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Naming the result of a source block



Planned maintenance scheduled April 17/18, 2019 at 00:00UTC (8:00pm US/Eastern)
Announcing the arrival of Valued Associate #679: Cesar Manara
Unicorn Meta Zoo #1: Why another podcast?Can I use elisp code make a table and insert a variable into cell?Indentation of source block resultFontify result of source block in org-modeHow to have org-babel treat the first line of a table result as a header?Org-mode: pipe source block output as stdin to next source blockHow to append header arguments to result code src block?How to insert a result of an org-mode source block as part of the document's syntax?Org-mode: Get src block result inside block definition for clocktableget contents of source blockCatching warnings from sh source blockHow to generate the result file for dot source block and include it with another path in org-mode?










1















The following question has been asked (in slightly different form) in a comment of another answer:



Is it possible to name the results of a source block with #+NAME: foobar (or equivalently but old-style: #+TBLNAME: foobar) rather than #+RESULTS: foobar?



Example:



#+NAME: foo
#+BEGIN_SRC emacs-lisp :var alpha=2 :results value
(let* ((tol 0.1)
(alpha_1 (- 90 alpha)))
`(("angle" "symbol" "value" "max" "min") hline
("toe" "\alpha" ,alpha ,(+ alpha tol) ,(- alpha tol))
("c" "\alpha_1" ,alpha_1 ,(+ alpha_1 tol) ,(- alpha_1 tol))
))
#+END_SRC

#+RESULTS: foo
| angle | symbol | value | max | min |
|-------+----------+-------+------+------|
| toe | alpha | 1 | 1.1 | 0.9 |
| c | alpha_1 | 89 | 89.1 | 88.9 |









share|improve this question


























    1















    The following question has been asked (in slightly different form) in a comment of another answer:



    Is it possible to name the results of a source block with #+NAME: foobar (or equivalently but old-style: #+TBLNAME: foobar) rather than #+RESULTS: foobar?



    Example:



    #+NAME: foo
    #+BEGIN_SRC emacs-lisp :var alpha=2 :results value
    (let* ((tol 0.1)
    (alpha_1 (- 90 alpha)))
    `(("angle" "symbol" "value" "max" "min") hline
    ("toe" "\alpha" ,alpha ,(+ alpha tol) ,(- alpha tol))
    ("c" "\alpha_1" ,alpha_1 ,(+ alpha_1 tol) ,(- alpha_1 tol))
    ))
    #+END_SRC

    #+RESULTS: foo
    | angle | symbol | value | max | min |
    |-------+----------+-------+------+------|
    | toe | alpha | 1 | 1.1 | 0.9 |
    | c | alpha_1 | 89 | 89.1 | 88.9 |









    share|improve this question
























      1












      1








      1


      1






      The following question has been asked (in slightly different form) in a comment of another answer:



      Is it possible to name the results of a source block with #+NAME: foobar (or equivalently but old-style: #+TBLNAME: foobar) rather than #+RESULTS: foobar?



      Example:



      #+NAME: foo
      #+BEGIN_SRC emacs-lisp :var alpha=2 :results value
      (let* ((tol 0.1)
      (alpha_1 (- 90 alpha)))
      `(("angle" "symbol" "value" "max" "min") hline
      ("toe" "\alpha" ,alpha ,(+ alpha tol) ,(- alpha tol))
      ("c" "\alpha_1" ,alpha_1 ,(+ alpha_1 tol) ,(- alpha_1 tol))
      ))
      #+END_SRC

      #+RESULTS: foo
      | angle | symbol | value | max | min |
      |-------+----------+-------+------+------|
      | toe | alpha | 1 | 1.1 | 0.9 |
      | c | alpha_1 | 89 | 89.1 | 88.9 |









      share|improve this question














      The following question has been asked (in slightly different form) in a comment of another answer:



      Is it possible to name the results of a source block with #+NAME: foobar (or equivalently but old-style: #+TBLNAME: foobar) rather than #+RESULTS: foobar?



