A simple org-mode viewer (that allows you to do some basic folding/unfolding and search -- or even something more complex that would allow you to view it as a mind-map?) would be nice. It could even be simplified with more GUI bells and whistles and still allow one to insert data and save the file. It would not be a full replacement for emacs, ever, but would allow other less technical users to use it as well.
I was thinking about something alike that could be ran on the web and on the desktop. Adobe AIR could be a nice platform to develop on, in this case. I'd love to write something like this, just need to gather the time and energy :) (oh, procrastination) Cheers, Marcelo. On Tue, Mar 15, 2011 at 6:21 AM, Harum Budi <harumb...@gmail.com> wrote: > 2011/3/15 Rainer M Krug <r.m.k...@gmail.com> >> >> > Aside from Emacs, are there other programs capable of editing Org >> > documents? >> >> To state the obvious: ,org files are text files, not binary files, which >> can be edited with *any* text editor. >> >> If you are asking about org-mode functionality: there are a few (I think >> 2) projects working on implementing something similar in vim and there >> was some discussion on this mailing list - but I did not follow this in >> detail. > > Thanks. Google returned VimOrganizer and VimTodo. The former is an org-mode > clone for vim (though I haven't read/tested how much has been implemented), > but the latter uses todo.txt format and not Org. Haven't found any other > similar programs so far. > (PS: I use Emacs myself, just curious). > Regards, > Budi >