> It was that way before - but personally, I think workbook.leo is 100
> times more useful. You can start jotting notes on that immediately
> when starting leo, whereas starting a new leo document, is, well...
> how often do you start new documents anyway?

I have understood the workbook.leo to be something along the lines of
the *scratch* buffer in emacs. Very useful for, as you say, scratch
pieces of text.

In the case of emacs of course, it is a buffer that gets buried and
doesn't interfere with the windows. Would a 'tabbed notebook' (MDI)
interface be easy to do for Leo? I too find it a bit annoying when
many windows pop up. I recently found myself with windows for
workbook, myLeosettings, LeoPluginsRef and a document I was working
on, and felt I would not have minded them each in their own tab.

Nitin

PS. I have been following the development of Leo (lurking) for a few
months now, and really like many of the ideas I see here. I am still
not up to using it on a regular basis, but can feel the potential.
Right now I am still using emacs org-mode, which is currently a
finalist for the sourceforge "most likely to change the way you do
everything" community choice award. Definitely think Leo could be up
there.

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