      Example:



      #+NAME: foo
      #+BEGIN_SRC emacs-lisp :var alpha=2 :results value
      (let* ((tol 0.1)
      (alpha_1 (- 90 alpha)))
      `(("angle" "symbol" "value" "max" "min") hline
      ("toe" "\alpha" ,alpha ,(+ alpha tol) ,(- alpha tol))
      ("c" "\alpha_1" ,alpha_1 ,(+ alpha_1 tol) ,(- alpha_1 tol))
      ))
      #+END_SRC

      #+RESULTS: foo
      | angle | symbol | value | max | min |
      |-------+----------+-------+------+------|
      | toe | alpha | 1 | 1.1 | 0.9 |
      | c | alpha_1 | 89 | 89.1 | 88.9 |






      org-babel org-table






      share|improve this question













      share|improve this question











      share|improve this question




      share|improve this question










      asked 5 hours ago









      TobiasTobias

      15.2k11035




      15.2k11035




















          1 Answer
          1






          active

          oldest

          votes


















          2














          One can add the following lines below unnamed source blocks (with bar replaced by the intended table name):



          #+NAME: bar
          #+RESULTS:
          ||


          The line with #+name: bar is preserved after the evaluation of the source block and || is replaced with the resulting table.



          Note, that the name bar really names the table and not the source block.
          That has the following consequences (probably among others I am not aware of at the moment):



          1. If you refer to the table name in the header arguments of another source block, say buh, then the bar source block is not reevaluated when buh is evaluated. The table is not updated but taken as argument for buh as it is.

            That is usually more an disadvantage than an advantage.

            One can call org-babel-execute-buffer to get correctly updated results.


          2. If the source block returns a string containing the formatted org-table rather than table data referring to the source block name in header variables gets you the string and not the table data. That is most often unwanted.

            In that case it is a big advantage that you can alternatively refer to the resulting table by its name.


          If the source block is named, e.g., foo replace #+RESULTS: with #+RESULTS: foo.



          Example:



          #+NAME: foo
          #+BEGIN_SRC emacs-lisp :var alpha=2 :results value
          (let* ((tol 0.1)
          (alpha_1 (- 90 alpha)))
          `(("angle" "symbol" "value" "max" "min") hline
          ("toe" "\alpha" ,alpha ,(+ alpha tol) ,(- alpha tol))
          ("c" "\alpha_1" ,alpha_1 ,(+ alpha_1 tol) ,(- alpha_1 tol))
          ))
          #+END_SRC

          #+TBLNAME: bar
          #+RESULTS: foo
          | angle | symbol | value | max | min |
          |-------+----------+-------+------+------|
          | toe | alpha | 1 | 1.1 | 0.9 |
          | c | alpha_1 | 89 | 89.1 | 88.9 |

          #+CALL: foo(alpha=bar[2,3])

          #+NAME: buh
          #+RESULTS:
          | angle | symbol | value | max | min |
          |-------+----------+-------+--------------------+-------------------|
          | toe | alpha | 1.1 | 1.2000000000000002 | 1.0 |
          | c | alpha_1 | 88.9 | 89.0 | 88.80000000000001 |


          The example demonstrates the update problem. The header variable alpha had the value 1 at the first evaluation of foo. Afterwards the value was changed to 2 but the source block foo was not evaluated again.

          The evaluation of the #+CALL statement does use the table value 1.1 at cell 2,3 directly without reevaluation of foo.






          share|improve this answer

























          • Quite informative, indeed. But there seems to be no way to not have the line #+RESULTS: in the results. One interesting question is, how is the system handling a let* form and turning it into a table? Is this something to do with :results value? But then if I do #+begin_src emacs-lisp :var table=bar (message "%S" table) #+end_src I get (("toe" "\alpha" 2 2.1 1.9) ("c" "$\alpha_1$" 88 88.1 87.9)) i.e., it's left out the title and horizontal line, i.e.,i.e., not completely reversible? Interesting stuff, nonetheless.

            – 147pm
            36 mins ago












          Your Answer








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          1 Answer
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          1 Answer
          1






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          active

          oldest

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          active

          oldest

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          2














          One can add the following lines below unnamed source blocks (with bar replaced by the intended table name):



          #+NAME: bar
          #+RESULTS:
          ||


          The line with #+name: bar is preserved after the evaluation of the source block and || is replaced with the resulting table.



          Note, that the name bar really names the table and not the source block.
          That has the following consequences (probably among others I am not aware of at the moment):



          1. If you refer to the table name in the header arguments of another source block, say buh, then the bar source block is not reevaluated when buh is evaluated. The table is not updated but taken as argument for buh as it is.

