestampRange. Two examples of durations are:
<2014-01-01>--<2014-01-02>
<2014-01-01 Tue 09:00>--<2014-01-02 Wed 17:00>
Only the dates are mandatory. This type of timestamp does not support repeating or warnings at this time.