I am sure this is obvious although when I've asked the question
previously, there was no answer.  The current structure of at thin
files contains a sentinel line such as the following:

#...@+node:abc.20090106093508.2:@thin /home/jsmith/....foo.py

If you use subversion and access those at thin files from Windows and
Linux machines and work on them within .leo files on those respective
platforms, you can't save the .leo file until you adjust the at thin
node in the .leo file for the directory structure of the platform that
you are working on.  The .leo file seems to pick up the location
information from the at thin file and I don't understand why this
information is contained in the at thin file at all -- the .leo file
(on whatever platform and which is not in subversion) knows where the
file is, why does the at thin file itself need to contain the
information (and why does the .leo file use the information) which
leads to the highly annoying need to correct .leo file if it was last
updated in subversion from a platform and directory structure
different from the one that is currently working on the file.  I
thought at thin files were designed to be subversion/CVS friendly.

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