            That is usually more an disadvantage than an advantage.

            One can call org-babel-execute-buffer to get correctly updated results.


          2. If the source block returns a string containing the formatted org-table rather than table data referring to the source block name in header variables gets you the string and not the table data. That is most often unwanted.

            In that case it is a big advantage that you can alternatively refer to the resulting table by its name.


          If the source block is named, e.g., foo replace #+RESULTS: with #+RESULTS: foo.



          Example:



          #+NAME: foo
          #+BEGIN_SRC emacs-lisp :var alpha=2 :results value
          (let* ((tol 0.1)
          (alpha_1 (- 90 alpha)))
          `(("angle" "symbol" "value" "max" "min") hline
          ("toe" "\alpha" ,alpha ,(+ alpha tol) ,(- alpha tol))
          ("c" "\alpha_1" ,alpha_1 ,(+ alpha_1 tol) ,(- alpha_1 tol))
          ))
          #+END_SRC

          #+TBLNAME: bar
          #+RESULTS: foo
          | angle | symbol | value | max | min |
          |-------+----------+-------+------+------|
          | toe | alpha | 1 | 1.1 | 0.9 |
          | c | alpha_1 | 89 | 89.1 | 88.9 |

          #+CALL: foo(alpha=bar[2,3])

          #+NAME: buh
          #+RESULTS:
          | angle | symbol | value | max | min |
          |-------+----------+-------+--------------------+-------------------|
          | toe | alpha | 1.1 | 1.2000000000000002 | 1.0 |
          | c | alpha_1 | 88.9 | 89.0 | 88.80000000000001 |


          The example demonstrates the update problem. The header variable alpha had the value 1 at the first evaluation of foo. Afterwards the value was changed to 2 but the source block foo was not evaluated again.

          The evaluation of the #+CALL statement does use the table value 1.1 at cell 2,3 directly without reevaluation of foo.






          share|improve this answer

























          • Quite informative, indeed. But there seems to be no way to not have the line #+RESULTS: in the results. One interesting question is, how is the system handling a let* form and turning it into a table? Is this something to do with :results value? But then if I do #+begin_src emacs-lisp :var table=bar (message "%S" table) #+end_src I get (("toe" "\alpha" 2 2.1 1.9) ("c" "$\alpha_1$" 88 88.1 87.9)) i.e., it's left out the title and horizontal line, i.e.,i.e., not completely reversible? Interesting stuff, nonetheless.

            – 147pm
            36 mins ago
















          2














          One can add the following lines below unnamed source blocks (with bar replaced by the intended table name):



          #+NAME: bar
          #+RESULTS:
          ||


          The line with #+name: bar is preserved after the evaluation of the source block and || is replaced with the resulting table.



          Note, that the name bar really names the table and not the source block.
          That has the following consequences (probably among others I am not aware of at the moment):



          1. If you refer to the table name in the header arguments of another source block, say buh, then the bar source block is not reevaluated when buh is evaluated. The table is not updated but taken as argument for buh as it is.

            That is usually more an disadvantage than an advantage.

            One can call org-babel-execute-buffer to get correctly updated results.


          2. If the source block returns a string containing the formatted org-table rather than table data referring to the source block name in header variables gets you the string and not the table data. That is most often unwanted.

            In that case it is a big advantage that you can alternatively refer to the resulting table by its name.


          If the source block is named, e.g., foo replace #+RESULTS: with #+RESULTS: foo.



          Example:



          #+NAME: foo
          #+BEGIN_SRC emacs-lisp :var alpha=2 :results value
          (let* ((tol 0.1)
          (alpha_1 (- 90 alpha)))
          `(("angle" "symbol" "value" "max" "min") hline
          ("toe" "\alpha" ,alpha ,(+ alpha tol) ,(- alpha tol))
          ("c" "\alpha_1" ,alpha_1 ,(+ alpha_1 tol) ,(- alpha_1 tol))
          ))
          #+END_SRC

          #+TBLNAME: bar
          #+RESULTS: foo
          | angle | symbol | value | max | min |
          |-------+----------+-------+------+------|
          | toe | alpha | 1 | 1.1 | 0.9 |
          | c | alpha_1 | 89 | 89.1 | 88.9 |

          #+CALL: foo(alpha=bar[2,3])

          #+NAME: buh
          #+RESULTS:
          | angle | symbol | value | max | min |
          |-------+----------+-------+--------------------+-------------------|
          | toe | alpha | 1.1 | 1.2000000000000002 | 1.0 |
          | c | alpha_1 | 88.9 | 89.0 | 88.80000000000001 |


          The example demonstrates the update problem. The header variable alpha had the value 1 at the first evaluation of foo. Afterwards the value was changed to 2 but the source block foo was not evaluated again.

