Hi, im a newcomer myself (you can check that by searching for posts of 
mine) and I would definetly use Leo to do that.
By what I have learned/am learning, I think if leo is used properly you can 
be using it for the last time.
It has a built in feature that translates c to python (some adjustments 
have to be made by the user) but what i mean by that is that you already 
have the parsing examples to make Leo analyze your files automatically.
In the begging Leo is a bit hard to understand (and they are working on 
this) since Leo has so many features... but its worth every second invested 
on it. My bet is that you will end up using it for everything, not only 
programming.

On Tuesday, May 21, 2013 10:46:19 PM UTC+2, Dilawar Singh wrote:
>
> Hi Group,
>
> I am a newcomer to Leo. Did anyone use it for documenting and managing 
> large C/C++ projects? I have some 'badly documented' C++ files which I wish 
> to clean up. One option is to use doxygen etc. I was wondering whether Leo 
> would be  a good candidate for this. I am willing to spend any amount of 
> time learning it if it guarantees to be as good as vim is with editing.
>
> --
> Dilawar 
>

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