Yes, I use Leo all the time to write books (training manuals in my case). I
use LaTex primarily. Each 'chapter' or 'section' is a separate file and I
use the \input{...} method in LaTex to pull it all together. That way I can
create custom manuals using different versions of the files without having
to rewrite anything. Works great! Don't know how I could do it without Leo.
Rob...........
On Thursday, May 16, 2013 2:02:46 PM UTC-4, Jacob Peck wrote:
>
> Hello all,
>
> Just a conversation topic here. I'm in the process of writing a few
> smallish books (20-100 pages) in ConTeXt with Leo as my editor.
>
> The outlining powers of Leo are absolutely astounding in this context.
> Having each bit of the text represented as a node, being able to
> rearrange them on a whim, just makes the writing process so simple. And
> I haven't even touched the chapters plugin! (Speaking of which, is
> there a simple tutorial/doc/screencast for that?)
>
> Just curious if anyone else has written a lengthy document or a book in
> Leo, and if so, if they have any tips to share? I know I would have
> *loved* Leo a couple of years ago when I was writing my honors thesis
> for my undergrad degree. I would have been able to script all of those
> midi -> png -> LaTeX conversions...
>
> Anywho, just curious.
>
> -->Jake
>
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