          The evaluation of the #+CALL statement does use the table value 1.1 at cell 2,3 directly without reevaluation of foo.






          share|improve this answer

























          • Quite informative, indeed. But there seems to be no way to not have the line #+RESULTS: in the results. One interesting question is, how is the system handling a let* form and turning it into a table? Is this something to do with :results value? But then if I do #+begin_src emacs-lisp :var table=bar (message "%S" table) #+end_src I get (("toe" "\alpha" 2 2.1 1.9) ("c" "$\alpha_1$" 88 88.1 87.9)) i.e., it's left out the title and horizontal line, i.e.,i.e., not completely reversible? Interesting stuff, nonetheless.

            – 147pm
            36 mins ago














          2












          2








          2







          One can add the following lines below unnamed source blocks (with bar replaced by the intended table name):



          #+NAME: bar
          #+RESULTS:
          ||


          The line with #+name: bar is preserved after the evaluation of the source block and || is replaced with the resulting table.



          Note, that the name bar really names the table and not the source block.
          That has the following consequences (probably among others I am not aware of at the moment):



          1. If you refer to the table name in the header arguments of another source block, say buh, then the bar source block is not reevaluated when buh is evaluated. The table is not updated but taken as argument for buh as it is.

            That is usually more an disadvantage than an advantage.

            One can call org-babel-execute-buffer to get correctly updated results.


          2. If the source block returns a string containing the formatted org-table rather than table data referring to the source block name in header variables gets you the string and not the table data. That is most often unwanted.

            In that case it is a big advantage that you can alternatively refer to the resulting table by its name.


          If the source block is named, e.g., foo replace #+RESULTS: with #+RESULTS: foo.



          Example:



          #+NAME: foo
          #+BEGIN_SRC emacs-lisp :var alpha=2 :results value
          (let* ((tol 0.1)
          (alpha_1 (- 90 alpha)))
          `(("angle" "symbol" "value" "max" "min") hline
          ("toe" "\alpha" ,alpha ,(+ alpha tol) ,(- alpha tol))
          ("c" "\alpha_1" ,alpha_1 ,(+ alpha_1 tol) ,(- alpha_1 tol))
          ))
          #+END_SRC

          #+TBLNAME: bar
          #+RESULTS: foo
          | angle | symbol | value | max | min |
          |-------+----------+-------+------+------|
          | toe | alpha | 1 | 1.1 | 0.9 |
          | c | alpha_1 | 89 | 89.1 | 88.9 |

          #+CALL: foo(alpha=bar[2,3])

          #+NAME: buh
          #+RESULTS:
          | angle | symbol | value | max | min |
          |-------+----------+-------+--------------------+-------------------|
          | toe | alpha | 1.1 | 1.2000000000000002 | 1.0 |
          | c | alpha_1 | 88.9 | 89.0 | 88.80000000000001 |


          The example demonstrates the update problem. The header variable alpha had the value 1 at the first evaluation of foo. Afterwards the value was changed to 2 but the source block foo was not evaluated again.

          The evaluation of the #+CALL statement does use the table value 1.1 at cell 2,3 directly without reevaluation of foo.






          share|improve this answer















          One can add the following lines below unnamed source blocks (with bar replaced by the intended table name):



          #+NAME: bar
          #+RESULTS:
          ||


          The line with #+name: bar is preserved after the evaluation of the source block and || is replaced with the resulting table.



          Note, that the name bar really names the table and not the source block.
          That has the following consequences (probably among others I am not aware of at the moment):



          1. If you refer to the table name in the header arguments of another source block, say buh, then the bar source block is not reevaluated when buh is evaluated. The table is not updated but taken as argument for buh as it is.

            That is usually more an disadvantage than an advantage.

            One can call org-babel-execute-buffer to get correctly updated results.


          2. If the source block returns a string containing the formatted org-table rather than table data referring to the source block name in header variables gets you the string and not the table data. That is most often unwanted.

            In that case it is a big advantage that you can alternatively refer to the resulting table by its name.


          If the source block is named, e.g., foo replace #+RESULTS: with #+RESULTS: foo.



          Example:



          #+NAME: foo
          #+BEGIN_SRC emacs-lisp :var alpha=2 :results value
          (let* ((tol 0.1)
          (alpha_1 (- 90 alpha)))
          `(("angle" "symbol" "value" "max" "min") hline
          ("toe" "\alpha" ,alpha ,(+ alpha tol) ,(- alpha tol))
          ("c" "\alpha_1" ,alpha_1 ,(+ alpha_1 tol) ,(- alpha_1 tol))
          ))
          #+END_SRC

          #+TBLNAME: bar
          #+RESULTS: foo
          | angle | symbol | value | max | min |
          |-------+----------+-------+------+------|
          | toe | alpha | 1 | 1.1 | 0.9 |
          | c | alpha_1 | 89 | 89.1 | 88.9 |

          #+CALL: foo(alpha=bar[2,3])

          #+NAME: buh
          #+RESULTS:
          | angle | symbol | value | max | min |
          |-------+----------+-------+--------------------+-------------------|
          | toe | alpha | 1.1 | 1.2000000000000002 | 1.0 |
          | c | alpha_1 | 88.9 | 89.0 | 88.80000000000001 |


          The example demonstrates the update problem. The header variable alpha had the value 1 at the first evaluation of foo. Afterwards the value was changed to 2 but the source block foo was not evaluated again.

          The evaluation of the #+CALL statement does use the table value 1.1 at cell 2,3 directly without reevaluation of foo.







          share|improve this answer














          share|improve this answer



          share|improve this answer








          edited 4 hours ago

























          answered 5 hours ago









          TobiasTobias

          15.2k11035




          15.2k11035












          • Quite informative, indeed. But there seems to be no way to not have the line #+RESULTS: in the results. One interesting question is, how is the system handling a let* form and turning it into a table? Is this something to do with :results value? But then if I do #+begin_src emacs-lisp :var table=bar (message "%S" table) #+end_src I get (("toe" "\alpha" 2 2.1 1.9) ("c" "$\alpha_1$" 88 88.1 87.9)) i.e., it's left out the title and horizontal line, i.e.,i.e., not completely reversible? Interesting stuff, nonetheless.

            – 147pm
            36 mins ago


















          • Quite informative, indeed. But there seems to be no way to not have the line #+RESULTS: in the results. One interesting question is, how is the system handling a let* form and turning it into a table? Is this something to do with :results value? But then if I do #+begin_src emacs-lisp :var table=bar (message "%S" table) #+end_src I get (("toe" "\alpha" 2 2.1 1.9) ("c" "$\alpha_1$" 88 88.1 87.9)) i.e., it's left out the title and horizontal line, i.e.,i.e., not completely reversible? Interesting stuff, nonetheless.

            – 147pm
            36 mins ago

















          Quite informative, indeed. But there seems to be no way to not have the line #+RESULTS: in the results. One interesting question is, how is the system handling a let* form and turning it into a table? Is this something to do with :results value? But then if I do #+begin_src emacs-lisp :var table=bar (message "%S" table) #+end_src I get (("toe" "\alpha" 2 2.1 1.9) ("c" "$\alpha_1$" 88 88.1 87.9)) i.e., it's left out the title and horizontal line, i.e.,i.e., not completely reversible? Interesting stuff, nonetheless.

          – 147pm
          36 mins ago






          Quite informative, indeed. But there seems to be no way to not have the line #+RESULTS: in the results. One interesting question is, how is the system handling a let* form and turning it into a table? Is this something to do with :results value? But then if I do #+begin_src emacs-lisp :var table=bar (message "%S" table) #+end_src I get (("toe" "\alpha" 2 2.1 1.9) ("c" "$\alpha_1$" 88 88.1 87.9)) i.e., it's left out the title and horizontal line, i.e.,i.e., not completely reversible? Interesting stuff, nonetheless.

          – 147pm
          36 mins ago


















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